Per the top post, Ziz never lies (for a reasonable definition of what a lie is). Other than that, I don’t think she is lying for four main reasons: 1) her decision theory implies that she isn’t, 2) the content of her claims seems plausible to me, 3) her claims don’t seem particularly strategically helpful) and 4) I have been able to independently verify some sub-components of her claims
And look, I don’t have a stake in any of that at this point and I’m not in a position to judge, but I don’t think she’s lying. I don’t think she ever lies, I just think she’s speaking from within her own worldview, the same way that she always does, the same way that everyone always does.
Here’s my extended reasoning for the four justifications above:
Ziz’s whole philosophy is based on TDT and lying is trivially a defection that globally damages credibility (your response is an example of how). I think Ziz has spoken on decision theory in good faith and, frankly, has an unusually nuanced understanding of it to the extent that she wouldn’t lie.
Corollary #1: If Ziz did choose to lie, it would imply that that she already inferred truthfulness would not actually establish her credibility in social reality (and my guess is her reasoning for this inference would be reasonable). This would mean that I shouldn’t trust Ziz but I also shouldn’t trust anyone else about Ziz.
Corollary #2: If you think Ziz is being deceptive about her own decision theory, then you can’t infer anything about what she claims her goals are from what she says (since all of this is heavily based on decision theory). I think Ziz is being honest about her goals.
Corollary #3: “bruh but she might still be lying if she thinks she can get away with it!!!”. To which I reply, “schelling points bruh.”
Ziz is a trans women which makes her vulnerable to have ppl act against her in ways that most cis people never experience (and therefore default to disbelieving unless they’re particular aware of what goes on). For this reason, a trans women with the reputation of a liar is in much greater danger than a cis person because it allows transphobes to take unconstrained actions against them. I doubt Ziz would act in ways that increase this risk
Corollary #1: if this stuff didn’t happen to Ziz, I’d be surprised that she’d independently come up with stuff on her own that matches my priors this well. I’m not trans myself but I have plenty of trans friends and, from what I’ve learned from them, Ziz’s account seems plausible
Many of the claims she has made are not obviously effective at furthering her own goals as one might expect if they were lies
I have personally verified a number of small details and claims Ziz has made for myself. This makes me inclined to believe she is being honest.
I found those claims disturbing as well, but when I tried to verify them I pretty much hit a brick wall. As someone disconnected from the bay area community and fairly new to the online community, it’s very hard for me to dig into this sort of thing.
If you have more information than what was talked about on Sinceriously, I’d love to hear about it.
I’m hesitant about saying things here since, to the extent that my epistemics are right, this is a relatively adversarial environment. I think discussing things would reveal things that I know/how I found out about them without many positive effects (I’m also disconnected from the Bay Area Community). After all, if you were confident that Ziz was lying, nothing I know would likely change your mind. Similarly, if you felt like Ziz might be telling the truth, the gravity of the claims probably has more relevance to your actions than the extent to which my info would move the probability.
That being said, DM me and we can chat. I’m also pretty curious about your interactions with Ziz/how she tried to manipulate you.
Ziz’s whole philosophy is based on TDT and lying is trivially a defection that globally damages credibility
The stunt at the CFAR reunion is defection that globally damages her credibility.
your response is an example of how
My response is an example of me estimating her to have low credibility because she’s willing to do things like that.
Given that she her operating decision theory lets her do things like that, I see no reason to expect her not doing other things that damage her credibility as well.
Wearing Sith robes and naming themselves after a fanfic villian is similar in that it damages reputation among many people and not a strategy to develop a reputation as someone to be trusted.
Any one of the three things alone suggests her seeing it okay to take actions that cost credibility. Together they also suggest a strategic decisions to not value credibility, maybe because seeking credibility contrains her range of actions.
How do you explain those three decisions if you think that she’s committed to upholding her credibility?
If I had to propose a model for this here, it’s something like:
Ziz believes in the power of what you might call “Woke Twitter Leftism” as a force that will one day come to completely dominate society and sees her own ideological principles as the natural evolution/convergence point of those ideas. If you’re a Woke Twitter Leftist and you legitimately believe the principles of Woke Twitter Leftism in your soul, you’ll naturally come to embrace her ethical positions over time. She thinks that since “Cthulu swims left” her faction will gradually grow to dominate politically and the actions she takes that would seem to damage her credibility will become credibility boosting in that future. Her callout posts, her protests, the way she expresses disapproval, it’s all clearly strategized to fit into the ideological pattern of twitter wokescolds and tumblr tenderqueers. The people she seems to be carelessly defecting against aren’t the people she thinks will win the culture war and so the fact that she’s damaging her credibility with them is irrelevant.
