This is a crosspost from the new Animal Welfare Alignment Newsletter by Anima International. You can subscribe on Substack if you are interested in following these efforts. Audio reading also available on Substack.
The goals of this post are to:
1. Raise a question I see as crucially important to the goal of aligning AI to animal welfare...
I used AI to fix transcription errors, rerrarange the ideas, and suggest tweaks to the title and some sentences.
Three of the most exciting projects to come out of EA in recent years are, in a vague sense, CEA spinouts:
* Kairos is directly a spinout of CEA and now handles most support for university AI safety groups. Basically everyone I've found who knows them is really excited about what they do
* NEST is an opinionated ideas-fi...
Hello! I'm Justin Portela. I got hired by GWWC to make YouTube videos after AI in Context did such a kickass job.
My channel is using that same cinematic, high-production value beauty to talk about everything in the EA universe that isn't AI.
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Wrt the first post. This is the largest update I have had on openphil's chances of successfully funding something transformative. I had previously experienced several large updates in the negative direction. Based on those, my prediction was that the list of grants in this new program would be highly disappointing. Instead, all of them actually seem to be in the correct genre. Things that the outside view say sometimes lead to major breakthroughs. This is in contrast to almost all funding to date which I thought fell within the category of interventions or speed ups in development that might improve things but definitely not lead to breakthroughs. My current model says this sort of thing is taste limited, in the same sense that Paul Graham attributes much of the success of yc to Jessica Livingston's taste in founders. In this case I am claiming that the given grants 'taste right' because they are at least aiming at new methods, which is the genre of improvement most heavily overrepresented in top cited research over the last century. I would have a second significant update in the positive direction if this is part of a bigger strategy of exploring a broader range of search strategies, like piggybacking the NIH was.
Edit: double whammy. Added benefit that this sort of thing is noteworthy, raising awareness for these sorts of strategies: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-017-08795-0
also made the front page of HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16016945