@Richard_Ngo do you have any alternative approaches in mind that are less susceptible to regulatory capture? At first glance, I think this broad argument can be applied to any situation where the government regulates anything. (There’s always some risk that R focuses on the wrong things or R experiences corporate/governmental pressure to push things through).
I do agree that the broader or more flexible the regulatory regime is, the more susceptible it might be to regulatory capture. (But again, this feels like it doesn’t really have much to do with safety cases– this is just a question of whether we want flexible or fixed/inflexible regulations in general.)
On the spectrum I outlined, the “legislate that AI labs should do X, Y, Z, as enforced by regulator R” end is less susceptible to regulatory capture (at least after the initial bill is passed).
@Richard_Ngo do you have any alternative approaches in mind that are less susceptible to regulatory capture? At first glance, I think this broad argument can be applied to any situation where the government regulates anything. (There’s always some risk that R focuses on the wrong things or R experiences corporate/governmental pressure to push things through).
I do agree that the broader or more flexible the regulatory regime is, the more susceptible it might be to regulatory capture. (But again, this feels like it doesn’t really have much to do with safety cases– this is just a question of whether we want flexible or fixed/inflexible regulations in general.)
On the spectrum I outlined, the “legislate that AI labs should do X, Y, Z, as enforced by regulator R” end is less susceptible to regulatory capture (at least after the initial bill is passed).