I think Ziz’s belief in the power of this acausal coalition and the belief that it will actually win the culture war that we’re currently embroiled in is the result of her rejecting necessity and refusing a gate. You can pretty clearly see where in her ideological theory this error is sitting and the canards she has to adopt to make it work. She thinks that most people are evil, but she still believes her tiny coalition of good-aligned people can shift the timeline which makes no sense. In order to support that, she has to adopt the completely unfounded belief that only good-aligned people can cooperate or use game theory and that nongood people will defect on each other too often to defeat her alliance.
These are all JD’s words, this is JD’s take on Ziz, not mine. This is an interesting post because there’s nothing fundamentally wrong with anything it says, it just frames it as a negative despite the fact that really, if twitter leftists are the scariest thing in the world to you, what does that really say about you as a person, hmmm? Don’t you know cancer has no future? Ziz is right and we are going to win. :)
I don’t think Woke Twitter Leftism has a problem with telling lies to hurt people who deserve to be hurt in their view and that there’s huge reputational risk for that kind of lies in that crowd.
To the extend that this model is accurate, I don’t think it suggests that we should expect her to always tell the truth.
She thinks that since “Cthulu swims left” her faction will gradually grow to dominate politically and the actions she takes that would seem to damage her credibility will become credibility boosting in that future. Her callout posts, her protests, the way she expresses disapproval, it’s all clearly strategized to fit into the ideological pattern of twitter wokescolds and tumblr tenderqueers.
That still doesn’t explain the Sith robes and fanfic villian name.
the completely unfounded belief that only good-aligned people can cooperate or use game theory and that nongood people will defect on each other too often to defeat her alliance.
Can you elaborate on why you think this belief is completely unfounded? It seems to me that there are clear asymmetries in coordination capacities of good vs nongood. For example, being more open to the idea of a “Good Person” in power than a “Bad Person” seems like common sense. Similarly, groups of good people are intrinsically value-aligned while teams of bad people are not (each has a distinct selfish motivation) -- and I think value-alignedness increases effectiveness.
Assuming Ziz is being honest, she pulled the stunt at CFAR after she had already been defected against. This does not globally damage her credibility. It does damage her reputation among a) ppl who think they can’t defect against her sneakily but plan to try and b) ppl who think she is bad at judging when she’s been defected against. I am in neither of those categories so I have no reason to expect Ziz to defect by lying at me.
In contrast, if Ziz was being dishonest, she pulled that stunt for… inscrutable reasons that may or may not be in the web of lies she might have made. I think this is unlikely. As I’ve already said, her claims seem plausible and, if she was lying, she could do far worse than she did. If she wanted to defect really hard and wasn’t constrained by truth, she could just raise issues that non-marginalized communities have a personal stake in (instead of something like transphobia).
Wearing Sith robes and naming themselves after a fanfic villian is similar in that it damages reputation among many people and not a strategy to develop a reputation as someone to be trusted.
Do you think Little Nas X is less honest because he became Satan in his hit music video Montero? I doubt that wearing Sith Robes / naming yourself after a villain (Ziz is a mythological bird?) is useful information about how honest someone is. This goes double when you know other things. Three points here:
Marginalized people have understandable reasons for inverting mainstream aesthetics. Good/evil aesthetics are defined by mainstream culture. If that culture has betrayed you, it can be therapeutic to reject it in turn by inverting its aesthetics. Many of my LGBTQ+ friends do this. Given that Ziz is a trans women who has an ontology that treats most ppl as “nongood”, it makes sense that she would also (either because of morality-related alienation or gender-related alienation).
You’re conflating reputation/credibility among “many ppl” with reputation/credibility among ppl who would actually help you. Only the second group matters and optimizing credibility with the first is a waste of time. If you look at a marginalized person who has moral integrity (vegan) and writes extensively on TDT (solving coordination problems) and conclude that they’re a liar because clothing choices, this says a lot about your values. You either a) buy-in to nongood mainstream clothing norms as reflecting a person’s goodness/evilness or b) think Ziz is making a critical error by pushing away ppl who think this is what clothes mean. IMO people who take either of these positions are sufficiently invested in the status quo that they’d only impede Ziz’s work. Credibility with them isn’t worth much.
