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  • Reframing AI Safety as a Neverending Institutional Challenge
    Crossposed from https://stephencasper.com/reframing-ai-safety-as-a-neverending-institutional-challenge/. Stephen Casper. . “They are wrong who think that politics is like an ocean voyage or a military campaign, something to be done with some particular end in view, something which leaves off as soon as that end is reached. It is not a public chore, to be got over with.
  • Manifest 2025 Announcement
    Buy tickets now! June 6th - 8th
  • [Replication] Crosscoder-based Stage-Wise Model Diffing
    Introduction. Anthropic recently released Stage-Wise Model Diffing, which presents a novel way of tracking how transformer features change during fine-tuning. We've replicated this work on a TinyStories-33M language model to study feature changes in a more accessible research context.
  • Good Research Takes are Not Sufficient for Good Strategic Takes
    TL;DR Having a good research track record is some evidence of good big-picture takes, but it's weak evidence. Strategic thinking is hard, and requires different skills. But people often conflate these skills, leading to excessive deference to researchers in the field, without evidence that that person is good at strategic thinking specifically.
  • 100+ concrete projects and open problems in evals
    We made a long list of concrete projects and open problems in evals with 100+ suggestions!. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1gi32-HZozxVimNg5Mhvk4CvW4zq8J12rGmK_j2zxNEg/edit?usp=sharing. We hope that makes it easier for people to get started in the field and to coordinate on projects.
  • Talking With The Smartest High School Student About Christianity
    Here's his blog https://substack.com/@truthandtradition Here is mine https://benthams.substack.com/
  • Charlie Kirk's Bad Arguments
    Clear proof that Charlie Kirk makes lots of terrible arguments
  • Weekend Links #8: Canadian and Indian AI, pool on the moon
    Also better dinner parties and the seven habits of highly depolarizing people
  • What Do I Want?
    It is relatively easy to identify a list of things that we want, in the sense of preferring a life with more of them to less of them.
  • Debunking Skepticism
    Here, I debunk the debunkers — the moral skeptics. *...
  • Why AGI could be here by 2028, and what to do about it: a primer
    I’m writing a new guide to careers to help AGI go well, in collaboration with 80,000 Hours.
  • Moral Intuitions Track Virtue Signals
    From Trolleys to Drowning Children
  • Good Research Takes are Not Sufficient for Good Strategic Takes
    Discuss...
  • Zero-sum politics is destroying America. We can build a way out.
    If you’re anything like me — a policy dork who spends too much time on X — you’ve been unable to escape discussion of a new book called Abundance. Written by the Atlantic’s Derek Thompson and the New York Times’s Ezra Klein (also a co-founder of Vox), Abundance is one of those policy books with […]...
  • Post 50: Good Research Takes are Not Sufficient for Good Strategic Takes
    Having a good research track record is some evidence of good big-picture takes about AGI, but it's weak evidence. Strategic thinking is hard, and requires different skills. But people often conflate these skills, leading to excessive deference to researchers in the field, without evidence that that person is good at strategic thinking specifically.
  • The Humane League is hiring a Donor Relations Specialist
    As Donor Relations Specialist, you will work closely with the Sr. Associate Director, Donor Relations to plan and execute the stewardship of THL’s donors who give up to $500 annually, including those who are part of our monthly giving program, The Heart Beat. Your role is to nurture these donors and ensure their experiences with THL are nothing short of exceptional.
  • Above the Fold, Cards of Gold
    What markets think will happen to the "Gold Card" pathway to citizenship, the Department of Education, and the rule of law in the US
  • Most AI value will come from broad automation, not from R&D
    AI's biggest impact will come from broad labor automation—not R&D—driving economic growth through scale, not scientific breakthroughs.
  • Apply to MATS 8.0!
    Discuss...
  • “Actually local groups” - an easy way to meet fellow EAs from your neighborhood
    TLDR: Consider indicating your approximate location on the EA forum community members map, so local organizers can find you, and maybe take initiative yourself to organize lunch meetups, walks, coworking, anything else you want, all within 10min of where you live or work... .
  • Are we close to an intelligence explosion?
