ABSTRACT: What could AI alignment look like if we had 6000+ full-time researchers and software developers? I've spent a few days thinking about that question, and this report is my first-draft attempt to answer it. This report sketches a highly-scalable research agenda: studying the hodge-podge assemblage of various "alignment primitives". Please let me know in the comments which ideas are novel and useful (if any), and which aren't.

Introduction

What is hodge-podge alignment?

I think that in the Technical AI Safety community, the following beliefs are common:

  • The adequate solution to the alignment problem (if it exists) will look like one thing.
  • That one thing might be quantilization, or debate, or ELK, or impact regularisation, or something else entirely.
  • If we received a radio message from a friendly alien civilisation that solved alignment, it would say "hey humans, you should use this particular method to solve alignment".

Maybe those beliefs are correct — but in this report, I'll explore the alternative hypothesis. What if the only strategy that achieves  is throwing every half-baked protocol we have at an AGI? Let's call this strategy "hodge-podge alignment".

Note that hodge-podge alignment differs from research diversification. The TAIS community is unanimously in favour of research diversification — i.e. they think we should explore many different research agendas. But their justification tends to be "we can't tell beforehand which research agenda will tell us the One Thing", rather than "we'll need to hodge-podge together the methods produced by each research agenda".

Give me an example.

There are dozens of "alignment primitives", but consider these four:

  1. Boxing: Run the AI on an air-gapped server with a narrow bandwidth channel to a human interlocutor. (See here.)
  2. Quantilization: The AI, rather than maximising the quality of actions, randomly selects from the top quantile of actions. (See here.)
  3. Impact regularisation: Penalise the AI for actions which significantly impact the environment. (See here.)
  4. Olah-style interpretability: Convert a neural network  into a smaller computational graph  whose nodes are annotated with human-legible concepts. (See here.)

We can "hodge-podge" together these primitives to give an assemblage:

  1. Assemblage: The AI randomly samples from the top 1% of actions  as ranked by , where  is our best proxy for human values,  is an impact regularisation, and  is a 1KB plaintext channel. Each neural network  in the AI is compressed into  and inspected by a human throughout training, evaluation, and deployment.

Will this work? I'm not sure.

I suspect that the assemblage would result in a safer AI than any of the four primitives used alone. But the goal of AI alignment is not to build a safe AI, but rather to build a safe and competent AI. (We already know how to build safe incompetent AI!) So the important question is: does the assemblage score higher than the primitives on the safety-competency trade-off? That's an open question.

Key Stages

My tentative proposal consists of the following key stages:

  1. Exhaustively enumerate alignment primitives.
  2. Taxonomise primitives by their type-signature, documentation, and implementation.
  3. Enumerate potential alignment assemblages.
  4. Study the assemblages theoretically and experimentally.
  5. Deploy any assemblage if it's adequate.

1. Exhaustively enumerate alignment primitives.

There are a few broad overviews of different alignment agendas.

But there isn't (to my knowledge) an exhaustive enumeration of the different methods produced by those agendas. In Stage 1 of hodge-podge alignment, we compile and publish this list.

Let's call the list of alignment primitives .

In my imagination, our list of alignment primitives should look something like the list of cryptographic primitives. Cryptographic primitives are well-established, low-level algorithms which are assembled together to build more complicated cryptographic algorithms. If we assume that the cryptographic primitives are implemented correctly (i.e. they behave in the way described by their documentation), then we can be sure that the cryptographic assemblage is also implemented correctly. Moreover, if we discover that a particular cryptographic primitive is "broken" (i.e. it doesn't behave in the way described by its documentation) then we can replace the broken primitive with another primitive rapidly and seamlessly.

2. Taxonomise primitives by their type-signature, documentation, and implementation.

For each alignment primitive,

  • Its type-signature specifies the types of objects passing through the input and output wires.
  • Its documentation is a formal description of how the primitive should behave.
  • Its implementation is a particular string of Python code that (hopefully) behaves as promised by the documentation.

(These three concepts will also extend to alignment assemblages.)

2a. Type-signature

In computer science, every function, subroutine or method has a "type-signature" defining its inputs and outputs. The type-signature doesn't say what the method does, but it says what type of object the method acts on and what type of object the method produces.

We can analogously talk about the "type-signature" of a particular alignment primitive. This type-signature specifies where in the AI-development pipeline the primitive could be implemented.

Here are some examples:

  • The type-signature of impact regularisation is "reward function to reward function".
  • The type-signature of quantilization is "ranking of actions to action".
  • The type-signature of Olah-style interpretability is "large neural network to a small computational graph of human-legible concepts".
  • The type-signature of amplification is "AI to AI".
  • The type-signature of a sandbox is "< output from human, output from AI, internal state > to < input to human, input to AI, internal state >"

There are many different type-signatures that alignment primitives have:

  • Pruning the dataset.
  • Augmenting the dataset.
  • Augmenting the reward function.
  • Augmenting the training environment.
  • Stopping buttons.
  • Evaluation metrics.
  • Boxing through training/evaluation/deployment.
  • Exotic decision theories.
  • etc-etc-etc-etc-

In Stage 2a of hodge-podge alignment, we determine the type-signature  of each alignment primitive . This is necessary for us because  constrains how the primitives can be assembled.

(But even ignoring hodge-podge alignment, it's useful to ask yourself: "What kind of object does this method act on? What kind of object does this method produce? What other methods could this method be composed with?" when thinking about particular alignment methods.)

