See https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/nqwzrpkPvviLHWXaE/apply-to-the-redwood-research-mechanistic-interpretability
Context: I work at Redwood and Buck is the CTO.
REMIX starts on 12/19/2022.
Resolves to N/A if REMIX is canceled (very unlikely as it starts on Monday).
Edit: ex-post EV analysis
@NoaNabeshima I always interpret EV calculations as being against the counterfactual of the resources not being used. Otherwise every EV calculation would influence every other one.
@EliasSchmied Hmm, or actually I notice I'm not really interpreting it like that in my head. I'm not sure, I'm confused. Maybe in the context of a specific organization with a limited budget it's tractable to compare it to the next best thing.
@EliasSchmied I think in this case a solid chunk of the costs are opportunity costs, I think the EV has to factor that in. The relevant comparison seems to be allocation of resources (incl researcher time) to next best thing
@DeltaTeePrime But then the original question becomes "Was this literally the best thing they could've done?", which.. doesn't feel like the original spirit of the question. Unless it's compared to the other thing they actually WOULD have done, without benefit of hindsight, that would make sense.
@EliasSchmied the criteria is "suppose we had decided not to do remix and instead used the resources elsewhere etc. Would this have been higher expected utility? (given ex-post knowledge about the quality of remix and what we otherwise would have done)." I might edit this into the description.