Some links on modal logic for FDT-style decision theory and coordination:
once you achieve pareto optimality, there is a tradeoff between kindness and correctness
It's hard to stay on a pareto frontier, optimizing for more (or less) "kindness" directly is a goodharting hazard. If you ask for something, you might just get poisoned with more of the fake version of it.
I'd prefer less of the sort of "kindness" that trades off with correctness, rather than more of it (even when getting less of it wouldn't actually help with correctness; it just doesn't seem like a good thing). But if I ask for that, I'll end up getting some (subtle) sneering and trolling, or unproductive high-standards elitism that on general principle wants to destroy ideas that didn't get a chance to grow up yet. Similarly, if you ask for the sort of "kindness" that does trade off with correctness, you'll end up getting some sycophancy (essentially) that cultivates your errors, making them stronger and more entrenched in your identity, ever more painful and less feasible to eventually defeat (even if there are benign forms of this sort of "kindness" that merely don't make the problem worse in a comfortable way, as opposed to trying to intervene on it).
having an identity is an important part of how nearly everyone navigates this complex and confusing world
Legible ideas (that are practical to meaningfully argue about) cover a lot of ground, they are not as hazardous as part of identity. And less well-defined but useful/promising/interesting understandings don't need to become part of identity to be taken seriously and developed. That's the failure mode at the other extreme, when anything insufficiently scientific/empirical/legible/etc. gets thrown out with the bathwater.
rather than immediately coming in with a wrecking ball and demolishing emotionally load bearing pillars
Probably when something is easy to defeat (admits argument, legible), it's not that painful to let it go. The pain is the nebulous attachment fighting for influence, that it won't be fully defeated even when you end up consciously endorsing a change of mind. Thus ideologies are somewhat infeasible to change, they'll keep their hold even long after the host disavows them. A habit of keeping such things at a distance benefits from other people not feeding their structurally hazardous placement (as emotionally load bearing pillars) with positivity. But that's distinct from viewing positively the development of even such hazardous things, handling them with appropriate caution.
it can be deeply emotionally painful to part ways with deeply held beliefs
This is not necessarily the case, not for everyone. Theories and their credences don't need to be cherished to be developed, or acted upon, they only need to be taken seriously. Plausibly this can be mitigated by keeping identity small, accepting only more legible things in the role of "beliefs" that can have this sort of psychological effect (so that they can be defeated through argument alone). Legible ideas cover a surprising amount of territory, there is no pragmatic need to treat anything else as "beliefs" in this sense, all the other things can remain ambient epistemic content detached from who you are. When more nebulous worldviews become part of one's identity, they become nearly impossible to dislodge (and possibly painful, with enough context and effort). They are still worth developing towards eventual legibility, and not practical to argue with (or properly explain).
Thus arguing legible beliefs should by their nature be less intrusive than arguing nebulous worldviews. And perhaps nebulous worldviews should be argued against being held as "beliefs" in the emotional sense in general, regardless of their apparent correctness, as a matter of epistemic hygiene. Ensuring by habit you are not going to be in the position where you have "beliefs" that would be painful to part ways with, and also can't be pinned down clearly enough to dispel.
I get a sense "RSI" will start being used to mean continual learning or even just memory features in 2026, similarly to how there are currently attempts to dilute "ASI" to mean merely robust above-human-level competence. Thus recursively self-improving personal superintelligence becomes a normal technology through the power of framing. Communication can fail until the trees start boiling the oceans, when it becomes a matter of framing and ideology rather than isolated terminological disputes. That nothing ever changes is a well-established worldview, and it's learning to talk about AI.
The end states of AI danger need terms to describe them. RSI proper is qualitative self-improvement, at least software-only singularity rather than merely learning from the current situation, automated training of new skills, keeping track of grocery preferences. And ASI proper is being qualitatively more capable than humanity, rather than a somewhat stronger cognitive peer with AI advantages, technology that takes everyone's jobs.
The crux is AIs capable at around human level, aligned in the way humans are aligned. If prosaic alignment only works for insufficiently capable AIs (not capable of RSI or scalable oversight), and breaks down for sufficiently capable AIs, then prosaic alignment doesn't help (with navigating RSI or scalable oversight). As AIs get more capable and still can get aligned with contemporary methods, the hypothesis that this won't work weakens. Maybe it does work.
There are many problems even with prosaically aligned human level AIs, plausibly lethal enough on their own, but that is a distinction that importantly changes what kinds of further plans have a chance to do anything. So the observations worth updating on are not just that prosaic alignment keeps working, but that it keeps working for increasingly capable AIs, closer to being relevant for helping humanity do its alignment homework.
Plausibly AIs are insufficiently capable yet to give any evidence on this, and it'll remain too early to tell all the way until it's too late to make any use of the update. Maybe Anthropic's RSP could be thought of as sketching a policy for responding to such observations, when AIs become capable enough for meaningful updates on feasibility of scalable oversight to become accessible, hitting the brakes safely and responsibly a few centimeters from the edge of a cliff.
There are many missing cognitive faculties, whose absence can plausibly be compensated with scale and other AI advantages. We haven't yet run out of scale, though in 2030s we will (absent AGI, trillions of dollars in revenue).
The currently visible crucial things that are missing are sample efficiency (research taste) and continual learning, with many almost-ready techniques to help with the latter. Sholto Douglas of Anthropic claimed a few days ago that probably continual learning gets solved in a satisfying way in 2026 (at 38:29 in the podcast). Dario Amodei previously discussed how even in-context learning might confer the benefits of continual learning with further scaling and sufficiently long contexts (at 13:17 in the podcast). Dwarkesh Patel says there are rumors Sutskever's SSI is working on test time training (at 39:25 in the podcast). Thinking Machines published work on better LoRA, which in some form seems crucial to making continual learning via weight updates practical for individual model instances. This indirectly suggests OpenAI would also have a current major project around continual learning.
