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Sent the form.
What do you think about combining teaching and research? Similar to the Humboldt idea of the university, but it wouldn't have to be as official or large-scale.
When I was studying math in Moscow long ago, I was attending MSU by day, and in the evenings sometimes went to the "Independent University", which wasn't really a university. Just a volunteer-run and donation-funded place with some known mathematicians teaching free classes on advanced topics for anyone willing to attend. I think they liked having students to talk about their work. Then much later, when we ran the AI Alignment Prize here on LW, I also noticed that the prize by itself wasn't too important; the interactions between newcomers and old-timers were a big part of what drove the thing.
So maybe if you're starting an organization now, it could be worth thinking about this kind of generational mixing, research/teaching/seminars/whatnot. Though there isn't much of a set curriculum on AI alignment now, and teaching AI capability is maybe not the best idea :-)
benito on LessOnline Festival Updates ThreadI think on-site housing is pretty scarce, though we're going to make more high-density rooms in response to demand for that. Tickets aren't scarce, our venue could fit like a 700 person event, so I don't expect to hit the limits.
thornoar on Mid-conditional loveIn my mind, conditional love always had to do with acceptance. If you love someone unconditionally, you love them for who they are, you admire their existing qualities. By contrast, loving someone conditionally means that you will love them on condition that they acquire some additional qualities. This is why it is considered to be toxic --- conditional love is not really about the person being 'loved', rather about an image of what that person could become.
We can quantify this concept in quite a neat way. Say that for any kind of love, there is a certain image of the loved person (Bob) in the head of the loving person (Alice), that represents the best, most lovable version of Bob. We will call this image BOB. Now, some qualities (or 'conditions') of BOB (say, N of them) may already be present in Bob (say, M out of N). Let's define the conditionality of Alice's love for Bob by the ratio (N-M)/N. That way, if this ratio is 0, that is, M = N, then all of BOB's qualities are already in Bob, i.e. Alice loves him for who he is, unconditionally. If, on the other hand, this ratio is 1, that is, M = 0, then Bob is simply out of the equation --- he doesn't even intersect with his image. Quite amusingly, in this model, it is the perfectly conditional love that would make no distinction between people and worms, because the object really doesn't matter. If a worm could smile and talk and walk like BOB, Alice would readily love this worm (with a conditionality of 0, by the way) like she never loved Bob.
We can see that my definition is actually roughly equivalent to yours. If Alice pulls Bob closer after a bad speech, it means that Alice is fine with who Bob is now, i.e. Bob's qualities somewhat align with BOB's.
Much like your notion of unconditional love, a conditionality of 0 is practically impossible. Bob needs to be a complete saint to perfectly align with BOB (or Alice needs to have really low standards). There will always be something we will want to change about our partners --- bad habits, speech patterns, their attitude, etc. But a low conditionality shows that we are already with the right person, while a high conditionality indicates that we are trying to turn them into something they are not.
tailcalled on Blessed information, garbage information, cursed informationI'd say "in many contexts" in practice refers to when you are already working with relatively blessed information. It's just that while most domains are overwhelmingly filled with garbage information (e.g. if you put up a camera at a random position on the earth, what it records will be ~useless), the fact that they are so filled with garbage means that we don't naturally think of them as being "real domains".
Basically, I don't mean that blessed information is some obscure thing that you wouldn't expect to encounter, I mean that people try to work with as much blessed information as possible. Logs were sort of a special case of being unusually-garbage.
You can't distill information in advance of a bug (or anomaly, or attack) because a bug by definition is going to be breaking all of the past behavior & invariants governing normal behavior that any distillation was based on.
Depends. If the system is very buggy, there's gonna be lots of bugs to distill from. Which bring us to the second part...
The logs are for the exceptions - which are precisely what any non-end-to-end lossy compression (factor analysis or otherwise) will correctly throw out information about to compress as residuals to ignore in favor of the 'signal'.
