Great post! dont have much concrete stuff to add, havent kept up that much with the policy discourse in the past few months. Personally I do feel like I became a bit complacent, and conveniently forgot some of the warning signs that lit up back when o3 (?) got fairly scary bio uplift results.
I guess, now the question is what do we do—the EU could in theory ban these models/request additional mitigations, but not sure if that would actually happen—as the CoP (despite being pretty good!) doesnt quite have enough teeth to do this cleanly.
Curious for ideas here—happy to relay some stuff to my EU policy connections/EU AIO if anyone has concrete suggestions.
There is one suggestion that people have made which would address the problem; be capable of stopping. Not even stopping, just making sure governments are capable of monitoring these systems and deciding to shut them down if they later find it to be necessary.
Short of that, again, I think we’ve proven that warnings in advance aren’t going to work. We’re over the line already.
Great post! dont have much concrete stuff to add, havent kept up that much with the policy discourse in the past few months. Personally I do feel like I became a bit complacent, and conveniently forgot some of the warning signs that lit up back when o3 (?) got fairly scary bio uplift results.
I guess, now the question is what do we do—the EU could in theory ban these models/request additional mitigations, but not sure if that would actually happen—as the CoP (despite being pretty good!) doesnt quite have enough teeth to do this cleanly.
Curious for ideas here—happy to relay some stuff to my EU policy connections/EU AIO if anyone has concrete suggestions.
There is one suggestion that people have made which would address the problem; be capable of stopping. Not even stopping, just making sure governments are capable of monitoring these systems and deciding to shut them down if they later find it to be necessary.
Short of that, again, I think we’ve proven that warnings in advance aren’t going to work. We’re over the line already.