    AIs are inching ever-closer to a critical threshold. Beyond this threshold lie great risks—but crossing it is not inevitable.
  • California’s surprisingly good AI policy report
    Transformer Weekly: California report on frontier AI risks, a new AI benchmark, and more Action Plan comments
  • In defense of quantifying suffering
    Author's note: Hi everyone! This is a cross-post from my blog. It's a short, accessible piece intended for those who find the idea of measuring suffering "icky," uncomfortable, or cold. I've noticed this as a fairly common reaction to effective altruism, and I wanted to write from a place of sincerely empathising with it.
  • Towards a scale-free theory of intelligent agency
    I recently left OpenAI to pursue independent research. I’m working on a number of different research directions, but the most fundamental is my pursuit of a scale-free theory of intelligent agency. In this post I give a rough sketch of how I’m thinking about that. I’m erring on the side of sharing half-formed ideas, so there may well be parts that don’t make sense yet.
  • Writing about non-AI topics feels weird
    I'm not writing about what's most important. The post Writing about non-AI topics feels weird appeared first on Otherwise.
  • Against Lyman Stone On Animal Welfare
    Demographer Lyman Stone writes:
  • Ag-Gag Politics: How Governments Justify Secrecy In Agriculture
    How do governments defend controversial laws that limit public oversight of factory farms? This study explores the rise of ag-gag laws in Canada. The post Ag-Gag Politics: How Governments Justify Secrecy In Agriculture appeared first on Faunalytics.
  • FAST Victory: Breza announces its cage-free commitment by the end of 2025
    Hello everyone!. We are pleased to announce our first commitment from a manufacturing company. Breza, a manufacturer of cookies and panettones, has committed to transitioning to 100% cage-free eggs by the end of 2025. Commitment link: You can see the publication of the commitment in this LINK. Scale: National (Perú).
  • “A Very Complicated Entity”: Lesson from the DOGE-United States Institute of Peace Showdown
    Editors’ Note: Ellen Aprill explains why the hybrid nature of the United States Institute of Peace (USIP), both a government and nonprofit entity, was at the heart of the standoff between Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and USIP officials earlier this week. The United States Institute of Peace (USIP) is the latest target of President … Continue reading →...
  • Cate Hall | What Philanthropy Can do That Others Can’t
    Cate Hall is the CEO of Astera. She’s a former Supreme Court attorney and the ex-No. 1 female poker player in the world. Before joining Astera, she co-founded and served as COO and later co-CEO of Alvea, a pandemic medicine company that set the record for the fastest startup to take a drug candidate to Phase I clinical trial.
  • Special: Defeating AI Defenses (with Nicholas Carlini and Nathan Labenz)
    In this special episode, we feature Nathan Labenz interviewing Nicholas Carlini on the Cognitive Revolution podcast. Nicholas Carlini works as a security researcher at Google DeepMind, and has published extensively on adversarial machine learning and cybersecurity.
  • The Heavy Tail of Valence: New Strategies to Quantify and Reduce Extreme Suffering
    Dr. Alfredo Parra discusses why it's so important to address extreme suffering, highlighting cluster headaches as a vivid example of severe pain that's often overlooked by common global health metrics. Alfredo explains the shortcomings of tools like DALYs in representing the true severity of intense yet less prevalent pain conditions.
  • Bridging Worldviews: Tantric Retreat Centre Goes Earning to Give
    Some rich people have worldviews that are uncommon within Effective Altruism. These people might be on board with doing good, but less aligned with the pragmatic, calculated approach common in Effective Altruist circles. Last year, I joined a group of “strange stakeholders” investing in a co-created tantric retreat centre.
  • America — and the media — needs a Covid reckoning
    In the first few months of the Covid-19 pandemic, the media did not exactly cover itself in glory. To quote myself from an early February 2020 piece, when the virus had already been spreading for more than a month in China and the US already had confirmed cases:  In the last week or so, new […]...
  • Global Disability Summit 2025: Sightsavers calls for stronger commitment to inclusion
    Sightsavers will host two events and two exhibition spaces at the event in Berlin on 2-3 April, calling on attendees to join us in targeting inequality.
