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Because future rewards are discounted
Don't you mean future values? Also, AFAICT, the only thing going on here that seperates online from offline RL is that offline RL algorithms shape the initial value function to give conservative behaviour. And so you get conservative behaviour.
bec-hawk on Stephen Fowler's ShortformDid OpenAI have the for-profit element at that time?
lorxus on romeostevensit's ShortformAny recommendations on how I should do that? You may assume that I know what a gas chromatograph is and what a Petri dish is and why you might want to use either or both of those for data collection, but not that I have any idea of how to most cost-effectively access either one as some rando who doesn't even have a MA in Chemistry.
deluks917 on Stephen Fowler's ShortformA serious effective altruism movement with clean house. Everyone who pushed the 'work with AI capabilities company' line should retire or be forced to retire. There is no need to blame anyone for mistakes, the decision makers had reasons. But they chose wrong and should not continue to be leaders.
weightt-an on LLMs could be as conscious as human emulations, potentiallyEach of the transformation steps described in the post reduces my expectation that the result would be conscious somewhat.
Well, it's like saying if the {human in a car as a single system} is or is not conscious. Firstly it's a weird question, because of course it is. And even if you chain the human to a wheel in such a way they will never disjoin from the car.
What I did is constrained possible actions of the human emulation. Not severely, the human still can talk whatever, just with constant compute budget, time or iterative commutation steps. Kind of like you can constrain actions of a meaty human by putting them in a jail or something. (... or in a time loop / repeated complete memory wipes)
No, I don't think it would be "what the fuck" surprising if an emulation of a human brain was not conscious.
How would you expect to this possibly cash out? Suppose there are human emulations running around doing all things exactly like meaty humans. How exactly do you expect that announcement of a high scientific council go, "We discovered that EMs are not conscious* because .... and that's important because of ...". Is that completely out of model for you? Or like, can you give me (even goofy) scenario out of that possibility
Or do you think high resolution simulations will fail to replicate capabilities of humans, outlook of them? I.e special sauce/quantum fuckery/literal magic?
eggsyntax on Language Models Model UsAbsolutely! @Jozdien recounting those anecdotes was one of the sparks for this research, as was janus showing in the comments that the base model could confidently identify gwern. (I see I've inexplicably failed to thank Arun at the end of my post, need to fix that).
Interestingly, I was able to easily reproduce the gwern identification using the public model, so it seems clear that these capabilities are not entirely RLHFed away, although they may be somewhat impaired.
eggsyntax on Language Models Model UsOh thanks, I'd missed that somehow & thought that only the temp mattered for that.
eggsyntax on Language Models Model UsThanks!
eggsyntax on Language Models Model UsThat used to work, but as of March you can only get the pre-logit_bias logprobs back. They didn't announce the change, but it's discussed in the OpenAI forums eg here. I noticed the change when all my code suddenly broke; you can still see remnants of that approach in the code.
akash-wasil on DeepMind's "Frontier Safety Framework" is weak and unambitious@Zach Stein-Perlman [LW · GW] I appreciate your recent willingness to evaluate and criticize safety plans from labs. I think this is likely a public good that is underprovided, given the strong incentives that many people have to maintain a good standing with labs (not to mention more explicit forms of pressure applied by OpenAI and presumably other labs).
One thought: I feel like the difference between how you described the Anthropic RSP and how you described the OpenAI PF feels stronger than the actual quality differences between the documents. I agree with you that the thresholds in the OpenAI PF are too high, but I think the PF should get "points" for spelling out risks that go beyond ASL-3/misuse.
OpenAI has commitments that are insufficiently cautious for ASL-4+ (or what they would call high/critical on model autonomy), but Anthropic circumvents this problem by simply refusing to make any commitments around ASL-4 (for now).
You note this limitation when describing Anthropic's RSP, but you describe it as "promising" while describing the PF as "unpromising." In my view, this might be unfairly rewarding Anthropic for just not engaging with the hardest parts of the problem (or unfairly penalizing OpenAI for giving their best guess answers RE how to deal with the hardest parts of the problem).
We might also just disagree on how firm or useful the commitments in each document are– I walked away with a much better understanding of how OpenAI plans to evaluate & handle risks than how Anthropic plans to handle & evaluate risks. I do think OpenAI's thresholds are too high, but It's likely that I'll feel the same way about Anthropic's thresholds. In particular, I don't expect either (any?) lab to be able to resist the temptation to internally deploy models with autonomous persuasion capabilities or autonomous AI R&D capabilities (partially because the competitive pressures and race dynamics pushing them to do so will be intense). I don't see evidence that either lab is taking these kinds of risks particularly seriously, has ideas about what safeguards would be considered sufficient, or is seriously entertaining the idea that we might need to do a lot (>1 year) of dedicated safety work (that potentially involves coming up with major theoretical insights, as opposed to a "we will just solve it with empiricism" perspective) before we are confident that we can control such systems.
TLDR: I would remove the word "promising" and maybe characterize the RSP more like "an initial RSP that mostly spells out high-level reasoning, makes few hard commitments, and focuses on misuse while missing the all-important evals and safety practices for ASL-4."