The post was misleading when it was written, and I think was called out as such by many people at the time. I think we should have some sympathy with Jacob being naive and being tricked, but surely a substantial amount of blame accrues to him for going to the bat for OpenAI when that turned out to be unjustified in the end (and at least somewhat predictably so).
250 upvotes is also crazy high. Another sign of the disastrous abilities of EA/LessWrong communities at character judgment.
The same is right now happening before our eyes on Anthropic. And similar crowds are as confidently asserting that this time they’re really the good guys.
To be clear I am pro people from organizations I think are corrupt showing up to defend themselves, so I would upvote it if it had like 20 karma or less.
I would point out that the comments criticizing the organization’s behavior and character are getting similar vote levels (e.g. top comment calls OpenAI reckless and unwise and 185 karma and 119 agree-vote).
I think people were happy to have the conversation happen. I did strong-downvote it, but I don’t think upvotes are the correct measure here. If we had something like agree/disagree-votes on posts, that would have been the right measure, and my guess is it would have overall been skewed pretty strongly into the disagree-vote diretion.
Out of curiosity, what’s the rationale for not having agree/disagree votes on posts? (I feel like pretty much everyone thinks it has been a great feature for comments!)
Yeah, the principled reason (though I am not like super confident of this) is that posts are almost always too big and have too many claims in them to make a single agree/disagree vote make sense. Inline reacts are the intended way for people to express agreement and disagreement on posts.
I am not super sure this is right, but I do want to avoid agreement/disagreement becoming disconnected from truth values, and I think applying them to elements that clearly don’t have a single truth value weakens that connection.
It… was the fault of Jacob?
The post was misleading when it was written, and I think was called out as such by many people at the time. I think we should have some sympathy with Jacob being naive and being tricked, but surely a substantial amount of blame accrues to him for going to the bat for OpenAI when that turned out to be unjustified in the end (and at least somewhat predictably so).
250 upvotes is also crazy high. Another sign of the disastrous abilities of EA/LessWrong communities at character judgment.
The same is right now happening before our eyes on Anthropic. And similar crowds are as confidently asserting that this time they’re really the good guys.
I am somewhat confused about this.
To be clear I am pro people from organizations I think are corrupt showing up to defend themselves, so I would upvote it if it had like 20 karma or less.
I would point out that the comments criticizing the organization’s behavior and character are getting similar vote levels (e.g. top comment calls OpenAI reckless and unwise and 185 karma and 119 agree-vote).
I think people were happy to have the conversation happen. I did strong-downvote it, but I don’t think upvotes are the correct measure here. If we had something like agree/disagree-votes on posts, that would have been the right measure, and my guess is it would have overall been skewed pretty strongly into the disagree-vote diretion.
Out of curiosity, what’s the rationale for not having agree/disagree votes on posts? (I feel like pretty much everyone thinks it has been a great feature for comments!)
I explained it a bit here: https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/fjfWrKhEawwBGCTGs/a-simple-case-for-extreme-inner-misalignment?commentId=tXPrvXihTwp2hKYME