TL;DR: At least in my experience, AISC was pretty positive for most participants I know and it’s incredibly cheap. It also serves a clear niche that other programs are not filling and it feels reasonable to me to continue the program.
I’ve been a participant in the 2021⁄22 edition. Some thoughts that might make it easier to decide for funders/donors. 1. Impact-per-dollar is probably pretty good for the AISC. It’s incredibly cheap compared to most other AI field-building efforts and scalable. 2. I learned a bunch during AISC and I did enjoy it. It influenced my decision to go deeper into AI safety. It was less impactful than e.g. MATS for me but MATS is a full-time in-person program, so that’s not surprising. 3. AISC fills a couple of important niches in the AI safety ecosystem in my opinion. It’s online and part-time which makes it much easier to join for many people, it implies a much lower commitment which is good for people who want to find out whether they’re a good fit for AIS. It’s also much cheaper than flying everyone to the Bay or London. This also makes it more scalable because the only bottleneck is mentoring capacity without physical constraints. 4. I think AISC is especially good for people who want to test their fit but who are not super experienced yet. This seems like an important function. MATS and ARENA, for example, feel like they target people a bit deeper into the funnel with more experience who are already more certain that they are a good fit. 5. Overall, I think AISC is less impactful than e.g. MATS even without normalizing for participants. Nevertheless, AISC is probably about ~50x cheaper than MATS. So when taking cost into account, it feels clearly impactful enough to continue the project. I think the resulting projects are lower quality but the people are also more junior, so it feels more like an early educational program than e.g. MATS. 6. I have a hard time seeing how the program could be net negative unless something drastically changed since my cohort. In the worst case, people realize that they don’t like one particular type of AI safety research. But since you chat with others who are curious about AIS regularly, it will be much easier to start something that might be more meaningful. Also, this can happen in any field-building program, not just AISC. 7. Caveat: I have done no additional research on this. Maybe others know details that I’m unaware of. See this as my personal opinion and not a detailed research analysis.
Copying from EAF
TL;DR: At least in my experience, AISC was pretty positive for most participants I know and it’s incredibly cheap. It also serves a clear niche that other programs are not filling and it feels reasonable to me to continue the program.
I’ve been a participant in the 2021⁄22 edition. Some thoughts that might make it easier to decide for funders/donors.
1. Impact-per-dollar is probably pretty good for the AISC. It’s incredibly cheap compared to most other AI field-building efforts and scalable.
2. I learned a bunch during AISC and I did enjoy it. It influenced my decision to go deeper into AI safety. It was less impactful than e.g. MATS for me but MATS is a full-time in-person program, so that’s not surprising.
3. AISC fills a couple of important niches in the AI safety ecosystem in my opinion. It’s online and part-time which makes it much easier to join for many people, it implies a much lower commitment which is good for people who want to find out whether they’re a good fit for AIS. It’s also much cheaper than flying everyone to the Bay or London. This also makes it more scalable because the only bottleneck is mentoring capacity without physical constraints.
4. I think AISC is especially good for people who want to test their fit but who are not super experienced yet. This seems like an important function. MATS and ARENA, for example, feel like they target people a bit deeper into the funnel with more experience who are already more certain that they are a good fit.
5. Overall, I think AISC is less impactful than e.g. MATS even without normalizing for participants. Nevertheless, AISC is probably about ~50x cheaper than MATS. So when taking cost into account, it feels clearly impactful enough to continue the project. I think the resulting projects are lower quality but the people are also more junior, so it feels more like an early educational program than e.g. MATS.
6. I have a hard time seeing how the program could be net negative unless something drastically changed since my cohort. In the worst case, people realize that they don’t like one particular type of AI safety research. But since you chat with others who are curious about AIS regularly, it will be much easier to start something that might be more meaningful. Also, this can happen in any field-building program, not just AISC.
7. Caveat: I have done no additional research on this. Maybe others know details that I’m unaware of. See this as my personal opinion and not a detailed research analysis.