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Comment by Kim_Bruning

14 days ago

> Yeah, I'm aware of the moltbot's attempts to retain some information, but that's a very, very lossy operation, on a number of levels, and also one that doesn't scale very well in the long run.

It came back though and stayed in the conversation. Definitely imperfect, for sure. But it did the thing. And still can serve as training for future bots.

But depending on the discussion, 'it' is not materially the same as the previous instance.

There was another response made with a now extended context. But that other response could have been done by another agent, another model, different system prompt. Or even the same, but with different randomness, providing a different reply.

I think this is a more important point than "talking about them as a person".

  • A strong Ship of Theseus variant, right?

    Openclaw persistence abilities are as yet not particularly amazing, but they're non-zero.

    So it's an argument of degree.

    • A degree that will fairly quickly hit zero. The bot that talks to you tomorrow or maybe the day after may still have its original interaction in its context window, but it will rapidly leave.

      Moreover, our human conception of the consequences of interaction do not tend to include the idea that someone can simply lie to themselves in their SOUL.md file and thereby sever their future selves completely from all previous interactions. To put it a bit more viscerally, we don't expect a long-time friend to cease to be a long-time friend very suddenly one day 12 years in simply because they forgot to update a text file to remember that they were your friend, or anything like that. This is not how human interactions work.

      I already said that future AIs may be able to meet this criterion, but the current ones do not. And again, future ones may have their own problems. There's a lot of aspects of humanity that we've simply taken for granted because we do not interact with anything other than humans in these ways, and it will be a journey of discovery both discovering what these things are, and what their n'th-order consequences on social order are. And probably be a bit dismayed at how fragile anything like a "social order" we recognize ultimately is, but that's a discussion for, oh, three or four years from now. Whether we're heading headlong into disaster is its own discussion, but we are certainly headed headlong into chaos in ways nobody has really discussed yet.

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