Even if lossy compression threw out the exceptions we were interested in as being noise, that would actually still be useful as a form of outlier detection. One could just zoom in on the biggest residuals and check what was going on there.
Issue is, the logs end up containing ~all the exceptions, including exceptional user behavior and exceptional user setups and exceptionally error-throwing non-buggy code, but the logs are only useful for bugs/attacks/etc. because the former behaviors are fine and should be supported.
trevorone on [Linkpost] Practically-A-Book Review: Rootclaim $100,000 Lab Leak DebateI've been tracking the Rootclaim debate from the sidelines and finding it quite an interesting example of high-profile rationality.
Would you prefer the term "high-performance rationality" over "high-profile rationality"?
thornoar on Open Thread Spring 2024Hello everyone! My name is Roman Maksimovich, I am an immigrant from Russia, currently finishing high school in Serbia. My primary specialization is mathematics, and back in middle school I have had enough education in abstract mathematics (from calculus to category theory and topology) to call myself a mathematician.
My other strong interests include computer science and programming (specifically functional programming, theoretical CS, AI, and systems programming s.a. Linux) as well as languages (specifically Asian languages like Japanese).
I ended up here after reading HP:MOR, which I consider to be an all-time masterpiece. The Sequences are very good too, although not that gripping. Rationality is a very important principle in my life, and so far I found the forum to be very well-organized and the posts to be very informative and well-written, so I will definitely stick around and try to engage in the forum to the best of my ability.
I thought I might do a bit of self-advertising as well. Here's my GitHub: https://github.com/thornoar
If any of you use this very niche mathematical graphics tool called Asymptote, you might be interested to know that I have been developing a cool 6000-line Asymptote library called 'smoothmanifold', which is sort of like a JavaScript framework (an analogy that I do not like) but for drawing abstract mathematical diagrams with Asymptote, whose main problem is the lack of abstraction. In plain Asymptote, you usually have to specify all the coordinates manually and draw objects line by line. In my library I make it so that the code resembles the logical structure of the picture more. You can draw a set as a blob on the plane, and then draw arrows that connect different sets, which would be a nightmare to do manually. And this is only the beginning -- there is a lot more features. If any of this is what interests you, feel free to read the README.md.
I have also written some mathematical papers, the most recent one paired with a software program for strong password creation. If you are interested in cryptography and cybersecurity, and would to create strong passwords using a hashing algorithm, you can take a look at 'password-hash', which contains both the algorithm source and binaries, as well as the paper/documentation.
evenlesswrong on When is a mind me?Consider the teleporter as a machine that does two things: deconstructs an input i and constructs an output o.
If you divide the machine logically into these two functions, d and c, which are responsible for deconstructing and constructing respectively, you have four ways the machine could function or not function:
If neither d or c work, the machine doesn't do anything.
If d works but c doesn't, the machine definitely kills or destroys the input person.
If d doesn't work and c does, the machine makes a copy of the person. If a being walked into the machine and found that this happened, the input being would be in my opinion justified in saying that they oppose being deconstructed.
If d works and c works, then we have a functioning teleporter. This is similar to the previous situation, just with "being i" destroyed. I find it hard to believe this is preferable in some way from the perspective of the input being.
I think there is possibly a good argument we should accept that this leads to some sort of nihilism about the value / coherence of our existence as discrete individuals, but personally, I maintain too much uncertainty to be okay with stepping into a "teleporter" type system that is more novel than going to sleep (which does after all destroy the being that goes to sleep and create a being that wakes up)
nicholaskross on LessOnline Festival Updates ThreadHow scarce are tickets/"seats"?
nathan-young on Legal punishment should limit the privacy rather than freedom (new discussion format)COMMENT THREAD
If you comment anywhere other than here, Nathan will delete your comment.
chipmonk on CTMU insight: maybe consciousness *can* affect quantum outcomes?This all seems very teleological. Do you have thoughts on what the teleology of the universe could be under this model?