While I doubt it turned off helpful ppl, Ziz admitted (I think in a comment on sinceriously somewhere) that her aesthetic was a tactical mistake in hindsight because it attracted a bunch of edgy bad ppl. You framing it as a strategic choice is incorrect for this reason.
How do you explain those three decisions if you think that she’s committed to upholding her credibility?
Well I think I’ve covered it above. The purpose of “Upholding Credibility” is so that the ppl you care about knowing the truth can actually receive the truth from you. And none of the decisions above impede information-conveyance or reflect defections on the groups of ppl Ziz would be interested in helping (ethical ppl who can work with her, concerned trans women who might be at risk, etc).
...
I’ll admit, I’m a little angry with your response so I might have a harsher tone here. Some of your arguments struck a nerve with me because it really feels like you’re implying that a bunch of my (non-rationalist, completely unaffiliated) LGBTQ+ friends are liars. Here’s what your arguments sound like to me:
“If someone claims Something Bad is happening and then handles it inappropriately, we should give significant weight to the possibility that they are lying because handling it inappropriately was defection”
“When a marginalized person copes with marginalization by inverting mainstream aesthetics, we should give significant weight to the possibility that they are lying because not following the mainstream means you don’t care about being taken honestly”
“If a marginalized person claims Something Bad is happening, handles it inappropriate, and copes with marginalization by inverting mainstream aesthetics, they’re systematically a liar”
Many of the specific statements related to a bunch of MIRI stuff seem straightforwardly false to me. They might be honest misunderstandings. In many cases Ziz was shown pretty clear and concrete evidence on what happened, but then just decided that their favorite narrative is correct, and is now just repeatedly announcing that narrative as true. I don’t know whether I would count this as lying, but like, it definitely includes making many wrong statements, and with a process that seems mostly driven by motivated cognition.
Ziz has quoted me a few times. Frequently these quotes are outright fabrications, such as this one: “He suggested me saying this was defamation.” and “the same man who threatened frivolous defamation lawsuits to deter me from relating what Vassar said”. I am extremely hesitant to generally call things defamation and have quite strong personal rules against bringing in defamation lawsuits. I never said that sentence or tried to imply it in the conversation that is being referenced.
Many other people I’ve talked to who were quoted by Ziz felt their statements drastically distorted, enough to really very seriously change their truth-value. I can confirm this based on the above.
While I don’t think any of the above requires “lying”, I do think it makes most statements from Ziz straightforwardly untrustworthy.
Thanks, I appreciate the concrete examples of untrustworthiness than don’t rely on inferences made about reputation. I am specifically concerned about things like this (which seems like a weird and bad direction to take a conversation (https://sinceriously.fyi/net-negative/). It also seems hard to recount falsely without active deception or complete detachment from reality and I doubt Ziz is completely detached from reality:
They asked if I’d rape their corpse. Part of me insisted this was not going as it was supposed to. But I decided inflicting discomfort in order to get reliable information was a valid tactic.
You say that you “never said that sentence or tried to imply it...” Do you have any sense of why Ziz interpreted you as saying that? I’d like to gauge the distance between what you said and how Ziz interpreted it to gauge degree-of-untrustworthiness.
Do you have any sense of why Ziz interpreted you as saying that?
I don’t know. I think part of the conversation was about some meta-level stuff on when it’s just and fair to attack MIRI and other institutions if they do something terrible. I don’t think I remember the details, but I might have said something like “I generally think it would be bad to make up outright lies and falsehoods about a thing, and I do think that if someone is very obviously making stuff up, something like a defamation lawsuit might make sense as a kind of last resort, though I am generally quite hesitant about defamation lawsuits and think they are pretty bad for the world”.
Again, I don’t remember the details, sadly. It was over 3 years ago. But my sense is that transforming sentences like the above into sentences like the one Ziz accuses me of is how most of their “quotes” work.
“If a marginalized person claims Something Bad is happening, handles it inappropriate, and copes with marginalization by inverting mainstream aesthetics, they’re systematically a liar”
False imprisonment of kids that are innocent bystanders isn’t just “handles it inappropriately”. None of the LGBTQ+ people I know personally have to the extend of my knowledge done something as bad nor would I expect that to be in their range of possible actions.
As far as Ziz, TDT and falsehoods, she writes herself:
They asked what I’d do, I said I’d socially retaliate. They asked how.
I said I would probably write a LessWrong post about how they thought I’d be bad for the world because I was trans. Half of me was surprised at myself for saying this. Did I just threaten to falsely social justice someone?
