Given the greater evidence available for general ML research, being well calibrated about the difficulty of general ML research is the first step to being well calibrated about the difficulty of ML alignment research.
I think I agree with this point but want to explicitly note the switch from the phrase ‘AI alignment research’ to ‘ML alignment research’; my model of Eliezer thinks the second is mostly a distraction from the former, and if you think they’re the same or interchangeable that seems like a disagreement.
[For example, I think ML alignment research includes stuff like “will our learned function be robust to distributional shift in the inputs?” and “does our model discriminate against protected classes?” whereas AI alignment research includes stuff like “will our system be robust to changes in the number of inputs?” and “is our model deceiving us about its level of understanding?”. They’re related in some ways, but pretty deeply distinct.]
I think I agree with this point but want to explicitly note the switch from the phrase ‘AI alignment research’ to ‘ML alignment research’; my model of Eliezer thinks the second is mostly a distraction from the former, and if you think they’re the same or interchangeable that seems like a disagreement.
[For example, I think ML alignment research includes stuff like “will our learned function be robust to distributional shift in the inputs?” and “does our model discriminate against protected classes?” whereas AI alignment research includes stuff like “will our system be robust to changes in the number of inputs?” and “is our model deceiving us about its level of understanding?”. They’re related in some ways, but pretty deeply distinct.]