I feel like the survey should mention how many questions there are, and perhaps how much time you expect people take for each section
70 questions is really the upper end of what you want to ask
With a LW audience in mind? That's a bit lower than I would assume.
One habit I worked hard to instill in my own head was that if I’m in a crowd that’s asked to do something, I silently count off three seconds. If nobody else responds, I either decide to do it or decide not to do it and I say that.
The "decide not to do it and I say that" is new to me and I like it. What I am currently sometimes doing is estimate how much I want to do the thing and throw a dice (via an RNG app).
I think the correct way to do forms is to always tell me how many questions the form have and the expected time needed by actually trying to fill the form 1 or more times. If you let me know this upfront I care less how many pages you do, but ideally you split pages only when you have conditional questions. Exceptions exist though, e.g. a team competition signup form where you fill in information about multiple people in the same form probably should have 1 page per person. However if you arent doing conditional questions I should always always be able to go to the next page without the dumb fuck validations stopping me.
Yeah, and perhaps a couple examples of bare minimum / average / high quality review in the main post
Based on vibes, I found it more probable that the function from Hard to oversee -> Easy to oversee is not 1-to-1 and thus reversible. It feels more like a projection function, so when you get simple alignment and try to unproject it you still just get a really high dimension space where advanced alignment is a negligible region.
Which GPT? The paper mentioned that GPT-5{,-mini,-nano} has only ~5% success rate. I tried it with o3 and got 2/3.
Collapsed to reduce screen estate
FYI I have been giving a number via normal distribution with mean = karma, sigma = some % of karma.
Why is the top question a multiple choice, but the bottom question a singular choice lol
I think the only sensible interpretation is "what is the maximum number of human lives you would trade for a sportscar?", but this is quite far from the literal meaning of the question.
What is the thing I am supposed to answer? The number of ways I came up with, or write down all of them?