I've been a Researcher at Animal Charity Evaluators (ACE) since October 2022. Before joining ACE, I worked in various roles in the U.K. Civil Service, most recently heading up the Animal Welfare Labelling team. I write the monthly Sentient Futures newsletter.
Hey, useful question! This is probably the strongest case I’ve seen, focused on the potential legal implications. But it still rests on the assumption that opening the door for legal recognition of certain charismatic species (like whales) will spill over to other species that people are primed to disregard (like chickens), which definitely isn’t a given. If you’ve not already seen it, the MOTH Project at NYU has also come up with a list of principles that seem like a useful guide for anyone doing work in this space.
On the empathy argument: In theory it could still be more persuasive, and harder for people to ignore, if animals were able to more directly communicate feelings of pain, stress, isolation, etc. And this could also reinforce people’s understanding of animals as individuals if different animals express different emotions in similar situations, which in theory could improve their empathy towards them. But yeah, this depends on a lot of things going right: e.g., the technology accurately relaying animals’ communications, animals coming across as complex/sympathetic, etc., and this being relayed by credible people to key audiences in a persuasive way. There’s likely to be a lot of misleading noise in this area as well - maybe you’ll get some big industry players commissioning studies that ‘translate’ animals’ communications in humane-washing ways. And on top of the points you raised, using this kind of tech on e.g. farmed chickens will give a skewed perspective on the intelligence of a typical chicken, given that farmed meat chickens are killed at a few weeks old so you’d be listening to the equivalent of toddlers who’ve been raised in abnormal conditions that probably stifle normal development.
Broader AI uses for understanding animals better could still be really useful (e.g. by enabling more sophisticated bio-sensors and tracking devices, and the software required to process and interpret all the resulting data), so it would be helpful to pivot people more to thinking about all the messier ways that AI could help us understand animals’ lives on their own terms rather than looking for a clean animal-to-human translation. Mal Graham has written about some of the potential applications in this post.
Thanks David!
Hey Benny, thanks for the thoughts!
Totally agree on your first point. I guess you could divide positive use cases up into a few different categories:
On your second point: thanks, that's a good point and I think your suggestion is probably more accurate!
Thanks for this excellent post! The distinction between 'puntable' and 'less puntable' ideas seems like a really helpful way for advocates to think about tactic prioritisation.
On the point about AI-enabled modelling of wild animal welfare and implications of different interventions: are there any existing promising examples of this? The one example I've come across is the model described in the paper 'Predicting predator–prey interactions in terrestrial endotherms using random forest' but the predictions seem pretty basic and not necessarily any better than non-AI modelling.
Also, why did you decide that TAI's role in 'infrastructure needs' and 'getting the “academic stamp of approval”' weren't useful to think about?
Thanks Tristan! Definitely agree that AGI's effects on animals (like on humans) are currently extremely uncertain – but by being proactive and strategic, we could still greatly increase the probability that those effects will be positive.
The recommendations I suggested seem broadly sensible to me but I'm sure that some are likely to be much more impactful than others, and some major ones are bound to be missing, and each one of them is sufficiently broad that it could cover a whole range of sub-priorities. This is probably an argument for prioritising the first of the principles that you mention, directing the movement toward considering the role of AI in its future, and agreeing on the set of practical, rapid steps that we need to take over the next few years.
Thanks for sharing, agree with all these concerns. Another one I’m worried about is that these kinds of efforts don’t accurately relay what animals are trying to communicate and instead just tell us what we want to hear (like we're already seeing with misleading 'dog translation collars'), which could be used as further justification for their exploitation and neglect.
As well as Earth Species Project and Project CETI, there’s lots of tech funding set to come into the field: Google is working on technology for communication with dolphins and the major Chinese tech firm Baidu has filed a patent for animal-human communication technology, and we'll probably see lots of others following suit. Seeking to slow down these efforts makes sense as an end goal, but as an intermediate goal we could at least try to get as many players in the field to sign up to something like these principles drafted by the More Than Human Life program at New York University (who Project CETI has partnered with).