Three Epoch employees – Matthew Barnett, Tamay Besiroglu, and Ege Erdil – have left to launch Mechanize, an AI startup aiming for broad automation of ordinary labour:
Today we’re announcing Mechanize, a startup focused on developing virtual work environments, benchmarks, and training data that will enable the full automation of the economy.
We will achieve this by creating simulated environments and evaluations that capture the full scope of what people do at their jobs. ...
Currently, AI models have serious shortcomings that render most of this enormous value out of reach. They are unreliable, lack robust long-context capabilities, struggle with agency and multimodality, and can’t execute long-term plans without going off the rails.
To overcome these limitations, Mechanize will produce the data and evals necessary for comprehensively automating work. Our digital environments will act as practical simulations of real-world work scenarios, enabling agents to learn useful abilities through RL. ...
The explosive economic growth likely to result from completely automating labor could generate vast abundance, much higher standards of living, and new goods and services that we can’t even imagine today. Our vision is to realize this potential as soon as possible.
I started a new company with @egeerdil2 and @tamaybes that's focused on automating the whole economy. We're taking a big bet on our view that the main value of AI will come from broad automation rather than from "geniuses in a data center".
The Mechanize website is scant on detail. It seems broadly bad that the alumni from a safety-focused AI org have left to form a company which accelerates AI timelines (and presumably is based on/uses evals built at Epoch).
It seems noteworthy that Epoch AI retweeted the announcement, wishing the departing founders best of luck – which feels like a tacit endorsement of the move.
Habryka wonders whether payment would have had to be given to Epoch for use of their benchmarks suite.
Links
- Official Twitter announcement
- See also this shortform on LessWrong
This seems to suggest that you think the politicians "making the world better for my children" statement would then also be problematic. Do you agree with that?
I'll be honest, this argument seems a bit too clever. Is the underlying problem with the statement really that it implies a set of motivations that might slightly up-weight a certain age group? One of the comments speaks of "core values" for EA. Is that really a core value? I'm pretty sure I recall reading an argument by McAskill about how actually we should more heavily weight young people in various ways (I think it was voting), for example. I serious doubt most EAs could claim that they literally are distributionally exact in weighting all morally relevant entities in every decision they make. I think the "core value" that exists probably isn't really this demanding, although I could be wrong.