Whee! Thanks. I won't ask how the sausage was made; I'll just plunge right into the graphs.
[N.B.: this is the third set of plots I've made, having overhauled them twice in response to errors pointed out by the child comments. The second round of plots, which erroneously used log-log scales, are at this link and this link.]
Here's my version of the Ćirković, Sandberg & Bostrom plot.

There appears to be even less evidence of anthropic shadow than in their original graph; there's now an impact in the upper right quadrant, and if anything more mid-sized cra...
From a paper by Milan M. Ćirković, Anders Sandberg, and Nick Bostrom:
There cannot have been a large disaster on Earth in the last millennia, or we wouldn't be around to see it. There can't have been a very large disaster on Earth in the last ten thousand years, or we wouldn't be around to see it. There can't have been a huge disaster on Earth in the last million years, or we wouldn't be around to see it. There can't have been a planet-destroying disaster on Earth... ever.
Thus the fact that we exist precludes us seeing certain types of disasters in the historical record; as we get closer and closer to the present day, the magnitude of the disasters we can see goes down. These missing disasters form the "anthropic shadow", somewhat visible in the top right of this diagram:
Hence even though it looks like the risk is going down (the magnitude is diminishing as we approach the present), we can't rely on this being true: it could be a purely anthropic effect.