I think this is imprecise. In my mind there are two categories:
People who think EA is a distraction from near term issues and competing for funding and attention (e.g. Seth Lazar as seen by his complaints about the UK taskforce and trying to tag Dustin Moskovitz and Ian Hogarth in his thinkpieces). These more classical ethicists are just from what I can see analytical philosophers looking for funding and clout competition with EA. They’ve lost a lot of social capital because they repeated a lot of old canards about AI and just repeats them. My model for them is something akin to they can’t do fizzbuzz or know what a transformer is, thus they’ll just say sentences about how AI can’t do things and there’s a lot of hype and power centralisation. These are more likely to be white men from the UK, Canada, Australia, and NZ. Status games are especially important to them and they seem to just not have a great understanding of the field of alignment at all. A good example I show people is this tweet which tries to say RLHF solves alignment and “Paul [Christiano] is an actual researcher I respect, the AI alignment people that bother me are more the longtermists.”
People in the other camp are more likely to think EA is problematic and power hungry and covers for big tech. People in this camp would be your Dr. Gebru, DAIR etc. I think these individuals are often much more technically proficient than the people in the first camp and their view of EA is more akin to seeing EA as a cult that seeks to indoctrinate within a bundle of longtermist beliefs and carry water for AI labs. I will say the strategic collaborations are more fruitful here because there is more technical proficiency and personally I believe the latter group have better epistemics and are more truth-seeking even if much more acerbic in their rhetoric. The higher level of technical proficiency means they can contribute to the UK Task force on things like cybersecurity and evals.
I think measuring along only the axis of tractability of gaining allies is the wrong question but the real question is what are the fruits of collaboration.
FAccT attendees are mostly a distinct group of researchers from the AI ethics researchers who come from or are actively assisting marginalised communities (and not with eg. fairness and bias abstractions).
Hmm I’m not quite sure I agree that there’s such a clear division of two camps. For example, I think Seth is actually not that far off from Timnit’s perspective on AI Safety/EA. Perhaps and bit less extreme and hostile, but I see that more of a degree in difference rather than a degree in kind.
I also disagree that people in your second camp are going to be useful for fruitful for collaboration, as they don’t just have technical objections but I think core philosophical objections to EA (or what they view as EA).
I guess overall I’m not sure. It’d be interesting to see some mapping of AI-researchers in some kind of belief-space plot so different groups could be distinguished. I think it’s very easy to extrapolate from a few small examples and miss what’s actually going—which I admit I might very well be doing with my pessimism here, but I sadly think it’s telling that I see so few counterexamples of collaboration but I can easily find examples of AI researchers dismissive or hostile to the AI Safety/xRisk perspective.
I don’t think you have to agree on deep philosophical stuff to collaborate on specific projects. I do think it’ll be hard to collaborate if one/both sides are frequently publicly claiming the other is malign and sinister or idiotic and incompetent or incredibly ideogically rigid and driven by emotion not reason (etc.)
I think this is imprecise. In my mind there are two categories:
People who think EA is a distraction from near term issues and competing for funding and attention (e.g. Seth Lazar as seen by his complaints about the UK taskforce and trying to tag Dustin Moskovitz and Ian Hogarth in his thinkpieces). These more classical ethicists are just from what I can see analytical philosophers looking for funding and clout competition with EA. They’ve lost a lot of social capital because they repeated a lot of old canards about AI and just repeats them. My model for them is something akin to they can’t do fizzbuzz or know what a transformer is, thus they’ll just say sentences about how AI can’t do things and there’s a lot of hype and power centralisation. These are more likely to be white men from the UK, Canada, Australia, and NZ. Status games are especially important to them and they seem to just not have a great understanding of the field of alignment at all. A good example I show people is this tweet which tries to say RLHF solves alignment and “Paul [Christiano] is an actual researcher I respect, the AI alignment people that bother me are more the longtermists.”
People in the other camp are more likely to think EA is problematic and power hungry and covers for big tech. People in this camp would be your Dr. Gebru, DAIR etc. I think these individuals are often much more technically proficient than the people in the first camp and their view of EA is more akin to seeing EA as a cult that seeks to indoctrinate within a bundle of longtermist beliefs and carry water for AI labs. I will say the strategic collaborations are more fruitful here because there is more technical proficiency and personally I believe the latter group have better epistemics and are more truth-seeking even if much more acerbic in their rhetoric. The higher level of technical proficiency means they can contribute to the UK Task force on things like cybersecurity and evals.
I think measuring along only the axis of tractability of gaining allies is the wrong question but the real question is what are the fruits of collaboration.
I don’t know why people overindex on loud grumpy twitter people. I haven’t seen evidence that most FAccT attendees are hostile and unsophisticated.
FAccT attendees are mostly a distinct group of researchers from the AI ethics researchers who come from or are actively assisting marginalised communities (and not with eg. fairness and bias abstractions).
Hmm I’m not quite sure I agree that there’s such a clear division of two camps. For example, I think Seth is actually not that far off from Timnit’s perspective on AI Safety/EA. Perhaps and bit less extreme and hostile, but I see that more of a degree in difference rather than a degree in kind.
I also disagree that people in your second camp are going to be useful for fruitful for collaboration, as they don’t just have technical objections but I think core philosophical objections to EA (or what they view as EA).
I guess overall I’m not sure. It’d be interesting to see some mapping of AI-researchers in some kind of belief-space plot so different groups could be distinguished. I think it’s very easy to extrapolate from a few small examples and miss what’s actually going—which I admit I might very well be doing with my pessimism here, but I sadly think it’s telling that I see so few counterexamples of collaboration but I can easily find examples of AI researchers dismissive or hostile to the AI Safety/xRisk perspective.
I don’t think you have to agree on deep philosophical stuff to collaborate on specific projects. I do think it’ll be hard to collaborate if one/both sides are frequently publicly claiming the other is malign and sinister or idiotic and incompetent or incredibly ideogically rigid and driven by emotion not reason (etc.)