I have, over the last year, become fairly well-known in a small corner of the internet tangentially related to AI.
As a result, I've begun making what I would have previously considered astronomical amounts of money: several hundred thousand dollars per month in personal income.
This has been great, obviously, and the funds have alleviated a fair number of my personal burdens (mostly related to poverty). But aside from that I don't really care much for the money itself.
My long term ambitions have always been to contribute materially to the mitigation of the impending existential AI threat. I never used to have the means to do so, mostly because of more pressing, safety/sustenance concerns, but now that I do, I would like to help however possible.
Some other points about me that may be useful:
- I'm intelligent, socially capable, and exceedingly industrious.
- I have a few hundred thousand followers worldwide across a few distribution channels. My audience is primarily small-midsized business owners. A subset of these people are very high leverage (i.e their actions directly impact the beliefs, actions, or habits of tens of thousands of people).
- My current work does not take much time. I have modest resources (~$2M) and a relatively free schedule. I am also, by all means, very young.
Given the above, I feel there's a reasonable opportunity here for me to help. It would certainly be more grassroots than a well-funded safety lab or one of the many state actors that has sprung up, but probably still sizeable enough to make a fraction of a % of a difference in the way the scales tip (assuming I dedicate my life to it).
What would you do in my shoes, assuming alignment on core virtues like maximizing AI safety?
Surprisingly small amounts of money can do useful things IMO. There's lots of talk about billions of dollars flying around, but almost all of it can't structurally be spent on weird things and comes with strings attached that cause the researchers involved to spend significant fractions of their time optimizing to keep those purse strings opened. So you have more leverage here than is perhaps obvious.
My second order advice is to please be careful about getting eaten (memetically) and spend some time on cognitive security. The fact that ~all wealthy people don't do that much interesting stuff with their money implies that the attractors preventing interesting action are very very strong and you shouldn't just assume you're too smart for that. Magic tricks work by violating our intuitions about how much time a person would devote to training a very weird edge case skill or particular trick. Likewise, I think people dramatically underestimate how much their social environment will warp into one that encourages you to be sublimated into the existing wealth hierarchy (the one that seemingly doesn't do much). Specifically, it's easy to attribute substitution yourself from high impact choices to choices where the grantees make you feel high impact. But high impact people don't have the time, talent, or inclination to optimize how you feel.
Since most all of a wealthy person's impact comes mediated through the actions of others, I believe the top skill to cultivate besides cogsec is expert judgement. I'd encourage you to talk through with an LLM some of the top results from research into expert judgement. It's a tricky problem to figure out who to defer to when you are giving out money and hence everyone has an incentive to represent themselves as an expert.
I don't know the details of Talinn's grant process but as Tallinn seems to have avoided some of these problems it might be worth taking inspiration from. (SFF, S-Process mentioned elsewhere here).