That’s correct. My point is that measuring goals which are not natural to measure will, in general, have many more problems with Goodharting and similar misoptimization and overoptimization pressures. And other approaches can be more productive, or at least more care is needed with design of metrics rather than discovery of what to measure and how.
That’s correct. My point is that measuring goals which are not natural to measure will, in general, have many more problems with Goodharting and similar misoptimization and overoptimization pressures. And other approaches can be more productive, or at least more care is needed with design of metrics rather than discovery of what to measure and how.