My apologies. I’m usually right when I guess that a post has been authored by AI, but it appears you really are a native speaker of one of the academic idioms that AIs have also mastered.
As for the essay itself, it involves an aspect of AI safety or AI policy that I have neglected, namely, the management of socially embedded AI systems. I have personally neglected this in favor of SF-flavored topics like “superalignment” because I regard the era in which AIs and humans have a coexistence in which humans still have the upper hand as a very temporary thing. Nonetheless, we are still in that era right now, and hopefully some of the people working within that frame, will read your essay and comment. I do agree that the public health paradigm seems like a reasonable source of ideas, for the reasons that you give.
My apologies. I’m usually right when I guess that a post has been authored by AI, but it appears you really are a native speaker of one of the academic idioms that AIs have also mastered.
As for the essay itself, it involves an aspect of AI safety or AI policy that I have neglected, namely, the management of socially embedded AI systems. I have personally neglected this in favor of SF-flavored topics like “superalignment” because I regard the era in which AIs and humans have a coexistence in which humans still have the upper hand as a very temporary thing. Nonetheless, we are still in that era right now, and hopefully some of the people working within that frame, will read your essay and comment. I do agree that the public health paradigm seems like a reasonable source of ideas, for the reasons that you give.