The recent success of RLVR suggests that any given sufficiently narrow mode of activity (such as doing well on a given kind of benchmarks) can now be automated. This plausibly applies to RLVR itself, which might be used by AIs to "manually" add new skills to themselves, after RLVR was used to teach AIs to apply RLVR to themselves, in the schleppy way that AI researchers currently do to get them better at benchmarkable activities. AI instances doing this automatically for the situation (goal, source of tasks, job) where they find themselves covers a lot of what continual learning is supposed to do. Sholto Douglas again (at 1:00:54 in a recent podcast):
So far the evidence indicates that our current methods haven't yet found a problem domain that isn't tractable with sufficient effort.
So it's not completely clear that there are any non-obvious obstacles still remaining. Missing research taste might get paved over with sufficient scale of effort, once continual learning ensures there is some sustained progress at all when AIs are let loose to self-improve. To know that some obstacles are real, the field first needs to run out of scaling and have a few years to apply RLVR (develop RL environments) to automate all the obvious things that might help AIs "manually" compensate for the missing faculties.
Some observations (not particularly constructive):
I'm responding to the claim that training scaling laws "have ended", even as the question of "the bubble" might be relevant context. The claim isn't very specific, and useful ways of making it specific seem to make it false, either in itself or in the implication that the observations so far have something to say in support of the claim.
The scaling laws don't depend on how much compute we'll be throwing at training or when, they predict how perplexity depends on the amount of compute. For scaling laws in this sense to become false, we'd need to show that perplexity starts depending on compute in some different way (with more compute). Not having enough compute doesn't disprove that the scaling laws are OK. Even not having enough data doesn't disprove this.
For practical purposes, scaling laws could be said to fail once they can no longer be exploited for making models better. As I outlined, there's going to be significantly more compute soon (this is still the case with "a bubble", which might have the power to get compute as much as 3x lower than the more optimistic 200x-400x projection for models by 2031, compared to the currently deployed models). The text data is plausibly in some trouble even for training with 2026 compute, and likely in a lot of trouble for training with 2028-2030 compute. But this hasn't happened yet, so the claim of scaling laws "having ended", past tense, would still be false in this sense. Instead, there would be a prediction that the scaling laws would in some practical sense end in a few years, before compute stops scaling even at pre-AGI funding levels. But also, the data efficiency I'm using for predicting that text data will be insufficient (even with repetition) is a product of the public pre-LLM-secrecy research that almost always took unlimited data for granted, so it's possible that spending a few years explicitly searching for ways to overcome data scarcity will let AI companies find a way to sidestep this issue, at least until 2030. Thus I wouldn't even predict that text data will run out by 2030 with a high degree of certainty, it's merely my baseline expectation.
It's still premised on the idea that more training/inference/ressources will result in qualitative improvements.
I said nothing about qualitative improvements. Sufficiently good inference hardware makes it cheap to make models a lot bigger, so if there is some visible benefit at all, this will be happening at the pace of the buildouts of better inference hardware. But also conversely, if there's not enough inference hardware, you physically can't serve something as a frontier model (for a large user base) even if that offers qualitative improvements, unless you restrict demand (with very high prices or rate limits).
So your scenario is possible; I had similar expectations a few years ago. But I'm seeing more and more evidence against it, so I'm giving it a lower probability (maybe 20%).
This is not very specific, similarly to the claim about training scaling laws "having ended". Even with "a bubble" (that bursts before 2031), some AI companies (like Google) might survive in an OK shape. These companies will also have their pick of the wreckage of the other AI companies, including both researchers and the almost-ready datacenter sites, which they can use to make their own efforts stronger. The range of scenarios I outlined only needs 2-4 GW of training compute by 2030 for at least one AI company (in addition to 2-4 GW of inference compute), which revenues of $40-80bn should be sufficient to cover (especially as the quality of inference hardware stops being a bottleneck, so that even older hardware will again become useful for serving current frontier models). Google has been spending this kind of money on datacenter capex as a matter of course for many years now.
OpenAI is projecting about $20bn of revenue in their current state, when the 800M+ free users are not being monetized (which is likely to change). These numbers can plausibly grow to at least give $50bn per year to the leading model company by 2030 (even if it's not OpenAI), this seems like a very conservative estimate. It doesn't depend on qualitative improvement in LLMs or promises for more than a trillion dollars in datacenter capex. Also, the capex numbers might even scale down gracefully if $50bn per year from one company by 2030 turns out to be all that's actually available.
Consider cults (including milder things like weird "alternative" health advice groups etc.). Positivity and mutual support seem like a key element of their architecture, and adversity often primarily comes from peers rather than an outgroup. I'm not talking about isolated beliefs, content and motivations for those tend to be far more legible. A lot of belief memeplexes have either too few followers or aren't distinct enough from all the other nonsense to be explicitly labeled as cults or ideologies, or to be organized, but you generally can't argue their members out of alignment with the group (on relevant beliefs, considered altogether).
This is also a standard piece of anti-epistemic machinery of groups that reinforce some nonsense memplex among themselves with support and positivity. Support and positivity are great, but directing them to systematically taboo correctness-fixing activity is what I'm gesturing at, the sort of "kindness" that by its intent and nature tends to trade off against correctness.