this is pretty normal? it's really hard for leadership to make employees care about or believe specific things. do you really think the average Amazon employee or whatever has strong opinions on the future of delivery drones? does the average Waymo employee have extremely strong beliefs about the future of self driving?
for most people in the world, their job is just a job. people obviously avoid working on things they believe are completely doomed, and tend to work on cool trendy things. but generally most people do not really have strong beliefs about where the stuff they're working on is going.
no specific taboo is required to ensure that people don't really iron out deep philosophical disagreements with their coworkers. people care about all sorts of other things in life. they care about money, they care whether they're enjoying the work, they care whether their coworkers are pleasant to be around, they care about their wife and kids and house.
once you have a company with more than 10 people, it requires constant effort to maintain culture. hiring is way harder if you can only hire people who are aligned, or if you insist on aligning people. if you grow very fast (and openai has grown very fast - it's approximately doubled every single year I've been here), it's inevitable that your culture will splinter. forget about having everyone on the same page; you're going to have entire little googletowns and amazontowns and so on of people who bring Google or Amazon culture with them and agglomerate with other recent transplants from those companies.
a lot of people say "I think" reflexively because they're used to making themselves small. it wouldn't be surprising to me if such people said "I think" more often than most even in situations where the caveat is unnecessary.
as far as I'm aware, the only person who can be argued to have ever been fired for acting on beliefs about x risk is leopold, and the circumstances there are pretty complicated. since I don't think he's the only person to have ever acted on xrisk at oai to the extent he did, I don't think this is just because other people don't do anything about xrisk.
most cases of xrisk people leaving are just because people felt sidelined/unhappy and chose to leave. which is ofc also bad, but quite different.
my guess:
that's the easy part of relentlessness. LMs already often get stuck in loops of trying increasingly hopeless things while getting utterly stuck.
sci-fi story setting idea: a future where VR becomes so widespread that where you live physically in the US becomes more of a formality than of actual consequence, so mass internal migrations a la Free State Project occur as people rush to move to low population states to get more political influence in a federal political system that is increasingly impossible to reform
i recently ran into to a vegan advocate tabling in a public space, and spoke briefly to them for the explicit purpose of better understanding what it feels like to be the target of advocacy on something i feel moderately sympathetic towards but not fully bought in on. (i find this kind of thing very valuable for noticing flaws in myself and improving; it's much harder to be perceptive of one's own actions otherwise). the part where i am genuinely quite plausibly persuadable of his position in theory is important; i think if i had talked to e.g flat earthers one might say my reaction is just because i'd already decided not to be persuaded. several interesting things i noticed (none of which should be surprising or novel, especially for someone less autistic than me, but as they say, intellectually knowing things is not the same as actual experience):
one possible take is that i'm just really weird and these modes of interaction work well for normal people more because they're less independently thinking or need to be argued out of having poorly thought out bad takes or something like that, idk. i can't rule this out but my guess is normal people probably are even more this than i am. also, for the purposes of analogy to the AI safety movement, presumably we want to select for people who are independent thinkers who have especially well thought out takes more than just normal people.
also my guess is this particular interaction was probably extremely out of distribution from the perspective of those tabling. my guess is activists generally have a pretty polished pitch for most common situations which includes a bunch of concrete ways of talking they've empirically found to cause people to engage, learned through years of RL against a general audience, but the polishedness of this pitch doesn't generalize out of distribution when poked at in weird ways. my interlocutor even noted at some point that his conversations when tabling generally don't go the way ours went.
yeah, but there would be a lot of worlds where the merger was totally fine and beneficial where it fell through because people had unfounded fears
i mean, in general, it's a lot easier to tell plausible-seeming stories of things going really poorly than actually high-likelihood stories of things going poorly. so the anecdata of it actually happening is worth a lot
i think analogies to relatively well known intuitive everyday things, or historical events, are a good way to automatically establish some baseline level of plausibility, and also to reduce the chances of accidentally telling completely implausible stories. the core reason is basically that without tethering to objective things that actually happened in reality, it's really easy to tell crazy stories about a wide range of possible conclusions.
for hacking, we can look at stuxnet as an example of how creative and powerful a cyberattack can be, or the 2024 crowdstrike failures as an example of how lots of computers can fail at the same time. for manipulation/deception, we can look at increasing political polarization in america due to social media, or politicians winning based on charisma and then betraying them once in office, or (for atheists) major world religions, or (for anyone mindkilled by politics) adherents of their dispreferred political party. most people might not have experienced humiliating defeat in chess, or experienced being an anthill on an active construction site, but perhaps they have personally experienced being politically outmaneuvered by a competitor at work, or being crushed beneath the heel of a soulless bureaucracy which, despite being composed of ensouled humans, would rather ruin people's lives than be inconvenienced with dealing with exceptions.