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Executive summary: The author argues that PauseCon 2026 was an impressively effective and encouraging example of grassroots AI pause advocacy, updating them toward supporting PauseAI’s approach and emphasizing the value of courageous, coordinated political engagement.

Key points:

  1. The author found PauseCon’s programming—sign-making, local presentations, lobbying training, meetings, and protest—both productive and motivating.
  2. Local organizers demonstrated creative and persistent grassroots tactics (e.g., festival outreach, repeated follow-ups with representatives) that others planned to replicate.
  3. The author was positively surprised that PauseAI’s actual strategy and messaging (e.g., nonviolence, Overton window shifting, treaty advocacy) seemed more reasonable and aligned with their views than expected from online discourse.
  4. PauseAI’s policy asks—especially a US-China treaty to halt frontier AI, public statements on extinction risk, and support for the AI Risk Evaluation Act—struck the author as coherent and well-communicated.
  5. Meetings with Congressional staffers were hard to evaluate but seemed directionally positive, with useful questions and some signs of engagement, and the author views follow-up as important.
  6. The author found collaborative “tag-team” advocacy (combining technical and policy expertise) especially effective in meetings.
  7. The protest was well-organized and valuable for building group identity and solidarity, even if it attracted limited external attention.
  8. The author interprets PauseAI as attempting to channel broad public concern about AI into coordinated political action, particularly around an international treaty.
  9. Overall, the experience increased the author’s optimism, pride, and willingness to support and participate in similar advocacy efforts.

 

 

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Executive summary: The author argues that their engagement with EA is overdetermined by a diverse mix of motivations—moral, emotional, social, and self-interested—which they do not fully endorse but all genuinely influence them.

Key points:

  1. The author’s upbringing, empathy, and fairness intuitions (influenced by Rawls) shaped a core belief that all people matter and that prioritizing the most important problems is the most realistic approach.
  2. Disillusionment with ineffective charity and exposure to EA thinkers (e.g., Singer, GiveWell) strengthened their commitment to effectiveness and “earning to give.”
  3. Emotional drivers like guilt, fear (especially of existential risks), rage at suffering, and personal loss (e.g., a friend dying of malaria) provide ongoing motivation to act.
  4. Social factors—admiration, friendship, and a strong sense of community—reinforce engagement and make participation more meaningful.
  5. Self-regarding motives such as pride, status (e.g., forum karma), and even schadenfreude or adversarial framing play a non-trivial role.
  6. Reflective awareness of cognitive biases and fallback to expected utility reasoning (“math”) help sustain motivation when other drives are absent.

 

 

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Executive summary: The author argues that rising clinical trial costs and inefficiencies are a major, tractable bottleneck to biomedical progress, and curates a reading list supporting the “Clinical Trial Abundance” view that expanding and improving trials could accelerate innovation.

Key points:

  1. The author suggests “clinical trial abundance” could be an EA cause area because disease burden remains high and increasing the pace of progress seems tractable.
  2. Drug development costs have risen ~80x since the 1950s to around $1B per approved drug, leading to fewer drugs, avoidance of risky bets, and worse outcomes for patients.
  3. Historical shifts moved the field from small, fast, sometimes unethical trials to large, slow, prediction-heavy preclinical pipelines that take many years.
  4. “Eroom’s Law” describes declining R&D efficiency, potentially driven by factors like higher standards of care, risk-averse regulators, excessive spending, and overreliance on predictive preclinical research.
  5. The author is uncertain about some strong claims in this literature, such as constant clinical trial success rates over 50 years.
  6. Clinical Trial Abundance advocates argue that neither deregulation alone nor AI will solve drug development, because human trials remain essential for testing efficacy.
  7. Trials are inefficient partly because they are treated as bespoke projects rather than standardized engineering processes, and industry risk aversion has causes beyond regulation.
  8. The goal is not just more trials but tighter feedback loops where trials improve understanding of disease, not just filter drugs.
  9. Regulatory uncertainty (e.g., opaque approval criteria) may drive inefficiency more than strict rules, leading firms to over-test and avoid risk; proposed solutions include publishing data from failed trials.
  10. Some countries (e.g., Australia) run faster, cheaper early-phase trials due to lighter approval requirements, lower GMP standards, and financial incentives, without clear safety tradeoffs.
  11. Proposed reforms include streamlining consent, using human challenge trials, increasing transparency (e.g., FDA letters), and treating current norms as historically contingent rather than optimal.
  12. The broader movement involves researchers, policymakers, and patient advocates (e.g., 1DaySooner) working on policy frameworks and practical reforms to expand and improve clinical trials.

