@Elizabeth, Mesa nails it above. I would also add that I am conceptualizing impactful AI safety research as the product of multiple reagents, including talent, ideas, infrastructure, and funding. In my bullet point, I was pointing to an abundance of talent and ideas relative to infrastructure and funding. I’m still mostly working on talent development at MATS, but I’m also helping with infrastructure and funding (e.g., founding LISA, advising Catalyze Impact, regranting via Manifund) and I want to do much more for these limiting reagents.
Also note that historically many individuals entering AI safety seem to have been pursuing the “Connector” path, when most jobs now (and probably in the future) are “Iterator”-shaped, and larger AI safety projects are also principally bottlenecked by “Amplifiers”. The historical focus on recruiting and training Connectors to the detriment of Iterators and Amplifiers has likely contributed to this relative talent shortage. A caveat: Connectors are also critical for founding new research agendas and organizations, though many self-styled Connectors would likely substantially benefit as founders by improving some Amplifier-shaped soft skills, including leadership, collaboration, networking, and fundraising.
@Elizabeth, Mesa nails it above. I would also add that I am conceptualizing impactful AI safety research as the product of multiple reagents, including talent, ideas, infrastructure, and funding. In my bullet point, I was pointing to an abundance of talent and ideas relative to infrastructure and funding. I’m still mostly working on talent development at MATS, but I’m also helping with infrastructure and funding (e.g., founding LISA, advising Catalyze Impact, regranting via Manifund) and I want to do much more for these limiting reagents.
Also note that historically many individuals entering AI safety seem to have been pursuing the “Connector” path, when most jobs now (and probably in the future) are “Iterator”-shaped, and larger AI safety projects are also principally bottlenecked by “Amplifiers”. The historical focus on recruiting and training Connectors to the detriment of Iterators and Amplifiers has likely contributed to this relative talent shortage. A caveat: Connectors are also critical for founding new research agendas and organizations, though many self-styled Connectors would likely substantially benefit as founders by improving some Amplifier-shaped soft skills, including leadership, collaboration, networking, and fundraising.