2024 Highlightapalooza! (The best of The 80,000 Hours Podcast this year)

2024 Highlightapalooza! (The best of The 80,000 Hours Podcast this year)

"A shameless recycling of existing content to drive additional audience engagement on the cheap… or the single best, most valuable, and most insight-dense episode we put out in the entire year, depending on how you want to look at it." — Rob Wiblin

It’s that magical time of year once again — highlightapalooza! Stick around for one top bit from each episode, including:

  • How to use the microphone on someone’s mobile phone to figure out what password they’re typing into their laptop
  • Why mercilessly driving the New World screwworm to extinction could be the most compassionate thing humanity has ever done
  • Why evolutionary psychology doesn’t support a cynical view of human nature but actually explains why so many of us are intensely sensitive to the harms we cause to others
  • How superforecasters and domain experts seem to disagree so much about AI risk, but when you zoom in it’s mostly a disagreement about timing
  • Why the sceptics are wrong and you will want to use robot nannies to take care of your kids — and also why despite having big worries about the development of AGI, Carl Shulman is strongly against efforts to pause AI research today
  • How much of the gender pay gap is due to direct pay discrimination vs other factors
  • How cleaner wrasse fish blow the mirror test out of the water
  • Why effective altruism may be too big a tent to work well
  • How we could best motivate pharma companies to test existing drugs to see if they help cure other diseases — something they currently have no reason to bother with

…as well as 27 other top observations and arguments from the past year of the show.

Check out the full transcript and episode links on the 80,000 Hours website.

Remember that all of these clips come from the 20-minute highlight reels we make for every episode, which are released on our sister feed, 80k After Hours. So if you’re struggling to keep up with our regularly scheduled entertainment, you can still get the best parts of our conversations there.

It has been a hell of a year, and we can only imagine next year is going to be even weirder — but Luisa and Rob will be here to keep you company as Earth hurtles through the galaxy to a fate as yet unknown.

Enjoy, and look forward to speaking with you in 2025!

Chapters:

  • Rob's intro (00:00:00)
  • Randy Nesse on the origins of morality and the problem of simplistic selfish-gene thinking (00:02:11)
  • Hugo Mercier on the evolutionary argument against humans being gullible (00:07:17)
  • Meghan Barrett on the likelihood of insect sentience (00:11:26)
  • Sébastien Moro on the mirror test triumph of cleaner wrasses (00:14:47)
  • Sella Nevo on side-channel attacks (00:19:32)
  • Zvi Mowshowitz on AI sleeper agents (00:22:59)
  • Zach Weinersmith on why space settlement (probably) won't make us rich (00:29:11)
  • Rachel Glennerster on pull mechanisms to incentivise repurposing of generic drugs (00:35:23)
  • Emily Oster on the impact of kids on women's careers (00:40:29)
  • Carl Shulman on robot nannies (00:45:19)
  • Nathan Labenz on kids and artificial friends (00:50:12)
  • Nathan Calvin on why it's not too early for AI policies (00:54:13)
  • Rose Chan Loui on how control of OpenAI is independently incredibly valuable and requires compensation (00:58:08)
  • Nick Joseph on why he’s a big fan of the responsible scaling policy approach (01:03:11)
  • Sihao Huang on how the US and UK might coordinate with China (01:06:09)
  • Nathan Labenz on better transparency about predicted capabilities (01:10:18)
  • Ezra Karger on what explains forecasters’ disagreements about AI risks (01:15:22)
  • Carl Shulman on why he doesn't support enforced pauses on AI research (01:18:58)
  • Matt Clancy on the omnipresent frictions that might prevent explosive economic growth (01:25:24)
  • Vitalik Buterin on defensive acceleration (01:29:43)
  • Annie Jacobsen on the war games that suggest escalation is inevitable (01:34:59)
  • Nate Silver on whether effective altruism is too big to succeed (01:38:42)
  • Kevin Esvelt on why killing every screwworm would be the best thing humanity ever did (01:42:27)
  • Lewis Bollard on how factory farming is philosophically indefensible (01:46:28)
  • Bob Fischer on how to think about moral weights if you're not a hedonist (01:49:27)
  • Elizabeth Cox on the empirical evidence of the impact of storytelling (01:57:43)
  • Anil Seth on how our brain interprets reality (02:01:03)
  • Eric Schwitzgebel on whether consciousness can be nested (02:04:53)
  • Jonathan Birch on our overconfidence around disorders of consciousness (02:10:23)
  • Peter Godfrey-Smith on uploads of ourselves (02:14:34)
  • Laura Deming on surprising things that make mice live longer (02:21:17)
  • Venki Ramakrishnan on freezing cells, organs, and bodies (02:24:46)
  • Ken Goldberg on why low fault tolerance makes some skills extra hard to automate in robots (02:29:12)
  • Sarah Eustis-Guthrie on the ups and downs of founding an organisation (02:34:04)
  • Dean Spears on the cost effectiveness of kangaroo mother care (02:38:26)
  • Cameron Meyer Shorb on vaccines for wild animals (02:42:53)
  • Spencer Greenberg on personal principles (02:46:08)