  • Why AGI could be here by 2028
    The post Why AGI could be here by 2028 appeared first on 80,000 Hours.
  • Response to the Zero Draft of the Independent International Scientific Panel on AI and the Global Dialogue on AI Governance
    The co-facilitators from Spain and Costa Rica have published the Zero Draft for the modalities of the Independent International Scientific…
  • Compassion in World Farming Polska is Hiring: Media and Campaigns Specialist
    Compassion in World Farming Polska is part of CIWF, an international organisation advocating for better conditions for farm animals, promoting plant-based diets, and pushing for more sustainable agriculture. Their campaigns have led to real changes for animals, and they are passionate about fighting injustice against them. Learn more and apply here. Media and Campaigns Specialist.
  • 15 Books That Should be Written this Year
    One of the skills I think is most valuable and I simultaneously do not have is the ability to write well.
  • When do experts expect AGI to arrive?
    The post When do experts expect AGI to arrive? appeared first on 80,000 Hours.
  • More Drowning Children
  • Sam Altman interview 🤖, Siri's new boss 📱, LLM code migrations 👨‍💻
  • GATE: Modeling the Trajectory of AI and Automation
  • Five insights from farm animal economics
    How the dismal science can help us end the dismal treatment of farm animals. By Martin Gould. Note: This post was crossposted from the Open Philanthropy Farm Animal Welfare Research Newsletter by the Forum team, with the author's permission. The author may not see or respond to comments on this post. This year we’ll be sharing a few notes from my colleagues on their areas of expertise.
  • The most important graph in AI right now: time horizon
    To understand how close we are to transformative AI, here’s the metric I find most interesting right now: how long are the tasks AI can do?
  • Join our next working session on cultured meat safety: June 4, 2025 in Chicago, IL
    We're seeking experts and researchers in food safety, toxicology, biomanufacturing, cell biology, food science, and other related fields to discuss cultured meat and food safety as part of our US govt-funded workshop series. The post Join our next working session on cultured meat safety: June 4, 2025 in Chicago, IL appeared first on New Harvest.
  • Five insights from farm animal economics
    How the dismal science can help us end the dismal treatment of farm animals
  • King of fruits
    Ordinary yellow pineapples were once so precious they were rented for display at dinner parties, but centuries of innovation made them commonplace.
  • The quest to build better defenses for AI risks
    'Societal resilience' measures might offer some protection to the proliferation of dangerous AI capabilities
  • Everything's An Emergency
    “Everything’s an emergency” is the title of a book that I have not read. It’s also the title of a very good substack by Bess Stillman, wife of the recently deceased Jake Seliger.
  • A newly surfaced document reveals the beef industry’s secret climate plan
    It’s now well established that for decades, major oil companies knew that burning fossil fuels would cause global warming, and yet did everything in their power to obstruct climate policy. They intensively lobbied policymakers, ran advertising campaigns, and funded think tanks to cast doubt on climate science. According to two new papers recently published in […]...
  • Old MacDonald had a ... Shrimp?
    Old MacDonald had a... Shrimp? View this email in your browser Hello! Our favourite links this month include: Yes, Shrimp Matter, a piece by the CEO of the Shrimp Welfare Project, explaining why he left a career in private equity to improve the lives (and deaths) of shrimp. A new paper from Fin Moorhouse and Will MacAskill on...
  • Factors Influencing Public Perceptions Of Zoo Animal Welfare
    This systematic review investigates the key factors influencing how zoo animal welfare is perceived by the public, as zoos strive to maintain public support while simultaneously fulfilling their conservation mission. The post Factors Influencing Public Perceptions Of Zoo Animal Welfare appeared first on Faunalytics.
  • Views Of Zoo Animal Welfare Are Complex And Contradictory
    This systematic review investigates the key factors influencing how zoo animal welfare is perceived by the public, as zoos strive to maintain public support while simultaneously fulfilling their conservation mission. The post Views Of Zoo Animal Welfare Are Complex And Contradictory appeared first on Faunalytics.
