My understanding is that there is a lot of writings produced internally by SingInst that are not available to the public. If you think you are up to the task of organizing and polishing them into publishable form (which I guess probably also requires filling in lots of missing pieces) you should contact them and volunteer. (But I guess they probably don’t want to hand their unfinished work to just anyone so you’ll have to prove yourself somehow.)
If you just want to get an idea of the issues involved, here are some of my writings on the topic:
From time to time people ask lukeprog about SI writings. He talk about AI papers they are working, and at some point, for the sake of security, he stop and says “it’s confidential” or something similar.
Evaluating who can do a good work is importante, 60% fail, besides the historical aversion to formated papers.
My understanding is that there is a lot of writings produced internally by SingInst that are not available to the public. If you think you are up to the task of organizing and polishing them into publishable form (which I guess probably also requires filling in lots of missing pieces) you should contact them and volunteer. (But I guess they probably don’t want to hand their unfinished work to just anyone so you’ll have to prove yourself somehow.)
If you just want to get an idea of the issues involved, here are some of my writings on the topic:
http://lesswrong.com/r/discussion/lw/6mi/some_thoughts_on_singularity_strategies/
http://lesswrong.com/r/discussion/lw/b10/modest_superintelligences/
http://lesswrong.com/r/discussion/lw/e2k/cynical_explanations_of_fai_critics_including/
And see also the unfinished AI risk sequence by lukeprog.
From time to time people ask lukeprog about SI writings. He talk about AI papers they are working, and at some point, for the sake of security, he stop and says “it’s confidential” or something similar.
Evaluating who can do a good work is importante, 60% fail, besides the historical aversion to formated papers.
Note: I’m still waiting EY books.