• "Our response to Séb Krier on Plan A" by MKodama, Thomas Larsen
    Jul 14 2026
    This criticism of AI 2040: Plan A by Séb Krier unfortunately seriously mischaracterizes our proposal. It also mostly contains flat assertions, not real argumentation, and the argumentation in it seems quite weak. While we appreciate constructive criticisms of Plan A, such as the ones by Tom Davidson, Richard Ngo, and 1a3orn, we feel the need to correct the issues in Séb's response. First, we’ll go over the specific false representations, and then we’ll give a point-by-point response.

    False Representations

    I’m not claiming you shouldn’t prepare and improvise in the dark, but rather that this version of preparing bakes in too much and leaves little space for the effective but uncomfortable trial-and-effort that real life requires.

    The exact opposite is true. Plan A is extremely iterative. In the status quo, there is trial and error, but ultimately companies aren’t going to choose the safer or more societally beneficial path, they are going to choose what the market wants. In Plan A there is much more time for AI companies to gain evidence and for governments to respond reasonably to the sweeping changes. Thanks to total transparency and broad deployment, all of this evidence is accessible to academics, independent researchers [...]

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    Outline:

    (00:44) False Representations

    (05:02) Point-by-point response

    (29:54) Conclusion

    The original text contained 4 footnotes which were omitted from this narration.

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    First published:
    July 14th, 2026

    Source:
    https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/RPgHythvMKh6eG9pS/our-response-to-seb-krier-on-plan-a

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    Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.

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    31 mins
  • "The Whitney Biennial Should Admit That Emilie Gossiaux Wants to Fuck Their Dog" by jenn
    Jul 14 2026
    content warnings: depictions of human and anthro nudity, discussion of bestiality, modern art

    Credit where it's due: it is genuinely, unironically baller for the Whitney museum to make the exhibit about how a disabled artist wants to fuck their dog the first one that people see when they attend the prestigious Whitney Biennial, their every-two-year showcase of new and emerging American talents. You know, the one that's supposed to be a barometer of where America is at these days.

    Unfortunately, not only do they fail to commit to the bit, the critics then fail to point this out and condemn them for it. Like, here is how one art critic at ArtReview describes it:

    Visitors first encounter Emilie Louise Gossiaux's Kong Play (2025) – a hundred or so small, brightly coloured snowman-shaped ceramics arranged on a low two-tiered pedestal. These sculptures are modelled after Kong chew toys, a tribute to the artist's guide dog (Gossiaux lost their vision in a bicycle accident in 2012). Accompanying Kong Play are variously titled ballpoint pen and crayon drawings by Gossiaux that depict the artist playing with a jaunty, sometimes bipedal, white canine. The exhibition thus opens tenderly – without fanfare, without friction.

    [...]

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    Outline:

    (03:53) Gossiaux's Recent Body of Work

    [... 1 more section]

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    First published:
    July 13th, 2026

    Source:
    https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/sFkYA5CwZCWYQ9nzB/the-whitney-biennial-should-admit-that-emilie-gossiaux-wants

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    17 mins
  • "The current bottleneck is political will, not research" by Charbel-Raphaël
    Jul 12 2026
    Abstract:

    1. We already know enough to act. I wish we were in a world where research was the bottleneck, but the main constraint on AI safety is no longer a shortage of clever policy ideas: best practices already exist and are not being applied or enforced, and a serious international (or even just national) regulatory regime would probably cut most of the risk.
    2. They are not applied because awareness is low. The people who narrate and enforce AI policy mostly do not believe in the problem. I estimate that a majority of the top ~100–1,000 most influential policymakers worldwide have never had a single serious conversation about catastrophic risk, and this is the main reason they are not worried[1]. Even among the civil-society organizations that showed up to the UN Global Dialogue, exactly one of the 1,534 written submissions mentions "takeover", and less than 1% mention x-risks.
    3. They've never had the conversation because our field under-invests in having it. Status rewards research over advocacy (~3.6 researchers per advocate in US AI safety); many organizations self-censor; funders treat repetition as redundancy, even though repetition is how anyone actually gets convinced. Meanwhile, the industry secured 7× as many meetings with the European Commission [...]
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    Outline:

    (03:29) 1. -- The bottleneck is political will, not research

    (03:44) What do I call "political will"?