 

 

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Executive summary: The author argues that current discourse around AI capabilities is overly credulous, relying on selective reporting, weak benchmarks, and ignored limitations, which leads to unjustified hype and flawed extrapolations about future impacts.

Key points:

  1. The author argues that company model releases function as advertising and should be treated with skepticism rather than as objective evidence of capabilities.
  2. They claim that reporting on models like Claude Mythos is often selective and misleading, for example overstating exploit success rates without noting reliance on specific, now-fixed bugs.
  3. The author argues that some commentators extrapolate beyond available evidence, such as inferring likely sandbox escape or massive future revenues without sufficient justification.
  4. They suggest alternative interpretations are neglected, including that unreleased models may be hyped ahead of IPOs or that improved tools could help humans better constrain AI systems.
  5. The author claims AI benchmarks are often invalid measures of capability, lacking rigorous validation and relying on untested assumptions about what they measure.
  6. They argue benchmark scores are compromised by contamination, memorization, and exploitable flaws, sometimes allowing high scores without solving tasks.
  7. The author claims benchmarks also fail to measure generalization because training and test data are not representative of broad domains, leading to overfitting.
  8. They argue that negative results and limitations—such as reliance on spurious heuristics, issues with chain-of-thought reasoning, and regressions on adversarial benchmarks—are under-discussed.
  9. The author interprets responses to such limitations (e.g., dismissing adversarial benchmarks) as prioritizing practical performance over assessing genuine general intelligence.
  10. They conclude that extrapolations to scenarios like rapid superintelligence takeover require additional assumptions and are not justified by current evidence.

 

 

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Executive summary: The author argues that starting a high-impact career is unusually difficult but often worth sustained effort, and that self-initiated projects can help build a track record that improves one’s chances.

Key points:

  1. The author argues that breaking into direct EA work is hard due to unfamiliar jargon, niche frameworks, idiosyncratic hiring practices, many applicants, and few structured entry paths.
  2. The author suggests these barriers can disadvantage capable candidates, especially those without connections to the EA community.
  3. The author encourages people pursuing impact to value their efforts even if they have not yet achieved the outcomes they want.
  4. The author argues that the potential value of direct work is very large, citing a 2018 survey where orgs reported willingness to pay about $1M for junior and $7.4M for senior contributions over three years.
  5. The author speculates that the value of talent may have increased since then due to inflation, growing funding, and talent bottlenecks.
  6. The author claims that many people take years to enter impactful roles, and that persistence is common among those who eventually succeed.
  7. The author argues that people often underestimate how much their capacity to contribute can grow after entering a role.
  8. The author claims experiential learning in impactful roles can exceed that of formal education in career-relevant skills.
  9. The author recommends building a track record through accessible self-initiated projects such as advocacy outreach, fundraising experiments, offering services, newsletters, and organizing talks or volunteering.
  10. The author suggests these projects can both create impact and demonstrate initiative to potential employers.
  11. The author uses a thought experiment to argue that choosing impactful work can lead to large differences in others’ lives even if personal happiness remains similar.
  12. The author concludes by affirming that pursuing impactful work is difficult but valuable and that those attempting it “belong” in the community.

 

 

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Executive summary: The author argues that an impending Anthropic IPO could bring an unprecedented surge of AI safety funding, but the field is severely bottlenecked by grantmaking talent and infrastructure, making the key priority rapidly expanding and diversifying who can direct capital.

