We're Ought. We're going to answer questions here on Tuesday August 9th at 10am Pacific. We may get to some questions earlier, and may continue answering a few more throughout the week.
About us:
- We're an applied AI lab, taking a product-driven approach to AI alignment.
- We're 10 people right now, roughly split between the Bay Area and the rest of the world (New York, Texas, Spain, UK).
- Our mission is to automate and scale open-ended reasoning. We are working on getting AI to be as helpful for supporting reasoning about long-term outcomes, policy, alignment research, AI deployment, etc. as it is for tasks with clear feedback signals.
- We're building the AI research assistant Elicit. Elicit's architecture is based on supervising reasoning processes, not outcomes, an implementation of factored cognition. This is better for supporting open-ended reasoning in the short run and better for alignment in the long run.
- Over the last year, we built Elicit to support broad reviews of empirical literature. We're currently expanding to deep literature reviews, then other research workflows, then general-purpose reasoning.
- We're hiring for full-stack, devops, ML, product analyst, and operations manager roles.
We're down to answer basically any question, including questions about our mission, theory of change, work so far, future plans, Elicit, relation to other orgs in the space, and what it's like to work at Ought.
Thanks for your question!
Outside of Elicit, not sure. johnwentworth implied there are new researchers interested in this space.
Nothing formal at the moment but we study a lot of independent EA researchers closely. Researchers at GiveWell and Happier Lives Institute have been particularly helpful recently. In the past, we’ve also worked closely with organizations like CSET, READI, and Effective Thesis.
Unfortunately I don’t have explicit permission to share details about them right now but will try to gesture.
We have many everyday success stories - Elicit saving people a ton of time, helping people ramp up in new domains, showing them research they didn’t find anywhere else (including on Google Scholar).
Elicit helped one researcher refine their PhD dissertation proposal questions, another respond to a last-minute peer review request, another prep an investor presentation, and another find a bunch of different parameters to determine carbon metrics for a forest restoration grant proposal.
You can see some of the success measures & testimonials linked here.