Yeah, I think there’s a useful distinction between two different kinds of “critiques:”
Critique #1: I have reviewed the preparedness framework and I think the threshold for “high-risk” in the model autonomy category is too high. Here’s an alternative threshold.
Critique #2: The entire RSP/PF effort is not going to work because [they’re too vague//labs don’t want to make them more specific//they’re being used for safety-washing//labs will break or weaken the RSPs//race dynamics will force labs to break RSPs//labs cannot be trusted to make or follow RSPs that are sufficiently strong/specific/verifiable].
I feel like critique #1 falls more neatly into “this counts as lab governance” whereas IMO critique #2 falls more into “this is a critique of lab governance.” In practice the lines blur. For example, I think last year there was a lot more “critique #1” style stuff, and then over time as the list of specific object-level critiques grew, we started to see more support for things in the “critique #2″ bucket.
Yeah, I think there’s a useful distinction between two different kinds of “critiques:”
Critique #1: I have reviewed the preparedness framework and I think the threshold for “high-risk” in the model autonomy category is too high. Here’s an alternative threshold.
Critique #2: The entire RSP/PF effort is not going to work because [they’re too vague//labs don’t want to make them more specific//they’re being used for safety-washing//labs will break or weaken the RSPs//race dynamics will force labs to break RSPs//labs cannot be trusted to make or follow RSPs that are sufficiently strong/specific/verifiable].
I feel like critique #1 falls more neatly into “this counts as lab governance” whereas IMO critique #2 falls more into “this is a critique of lab governance.” In practice the lines blur. For example, I think last year there was a lot more “critique #1” style stuff, and then over time as the list of specific object-level critiques grew, we started to see more support for things in the “critique #2″ bucket.