  • Mercy For Animals Publishes Report on White Striping at Whole Foods
    Hello everyone,. This week, Mercy For Animals released White Striping at Whole Foods, a shopper-led investigative report exposing the company's continued reliance on birds bred for extreme and unnaturally fast growth. The exposé, featured on WholeFoodsChicken.com, addresses the disturbing truth behind white striping and the prevalence of signs of muscle abnormality in Whole Foods' chicken...
  • Announcing the Vancouver Forum for Effective Altruism, April 4-5
    We’re excited to announce the Vancouver Forum for Effective Altruism!. Whether you’re new to Effective Altruism, or have already made high-impact work a part of your life, you’re invited to join the Forum. Join us this April 4-5 in Vancouver, Canada to make new connections, learn about the latest in EA, and enjoy a meal together... . Registration is now open!. .
  • Contra MacAskill and Wiblin on The Intelligence Explosion
    Will MacAskill went on Rob Wiblin’s 80k hours podcast last week to talk about AI.
  • Will AI Lawyers Make Swords or Shields?
    There is good reason to think that lawyers may be one of the most automatable professions under the current trajectory of AI development.
  • OpenAI and Anthropic try to fend off competition with new models, ideas for the U.S. AI Action Plan, and important new misalignment research
    Plus: DOD looks to accelerate software acquisition, Trump floats CHIPS repeal, White House tries to cut off maintenance of Chinese chip tools, and the confirmation hearing for new OSTP head. The post OpenAI and Anthropic try to fend off competition with new models, ideas for the U.S. AI Action Plan, and important new misalignment research appeared first on Center for Security and Emerging...
  • “80,000 Hours is shifting our strategic approach to focus more on AGI” by 80000_Hours, Niel_Bowerman
    TL;DR: In a sentence: We are shifting our strategic focus to put our proactive effort towards helping people work on safely navigating the transition to a world with AGI, while keeping our existing content up. In more detail: We think it's plausible that frontier AI companies will develop AGI by 2030.
  • 80,000 Hours is shifting its strategic approach to focus more on AGI
    TL;DR: In a sentence: We are shifting our strategic focus to put our proactive effort towards helping people work on safely navigating the transition to a world with AGI, while keeping our existing content up. In more detail: We think it’s plausible that frontier AI companies will develop AGI by 2030.
  • I made an infographic for the Introduction to Effective Altruism post (feedback welcome!)
    I made the following infographic adapting the Introduction to Effective Altruism post. The goal I set for myself was to make the post more accessible and easier to digest to broaden its potential audience, and to make the ideas more memorable through graphics and data visualizations.
  • Hidden Open Thread 373.5
  • The Bisexual Revolution: Why are so many people now identifying as bisexual?
    This article is the long, in-depth version of the piece we wrote for Queer Majority, diving deeper into the data and exploring...
  • Conversation With Rabbi Tovia Singer About Judaism And Isaiah 53
    Here's Tovia's YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/@ToviaSinger1/videos
  • The top 25 happiest countries in 2025 plus our four favourite findings from the 2025 World Happiness Report
    The post The top 25 happiest countries in 2025 plus our four favourite findings from the 2025 World Happiness Report appeared first on Happier Lives Institute.
  • What's the antidote to hypernationalism?
  • Google Pixel 9a 📱, OpenAI o1-pro API 🤖, AI in legacy codebases 👨‍💻
  • Are alternative proteins an effective intervention for animals?
    Tl;dr: Despite huge investment and continuing growth, alt proteins remain an uncertain cause area. A huge number of surveys and some data from the real world have failed to produce a consensus around the effectiveness of alternative proteins in replacing animal products; however, the preponderance of evidence supports the idea that alternative proteins have displaced animal products to some...