Key points:

  1. The author claims Anthropic is likely to IPO soon (possibly October 2026), creating a large pool of newly liquid, donation-motivated individuals.
  2. They estimate this event could generate tens of billions of dollars for AI safety philanthropy, far exceeding previous tech-driven donations.
  3. Current grantmaking capacity is extremely limited, with roughly 30–60 serious AI safety grant evaluators globally.
  4. Existing organizations like Coefficient Giving and Longview are already bottlenecked by grantmaker bandwidth despite managing large and growing funding volumes.
  5. The author argues the field is talent-constrained rather than funding-constrained, citing evidence that more staff directly increased deployed capital without reducing grant quality.
  6. They claim that insufficient grantmaking capacity leads to high-quality projects being delayed or unfunded.
  7. The funding ecosystem is highly centralized, with over 50% of philanthropic AI safety funding coming from Good Ventures via Coefficient Giving.
  8. This centralization means one funder’s priorities and constraints disproportionately shape the field, including excluding certain cause areas or political work.
  9. Institutional funders face structural and reputational constraints that bias funding toward “legible,” non-controversial, and often US-centric projects.
  10. The author argues that “decorrelated” funding—driven by independent donors and grantmakers with different worldviews—is necessary to cover neglected approaches and risks.
  11. They suggest the highest-leverage opportunities include becoming a grantmaker, advising donors independently, joining major funders, or founding new organizations.
  12. The author warns that without timely advisory infrastructure, new donors may park funds in donor-advised funds indefinitely, missing a critical, time-limited opportunity to deploy capital effectively.

 

 

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Executive summary: THL UK argues that while the Sustainable Chicken Forum signals a real setback and exposes limits in their earlier strategy, corporate advocacy for broiler welfare remains impactful but will likely require much greater public awareness to drive further progress, especially on slower-growing breeds.

Key points:

  1. The Sustainable Chicken Forum (SCF), formed by major UK hospitality companies, represents a coordinated move away from the Better Chicken Commitment, particularly rejecting slower-growing breeds.
  2. THL UK believes SCF’s claims about welfare and sustainability are flawed and has responded in a separate report.
  3. THL UK now thinks it was overly optimistic about the speed of broiler welfare progress and too reliant on analogies to successful cage-free campaigns.
  4. Broiler reforms have been harder due to low public awareness, greater complexity, lack of labeling transparency, weaker historical advocacy, and stronger industry opposition.
  5. Corporate commitments have proven fragile without strong public pressure, and accountability mechanisms should have been implemented earlier.
  6. Despite setbacks, BCC campaigning has led to substantial improvements since 2017, including lower stocking densities, better environmental conditions, and some increase in slower-growing breeds.
  7. Chicken consumption has risen significantly, but THL UK argues their work still reduced suffering relative to the counterfactual.
  8. THL UK interprets ACE’s cost-effectiveness estimates as already incorporating risks like delays and backsliding, and sees SCF as broadly consistent with those uncertainties.
  9. Survey data suggests a large gap between consumer concern for welfare and actual understanding of broiler issues, especially fast-growing breeds.
  10. THL UK now views low public awareness as the key bottleneck and plans to prioritize increasing salience through media, partnerships, and outreach alongside continued corporate advocacy.

 

 

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Executive summary: The author argues that recent large-scale cage-free commitments in China, especially by major suppliers like Yurun, indicate that corporate animal welfare progress there is more tractable and impactful than often assumed.

Key points:

  1. Around 75% of the world’s farmed animals are in Asia, yet the region receives relatively little animal welfare funding, making China a high-impact but underfunded area.
  2. Corporate engagement in China is difficult due to regulation, business norms, and scale, requiring long-term, relationship-based strategies like those used by Lever China.
  3. Yurun Group, a major global meat supplier, committed to sourcing 100% cage-free eggs and chicken, signaling large potential downstream effects on supply chains.
  4. Broiler chickens in China are often kept in multi-tier cage systems similar in size to battery cages, making this commitment significant for welfare.
  5. Lever China has secured dozens of cage-free commitments over several years, and growing corporate participation increases leverage in persuading additional companies.
  6. China’s duck sector, which produces about 2 billion caged ducks annually, is both neglected and potentially tractable due to cultural assumptions about free-range practices.
  7. Xiao Diao Li Tang committed to a comprehensive cage-free poultry policy (including ducks) after its owner was personally persuaded, illustrating the role of individual decision-makers.
  8. Xuri Egg Products pledged to make exported duck eggs cage-free, which the author describes as a “defensive win” that likely prevents 200,000–500,000 ducks annually from being shifted into cages.
  9. The author argues that China’s scale and supply chain dynamics can accelerate welfare improvements once key firms adopt new standards.
  10. Lever Foundation reports large-scale impact (e.g., hundreds of millions of animals affected annually), which the author claims reflects the scale of the problem rather than overstatement.

