I'm an admin of LessWrong. Here are a few things about me.
Update from chatting with him: he said he was a just freelancer doing a year exclusively with NYT, and he wasn’t in a position to write on behalf of the NYT on the issue (e.g. around their deanonymization policies). This wasn’t satisfying to me, and so I will keep to being off-the-record.
I occasionally get texts from journalists asking to interview me about things around the aspiring rationalist scene. A few notes on my thinking and protocols for this:
Oops! Then we have taken that feature down for a bit until further testing is done (and the devs have had a little more sleep).
While we always strive to deliver the premium unfinished experience you expect from EA, it seems this bug slipped past our extensive testing. We apologize; a day-one patch is already in development.
(I expect you will see your picoLightcones in the next 30-60 mins.)
Edit: And you should have now gotten them, and any future purchases should go through ~immediately.
An idea I've been thinking about for LessOnline this year, is a blogging awards ceremony. The idea being that there's a voting procedure on the blogposts of the year, in a bunch of different categories, a shortlist is made and winners are awarded a prize.
I like opportunities for celebrating things in the online, written, truth-seeking ecosystem. I'm interested in reacts on whether people would be pro something like this happening, and comments on suggestions for how to do it well. (Epistemic status: tentatively excited about this idea.)
Here's my first idea for what the categories would be this year.
As for structure, I'm not really sure. Here's my first idea.
I've also not got a name in mind yet. It's not a generic "Blogging Awards", tons of blogposts would not naturally be included (e.g. food blogs, fashion blogs, travel blogs, etc). I think "Blogging-With-High-Epistemic-Aspirations Awards" is too long. "Rationalist Blogging Awards" is a reasonably narrow pointer but I don't want to risk intertwining too much with a narrow social group's identity when there's probably a good alternative name that also points toward the substance.
Suggestions and feedback appreciated!
Same, here's a screenshot. Perhaps Molony is using a third-party web viewer?
Seeing this, I update toward a heuristic of "all polymarket variation within 4 percentage points are noise".
I wrote this because I am increasingly noticing that the rules for "which worlds to keep in mind/optimize" are often quite different from "which worlds my spreadsheets say are the most likely worlds". And that this is in conflict with my heuristics which would've said "optimize the world-models in your head for being the most accurate ones – the ones that will give you the most accurate answers to most questions" rather than something like "optimize the world-models in your head for being the most useful ones".
(Though the true answer is some more complicated function combining both practical utility and map-territory correspondence.)
I will note that what is confusing to one person need not be confusing to another person. In my experience it is a common state of affairs for one person in a conversation to be confused and the other not (whether it be because the latter person is pre-confused, post-confused, or simply because their path to understanding a phenomena didn't pass through the state of their interlocutor).
It seems probable to me that I have found this subject more confusing than have others.