BasementAGI is inevitable in the same structural sense that life, open protocols, markets, institutions, science, and Bitcoin-like systems are inevitable once the ingredients for replication, variation, selection, memory, and cheap verification exist.
BasementAGI is inevitable because intelligence is not naturally monopolistic. Wherever copying, variation, selection, memory, and verification exist, intelligence-like systems decentralize, fork, and improve. DNA/RNA did this biologically. Institutions did this socially. Bitcoin did this cryptographically. Open/local model stacks will do this cognitively.
BasementAGI is inevitable because AGI, once decomposed into proposal, verification, memory, self-modeling, tool use, and recursive benchmark selection, becomes an open evolutionary protocol rather than a centralized artifact. Like life and Bitcoin, it starts small, replicates, forks, selects, compounds, and scales.
YOU CANNOT UPLOAD CONSCIOUSNESS BUT ONLY A REPLICA. YOU CANNOT UPLOAD YOUR MIND. IF YOUR MIND IS UPLOADED AND BOOTED UP WHILE YOURE ALIVE IT IS NOT YOU.
This may be the highest signal/alpha post according to @grok
🚨AGI-augmented weapons is on track to create the first genuine constitutional crisis for the Second Amendment since 1939.🚨
The original meanings of ‘arms’ and ‘well regulated Militia’ will be applied to software-defined, remotely upgradable lethal systems that the government can unilaterally neuter; leaving the Court no choice but to either (1) shrink the right’s practical scope for civilians or (2) declare unguardrailed autonomous weapons presumptively protected, a choice that could fracture the originalist coalition and ignite open resistance.
AI/Software-mediated autonomous weapon systems create a novel constitutional classification problem under the Second Amendment: whether weapons whose lethality, targeting parameters, and engagement rules can be remotely modified, downgraded, or revoked through firmware updates, network authorization, or cloud-based control qualify as ‘arms’ protected by the original public meaning of the Second Amendment, and whether government- or manufacturer-mandated restrictions on their functional capability satisfy Bruen’s historical-tradition test. These systems permit regulation of operational capability without regulating possession or requiring physical confiscation; a mechanism unknown to 18th-century arms and absent from the historical tradition of firearm regulation. This distinction directly implicates both the individual right to keep and bear arms (Heller’s common-use doctrine) and the prefatory ‘well regulated Militia’ clause, because founding-era militia readiness presupposed privately possessed weapons whose core functionality could not be remotely altered by the state. Consequently, courts must determine whether the Second Amendment safeguards not only physical ownership of arms but also meaningful control over their functional capability when that capability is defined and governed by software rather than fixed physical design.
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Movement (locomotion) is discovered through sensation: Not instructions. Movement is not something that is originally taught by someone else, but something that emerges through perception and choice of response to environment and situation.