So she’s open about having threatened to say false things that part of her believed to be false for retaliation. From the TDT perspective actually fulfilling what you threaten seems quite reasonable.
Since you’ve quoted Ziz out of context, let me finish that quote for you. It is clear that the other half of her (whatever that means) did in fact believe those things and it is clear that this was a recounting of a live-conversation rather than a broad strategy. It is not that weird to not have fully processed the things that you partially believe, live, in the middle of a conversation such that you are surprised by them.
The other half of me was like isn’t it obvious. They are disturbed at me because intense suffering is scary. Because being trans in a world where it would make things worse to transition was pain to intense for social reality to acknowledge, and therefore a threat.
I see you’re equivocating between “honesty”/”credibility” and “reputation” again:
I see you’ve quietly dropped the two other reasons to ding credibility I mentioned to focus on the protest, which along with a misquote is your main reason for why Ziz is a liar:
False imprisonment of kids that are innocent bystanders isn’t just “handles it inappropriately”. None of the LGBTQ+ people I know personally have to the extend of my knowledge done something as bad nor would I expect that to be in their range of possible actions.
It seems obvious to me that false imprisonment of kids is a noncentral description of what Ziz was doing (ie “she staged a protest and unbeknownst to her there were children somewhere” is my model). Given that this was scaled back to a misdemeanor, I imagine that you’re focusing on this specifically for rhetorical effect.
While I’m dubious about the protest being a Smart Move, I don’t think this has much bearing on Ziz’s honesty and I certainly don’t think the coincidental presence of children somewhere in the area has any bearing on it.
From the TDT perspective actually fulfilling what you threaten seems quite reasonable.
From a TDT perspective, actually treating the first thing you come up with after someone asks you a question (esp when its couched in wiggle-terms like “probably”) as a binding pre-commitment does not seem reasonable to me at all.
Given your manipulation of context above, and my notable lack of context wrt this whole situation, you have an asymmetric information advantage here that I suspect you may use to deceive me. As a result, I’m tapping out of the convo here.
I see you’ve quietly dropped the two other reasons to ding credibility I mentioned to focus on the protest, which along with a misquote is your main reason for why Ziz is a liar
I didn’t say that there were three reasons, I only spoke of one reason being that there’s a pattern of behavior. It’s about the generator function. The question is about what generator function explains all three events
We are talking about a person who supposedly follows a coherent decision theory and makes game theory backed moves. I wouldn’t expect that the average LGBTQ+ thinks their actions through in game theoretic terms. There’s also an IQ difference between Ziz and the average human or average LGBTQ+ person where she’s very likely >130 IQ. That means I’m more likely to take a stupid action by a random person as simply a stupid action but expect Ziz to have a better thought out model for why her action makes sense then I would expect for the averge person.
Ziz writes about the importance of not following social conventions and preventing herself from value drift. From the inside I would expect both the Sith robes and the fanfic villian name to be stoic exercises with the intend of immunizing herself against social conventions affecting her. In the post about Pasek’s doom she writes about it being important to be a Gervais-sociopath. Being able to act unconstrained and being able to lie when adventagous is part of being a Gervais-sociopath and the stoic exercises are a way to train mentally into that direction.
My model would explain most weird (as seen by general society) actions of most LGBTQ+ people to be made because even when they are costly (certain people think less of them for it) they are done because the person considers expression of their sexual of gender identity to be a sacred value. Sith robes are not expressions of their sexual of gender identity and thus taking the reputational hit for them shows valuing reputation less.
There’s also sometimes weirdness that comes from lack of social skills and not from conscious decisions that aren’t directly sexual / gender identity. Choosing a fanfic villian name and wearing Sith robes is however done through conscious choice.
It seems obvious to me that false imprisonment of kids is a noncentral description of what Ziz was doing (ie “she staged a protest and unbeknownst to her there were children somewhere” is my model). Given that this was scaled back to a misdemeanor, I imagine that you’re focusing on this specifically for rhetorical effect.
The article was the first impression I got about Ziz (I live in Germany and never have attended a CFAR workshop) and I would expect that I’m not the only person for which it’s true.
You said that the action was only costly with people who Ziz thinks defected with her and that’s not how the action turned out.
While it likely played out worse then she expected beforehand, I don’t think the idea that it was only likely to damage her reputation with the CFAR staff (whom she thinks defected) was a reasonable model of the situation.
The article was the first impression I got about Ziz (I live in Germany and never have attended a CFAR workshop) and I would expect that I’m not the only person for which it’s true.