Producing and editing: Keiran Harris
Audio engineering: Ben Cordell, Milo McGuire, Simon Monsour, and Dominic Armstrong
Video editing: Simon Monsour
Transcriptions: Katy Moore

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#2 - David Spiegelhalter on risk, stats and improving understanding of science

#2 - David Spiegelhalter on risk, stats and improving understanding of science

Recorded in 2015 by Robert Wiblin with colleague Jess Whittlestone at the Centre for Effective Altruism, and recovered from the dusty 80,000 Hours archives. David Spiegelhalter is a statistician at the University of Cambridge and something of an academic celebrity in the UK. Part of his role is to improve the public understanding of risk - especially everyday risks we face like getting cancer or dying in a car crash. As a result he’s regularly in the media explaining numbers in the news, trying to assist both ordinary people and politicians focus on the important risks we face, and avoid being distracted by flashy risks that don’t actually have much impact. Summary, full transcript and extra links to learn more. To help make sense of the uncertainties we face in life he has had to invent concepts like the microlife, or a 30-minute change in life expectancy. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microlife) We wanted to learn whether he thought a lifetime of work communicating science had actually had much impact on the world, and what advice he might have for people planning their careers today.

21 Juni 201733min

#1 - Miles Brundage on the world's desperate need for AI strategists and policy experts

#1 - Miles Brundage on the world's desperate need for AI strategists and policy experts

Robert Wiblin, Director of Research at 80,000 Hours speaks with Miles Brundage, research fellow at the University of Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute. Miles studies the social implications surrounding the development of new technologies and has a particular interest in artificial general intelligence, that is, an AI system that could do most or all of the tasks humans could do. This interview complements our profile of the importance of positively shaping artificial intelligence and our guide to careers in AI policy and strategy Full transcript, apply for personalised coaching to work on AI strategy, see what questions are asked when, and read extra resources to learn more.

5 Juni 201755min

#0 – Introducing the 80,000 Hours Podcast

#0 – Introducing the 80,000 Hours Podcast

80,000 Hours is a non-profit that provides research and other support to help people switch into careers that effectively tackle the world's most pressing problems. This podcast is just one of many things we offer, the others of which you can find at 80000hours.org. Since 2017 this show has been putting out interviews about the world's most pressing problems and how to solve them — which some people enjoy because they love to learn about important things, and others are using to figure out what they want to do with their careers or with their charitable giving. If you haven't yet spent a lot of time with 80,000 Hours or our general style of thinking, called effective altruism, it's probably really helpful to first go through the episodes that set the scene, explain our overall perspective on things, and generally offer all the background information you need to get the most out of the episodes we're making now. That's why we've made a new feed with ten carefully selected episodes from the show's archives, called 'Effective Altruism: An Introduction'. You can find it by searching for 'Effective Altruism' in your podcasting app or at 80000hours.org/intro. Or, if you’d rather listen on this feed, here are the ten episodes we recommend you listen to first: • #21 – Holden Karnofsky on the world's most intellectual foundation and how philanthropy can have maximum impact by taking big risks • #6 – Toby Ord on why the long-term future of humanity matters more than anything else and what we should do about it • #17 – Will MacAskill on why our descendants might view us as moral monsters • #39 – Spencer Greenberg on the scientific approach to updating your beliefs when you get new evidence • #44 – Paul Christiano on developing real solutions to the 'AI alignment problem' • #60 – What Professor Tetlock learned from 40 years studying how to predict the future • #46 – Hilary Greaves on moral cluelessness, population ethics and tackling global issues in academia • #71 – Benjamin Todd on the key ideas of 80,000 Hours • #50 – Dave Denkenberger on how we might feed all 8 billion people through a nuclear winter • 80,000 Hours Team chat #3 – Koehler and Todd on the core idea of effective altruism and how to argue for it

1 Maj 20173min

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