Note also that this work isn’t just papers; e.g., as a matter of public record MIRI has submitted formal comments to regulators to inform draft regulation based on this work.
(For those less familiar, yes, such comments are indeed actually weirdly impactful in the American regulatory system).
I got curious why this was getting agreement-downvoted, and the only links I could find on the main/old MIRI site to the techgov site were in the last two blogposts. Given their stated strategy shift to policy/comms, this does seem a little odd/suboptimal; I’d expect them to be more prominently/obviously linked. To be fair the new techgov site does have a prominent link to the old site.
Some technical governance work at: https://techgov.intelligence.org/research
https://x.com/peterbarnett_/status/1864405388092952595
https://x.com/peterbarnett_/status/1864425086486466621
Note also that this work isn’t just papers; e.g., as a matter of public record MIRI has submitted formal comments to regulators to inform draft regulation based on this work.
(For those less familiar, yes, such comments are indeed actually weirdly impactful in the American regulatory system).
Why is this work hidden from the main MIRI website?
I got curious why this was getting agreement-downvoted, and the only links I could find on the main/old MIRI site to the techgov site were in the last two blogposts. Given their stated strategy shift to policy/comms, this does seem a little odd/suboptimal; I’d expect them to be more prominently/obviously linked. To be fair the new techgov site does have a prominent link to the old site.
Who works on this?
You can find the team on the team page. https://techgov.intelligence.org/team
nice!