Ah, mea culpa. I saw your other comment amount Pasek crashing with you and interpreted it to mean you were pretty close to the Ziz-related part of the community. I’m less hesitant about talking to you now so I’ll hop back in.
they are done because the person considers expression of their sexual of gender identity to be a sacred value. Sith robes are not expressions of their sexual of gender identity and thus taking the reputational hit for them shows valuing reputation less.
I really feel that you’re making a category error by repeatedly merging the concepts “credibility with a small set of helpful ppl” and “general reputation.” I don’t see why Sith Robes or gender identity or aesthetics in general should cause me to trust someone less, especially when I have other information on them I consider more relevant. This because, unlike most social conventions which serve as forms of control/submission to the mob/etc, the ability to be perceived as honest by those you want to work with allows you to more easily work with them.
Gervais sociopaths often have principles that include telling the truth.
I don’t think her aesthetic was stoically motivated as much as motivated by the desire to treat ones own interests and values as logically prior to social convention—a refusal to let ones own interests bow to the mob. This seems conceptually similar to me as treating something as a sacred value. It just has more decision theory behind it.
It’s about the generator function. The question is about what generator function explains all three events
I think this is somewhat noncentral because (as mentioned), I disagree that a single generator produced all three events. What do you think the actual relevant generator is, and why do you think it also generates lie-behavior against parties Ziz might want to work with (eg publishing everyone-facing lies on the internet)?
While it likely played out worse then she expected beforehand, I don’t think the idea that it was only likely to damage her reputation with the CFAR staff (whom she thinks defected) was a reasonable model of the situation.
Yeah fair enough. I agree that this isn’t a reasonable model but my point still stands I think. The issue is that I neglected a third group aside from people who plan on defecting against Ziz or have low opinions of her judgement. People who automatically flinch away from others who do unconstrained things would also likely trust her less. Still, that group would be unable to help do the unconstrained things she wants to so I don’t think it means much to Ziz that she can’t work with them.
What group of people do you think Ziz wanted to work with that she is no longer able to because of the protest?
Per the top post, Ziz never lies (for a reasonable definition of what a lie is). Other than that, I don’t think she is lying for four main reasons: 1) her decision theory implies that she isn’t, 2) the content of her claims seems plausible to me, 3) her claims don’t seem particularly strategically helpful) and 4) I have been able to independently verify some sub-components of her claims
Here’s my extended reasoning for the four justifications above:
Ziz’s whole philosophy is based on TDT and lying is trivially a defection that globally damages credibility (your response is an example of how). I think Ziz has spoken on decision theory in good faith and, frankly, has an unusually nuanced understanding of it to the extent that she wouldn’t lie.
Corollary #1: If Ziz did choose to lie, it would imply that that she already inferred truthfulness would not actually establish her credibility in social reality (and my guess is her reasoning for this inference would be reasonable). This would mean that I shouldn’t trust Ziz but I also shouldn’t trust anyone else about Ziz.
Corollary #2: If you think Ziz is being deceptive about her own decision theory, then you can’t infer anything about what she claims her goals are from what she says (since all of this is heavily based on decision theory). I think Ziz is being honest about her goals.
Corollary #3: “bruh but she might still be lying if she thinks she can get away with it!!!”. To which I reply, “schelling points bruh.”
Ziz is a trans women which makes her vulnerable to have ppl act against her in ways that most cis people never experience (and therefore default to disbelieving unless they’re particular aware of what goes on). For this reason, a trans women with the reputation of a liar is in much greater danger than a cis person because it allows transphobes to take unconstrained actions against them. I doubt Ziz would act in ways that increase this risk
Corollary #1: if this stuff didn’t happen to Ziz, I’d be surprised that she’d independently come up with stuff on her own that matches my priors this well. I’m not trans myself but I have plenty of trans friends and, from what I’ve learned from them, Ziz’s account seems plausible
Many of the claims she has made are not obviously effective at furthering her own goals as one might expect if they were lies
I have personally verified a number of small details and claims Ziz has made for myself. This makes me inclined to believe she is being honest.
I found those claims disturbing as well, but when I tried to verify them I pretty much hit a brick wall. As someone disconnected from the bay area community and fairly new to the online community, it’s very hard for me to dig into this sort of thing.
If you have more information than what was talked about on Sinceriously, I’d love to hear about it.
