I really like this ad strategy from BlueDot. 5 stars.
90% of the message is still x / c-risk focussed, but by including “discrimination” and “loss of social connection” they’re clearly trying to either (or both);
create a big tent
nudge people that are in “ethics” but sympathetic to x / c-risk into x / c-risk
Huh, this is really a surprisingly bad ad. None of the things listed are things that IMO have much to do with why AI is uniquely dangerous (they are basically all misuse-related), and also not really what any of the AI Safety fundamentals curriculum is about (and as such is false advertising). Like, I don’t think the AI Safety fundamentals curriculum has anything that will help with election interference or loss of social connection or less likelihood of war or discrimination?
I should have been clearer—I like the fact that they’re trying to create a larger tent and (presumably) win ethics people over. There are many reasons not also not like the ad. I would also guess that they have an automated campaign running with several (maybe dozens) of pieces of creative. Without seeing their analytics it would be impossible to know which performs the best, but it wouldn’t surprise me if it was this one (lists work).
I really like this ad strategy from BlueDot. 5 stars.
90% of the message is still x / c-risk focussed, but by including “discrimination” and “loss of social connection” they’re clearly trying to either (or both);
create a big tent
nudge people that are in “ethics” but sympathetic to x / c-risk into x / c-risk
(prediction: 4000 disagreement Karma)
Huh, this is really a surprisingly bad ad. None of the things listed are things that IMO have much to do with why AI is uniquely dangerous (they are basically all misuse-related), and also not really what any of the AI Safety fundamentals curriculum is about (and as such is false advertising). Like, I don’t think the AI Safety fundamentals curriculum has anything that will help with election interference or loss of social connection or less likelihood of war or discrimination?
I should have been clearer—I like the fact that they’re trying to create a larger tent and (presumably) win ethics people over. There are many reasons not also not like the ad. I would also guess that they have an automated campaign running with several (maybe dozens) of pieces of creative. Without seeing their analytics it would be impossible to know which performs the best, but it wouldn’t surprise me if it was this one (lists work).