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Michael's avatar

You may have noticed recently that some federal government websites don't suck any more. For example, login.gov is pretty good.

This is because the US Digital Service (within the White House) as well as the internal consulting group 18F (within the GSA) actually employ quite competent technologists, and have managed to somehow make the federal hiring process for these roles a little bit less bizarre (it's still very bureaucratic, but I believe they can evade the usual points-based resume evaluation system).

I think the combination of groups like these (on the "product" side) as well as the national labs (for example, Oak Ridge is posting on the 80k hours job board for various roles) means that the government probably can get some decent AI talent. No way to match big tech salaries, but not hopeless.

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Peter Gerdes's avatar

AI safety isn't a continuous kind of thing where you make things a bit safer by adding a few extra hoops like food/product safety might be.

I fear it's a losing move if you are concerned about AI safety because

1) It lets AI companies say "don't worry we're already regulated" and creates the perception the government is doing something about AI.

2) This also seems to implicitly add substantial fixed costs to doing AI research -- you need to report various things (even if you aren't legally penalized there is PR risk of thumbing your nose at the regs). That likely means more huge models trained per small experiment performed to help us get a better theoretical handle on the systems.

3) It imposes a small drag on AI research here which -- if you believe that AI risk is more likely to be something US researchers worry about than ones in China -- could raise its own AI safety risks.

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As I'm not so concerned I tend to see it as a winning move. Sure, I'd prefer not having this kind of drag but I believe there is public demand to do something and this is the minimal something.

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