Ben Pace

I'm an admin of LessWrong. Here are a few things about me.

  • I generally feel more hopeful about a situation when I understand it better.
  • I have signed no contracts nor made any agreements whose existence I cannot mention.
  • I believe it is good take responsibility for accurately and honestly informing people of what you believe in all conversations; and also good to cultivate an active recklessness for the social consequences of doing so.
  • It is wrong to directly cause the end of the world. Even if you are fatalistic about what is going to happen.

(Longer bio.)

Sequences

AI Alignment Writing Day 2019
Transcript of Eric Weinstein / Peter Thiel Conversation
AI Alignment Writing Day 2018
Share Models, Not Beliefs

Wikitag Contributions

Comments

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Ben Pace*300

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:

  • I generally think it is pro-social to share information with serious journalists on topics of clear public interest.
  • By-default I speak with them only if their work seems relatively high-integrity. I like journalists whose writing is (a) factually accurate, (b) boring, and (c) do not feel to me to have an undercurrent of hatred for their subjects.
  • By default I speak with them off-the-record, and then offer to send them write-ups of the things I said that they want to quote. This has gone quite well. I've felt comfortable speaking in my usual fashion without worrying about nailing each and every phrasing. Then I ask what they're interested in quoting, and I send them (typically a 1-2 page) google doc on those topics (largely re-stating what I already said to them, and making some improvements / additions). Then they tell me which quotes they want to use (typically cutting many sentences or paragraphs half-way). Then I make one or two slight edits and give them explicit permission to quote. I think this has gone quite well and they've felt my quotes were substantive and improvements.
  • For the New York Times, I am currently trying out the policy of "I am happy to chat off-the-record. I will also offer quotes by my usual protocol, but I will only give them conditional on you including a mention that I disapprove of the NYT's de-anonymization policies (which I bring up due to your reckless and negligent behavior that upturned the life of a beloved member of my community)." I am about to try this for the first time, and I expect they will thus not want to use my quotes, and that's fine by me.
Reply3111

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.

Ben Pace120

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.

  1. Blog of the year
  2. Best original contribution (e.g. novel discovery, did some science, etc)
  3. Best explanation of a complex idea
  4. Biggest mistake admitted (H/T @ymekshout for suggesting this one)
  5. Best fiction
  6. Best counter-argument
  7. Best prediction
  8. Most productive dialogue
  9. Most beautiful non-fiction
  10. Best new blog

As for structure, I'm not really sure. Here's my first idea.

  • How to nominate? Anyone can nominate a blogpost for $10. Anyone with a LessOnline ticket gets a free nomination. Anything published in 2024 is eligible.
  • How is it judged? For the first year I'd probably keep it small and simple, perhaps hand-selected ~10 judges and pay them a little to each read 5 nominations in 4 different categories and vote on those.

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!

Thanks!

Zvi's post is imported, so it's stored a little differently than normal posts. Here's two copies I made stored differently (1, 2), I'd appreciate you letting me know if either of these look correct on mobile.

(Currently it looks fine on my iPhone, are you on an Android?)

Same, here's a screenshot. Perhaps Molony is using a third-party web viewer?

Ben Pace*3-5

Seeing this, I update toward a heuristic of "all polymarket variation within 4 percentage points are noise".

Ben Pace121

I tried to invite Iceman to LessOnline, but I suspect he no longer checks the old email associated with that account. If anyone knows up to date contact info, I’d appreciate you intro-ing us or just letting him know we’d love to have him join.

Ben PaceΩ451

I think my front-end productivity might be up 3x? A shoggoth helped me building a stripe shop and do a ton of UI design that I would’ve been hesitant to take on myself (without hiring someone else to work with), as well as quality increase in speed of churning through front-end designs.

(This is going from “wouldn’t take on the project due to low skill” to “can take it on and deliver it in a reasonable amount of time”, which is different from “takes top programmer and speeds them up 3x”.)

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