I’m hesitant about saying things here since, to the extent that my epistemics are right, this is a relatively adversarial environment. I think discussing things would reveal things that I know/how I found out about them without many positive effects (I’m also disconnected from the Bay Area Community). After all, if you were confident that Ziz was lying, nothing I know would likely change your mind. Similarly, if you felt like Ziz might be telling the truth, the gravity of the claims probably has more relevance to your actions than the extent to which my info would move the probability.
That being said, DM me and we can chat. I’m also pretty curious about your interactions with Ziz/how she tried to manipulate you.
The stunt at the CFAR reunion is defection that globally damages her credibility.
My response is an example of me estimating her to have low credibility because she’s willing to do things like that.
Given that she her operating decision theory lets her do things like that, I see no reason to expect her not doing other things that damage her credibility as well.
Wearing Sith robes and naming themselves after a fanfic villian is similar in that it damages reputation among many people and not a strategy to develop a reputation as someone to be trusted.
Any one of the three things alone suggests her seeing it okay to take actions that cost credibility. Together they also suggest a strategic decisions to not value credibility, maybe because seeking credibility contrains her range of actions.
How do you explain those three decisions if you think that she’s committed to upholding her credibility?
These are all JD’s words, this is JD’s take on Ziz, not mine. This is an interesting post because there’s nothing fundamentally wrong with anything it says, it just frames it as a negative despite the fact that really, if twitter leftists are the scariest thing in the world to you, what does that really say about you as a person, hmmm? Don’t you know cancer has no future? Ziz is right and we are going to win. :)
I don’t think Woke Twitter Leftism has a problem with telling lies to hurt people who deserve to be hurt in their view and that there’s huge reputational risk for that kind of lies in that crowd.
To the extend that this model is accurate, I don’t think it suggests that we should expect her to always tell the truth.
That still doesn’t explain the Sith robes and fanfic villian name.
Can you elaborate on why you think this belief is completely unfounded? It seems to me that there are clear asymmetries in coordination capacities of good vs nongood. For example, being more open to the idea of a “Good Person” in power than a “Bad Person” seems like common sense. Similarly, groups of good people are intrinsically value-aligned while teams of bad people are not (each has a distinct selfish motivation) -- and I think value-alignedness increases effectiveness.
Assuming Ziz is being honest, she pulled the stunt at CFAR after she had already been defected against. This does not globally damage her credibility. It does damage her reputation among a) ppl who think they can’t defect against her sneakily but plan to try and b) ppl who think she is bad at judging when she’s been defected against. I am in neither of those categories so I have no reason to expect Ziz to defect by lying at me.
In contrast, if Ziz was being dishonest, she pulled that stunt for… inscrutable reasons that may or may not be in the web of lies she might have made. I think this is unlikely. As I’ve already said, her claims seem plausible and, if she was lying, she could do far worse than she did. If she wanted to defect really hard and wasn’t constrained by truth, she could just raise issues that non-marginalized communities have a personal stake in (instead of something like transphobia).
Do you think Little Nas X is less honest because he became Satan in his hit music video Montero? I doubt that wearing Sith Robes / naming yourself after a villain (Ziz is a mythological bird?) is useful information about how honest someone is. This goes double when you know other things. Three points here:
Marginalized people have understandable reasons for inverting mainstream aesthetics. Good/evil aesthetics are defined by mainstream culture. If that culture has betrayed you, it can be therapeutic to reject it in turn by inverting its aesthetics. Many of my LGBTQ+ friends do this. Given that Ziz is a trans women who has an ontology that treats most ppl as “nongood”, it makes sense that she would also (either because of morality-related alienation or gender-related alienation).
You’re conflating reputation/credibility among “many ppl” with reputation/credibility among ppl who would actually help you. Only the second group matters and optimizing credibility with the first is a waste of time. If you look at a marginalized person who has moral integrity (vegan) and writes extensively on TDT (solving coordination problems) and conclude that they’re a liar because clothing choices, this says a lot about your values.
You either a) buy-in to nongood mainstream clothing norms as reflecting a person’s goodness/evilness or b) think Ziz is making a critical error by pushing away ppl who think this is what clothes mean.
IMO people who take either of these positions are sufficiently invested in the status quo that they’d only impede Ziz’s work. Credibility with them isn’t worth much.
While I doubt it turned off helpful ppl, Ziz admitted (I think in a comment on sinceriously somewhere) that her aesthetic was a tactical mistake in hindsight because it attracted a bunch of edgy bad ppl. You framing it as a strategic choice is incorrect for this reason.
