it seems harder to think of the equivalent for preventing the accidental or deliberate release of synthetic diseases.
OK, how about really easy stuff, like systematically emailing researchers involved with synthetic biology and trying to convince them to reconsider their choice of field? Feels like ideally we would get someone who knew stuff about biology (and ideally had some level of respect in the biology community) to do this.
However its no secret that the cost-effectiveness of political advocacy is really hard to measure, which is perhaps why its been underanalysed in the Effective Altruism community.
Does anyone reading LW know stuff about political advocacy and lobbying? Is there a Web 2.0 “lobbyist as a service” company yet? ;)
Are there ways we can craft memes to co-opt existing political factions? I doubt we’d be able to infect, say, most of the US democractic party with the entire effective altruism memeplex, but perhaps a single meme could make a splash with good timing and a clever, sticky message.
Is there any risk of “poisoning the well” with an amateurish lobbying effort? If we can get Nick Bostrom or similar to present to legislators on a topic, they’ll probably be taken seriously, but a half-hearted attempt from no-names might not be.
Is there any risk of “poisoning the well” with an amateurish lobbying effort?
E.g. annoyance towards the overenthusiastic amateurs wasting the time of a researcher who knows the field and issues better than they do seems plausible. Also, efforts to persuade researchers to leave the field seems most likely to work on the most responsible ones, leaving the more reckless researchers to dominate the field, which could reduce the social norms related to precaution-taking in the field overall.
Low-quality or otherwise low-investment attempts at convincing people to make major life changes seem to me to run a strong risk of setting up later attempts for the one argument against an army failure mode. Remember that the people you’re trying to convince aren’t perfect rationalists.
(And I’m not sure that convincing a few researchers would be an improvement, let alone a large one.)
Also, efforts to persuade researchers to leave the field seems most likely to work on the most responsible ones, leaving the more reckless researchers to dominate the field, which could reduce the social norms related to precaution-taking in the field overall.
Only if they buy the argument in the first place. Have any “synthetic biology” researchers ever been convinced by such arguments?
OK, how about really easy stuff, like systematically emailing researchers involved with synthetic biology and trying to convince them to reconsider their choice of field? Feels like ideally we would get someone who knew stuff about biology (and ideally had some level of respect in the biology community) to do this.
Systematically emailing researchers runs the risk of being pattern matched to crank spam. If I were a respected biologist, a better plan might be to
write a short (500-1500 words) editorial that communicates the strongest arguments with the least inferential distance, and sign it
get other recognized scientists to sign it
contact the editors of Science, Nature, and PNAS and ask whether they’d like to publish it
if step 3 works, try to get an interview or segment on those journals’ podcasts (allthreehave podcasts), and try putting out a press release
if step 3 fails, try getting a more specific journal like Cell or Nature Genetics to publish it
Some of these steps could of course be expanded or reordered (for example, it might be quicker to get a less famous journal to publish an editorial, and then use that as a stepping stone into Science/Nature/PNAS). I’m also ignoring the possibility that synthetic biologists have already considered risks of their work, and would react badly to being nagged (however professionally) about it.
Edit:Martin Rees got an editorial into Science about catastrophic risk just a few weeks ago, which is minor evidence that this kind of approach can work.
OK, how about really easy stuff, like systematically emailing researchers involved with synthetic biology and trying to convince them to reconsider their choice of field?
That might convince a few ones on the margin, but I doubt it would convince the bulk of them—especially the most dangerous ones, I guess.
People like Bostrom and Martin Rees are certainly engaged in raising public awareness through the media. There’s extensive lobbying on some risks, like global warming, nuclear weapons and asteroid defence. In relation to bio/nano/AI the most important thing to do at the moment is research—lobbying should wait until it’s clearer what should be done. Although perhaps not—look at the mess over flu research.
It seems harder to think of the equivalent for preventing the accidental or deliberate release of synthetic diseases.
OK, how about really easy stuff, like systematically emailing researchers involved with synthetic biology and trying to convince them to reconsider their choice of field?
One of the last serious attempts to prevent large-scale memetic engineering was the unabomber.
The effort apparently failed—the memes have continued their march unabated.
Thanks for reminding me about GCR.
OK, how about really easy stuff, like systematically emailing researchers involved with synthetic biology and trying to convince them to reconsider their choice of field? Feels like ideally we would get someone who knew stuff about biology (and ideally had some level of respect in the biology community) to do this.
Does anyone reading LW know stuff about political advocacy and lobbying? Is there a Web 2.0 “lobbyist as a service” company yet? ;)
Are there ways we can craft memes to co-opt existing political factions? I doubt we’d be able to infect, say, most of the US democractic party with the entire effective altruism memeplex, but perhaps a single meme could make a splash with good timing and a clever, sticky message.
Is there any risk of “poisoning the well” with an amateurish lobbying effort? If we can get Nick Bostrom or similar to present to legislators on a topic, they’ll probably be taken seriously, but a half-hearted attempt from no-names might not be.
E.g. annoyance towards the overenthusiastic amateurs wasting the time of a researcher who knows the field and issues better than they do seems plausible. Also, efforts to persuade researchers to leave the field seems most likely to work on the most responsible ones, leaving the more reckless researchers to dominate the field, which could reduce the social norms related to precaution-taking in the field overall.
Low-quality or otherwise low-investment attempts at convincing people to make major life changes seem to me to run a strong risk of setting up later attempts for the one argument against an army failure mode. Remember that the people you’re trying to convince aren’t perfect rationalists.
(And I’m not sure that convincing a few researchers would be an improvement, let alone a large one.)
Only if they buy the argument in the first place. Have any “synthetic biology” researchers ever been convinced by such arguments?
Were there any relatively uninformed amateurs that played a role in convincing EY that AI friendliness was an issue?
Systematically emailing researchers runs the risk of being pattern matched to crank spam. If I were a respected biologist, a better plan might be to
write a short (500-1500 words) editorial that communicates the strongest arguments with the least inferential distance, and sign it
get other recognized scientists to sign it
contact the editors of Science, Nature, and PNAS and ask whether they’d like to publish it
if step 3 works, try to get an interview or segment on those journals’ podcasts (all three have podcasts), and try putting out a press release
if step 3 fails, try getting a more specific journal like Cell or Nature Genetics to publish it
Some of these steps could of course be expanded or reordered (for example, it might be quicker to get a less famous journal to publish an editorial, and then use that as a stepping stone into Science/Nature/PNAS). I’m also ignoring the possibility that synthetic biologists have already considered risks of their work, and would react badly to being nagged (however professionally) about it.
Edit: Martin Rees got an editorial into Science about catastrophic risk just a few weeks ago, which is minor evidence that this kind of approach can work.
That might convince a few ones on the margin, but I doubt it would convince the bulk of them—especially the most dangerous ones, I guess.
People like Bostrom and Martin Rees are certainly engaged in raising public awareness through the media. There’s extensive lobbying on some risks, like global warming, nuclear weapons and asteroid defence. In relation to bio/nano/AI the most important thing to do at the moment is research—lobbying should wait until it’s clearer what should be done. Although perhaps not—look at the mess over flu research.
One of the last serious attempts to prevent large-scale memetic engineering was the unabomber.
The effort apparently failed—the memes have continued their march unabated.