    (05:10) The best practices we already have are not being applied

    (07:28) We need to go from plan D to plan A: more seriousness and coordination

    [... 31 more sections]

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    First published:
    July 11th, 2026

    Source:
    https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/EexsebbYhbe2gXkPP/the-current-bottleneck-is-political-will-not-research

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    Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.

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    47 mins
  • "Selective Optimism: a critique of AI 2040" by Richard_Ngo
    Jul 10 2026
    Some context for this post: I’ve been working part-time as a consultant for the AI Futures Project over the last year. Most of the work I’ve done for them has involved critiquing and suggesting improvements for their AI 2040 scenario—some of which were addressed, and some of which weren’t. To their credit, they asked me to write up my remaining critiques into a post that would accompany its launch. In the rest of this post I’ll discuss my three biggest high-level criticisms of AI 2040.

    Before doing so, I want to emphasize that there are many interesting and thought-provoking details in the scenario. I’ve focused on the high-level framing of the scenario because that's where my main disagreements lie; given the scope of these disagreements, it's hard to evaluate the details.

    Since the AI Futures Project paid me to develop and write this criticism, you shouldn’t take this as a fully unbiased perspective. However, they haven’t reviewed this piece, and in general have been open-minded about receiving criticism (as their request for me to post this today demonstrates).

    Finally: the preview image for the substack version of this post comes from this video of a dad shouting to his [...]

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    First published:
    July 9th, 2026

    Source:
    https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/BBd2EJywf2xXftyFn/selective-optimism-a-critique-of-ai-2040

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    16 mins
  • [Linkpost] "AI 2040: Plan A" by Daniel Kokotajlo, elifland, Thomas Larsen, romeo, bhalstead, ryan_greenblatt
    Jul 9 2026
    This is a link post. For the past year, we at the AI Futures Project have been sinking most of our time into our next big scenario. Now it's done!

    It's called AI 2040: Plan A.

    It's called Plan A because it's a recommendation, not a prediction. It's what we think should happen, not what will happen, though we think it's plausible enough to aim for.

    It's called AI 2040 because in it, they delay the creation of superintelligence to 2040. It would have happened much sooner (in 2030, to be precise) if not for decisive action on the part of the US and Chinese governments.

    As with AI 2027, summaries don’t really do it justice, since the whole point was to be detailed and comprehensive and work things out step by step rather than rely on high-level abstractions like doom or utopia.

    Read the scenario at ai-2040.com. You can listen to it on audio, or view it on mobile, but the experience is significantly better on a normal computer.

    What's next for us?

    Well, first we are going to respond to comments and otherwise engage with whatever conversation, responses, critiques, etc. that [...]







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    First published:
    July 9th, 2026

    Source:
    https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/pFzctpJBat95SrCyC/ai-2040-plan-a

    Linkpost URL:
    https://www.ai-2040.com/

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    2 mins
  • "A Review of Anthropic’s Global Workspace Paper" by Neel Nanda
    Jul 9 2026
    The below is a public review Anthropic asked me to write for their new global workspace paper. I recommend at least skimming their paper first. TLDR:I think this is a fantastic paper - it presents compelling evidence for some kind of "cognitive space" in models, that is used as a "working memory" for intermediate variables during a forward pass, shows that J-Lens is a useful technique for accessing this space. I believe these key claims.I believe J-Lens will be a useful (but limited) tool in practice for model forensics, e.g. generating hypotheses about unusual model behaviour during alignment audits.I discuss my mental models for why a cognitive space should exist, and first principles arguments for why J-Lens should work for accessing itI assess the paper's evidence that this cognitive space exists, and the paper's evidence that J-Lens is practically useful.We have replicated the core claims on Qwen 3.6 27B, and also share preliminary evidence of extending this work by finding abstract "interpretative meta-tokens", like Chinese characters for "what does this mean" that seem to activate and play a causal role on processing ambiguous sentences. What claims is this paper making? In my opinion this [...] ---Outline:(01:27) What claims is this paper making?[... 28 more sections]--- First published: July 6th, 2026 Source: https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zFJ3ZdQwrTWE9jT5S/a-review-of-anthropic-s-global-workspace-paper --- Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO. ---Images from the article:
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    51 mins
  • "(Don’t fear) the strangelet" by djbinder
    Jul 7 2026
    In a previous post, I explain why the universe is probably not stable, but nevertheless unlikely to be intentionally destroyable even in the limit of advanced technology. Now let's turn our attention to more prosaic risks where exotic physics merely destroys the Solar System, Earth, or just outperforms traditional nuclear weapons on some more local scale.

