I bet you’re right that a perceived lack of policy options is a key reason people don’t write about this to mainstream audiences
Still, I think policy options exist
The easiest one is adding right right types AI capabilities research to the US Munitions List, so they’re covered under ITAR laws. These are mind-bogglingly burdensome to comply with (so it’s effectively a tax on capabilities research). They also make it illegal to share certain parts of your research publicly
It’s not quite the secrecy regime that Eliezer is looking for, but it’s a big step in that direction
I bet you’re right that a perceived lack of policy options is a key reason people don’t write about this to mainstream audiences
Still, I think policy options exist
The easiest one is adding right right types AI capabilities research to the US Munitions List, so they’re covered under ITAR laws. These are mind-bogglingly burdensome to comply with (so it’s effectively a tax on capabilities research). They also make it illegal to share certain parts of your research publicly
It’s not quite the secrecy regime that Eliezer is looking for, but it’s a big step in that direction