  • Podcast: AGI by 2030? Two forecasters discuss
    "I'm coming around to the maybe-lines-just-keep-going-up-indefinitely thing"
  • SHIFT relies on token-level features to de-bias Bias in Bios probes
    In Sparse Feature Circuits (Marks et al. 2024), the authors introduced Spurious Human-Interpretable Feature Trimming (SHIFT), a technique designed to eliminate unwanted features from a model's computational process. They validate SHIFT on the Bias in Bios task, which we think is too simple to serve as meaningful validation. To summarize:
  • Meat the Future Challenge: Win $1000 USD and an Integriculture Cultured Meat Starter Kit
    Students from around the world can apply by March 25, 2025 to receive a cultured meat starter kit plus $1000 to get your cell ag research off the ground. The post Meat the Future Challenge: Win $1000 USD and an Integriculture Cultured Meat Starter Kit appeared first on New Harvest.
  • EA Forum Digest #232
    EA Forum Digest #232 Hello!. I liked a lot of posts this week, hope you have an extra minute! — JP (for the Forum team) We recommend: Existential Choices Debate Week lead to a bunch of good posts: Read the live symposium comment thread with Will MacAskill and other special guests (Toby Tremlett🔹) — 150 comments!
  • Strengthening America’s AI Workforce
    11 recommendations to recruit the world's top AI talent
  • Forecasting AI Futures Resource Hub
    Like a collector, I gather resources and information. Storing it and categorizing it. I do this for any project I undertake. But for Forecasting AI Futures, I realized the collection might be quite useful for others. So, I set to work on restructuring it and make it look nice!. Here is the result: Forecasting AI Futures Resource Hub.
  • METR: Measuring AI Ability to Complete Long Tasks
    Summary: We propose measuring AI performance in terms of the length of tasks AI agents can complete. We show that this metric has been consistently exponentially increasing over the past 6 years, with a doubling time of around 7 months.
  • “You probably won’t solve malaria or x-risk, and that’s ok” by Rory Fenton
    Cross-posted from my blog. Contrary to my carefully crafted brand as a weak nerd, I go to a local CrossFit gym a few times a week. Every year, the gym raises funds for a scholarship for teens from lower-income families to attend their summer camp program.
  • Prioritizing threats for AI control
    We often talk about ensuring control, which in the context of this doc refers to preventing AIs from being able to cause existential problems, even if the AIs attempt to subvert our countermeasures. To better contextualize control, I think it's useful to discuss the main threats. I'll focus my discussion on threats induced by misalignment which could plausibly increase existential risk.
  • METR: Measuring AI Ability to Complete Long Tasks
    Summary: We propose measuring AI performance in terms of the length of tasks AI agents can complete. We show that this metric has been consistently exponentially increasing over the past 6 years, with a doubling time of around 7 months.
  • New Pan-African Engagement Officer
    I am excited to be taking on a new role as the Pan-African Engagement Officer. Having previously served as the Senior Stakeholder Engagement and Communications Advisor for Target Malaria Ghana, I am eager to continue to contribute to the project’s mission on a broader scale. My background is in the humanities, having earned a BA […].
  • Links in Progress: Where's my winter robot chauffeur?
    What we've been reading: science, metascience, tech, housing, fertility and more...
  • Engaging the women’s associations in Bobo-Dioulasso and the educational community in the Karangasso Sambla district
    In the last week of February, the Target Malaria Burkina Faso team held two meetings with the women’s associations of Bobo-Dioulasso and the educational community in the Karangasso Sambla district on the fight against malaria. The objective of these meetings was to inform these key stakeholders about research into genetic modification technology as a complementary […].
  • AIS Netherlands is looking for a Founding Executive Director (EOI form)
    TLDR: ENAIS is teaming up with community builders from The Netherlands to seed AIS Netherlands. You can read about the role below, and if you would be interested in founding such an organisation, fill out this expression of interest form.
  • 25 Years, 10 Lessons: Insights From Faunalytics’ Founder Che Green
    Faunalytics founder Che Green shares hard-won lessons and insights from 25 years of data-driven advocacy in animal protection. The post 25 Years, 10 Lessons: Insights From Faunalytics’ Founder Che Green appeared first on Faunalytics.
  • Effective Altruists Agree That It's Hard To Help People In The Developing World
    sorry regular readers I'm writing this because I want to be able to link it on X
  • Facing The Future Of Pig Farming
    Pig farming stakeholders tend to focus more on their current challenges than their vision for the future, highlighting gaps between industry and public expectations. The post Facing The Future Of Pig Farming appeared first on Faunalytics.
