Trying to make transformative AI go less badly for sentient beings, regardless of species and substrate
Interested in:
Sentience- & suffering-focused ethics; sentientism; painism; s-risks
Animal ethics & abolitionism
AI safety & governance
Activism, direct action & social change
Bio:
From London
BA in linguistics at the University of Cambridge
Almost five years in the British Army as an officer
MSc in global governance and ethics at University College London
One year working full time in environmental campaigning and animal rights activism at Plant-Based Universities / Animal Rising
Now pivoting to the (future) impact of AI on biologically and artifically sentient beings
Currently lead organiser of the AI, Animals, & Digital Minds conference in London in June 2025
I strongly agree with this article.
It reminded me of this 2012 piece, in which the author puts forward a compelling case for a paradigm shift in the animal movement – from
a) converting people to veganism
to
b) becoming a claim-making (or I think more precisely) a demand-making machine and making the abolition of animal exploitation an explicitly legal and political issue.