Well I think I’ve covered it above. The purpose of “Upholding Credibility” is so that the ppl you care about knowing the truth can actually receive the truth from you. And none of the decisions above impede information-conveyance or reflect defections on the groups of ppl Ziz would be interested in helping (ethical ppl who can work with her, concerned trans women who might be at risk, etc).
...
I’ll admit, I’m a little angry with your response so I might have a harsher tone here. Some of your arguments struck a nerve with me because it really feels like you’re implying that a bunch of my (non-rationalist, completely unaffiliated) LGBTQ+ friends are liars. Here’s what your arguments sound like to me:
“If someone claims Something Bad is happening and then handles it inappropriately, we should give significant weight to the possibility that they are lying because handling it inappropriately was defection”
“When a marginalized person copes with marginalization by inverting mainstream aesthetics, we should give significant weight to the possibility that they are lying because not following the mainstream means you don’t care about being taken honestly”
“If a marginalized person claims Something Bad is happening, handles it inappropriate, and copes with marginalization by inverting mainstream aesthetics, they’re systematically a liar”
Some of my thoughts on Ziz’s honesty:
Many of the specific statements related to a bunch of MIRI stuff seem straightforwardly false to me. They might be honest misunderstandings. In many cases Ziz was shown pretty clear and concrete evidence on what happened, but then just decided that their favorite narrative is correct, and is now just repeatedly announcing that narrative as true. I don’t know whether I would count this as lying, but like, it definitely includes making many wrong statements, and with a process that seems mostly driven by motivated cognition.
Ziz has quoted me a few times. Frequently these quotes are outright fabrications, such as this one: “He suggested me saying this was defamation.” and “the same man who threatened frivolous defamation lawsuits to deter me from relating what Vassar said”. I am extremely hesitant to generally call things defamation and have quite strong personal rules against bringing in defamation lawsuits. I never said that sentence or tried to imply it in the conversation that is being referenced.
Many other people I’ve talked to who were quoted by Ziz felt their statements drastically distorted, enough to really very seriously change their truth-value. I can confirm this based on the above.
While I don’t think any of the above requires “lying”, I do think it makes most statements from Ziz straightforwardly untrustworthy.
Thanks, I appreciate the concrete examples of untrustworthiness than don’t rely on inferences made about reputation. I am specifically concerned about things like this (which seems like a weird and bad direction to take a conversation (https://sinceriously.fyi/net-negative/). It also seems hard to recount falsely without active deception or complete detachment from reality and I doubt Ziz is completely detached from reality:
You say that you “never said that sentence or tried to imply it...” Do you have any sense of why Ziz interpreted you as saying that? I’d like to gauge the distance between what you said and how Ziz interpreted it to gauge degree-of-untrustworthiness.
I don’t know. I think part of the conversation was about some meta-level stuff on when it’s just and fair to attack MIRI and other institutions if they do something terrible. I don’t think I remember the details, but I might have said something like “I generally think it would be bad to make up outright lies and falsehoods about a thing, and I do think that if someone is very obviously making stuff up, something like a defamation lawsuit might make sense as a kind of last resort, though I am generally quite hesitant about defamation lawsuits and think they are pretty bad for the world”.
Again, I don’t remember the details, sadly. It was over 3 years ago. But my sense is that transforming sentences like the above into sentences like the one Ziz accuses me of is how most of their “quotes” work.
It got her a criminal record which means it will damage her credibility which every person who runs a criminal background check on her.
Reading https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Mystery-in-Sonoma-County-after-kidnap-arrests-of-14844155.php is going to make any normal person consider the people to have no credibility and having an article like that with your legal name that people can google to find more about you in interactions like applying for a flat, is a heavy reputational cost.
False imprisonment of kids that are innocent bystanders isn’t just “handles it inappropriately”. None of the LGBTQ+ people I know personally have to the extend of my knowledge done something as bad nor would I expect that to be in their range of possible actions.
As far as Ziz, TDT and falsehoods, she writes herself:
So she’s open about having threatened to say false things that part of her believed to be false for retaliation. From the TDT perspective actually fulfilling what you threaten seems quite reasonable.
Since you’ve quoted Ziz out of context, let me finish that quote for you. It is clear that the other half of her (whatever that means) did in fact believe those things and it is clear that this was a recounting of a live-conversation rather than a broad strategy. It is not that weird to not have fully processed the things that you partially believe, live, in the middle of a conversation such that you are surprised by them.
