Gear-level models are expensive - often prohibitively expensive. Black-box approaches are usually much cheaper and faster. But black-box approaches rarely generalize - they're subject to Goodhart, need to be rebuilt when conditions change, don't identify unknown unknowns, and are hard to build on top of. Gears-level models, on the other hand, offer permanent, generalizable knowledge which can be applied to many problems in the future, even if conditions shift.
[memetic status: stating directly despite it being a clear consequence of core AI risk knowledge because many people have "but nature will survive us" antibodies to other classes of doom and misapply them here.]
Unfortunately, no.[1]
Technically, “Nature”, meaning the fundamental physical laws, will continue. However, people usually mean forests, oceans, fungi, bacteria, and generally biological life when they say “nature”, and those would not have much chance competing against a misaligned superintelligence for resources like sunlight and atoms, which are useful to both biological and artificial systems.
There’s a thought that comforts many people when they imagine humanity going extinct due to a nuclear catastrophe or runaway global warming: Once the mushroom clouds or CO2 levels have settled, nature will reclaim the cities. Maybe mankind in our hubris will have wounded Mother Earth and paid the price ourselves, but...
Additionally, the AI might think it's in an alignment simulation and just leave the humans as is or even nominally address their needs.
[Reminder: I am an internet weirdo with no medical credentials]
A few months ago, I published some crude estimates of the power of nitric oxide nasal spray to hasten recovery from illness, and speculated about what it could do prophylactically. While working on that piece a nice man on Twitter alerted me to the fact that humming produces lots of nasal nitric oxide. This post is my very crude model of what kind of anti-viral gains we could expect from humming.
I’ve encoded my model at Guesstimate. The results are pretty favorable (average estimated impact of 66% reduction in severity of illness), but extremely sensitive to my made-up numbers. Efficacy estimates go from ~0 to ~95%, depending on how you feel about publication bias, what percent of Enovid’s impact...
My prior is that solutions contain on the order of 1% active ingredients, and of things on the Enovid ingredients list, citric acid and NaNO2 are probably the reagents that create NO [1], which happens at a 5.5:1 mass ratio. 0.11ppm*hr as an integral over time already means the solution is only around 0.01% NO by mass [1], which is 0.055% reagents by mass, probably a bit more because yield is not 100%. This is a bit low but believable. If the concentration were really only 0.88ppm and dissipated quickly, it would be extremely dilute which seems unlikely. T...
The movement to reduce AI x-risk is overly purist. This is leading to a lot of sects to maintain each individual sect's platonic level of purity and is actively (greatly) harming the cause.
I think these were all legitimate responses to a perceived increase in risk, but ultimately did or will do more harm than good. Disclaimer: I am the least sure that the formation Anthropic increases p(doom) but I speculate, post AGI, it will be seen...
During AI Safety Camp (AISC) 2024, I was working with somebody on how to use binary search to approximate a hull that would contain a set of points, only to knock a glass off of my table. It splintered into a thousand pieces all over my floor.
A normal person might stop and remove all the glass splinters. I just spent 10 seconds picking up some of the largest pieces and then decided that it would be better to push on the train of thought without interruption.
Some time later, I forgot about the glass splinters and ended up stepping on one long enough to penetrate the callus. I prioritized working too much. A pretty nice problem to have, in my book.
It was...
It's a reasonable concern to have, but I've spoken enough with him to know that he's not out of touch with reality. I do think he's out of sync with social reality, however, and as a result I also think this post is badly written and the anecdotes unwisely overemphasized. His willingness to step out of social reality in order to stay grounded with what's real, however, is exactly one of the main traits that make me hopefwl about him.
I have another friend who's bipolar and has manic episodes. My ex-step-father also had rapid-cycling BP, so I know a bit abou...
Summary:
We think a lot about aligning AGI with human values. I think it’s more likely that we’ll try to make the first AGIs do something else. This might intuitively be described as trying to make instruction-following (IF) or do-what-I-mean-and-check (DWIMAC) be the central goal of the AGI we design. Adopting this goal target seems to improve the odds of success of any technical alignment approach. This goal target avoids the hard problem of specifying human values in an adequately precise and stable way, and substantially helps with goal misspecification and deception by allowing one to treat the AGI as a collaborator in keeping it aligned as it becomes smarter and takes on more complex tasks.
This is similar but distinct from the goal targets of prosaic alignment efforts....
I read your linked shortform thread. I agreed with pretty most of your arguments against some common AGI takeover arguments. I agree that they won't coordinate against us and won't have "collective grudges" against us.
But I don't think the arguments for continued stability are very thorough, either. I think we just don't know how it will play out. And I think there's a reason to be concerned that takeover will be rational for AGIs, where it's not for humans.
The central difference in logic is the capacity for self-improvement. In your post, you addressed se...
Produced as part of the MATS Winter 2023-4 program, under the mentorship of @Jessica Rumbelow
One-sentence summary: On a dataset of human-written essays, we find that gpt-3.5-turbo can accurately infer demographic information about the authors from just the essay text, and suspect it's inferring much more.
Every time we sit down in front of an LLM like GPT-4, it starts with a blank slate. It knows nothing[1] about who we are, other than what it knows about users in general. But with every word we type, we reveal more about ourselves -- our beliefs, our personality, our education level, even our gender. Just how clearly does the model see us by the end of the conversation, and why should that worry us?
Like many, we were rather startled when @janus showed...
I'm aware of the paper because of the impact it had. I might personally not have chosen to draw their attention to the issue, since the main effect seems to be making some research significantly more difficult, and I haven't heard of any attempts to deliberately exfiltrate weights that this would be preventing.
Ilya Sutskever and Jan Leike have resigned. They led OpenAI's alignment work. Superalignment will now be led by John Schulman, it seems. Jakub Pachocki replaced Sutskever as Chief Scientist.
Reasons are unclear (as usual when safety people leave OpenAI).
The NYT piece (archive) and others I've seen don't really have details.
OpenAI announced Sutskever's departure in a blogpost.
Sutskever and Leike confirmed their departures in tweets.
Updates:
Friday May 17:
Leike tweets, including:
...I have been disagreeing with OpenAI leadership about the company's core priorities for quite some time, until we finally reached a breaking point.
I believe much more of our bandwidth should be spent getting ready for the next generations of models, on security, monitoring, preparedness, safety, adversarial robustness, (super)alignment, confidentiality, societal impact, and related topics.
These problems are quite hard to get right,
Noting that while Sam describes the provision as being about “about potential equity cancellation”, the actual wording says ‘shall be cancelled’ not ‘may be cancelled’, as per this tweet from Kelsey Piper: https://x.com/KelseyTuoc/status/1791584341669396560
Instances in history in which private companies (or any individual humans) have intentionally turned down huge profits and power are the exception, not the rule.
OpenAI wasn’t a private company (ie for-profit) at the time of the OP grant though.
FSF blogpost. Full document (just 6 pages; you should read it). Compare to Anthropic's RSP, OpenAI's RSP ("Preparedness Framework"), and METR's Key Components of an RSP.
DeepMind's FSF has three steps:
I agree with 1 and think that race dynamics makes the situation considerably worse when we only have access to prosaic approaches. (Though I don't think this is the biggest issue with these approaches.)
I think I expect a period substantially longer than several months by default due to slower takeoff than this. (More like 2 years than 2 months.)
Insofar as the hope was for governments to step in at some point, I think the best and easiest point for them to step in is actually during the point where AIs are already becoming very powerful: