We get some evidence that people value openness and financial transparency. This is vaguely useful for SIAI (they get evidence that the derivative of donations with respect to openness is probably slightly higher than they previously thought), but useless to anyone whose considering donating. What donors need to know is how good openness is, not how much other people value it. It also does nothing to address the good reasons for SIAI not to publish AGI progress; reasons which don’t apply to normal charities.
Also, he says you shouldn't try to maximise expected utility. This could be a nit-pick, but your risk aversion should be factored into your utility function; you shouldn't be risk averse in utility.
This could be a nit-pick, but your risk aversion should be factored into your utility function
Not according to Against Discount Rates ...and I agree - though this may be a tangent.
It is better if risk aversion is dynamically generated.
Mathematician and climate activist John Baez finally commented on charitable giving. I think the opinion of highly educated experts who are not closely associated with LessWrong or the SIAI but have read most of the available material is important to estimate the public and academic perception of risks from AI and the effectiveness with which the risks are communicated by LessWrong and the SIAI.
Desertopa asked:
John Baez replied:
What can one learn from this?