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valencia_o's avatar

> A similar phenomenon that has existed for a long time: Pandora stations, in my experience, reliably collapse in usefulness if you rate too many songs. You want to offer a little guidance, and then stop.

I ran into this with Spotify when I made a bunch of playlists for D&D, which then turned all of my Spotify-generated playlists into instrumental background music, rather than what I normally listen to outside of D&D.

It took me a while to notice it, but one of the options on a playlist in Spotify is “exclude from your taste profile.” Once I did that with most of my d&d playlists, my recommended songs went back to normal.

Two takeaways for me:

1) Spotify seems to weight “added to a playlist” significantly higher than “listened to multiple times” - so if you’re making playlists for specific things or occasions, it’s worth excluding them

2) I want buttons like that in more apps

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James's avatar

You bring up superforecasters and mention that forecasting is real and being well calibrated is a thing (agree) and track records are important (agree), but as you’ve discussed previously the majority of well-calibrated superforecasters with good track records are deep within your Obvious Nonsense bracket on AI risk.

I think we both agree these people are too low for various reasons and ultimately not well calibrated on the question, but it does move the needle down for me and I think it makes the track records weak evidence for forecasting AI risk being more grounded.

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