Former Reliability Engineer with expertise in data analysis, facilitation, incident investigation, technical writing, and more. Currently studying deep learning and cataloguing EA projects and AI safety efforts.
Contact me if you have EA project ideas or want to take ownership of one.
I have, and am willing to offer to EA members and organizations, the following generalist skills:
Specifying impact. In Reliability we often have to outline exactly how a proposed expenditure will improve an organization's bottom line. I have gotten very good at asking and answering questions like "how many people might this affect?" or "how likely is this outcome?" This could be especially useful for people with project ideas writing grant proposals.
Facilitation. Organize and run a meeting, take notes, email follow-ups and reminders, whatever you need. I don't need to be an expert in the topic, I don't need to personally know the participants. I do need a clear picture of the meeting's purpose and what contributions you're hoping to elicit from the participants.
Technical writing. More specifically, editing and proofreading, which don't require I fully understand the subject matter. I am a human Hemingway Editor. I have been known to cut a third of the text out of a corporate document while retaining all relevant information to the owner's satisfaction. I viciously stamp out typos.
Presentation review and speech coaching. I used to be terrified of public speaking. I still am, but now I'm pretty good at it anyway. I have given prepared and impromptu talks to audiences of dozens-to-hundreds and I have coached speakers giving company TED talks to thousands. A friend who reached out to me for input said my feedback was "exceedingly helpful". If you plan to give a talk and want feedback on your content, slides, or technique, I would be delighted to advise.
I am willing to take one-off or recurring requests. I reserve the right to start charging if this starts taking up more than a couple hours a week, but for now I'm volunteering my time and the first consult will always be free (so you can gauge my awesomeness for yourself). Contact me at optimiser.joe@gmail.com if you're interested.
Yes, "let's not fail with abandon" is a good summary of my argument to fellow omnivores.
That's a really good overview by Rethink Priorities. The Invertebrate Sentience Table shifted my credence a little bit in favor of insects, but I think I tend to weight more highly the argument that some sentience criteria can prove too much. I'm not super impressed by a criteria that shares a "Yes" answer with plants and/or prokaryotes. In the same vein, contextual learning sounds impressive, but if I'm understanding that description correctly then it also applies to the recommendation feature of Google Search. I do, however, agree we should take the possibility seriously and continue looking for hard evidence either way.
Here's a thought: is anyone currently testing where language models like GPT-4 fall on the sentience table?
Thanks, those are some great resources! I can read the post on insect sentience but the link to the paper throws an error. I'd love to read the definitions they use for their criteria.
Getting technical: soy is a different branch of the legume family tree. The one I'm most allergic to seems to be Hologalegina (galegolds), which includes broad beans, peas, and chickpeas.
Tofu is always fine and soy is I think fine, but I've had reactions to a few things containing soy + something else (soy protein shakes = very bad day). Soybeans are phaseoloids, the same sub-family as black/brown beans, but only the latter reliably causes me problems. I haven't tested all the phaseoloids but it's obviously kinda unpleasant to do so.
Part of the problem with this allergy profile is the uncertainty it spawns; many foods have 2 or 3 ingredients that could be the cause of a reaction and it can be hard to tell which is the culprit. To complicate matters further, cooking helps at least some of them (fish is 50-50, egg yolk is fine).
I've been to formal allergy testing but they only had tests for a few of my problem foods because come on, who would be allergic to celery? IIRC the scale they used is 1 to 5 where 5 is "don't f*ck with this ever".
Strong reaction: Fish mix (4), egg yolk (4), catfish (5), english pea (5)
Weak reaction: trout (3), green bean (3)
No reaction: shellfish (although the allergist mentioned I could be allergic to the shells, which aren't tested, and I've definitely reacted to every shellfish I've tried in the last two decades)
Thanks, Fai! I'm still on the fence about this, but assuming it were true - what does the evidence look like for suffering? It seems like it might be better to eat an animal that's lived a relatively normal life compared to e.g. farmed chickens. I know some fish farms can get pretty bad but how common is that? Edit: Pete's comment had a useful source here.
I'm curious what evidence convinced you about fish. So far I haven't seen much on the subject of consciousness specifically, though I have seen some arguments around pain nerves and aversive stimuli.
Conditional on insects having conscious experiences, I'd agree with you. I'm not convinced they do, and I don't find stimulus-response alone to be sufficient for giving a creature nonzero moral weight. Plenty of people may disagree with me on that, though, and I certainly wouldn't recommend anyone attempt a diet substitute that they think causes more harm.
I enjoyed this post. Short and to the point.
I'd like to add that the stakes are high enough to justify pushing resources into every angle we might reasonably have on the problem. Even if foundational research has only a sliver of a chance of impacting future alignment, that sliver contains quite a lot of value. And I do think it's in fact quite a bit more than a sliver.
Great advice, Yonatan! This is actually baked into the original plan - build a minimum viable product, find some users, find the sticking points, iterate and improve. "Build a feedback form" is on the to-do list, and I'm always open to suggestions for better design and sharing.
Also, honestly, even if nobody else benefits from this, I'll be glad to have it available. Initially the thing that drew me to David's post was my frustration at not knowing where to look for quick-win opportunities to benefit EA. I figured someone had done something like what I wanted, and I was delighted to find that someone did. Even if it completely flops, I won't regret the time spent collecting and organizing project ideas, and I'll probably keep using the list as a reference for years.
(Cross-posted on the EA Anywhere Slack and a few other places)
I have, and am willing to offer to EA members and organizations upon request, the following generalist skills:
I am willing to take one-off or recurring requests. I reserve the right to start charging if this starts taking up more than a couple hours a week, but for now I'm volunteering my time and the first consult will always be free (so you can gauge my awesomeness for yourself). Message me or email me at optimiser.joe@gmail.com if you're interested.