I hope this makes the case at least somewhat that these events are important, even if you don’t care at all about the specific politics involved.
I would argue that the specific politics inherent in these events are exactly why I don’t want to approach them. From the outside, the mix of corporate politics, reputation management, culture war (even the boring part), all of which belong in the giant near-opaque system that is Google, is a distraction from the underlying (indeed important) AI governance problems.
For that particular series of events, I already got all the governance-relevant information I needed from the paper that apparently made the dominoes fall. I don’t want my attention to get caught in the whirlwind. It’s too messy (and still is after months). It’s too shiny. It’s not tractable for me. It would be an opportunity cost. So I take a deep breath and avert my eyes.
I would argue that the specific politics inherent in these events are exactly why I don’t want to approach them. From the outside, the mix of corporate politics, reputation management, culture war (even the boring part), all of which belong in the giant near-opaque system that is Google, is a distraction from the underlying (indeed important) AI governance problems.
For that particular series of events, I already got all the governance-relevant information I needed from the paper that apparently made the dominoes fall. I don’t want my attention to get caught in the whirlwind. It’s too messy (and still is after months). It’s too shiny. It’s not tractable for me. It would be an opportunity cost. So I take a deep breath and avert my eyes.