    The basic logic behind any bomb is a self-sustaining chain reaction, in which a carrier converts a unit of fuel and comes out the other side in surplus:

    Two conditions make this run away. The reaction must release energy, so the products are more stable than the fuel; and each reaction must produce more carrier than it consumes, so that one reaction seeds the next. A practical third condition is that cannot be so unstable that it decays before the bomb is assembled.

    False vacuum decay is the ultimate bomb: is the false vacuum, the empty space we currently inhabit, and is the true vacuum. Because the supply of false vacuum is effectively unlimited, the reaction grows without bound and destroys the universe.

    Fission bombs run on the same principle at a more prosaic scale. Consider uranium-235. This [...]

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    Outline:

    (03:19) Nuclei are probably, but not definitely, stable within the Standard Model

    (08:11) Positively charged strangelets are safe, neutral strangelets are not

    (11:34) Strangelets would be hard to make

    (13:33) Exotic physics could permit ways to destroy protons, but not autocatalytically

    (16:01) Other forms of matter offer no plausible chain reaction

    (18:50) Tiny black holes are not scary

    (20:04) Conclusion: There are no super-weapons between the nuclear bomb and false vacuum decay

    (21:56) Appendix 1: Igniting the Atmosphere

    (27:53) Optically thick ignition

    (29:09) Appendix 2: Let's throw a strangelet into the sun

    (29:21) Neutral strangelet

    (32:56) Positive strangelet

    (33:58) Bonus: neutral strangelet meets Earth

    The original text contained 5 footnotes which were omitted from this narration.

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    First published:
    July 3rd, 2026

    Source:
    https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/cBnCCKwwjQ4zZpeNQ/don-t-fear-the-strangelet

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    35 mins
  • "We need 3rd party Training-Run Assessments" by Alex Meinke
    Jul 7 2026
    Training-run assessments conducted by a 3rd party should become a standard part of frontier AI safety.

    By a Training-Run Assessment, or TRA, I mean an in-depth analysis of the post-training pipeline and dynamics leading up to a frontier model release. A TRA can look at intermediate checkpoints, training rollouts, RL environments, reward signals, SFT datasets, and the process by which the developer responded to warning signs.[1]

    In this post I will argue that:

    • Final-checkpoint evaluations will be insufficient to assess scheming risks.
    • TRAs can be more effective at detecting scheming.
    • Frontier developers should involve third parties to do TRAs or verify safety claims by the developers.
    The rest of the post lays out a taxonomy of TRAs and sketches a path toward a 3rd party ecosystem for them. We, at Apollo Research, are intending to conduct 3rd party Training-Run Assessments in the future.

    Detecting Scheming may require Training-Run Assessments

    By scheming I mean an AI covertly pursuing misaligned goals while deliberately concealing its intentions or capabilities from its developers. I restrict attention to “coherent” forms of scheming where the model pursues somewhat stable misaligned goals across context windows, rather than misalignment that surfaces only as isolated, context-dependent defections. [...]

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    Outline:

    (01:23) Detecting Scheming may require Training-Run Assessments

    (03:55) Why 3rd parties should perform Training-Run Assessments

    (04:12) Developers may lack incentives to adequately assess scheming

    (04:49) Developers' safety assessments lack credibility

    (05:31) External evaluators can bundle expertise for assessing scheming

    (06:17) 3rd party TRAs can be developed gradually

    (08:50) Checkpoint evals

    (08:54) What?

    (10:30) How?

    (11:15) Data inspections

    (11:19) What?

    (12:03) Why?

    [... 16 more sections]

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    First published:
    July 5th, 2026

    Source:
    https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/3HvvjffA65mHLwaWm/we-need-3rd-party-training-run-assessments

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    Narrated by TYPE III AUDIO.

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    35 mins