We've written a paper on online imitation learning, and our construction allows us to bound the extent to which mesa-optimizers could accomplish anything. This is not to say it will definitely be easy to eliminate mesa-optimizers in practice, but investigations into how to do so could look here as a starting point. The way to avoid outputting predictions that may have been corrupted by a mesa-optimizer is to ask for help when plausible stochastic models disagree about probabilities.
Here is the abstract:
In imitation learning, imitators and demonstrators are policies for picking actions given past interactions with the environment. If we run an imitator, we probably want events to unfold similarly to the way they would have if the demonstrator had been acting the whole time. No existing work provides formal guidance in how this might be accomplished, instead restricting focus to environments that restart, making learning unusually easy, and conveniently limiting the significance of any mistake. We address a fully general setting, in which the (stochastic) environment and demonstrator never reset, not even for training purposes. Our new conservative Bayesian imitation learner underestimates the probabilities of each available action, and queries for more data with the remaining probability. Our main result: if an event would have been unlikely had the demonstrator acted the whole time, that event's likelihood can be bounded above when running the (initially totally ignorant) imitator instead. Meanwhile, queries to the demonstrator rapidly diminish in frequency.
The second-last sentence refers to the bound on what a mesa-optimizer could accomplish. We assume a realizable setting (positive prior weight on the true demonstrator-model). There are none of the usual embedding problems here—the imitator can just be bigger than the demonstrator that it's modeling.
(As a side note, even if the imitator had to model the whole world, it wouldn't be a big problem theoretically. If the walls of the computer don't in fact break during the operation of the agent, then "the actual world" and "the actual world outside the computer conditioned on the walls of the computer not breaking" both have equal claim to being "the true world-model", in the formal sense that is relevant to a Bayesian agent. And the latter formulation doesn't require the agent to fit inside world that it's modeling).
Almost no mathematical background is required to follow [Edit: most of ] the proofs. [Edit: But there is a bit of jargon. "Measure" means "probability distribution", and "semimeasure" is a probability distribution that sums to less than one.] We feel our bounds could be made much tighter, and we'd love help investigating that.
These slides (pdf here) are fairly self-contained and a quicker read than the paper itself.






Below, and refer to the probability of the event supposing the demonstrator or imitator were acting the entire time. The limit below refers to successively more unlikely events ; it's not a limit over time. Imagine a sequence of events such that .



Okay, sure.
It's not clear to me that there isn't meaningful overhead involved.
I agree with what you're saying but I don't see how it contradicts what I was. First, what I had in mind when saying that some timesteps are better for treachery because when the agent acts on a false prediction it has a greater effect on the world, though of course P(discovery) is also relevant. But my point is that when multiple treacherous models pick the same timestep to err, there may be pros and cons to doing this, but one thing that isn't on the cons list, is that in the long run, it makes our lives easier if they do. Making our lives difficult is a public good for treacherous models.
So treacherous models won't be trying to avoid collisions in order to make queries be linear in p(treachery)/p(truth). If P(discovery) increases when multiple models are trying to be treacherous at the same time--which we could go onto discuss; it's not obvious to me either way as of yet--that will balanced against the inherit variation in some timesteps being a better for treachery than others.