This policy is more likely to apply [...] if your existence is not publicly known.
How is “existence is publicly known” defined? Suppose it’s public knowledge that “OpenAI has an AI agent project codenamed Worldkiller, though nobody outside OpenAI knows anything else about it”. I’d think that the public knowing about OpenAI having such a project wouldn’t change the probability of Worldkiller having something relevant to say.
Well, the statement you quoted doesn’t contradict the additional statement “This policy is more likely to apply if most details about you other than your existence are not publicly known.” Most likely, both statements are true.
How is “existence is publicly known” defined? Suppose it’s public knowledge that “OpenAI has an AI agent project codenamed Worldkiller, though nobody outside OpenAI knows anything else about it”. I’d think that the public knowing about OpenAI having such a project wouldn’t change the probability of Worldkiller having something relevant to say.
Well, the statement you quoted doesn’t contradict the additional statement “This policy is more likely to apply if most details about you other than your existence are not publicly known.” Most likely, both statements are true.