First sentence under work: “Gill has written about the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on modern life and the necessity for establishing appropriate regulatory frameworks to ensure AI plays a positive role in the future.”
He is the UN envoy. He is in policy, politics, regulation.
This is what “gill achievements AI” bring up for me (don’t need full name)
“Gill helped secure high-impact international consensus recommendations on regulating Artificial Intelligence (Al) in lethal autonomous weapon systems in 2017 and 2018, the draft Al ethics recommendation of UNESCO in 2020, and a new international platform on digital health and Al.”
Edit: Check out the credentials of its members. I see a lot of competence there. Compare qith national committees. Steering this is a strategic achievement.
He is a political coordinator. I hope that you can understand that he has to discuss existing AI, not just future AI.
Think what kind of statements give you political leverage in his position. I could also ask how many policies Eliezer has successfully pushed through banning AI research or deployment, to make this point more clear.
In general, I stand by Stuart as the overall champ. Gill is last on alignment knowledge (still knowledgable on AI), high on strategy.
Back to topic:
All I am pointing out, is that you don’t need to throw in the word strategic anywhere when mentioning that Eliezer is an excellent x-risk analyst and advocate. I think this is important distinction, because we also need strategic AI safety champions and political regulation.
Note: Even people who don’t even believe in x-risk can have a huge impact, if they successfully regulate AI in key areas/regions, or internationally.
I am not really sure what all of the things you are saying here are supposed to tell me. Maybe I am supposed to respect random people in the UN? I do not generally think highly of the UN, or think involvement in it is much of a sign of being a good strategist (though of course, as all highly selected positions it is of course evidence of being in the top percentiles of competence, but not more than that).
I didn’t quote these sections because they too are largely uninformative:
Gill helped secure high-impact international consensus recommendations on regulating Artificial Intelligence (Al) in lethal autonomous weapon systems in 2017 and 2018, the draft Al ethics recommendation of UNESCO in 2020, and a new international platform on digital health and Al.
Like, what is this supposed to tell me? I really don’t know the sign of lethal autonomous weapon regulation. My guess is it’s mildly bad and I was historically opposed to regulating it, but it’s not super clear and I’ve flipped back and forth a few times. The “platform for digital health and AI” seems like a red flag, but I don’t know.
Habryka, I genuinely don’t know why that quote appeared for you first.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amandeep_Singh_Gill
First sentence under work: “Gill has written about the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on modern life and the necessity for establishing appropriate regulatory frameworks to ensure AI plays a positive role in the future.”
He is the UN envoy. He is in policy, politics, regulation.
This is what “gill achievements AI” bring up for me (don’t need full name)
“Gill helped secure high-impact international consensus recommendations on regulating Artificial Intelligence (Al) in lethal autonomous weapon systems in 2017 and 2018, the draft Al ethics recommendation of UNESCO in 2020, and a new international platform on digital health and Al.”
This is the AI advisory board: https://www.un.org/en/ai-advisory-body/members
Edit: Check out the credentials of its members. I see a lot of competence there. Compare qith national committees. Steering this is a strategic achievement.
He is a political coordinator. I hope that you can understand that he has to discuss existing AI, not just future AI.
Think what kind of statements give you political leverage in his position. I could also ask how many policies Eliezer has successfully pushed through banning AI research or deployment, to make this point more clear.
In general, I stand by Stuart as the overall champ. Gill is last on alignment knowledge (still knowledgable on AI), high on strategy.
Back to topic:
All I am pointing out, is that you don’t need to throw in the word strategic anywhere when mentioning that Eliezer is an excellent x-risk analyst and advocate. I think this is important distinction, because we also need strategic AI safety champions and political regulation.
Note: Even people who don’t even believe in x-risk can have a huge impact, if they successfully regulate AI in key areas/regions, or internationally.
I am not really sure what all of the things you are saying here are supposed to tell me. Maybe I am supposed to respect random people in the UN? I do not generally think highly of the UN, or think involvement in it is much of a sign of being a good strategist (though of course, as all highly selected positions it is of course evidence of being in the top percentiles of competence, but not more than that).
I didn’t quote these sections because they too are largely uninformative:
Like, what is this supposed to tell me? I really don’t know the sign of lethal autonomous weapon regulation. My guess is it’s mildly bad and I was historically opposed to regulating it, but it’s not super clear and I’ve flipped back and forth a few times. The “platform for digital health and AI” seems like a red flag, but I don’t know.