I see you’re equivocating between “honesty”/”credibility” and “reputation” again:
I see you’ve quietly dropped the two other reasons to ding credibility I mentioned to focus on the protest, which along with a misquote is your main reason for why Ziz is a liar:
It seems obvious to me that false imprisonment of kids is a noncentral description of what Ziz was doing (ie “she staged a protest and unbeknownst to her there were children somewhere” is my model). Given that this was scaled back to a misdemeanor, I imagine that you’re focusing on this specifically for rhetorical effect.
While I’m dubious about the protest being a Smart Move, I don’t think this has much bearing on Ziz’s honesty and I certainly don’t think the coincidental presence of children somewhere in the area has any bearing on it.
From a TDT perspective, actually treating the first thing you come up with after someone asks you a question (esp when its couched in wiggle-terms like “probably”) as a binding pre-commitment does not seem reasonable to me at all.
Given your manipulation of context above, and my notable lack of context wrt this whole situation, you have an asymmetric information advantage here that I suspect you may use to deceive me. As a result, I’m tapping out of the convo here.
If you are in good faith, I wish you well.
I didn’t say that there were three reasons, I only spoke of one reason being that there’s a pattern of behavior. It’s about the generator function. The question is about what generator function explains all three events
We are talking about a person who supposedly follows a coherent decision theory and makes game theory backed moves. I wouldn’t expect that the average LGBTQ+ thinks their actions through in game theoretic terms. There’s also an IQ difference between Ziz and the average human or average LGBTQ+ person where she’s very likely >130 IQ. That means I’m more likely to take a stupid action by a random person as simply a stupid action but expect Ziz to have a better thought out model for why her action makes sense then I would expect for the averge person.
Ziz writes about the importance of not following social conventions and preventing herself from value drift. From the inside I would expect both the Sith robes and the fanfic villian name to be stoic exercises with the intend of immunizing herself against social conventions affecting her. In the post about Pasek’s doom she writes about it being important to be a Gervais-sociopath. Being able to act unconstrained and being able to lie when adventagous is part of being a Gervais-sociopath and the stoic exercises are a way to train mentally into that direction.
My model would explain most weird (as seen by general society) actions of most LGBTQ+ people to be made because even when they are costly (certain people think less of them for it) they are done because the person considers expression of their sexual of gender identity to be a sacred value. Sith robes are not expressions of their sexual of gender identity and thus taking the reputational hit for them shows valuing reputation less.
There’s also sometimes weirdness that comes from lack of social skills and not from conscious decisions that aren’t directly sexual / gender identity. Choosing a fanfic villian name and wearing Sith robes is however done through conscious choice.
The article was the first impression I got about Ziz (I live in Germany and never have attended a CFAR workshop) and I would expect that I’m not the only person for which it’s true.
You said that the action was only costly with people who Ziz thinks defected with her and that’s not how the action turned out.
While it likely played out worse then she expected beforehand, I don’t think the idea that it was only likely to damage her reputation with the CFAR staff (whom she thinks defected) was a reasonable model of the situation.
Ah, mea culpa. I saw your other comment amount Pasek crashing with you and interpreted it to mean you were pretty close to the Ziz-related part of the community. I’m less hesitant about talking to you now so I’ll hop back in.
I really feel that you’re making a category error by repeatedly merging the concepts “credibility with a small set of helpful ppl” and “general reputation.” I don’t see why Sith Robes or gender identity or aesthetics in general should cause me to trust someone less, especially when I have other information on them I consider more relevant. This because, unlike most social conventions which serve as forms of control/submission to the mob/etc, the ability to be perceived as honest by those you want to work with allows you to more easily work with them.
Gervais sociopaths often have principles that include telling the truth.
I don’t think her aesthetic was stoically motivated as much as motivated by the desire to treat ones own interests and values as logically prior to social convention—a refusal to let ones own interests bow to the mob. This seems conceptually similar to me as treating something as a sacred value. It just has more decision theory behind it.
I think this is somewhat noncentral because (as mentioned), I disagree that a single generator produced all three events. What do you think the actual relevant generator is, and why do you think it also generates lie-behavior against parties Ziz might want to work with (eg publishing everyone-facing lies on the internet)?
Yeah fair enough. I agree that this isn’t a reasonable model but my point still stands I think. The issue is that I neglected a third group aside from people who plan on defecting against Ziz or have low opinions of her judgement. People who automatically flinch away from others who do unconstrained things would also likely trust her less. Still, that group would be unable to help do the unconstrained things she wants to so I don’t think it means much to Ziz that she can’t work with them.
What group of people do you think Ziz wanted to work with that she is no longer able to because of the protest?