 

 

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Executive summary: The author argues that AI constitutions—documents specifying intended model values and behavior—are a promising but currently underdeveloped tool for shaping AI character, improving transparency and governance, and require much more empirical study, democratic input, and pluralistic experimentation.

Key points:

  1. An AI constitution is a document describing intended model values and behavior, used not just as instructions but importantly in generating and evaluating training data and communicating intentions to stakeholders.
  2. Publishing constitutions can improve transparency, allow public scrutiny, clarify intended vs unintended behaviors, and help users choose between different AI systems.
  3. Claude’s constitution prioritizes (in weighted but non-lexical fashion) safety as corrigibility, broad ethical behavior, compliance with guidelines, and helpfulness, alongside a small set of absolute “hard constraints.”
  4. Anthropic’s approach emphasizes “constitution as character,” where models internalize values rather than explicitly consulting rules, contrasting with a “constitution as law” model that treats the document as the sole objective.
  5. The constitution relies on holistic judgment, rich explanations, anthropomorphic concepts, and respect toward the model, based partly on the “persona-selection” hypothesis that models adopt human-like personas from training data.
  6. Key design choices include strong honesty norms, avoidance of power concentration (including by the company), allowance for conscientious refusal (e.g., boycotting harmful tasks), and attempts to shape stable model psychology.
  7. Constitutions may help limit abuse of AI power through transparency and public accountability, but are insufficient alone due to hidden training processes, potential backdoors, and incomplete observability of model behavior.
  8. The author sees current approaches as highly uncertain and calls for more empirical research, richer public and legal discourse, democratic oversight, and pluralistic experimentation across different AI “characters.”

 

 

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Executive summary: The author introduces the Interspecific Affect GPT as a structured, evidence-sensitive tool to estimate species’ maximum plausible affective intensity relative to humans, aiming to make interspecies welfare comparisons more explicit without claiming precision or resolving downstream ethical questions.

Key points:

  1. The post transitions from prior theoretical work on affective capacity (information-processing and evolutionary lenses) to a practical tool for interspecific welfare comparison.
  2. A central unresolved problem in welfare science is comparing affective intensity across species, especially regarding maximum intensity (“ceiling”) and how experience maps to time.
  3. The author argues the ceiling question is often more decisive, since limits on maximum intensity constrain total possible suffering regardless of duration.
  4. The tool focuses narrowly on estimating a species’ upper bound of pain intensity relative to a human-anchored reference scale, not on assigning moral weights or rankings.
  5. It introduces human-anchored categories (e.g., Annoying(h), Excruciating(h)) to create a shared reference scale without implying equivalence in actual experience.
  6. The tool is intended as a structured reasoning scaffold that makes assumptions, evidence, and disagreements explicit and open to criticism, rather than a calculator or decision rule.
  7. It adopts methodological commitments such as biological parsimony, explicit separation of sentience and affective-capacity analysis, and avoiding unjustified cross-taxon inference.
  8. The workflow proceeds stepwise: defining taxonomic scope, checking assumptions, classifying sentience plausibility, reviewing multi-domain evidence, assessing affective architecture, and inferring ceilings with stress tests.
  9. Ceiling estimates are tested via evolutionary “cost of intensity,” alternative hypotheses (e.g., poorly regulated intense states), and convergence checks that widen uncertainty when evidence conflicts.
  10. The tool includes a red-teaming step to challenge its own conclusions and produces a final dossier with sentience judgment, ceiling estimate, uncertainty considerations, and research priorities.
  11. The author emphasizes that the tool is for disciplined scientific inference, distinct from how uncertainty should be handled in ethical or policy decisions, and invites criticism and iteration.

 

 

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