If you want to get an informed opinion on how the general public perceives PauseAI, get a t-shirt and hand out some flyers in a high foot-traffic public space. If you want to be formal about it, bring a clipboard, track whatever seems interesting in advance, and share your results. It might not be publishable on an academic forum, but you could do it next week.
Here’s what I expect you to find, based on my own experience and the reports of basically everyone who has done this: - No one likes flyers, but get a lot more interested if you can catch their attention enough to say it’s about AI. - Everyone hates AI. - Your biggest initial skepticism will be from people who think you are in favor of AI. - Your biggest actual pushback will be from people who think that social change is impossible. - Roughly 1⁄4 to 1⁄2 are amenable to (or have already heard about!) x-risk, most of the rest won’t actively disagree but you can tell that particular message is not really “landing” and pay a lot more attention if you talk about something else (unemployment, military applications, deepfakes, etc.) - Bring a clipboard for signups. Even if recruitment isn’t your goal, if you don’t have one you’ll feel unprepared when people ask about it.
Also, protests are about Overton-window shifting, making AI danger a thing that is acceptable to talk about. And even if it makes a specific org look “fringe” (not a given, as Holly has argued), that isn’t necessarily a bad thing for the underlying cause. For example, if I see an XR protest, my thought is (well, was before I knew the underlying methodology): “Ugh, those protestors...I mean, I like what they are fighting for and more really needs to be done, but I don’t like the way they go about it” Notice that middle part. Activation of a sympathetic but passive audience was the point. That’s a win from their perspective. And the people who are put off by methods then go on to (be more likely to) join allied organizations that believe the same things but use more moderate tactics. The even bigger win is when the enthusiasm catches the attention of people who want to be involved but are looking for orgs that are the “real deal,” as measured by willingness to put effort where their words are.
Glad to hear it! If you want more detail, feel free to come by the Discord Server or send me a Direct Message. I run the welcome meetings for new members and am always happy to describe aspects of the org’s methodology that aren’t obvious from the outside and can also connect you with members who have done a lot more on-the-ground protesting and flyering than I have.
As someone who got into this without much prior experience in activism, I was surprised how much subtlety and counterintuitive best practices there are, most of which is learned through direct experience combined with direct mentorship, as opposed to written down & formalized. I made an attempt to synthesize many of the code ideas in this video—it’s from a year ago and looking over it there is quite a bit I would change (spend less time on some philosophical ideas, add more detail re specific methods), but it mostly holds up OK.
NEVER WRITE ON THE CLIPBOARD WHILE THEY ARE TALKING.
If you’re interested in how writing on a clipboard affects the data, sure, that’s actually a pretty interesting experimental treatment. It should not be considered the control.
Also, the dynamics you described with the protests is conjunctive. These aren’t just points of failure, they’re an attack surface, because any political system has many moving parts, and a large proportion of the moving parts are diverse optimizers.
If you want to get an informed opinion on how the general public perceives PauseAI, get a t-shirt and hand out some flyers in a high foot-traffic public space. If you want to be formal about it, bring a clipboard, track whatever seems interesting in advance, and share your results. It might not be publishable on an academic forum, but you could do it next week.
Here’s what I expect you to find, based on my own experience and the reports of basically everyone who has done this:
- No one likes flyers, but get a lot more interested if you can catch their attention enough to say it’s about AI.
- Everyone hates AI.
- Your biggest initial skepticism will be from people who think you are in favor of AI.
- Your biggest actual pushback will be from people who think that social change is impossible.
- Roughly 1⁄4 to 1⁄2 are amenable to (or have already heard about!) x-risk, most of the rest won’t actively disagree but you can tell that particular message is not really “landing” and pay a lot more attention if you talk about something else (unemployment, military applications, deepfakes, etc.)
- Bring a clipboard for signups. Even if recruitment isn’t your goal, if you don’t have one you’ll feel unprepared when people ask about it.
Also, protests are about Overton-window shifting, making AI danger a thing that is acceptable to talk about. And even if it makes a specific org look “fringe” (not a given, as Holly has argued), that isn’t necessarily a bad thing for the underlying cause. For example, if I see an XR protest, my thought is (well, was before I knew the underlying methodology): “Ugh, those protestors...I mean, I like what they are fighting for and more really needs to be done, but I don’t like the way they go about it” Notice that middle part. Activation of a sympathetic but passive audience was the point. That’s a win from their perspective. And the people who are put off by methods then go on to (be more likely to) join allied organizations that believe the same things but use more moderate tactics. The even bigger win is when the enthusiasm catches the attention of people who want to be involved but are looking for orgs that are the “real deal,” as measured by willingness to put effort where their words are.
Excellent, thank you. That’s the sort of information I was looking for.
Hmm. Good point, I haven’t been taking that factor into account.
Glad to hear it! If you want more detail, feel free to come by the Discord Server or send me a Direct Message. I run the welcome meetings for new members and am always happy to describe aspects of the org’s methodology that aren’t obvious from the outside and can also connect you with members who have done a lot more on-the-ground protesting and flyering than I have.
As someone who got into this without much prior experience in activism, I was surprised how much subtlety and counterintuitive best practices there are, most of which is learned through direct experience combined with direct mentorship, as opposed to written down & formalized. I made an attempt to synthesize many of the code ideas in this video—it’s from a year ago and looking over it there is quite a bit I would change (spend less time on some philosophical ideas, add more detail re specific methods), but it mostly holds up OK.
Multiple talented researchers I know got into alignment because of PauseAI.
NEVER WRITE ON THE CLIPBOARD WHILE THEY ARE TALKING.
If you’re interested in how writing on a clipboard affects the data, sure, that’s actually a pretty interesting experimental treatment. It should not be considered the control.
Also, the dynamics you described with the protests is conjunctive. These aren’t just points of failure, they’re an attack surface, because any political system has many moving parts, and a large proportion of the moving parts are diverse optimizers.
You can also give them the clipboard and pen, works well