Daniel Kokotajlo

Was a philosophy PhD student, left to work at AI Impacts, then Center on Long-Term Risk, then OpenAI. Quit OpenAI due to losing confidence that it would behave responsibly around the time of AGI. Not sure what I'll do next yet. Views are my own & do not represent those of my current or former employer(s). I subscribe to Crocker's Rules and am especially interested to hear unsolicited constructive criticism. http://sl4.org/crocker.html

Some of my favorite memes:


(by Rob Wiblin)

Comic. Megan & Cueball show White Hat a graph of a line going up, not yet at, but heading towards, a threshold labelled "BAD". White Hat: "So things will be bad?" Megan: "Unless someone stops it." White Hat: "Will someone do that?" Megan: "We don't know, that's why we're showing you." White Hat: "Well, let me know if that happens!" Megan: "Based on this conversation, it already has."
(xkcd)

My EA Journey, depicted on the whiteboard at CLR:

(h/t Scott Alexander)


 
Alex Blechman @AlexBlechman Sci-Fi Author: In my book I invented the Torment Nexus as a cautionary tale Tech Company: At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus from classic sci-fi novel Don't Create The Torment Nexus 5:49 PM Nov 8, 2021. Twitter Web App

Sequences

Agency: What it is and why it matters
AI Timelines
Takeoff and Takeover in the Past and Future

Wiki Contributions

Comments

Sorted by

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.ads9158 Really cool to see loads of top scientists in the field coming together to say this. It's interesting to compare the situation w.r.t. mirror life to the situation w.r.t. neural-net-based superintelligence. In both cases, loads of top scientists have basically said "holy shit this could kill everyone." But in the AI case there's too much money to be made from precursor systems? And/or the benefits seem higher? Best one can do with mirror life is become an insanely rich pharma company, whereas with superintelligence you can take over the world.

Curious what Nostalgebraist's reply to those points was. Or if anyone who disagrees with Scott wants to speak up and give a reply?

I don't think I understand this yet, or maybe I don't see how it's a strong enough reason to reject my claims, e.g. my claim "If standard game theory has nothing to say about what to do in situations where you don't have access to an unpredictable randomization mechanism, so much the worse for standard game theory, I say!"

Seems like some measure of evidence -- maybe large, maybe tiny -- that "We don't know how to give AI values, just to make them imitate values" is false?

I'm not sure what view you are criticizing here, so maybe you don't disagree with me, but anyhow: I would say we don't know how to give AIs exactly the values we want them to have; instead we whack them with reinforcement from the outside and it results in values that are maybe somewhat close to what we wanted but mostly selected for producing behavior that looks good to us rather than being actually what we wanted.

I'd guess that the amount spent on image and voice is negligible for this BOTEC? 

I do think that the amount spent on inference for customers should be a big deal though. My understanding is that OpenAI has a much bigger userbase than Anthropic. Shouldn't that mean that, all else equal, Anthropic has more compute to spare for training & experiments? Such that if Anthropic has about as much compute total, they in effect have a big compute advantage?

Are you saying Anthropic actually has more compute (in the relevant sense) than OpenAI right now? That feels like a surprising claim, big if true.

But I'm really not sure that training the overall system end-to-end is going to play a role. The success and relatively faithful CoT from r1 and QwQ give me hope that end-to-end training won't be very useful.

Huh, isn't this exactly backwards? Presumably r1 and QwQ got that way due to lots of end-to-end training. They aren't LMPs/bureaucracies.

...reading onward I don't think we disagree much about what the architecture will look like though. It sounds like you agree that probably there'll be some amount of end-to-end training and the question is how much?

My curiosity stems from:
1. Generic curiosity about how minds work. It's an important and interesting topic and MR is a bias that we've observed empirically but don't have a mechanistic story for why the structure of the mind causes that bias -- at least, I don't have such a story but it seems like you do!
2. Hope that we could build significantly more rational AI agents in the near future, prior to the singularity, which could then e.g. participate in massive liquid virtual prediction markets and improve human collective epistemics greatly.

This is helping, thanks. I do buy that something like this would help reduce the biases to some significant extent probably.

Will the overall system be trained? Presumably it will be. So, won't that create a tension/pressure, whereby the explicit structure prompting it to avoid cognitive biases will be hurting performance according to the training signal? (If instead it helped performance, then shouldn't a version of it evolve naturally in the weights?)

no need to apologize, thanks for this answer!

Question: Wouldn't these imperfect bias-corrections for LMA's also work similarly well for humans? E.g. humans could have a 'prompt' written on their desk that says "Now, make sure you spend 10min thinking about evidence against as well..." There are reasons why this doesn't work so well in practice for humans (though it does help); might similar reasons apply to LMAs? What's your argument that the situation will be substantially better for LMAs?

I'm particularly interested in elaboration on this bit:

Language model agents won't have as much motivated reasoning as humans do, because they're not probably going to use the same very rough estimated-value-maximization decision-making algorithm. (this is probably good for alignment; they're not maximizing anything, at least directly. They are almost oracle-based agents).
 

Unimportant: I don't think it's off-topic, because it's secretly a way of asking you to explain your model of why confirmation bias happens more and prove that your brain-inspired model is meaningful by describing a cognitive architecture that doesn't have that bias (or explaining why such an architecture is not possible). ;)

Thanks for the links! On brief skim they don't seem to be talking much about cognitive biases. Can you spell it out here how the bureaucracy/LMP of LMA's you describe could be set up to avoid motivated reasoning?

Load More