Late last year a LessWrong team was being mooted for the Google AI challenge (http://aichallenge.org/; http://lesswrong.com/r/discussion/lw/8ay/ai_challenge_ants/). Sadly, after a brief burst of activity, no "official" LessWrong entry appeared (AFAICT, and please let me know if I am mistaken). The best individual effort from this site's regulars (AFAICT) came from lavalamp, who finished around #300.
This is a pity. This was an opportunity to achieve, or at least have a go at, a bunch of worthwhile things, including development of methods of cooperation between site members, gathering positive publicity, and yes, even advancing the understanding of AI related issues.
So - how can things be improved for the next AI challenge (which I think is about 6 months away)?
Can you give an example for Ants?
I can try. Or, at least give a sketch. (Hand-waving ahead ...)
The Ants problem -- if I'm understanding it correctly -- is a problem of coordinated action. We have a community of ants, and the community has some goals: collecting food, taking over opposing hills, defending friendly hills. Imagine you are an ant in the community. What does rational behavior look like for you?
I think that is already enough to launch us on lots of hard problems:
What does winning look like for a single ant in the Ants game? Does winning for a single ant even make sense