If you work for a frontier AI company, either because you think they care about saving the world or especially if you think that you will be the one to influence them, you are deluded. Wake up and quit.
If you care about protecting the world, you will quit, even though it will be hard to give up the money and the prestige and the hope that they would fix the problem. The actual path to reducing AI risk is not as glamorous or as clear at this point as following the instructions of a wealthy and well-organized corporation, but at least you will be going in the right direction.
The early 80k-style advice to work at an AI lab was mainly to make technical discoveries for safety that e.g. academia didn't have the resources for. When they were small, it also made some sense to try to influence the industry culture. Now, this advice is crazy-- there is no way 1 EA joining a 1000 person company with duties to their investors and locked in a death race is going to "influence" it. The influence goes entirely the other way. If you weren't frogboiled, you would never have selected this path for influence.
There's a lot more to say on this, but I think this is the crux. Your chance for positive marginal impact for AI Safety is not with the labs. If you work for the labs, you're probably just a henchman for a supervillain megaproject, and you can have some positive counterfactual impact right now by quitting. Don't sell out.
Thanks for the post, Holly. Strongly upvoted. I did not find the post that valuable per se, but it generated some good discussion.
People at leading AI companies can earn hundreds of thousand of dollars per year, so quitting could plausibly decrease their donations by 100 k$/year. I estimate donating this to the Shrimp Welfare Project (SWP) would decrease as much pain per year as that needed to neutralise the happiness of 1.25 M human lives (= 100*10^3*639/51). Do you think the benefits of quitting outweight this? I do not, so I encourage people at leading AI companies to simply donate more to SWP. I imagine no one would quit if there were actual human lives on the line (instead of shrimp which are not helped).
I wasn't imagining they were donating the money, frankly. I'm not sure how many people working at AI companies even donate.
Anyway, directly making the world worse is not the only choice for making money.