We (Zvi Mowshowitz and Vladimir Slepnev) are happy to announce the results of the third round of the AI Alignment Prize, funded by Paul Christiano. From April 15 to June 30 we received entries from 12 participants, and are awarding $10,000 to two winners.
We are also announcing the fourth round of the prize, which will run until December 31 of this year under slightly different rules. More details below.
The winners
First prize of $7,500 goes to Vanessa Kosoy for The Learning-Theoretic AI Alignment Research Agenda. We feel this is much more accessible than previous writing on this topic, and gives a lot of promising ideas for future research. Most importantly, it explains why she is working on the problems she’s working on, in concrete enough ways to encourage productive debate and disagreement.
We will contact each winner by email to arrange transfer of money. Many thanks to everyone else who sent in their work!
The next round
We are now announcing the fourth round of the AI Alignment Prize. Due the drop in number of entries, we feel that 2.5 months might be too short, so this round will run until end of this year.
We are looking for technical, philosophical and strategic ideas for AI alignment, posted publicly between July 15 and December 31, 2018. You can submit links to entries by leaving a comment below, or by email to apply@ai-alignment.com. We will try to give feedback on all early entries to allow improvement. Another change from previous rounds is that we ask each participant to submit only one entry (though possibly in multiple parts), rather than a list of several entries on different topics.
The minimum prize pool will again be $10,000, with a minimum first prize of $5,000.
We (Zvi Mowshowitz and Vladimir Slepnev) are happy to announce the results of the third round of the AI Alignment Prize, funded by Paul Christiano. From April 15 to June 30 we received entries from 12 participants, and are awarding $10,000 to two winners.
We are also announcing the fourth round of the prize, which will run until December 31 of this year under slightly different rules. More details below.
The winners
First prize of $7,500 goes to Vanessa Kosoy for The Learning-Theoretic AI Alignment Research Agenda. We feel this is much more accessible than previous writing on this topic, and gives a lot of promising ideas for future research. Most importantly, it explains why she is working on the problems she’s working on, in concrete enough ways to encourage productive debate and disagreement.
Second prize of $2,500 goes to Alexander Turner for the posts Worrying About the Vase: Whitelisting and Overcoming Clinginess in Impact Measures. We are especially happy with the amount of good discussion these posts generated.
We will contact each winner by email to arrange transfer of money. Many thanks to everyone else who sent in their work!
The next round
We are now announcing the fourth round of the AI Alignment Prize. Due the drop in number of entries, we feel that 2.5 months might be too short, so this round will run until end of this year.
We are looking for technical, philosophical and strategic ideas for AI alignment, posted publicly between July 15 and December 31, 2018. You can submit links to entries by leaving a comment below, or by email to apply@ai-alignment.com. We will try to give feedback on all early entries to allow improvement. Another change from previous rounds is that we ask each participant to submit only one entry (though possibly in multiple parts), rather than a list of several entries on different topics.
The minimum prize pool will again be $10,000, with a minimum first prize of $5,000.
Thank you!