  • New Harvest hosts FEASTS 2nd General Assembly
    Reviewing progress and results of from the first year of our 35-partner, 17-country, EU-funded consortium project. The post New Harvest hosts FEASTS 2nd General Assembly appeared first on New Harvest.
  • Fish Welfare Opportunities Ahead
    Fish Welfare Opportunities Ahead Europe, Canada, Chile... There's plenty of chances to help fishes View this email in your browser Fish Welfare Opportunities Ahead. Hello readers, welcome to the Animal Ask newsletter, Thinking about what to include and highlight in this edition of our newsletter was a no-brainer: we have been...
  • Africa Health Agenda International Conference 2025: Leaders call for health financing reforms
    The post Africa Health Agenda International Conference 2025: Leaders call for health financing reforms appeared first on Living Goods.
  • We’ll miss globalism when it’s gone
    I have, like I suspect many readers, been in quite a bad mood for the last two months. My go-to joke explaining why — which I feel like should land with readers of this newsletter — has become: “I didn’t realize quite how much my overall optimism about the state of the world depended on […]...
  • More than 1 million people die of tuberculosis every year. They don’t have to.
    Humanity’s battle against tuberculosis has been one of slow and imperfect progress. The disease no longer kills one in seven people in the US, as it did in the 19th century. But look elsewhere and its burden is still terrible: TB killed more than 1.2 million people in 2023, likely making it once again the […]...
  • ...but is increasing the value of futures tractable?
    The central question being discussed in the current debate is whether marginal efforts should prioritize reducing existential risk or improving the quality of futures conditional on survival. Both are important, both are neglected, though the latter admittedly more so, at least within EA.
  • A Taxonomy of Jobs Deeply Resistant to TAI Automation
    This is a light, informal taxonomy of jobs that conceptually will display significant resistance to automation, even after the diffusion of transformative AI systems that can outperform humans in all forms of cognitive and physical labor. This is intended to provide practical, non-technical context around plausible human jobs in a post-AGI economy.
  • The Half Life Of Memory
    A radioactive model of personal identity
  • Misophonia: Beyond Sensory Sensitivity
  • Good Robot #3: Let's fix everything
    A simple parable about a drowning child sparks a moral revolution. Can AI help us do the most good in the world? Good Robot was made in partnership with Vox’s Unexplainable team. Episodes will be released on Wednesdays and Saturdays. For more, go to vox.com/goodrobot Support Future Perfect by becoming a Vox Member today: vox.com/members Learn more about your ad choices.
  • Whole Foods sells scarred Frankenchicken meat with evidence of muscle abnormality, report shows
    Shopper-led investigation reveals that Whole Foods profits from one of the worst factory-farming practices, contradicting public ethical food claims and raising concerns about meat quality and nutrition. LOS ANGELES — Mercy For Animals’ new shopper-led report, “White Striping at Whole Foods,” spotlights the use of fast-growing chicken breeds, referred to as “Frankenchickens,” in Whole Foods’ […].
  • The Proof Is In—Shoppers Record Evidence of Whole Foods’ Chicken Cruelty
    Shoppers led a groundbreaking investigation into Whole Foods’ chicken supply across North America—and the results point to shocking cruelty and a broken promise. The post The Proof Is In—Shoppers Record Evidence of Whole Foods’ Chicken Cruelty appeared first on Mercy For Animals.
  • Greater than the sum: Designing credit that works for women
    Greater than the sum: Designing credit that works for women For Peace, keeping her head above water as a business owner was challenging as she balanced caring for her six children. It wasn't until she gained access to loans and received financial training that she was finally able to expand her business, grow her income, and ensure her teenagers continued in school. elewis@poverty… Tue,...
  • Video: Why spending smarter beats bigger budgets
    Video: Why spending smarter beats bigger budgets The good news on global development is that key indicators, like child mortality and school enrollment, are better today than at any point in human history. However, the bad news is that though many more children are surviving, large numbers are not thriving. elewis@poverty… Tue, 03/18/2025 - 22:13...

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