2b. Implementation

In Stage 2b of hodge-podge alignment, we implement each primitive  as a string of Python code . If the method isn't well-defined enough to be implemented as Python code, then we try to re-formalise it until we can implement it as Python code.

def quantilization(A, Q, q=0.01):
	n = int(len(A)*q)+1
	top_quantile = sorted(A, key=Q, reverse=True)[:n]
	action = random.sample(top_quantile)
	return action

The code is written in a composable and modular way. So far, a lot of alignment methods have been implemented in code, but in a way that is entangled with the rest of the code. But we want the primitives to be implemented in a modular way so that we can hotswap then in our assemblages.

We might release these implementations as part of an open-source library, unless there are risks that this will exacerbate AI capabilities development. However, that risk is mitigated by the modular nature of the implementation. Although it would be risky to open-source the code of a sandboxed AI — it's not as risky to open-source the code of the sandbox itself.

2c. Documentation

The documentation  of a primitive is a set of sentences describing how it should behave. The documentation can be written in a formal language, or in plain English.

The following are (equivalent?) definitions of the documentation:

  • If all the properties in  are satisfied, then the primitive is a success.
  • If any of the properties in  are not satisfied, then the primitive is broken.
  • When we argue that an assemblage solves alignment, we appeal to the properties  of the primitives.
  •  are the promises from the developer about the primitive .
  •  are the properties that won't be changed by the developer without warning.
  • If a primitive is broken, then  are properties that we'll demand from the replacement.

The documentation  determines how the primitive should behave, and the implementation  determines how the primitive does behave.

In Stage 2b of hodge-podge alignment, we write documentation for each primitive.

3. Enumerate potential alignment assemblages.

Once we know the type-signatures  of the alignment primitives, we can then (mechanically) enumerate the different alignment assemblages. Let's call this list .

To construct an assemblage, we start with some sequence of primitives   (not necessarily distinct), and then we "wire together" the outputs of some primitives to the inputs of others (so long as those wires are type-compatible).

More formally —

  • The primitives are stateful dynamic systems, so we formalise them as polymorphic lenses.
  • The category of polymorphic lenses is cartesian closed, so we can construct the "parallel product"  of the primitives. The parallel product is just a formless heap — none of the primitives have been wired together yet.
  • Finally, we can compose the parallel product with a particular "typed wiring diagram", because they are also formalised as polymorphic lenses.
  • This yields an assemblage. An assemblage is the composition of a parallel product of primitives with a typed wiring diagram, in the category of polymorphic lenses.
  • The type-signature  of the assemblage is determined by the wiring diagram.
  • The implementation  of the assemblage is straightforwardly determined by the wiring diagram and the implementations  of the primitives.
  • The documentation  are the properties derivable (formally or informally) from the documentations  of the primitives.
  • This is because (I think) , and  are functors (ish).

Note that  is different from :

  • For a subset , there might exist no corresponding assemblage. This is because the type-signatures of the primitives in  might forbid wiring.
  • For a subset , there might exist many distinct corresponding assemblages — possibly infinitely many. This is because a primitive can appear more than once in an assemblage.

We call  the degree of the assemblage — I suspect that (on average) safety will increase as  increases, and competency will decrease.

4. Study assemblages theoretically and experimentally

In Stage 4 of hodge-podge alignment, the goal is to determine which alignment assemblages are reliable. An assemblage  is reliable if we are confident that the implementation  satisfies the documentation .

This is of course the hard step. Fortunately, this process can be heavily parallelised.

Theory:
In cryptography, you start with various "cryptographic assumptions" that particular cryptographic primitives are reliable, and then you derive theorems/informal arguments that the assemblages are reliable.

Likewise, in alignment, we will start with various "alignment assumptions" that particular alignment primitives are reliable, and then we derive theorems/informal arguments that the assemblages are reliable. In other words, we want arguments of the form .

Note that we can construct these arguments before we've actually found implementations for the alignment primitives!

Experiments:
To determine whether an assemblage has been implemented correctly we run experiments, e.g. toy-models, block-worlds. We test the implementation  in a wide range of likely situations, and check if  is satisfied.

Reliability:
We classify an assemblage  as reliable whenever the following conditions hold:

  • We're confident that the argument  is valid.
  • There is significant experimental evidence that the implementation  satisfies the documentation .
  • All the sub-assemblages of  are reliable.

5. Deploy any assemblage if it's adequate.

An alignment assemblage  is adequate if its documentation  includes "everything goes well" and  is reliable. If we discover an adequate alignment assemblage then we deploy it, hoping to achieve a pivotal act with a low probability of doom.

In practice, searching for an adequate assemblage might look like this:

  • Start with a design for an unsafe but competent AI.
  • Gradually add primitives until the AI is safe.

Or it might look like this:

  • Start with a design for a safe but incompetent AI.
  • Gradually remove primitives until the AI is competent.

This would be analogous to a nuclear power station adding and removing control rods to find a happy medium — but for us, we are seeking the optimal point in the safety-competency trade-off. 

Motivation

Here are some reasons I think hodge-podge alignment is a reasonably promising research agenda.

1. Ex-ante Uncertainty
We might end up in a situation where we're confident that among our top 20 primitive methods there exists at least one method which reliably works, but we aren't sure beforehand which method is the reliable one. In this situation, it might be best to "assemble" them together.

Here's why I think this situation is likely:

  1.  Right now, no one knows what method is best.
  2. There's been little convergence over time on a single method.
  3. AGI will arrive soon, so we'll probably be equally as unsure when it does arrive.

2. Swiss Cheese
We might end up in a situation where we're confident that each of our top 20 methods is unreliable, but if we "roll the dice" 20 times then we'll be confident that at least one of the methods will stop the failure. Therefore we apply all of them at once.

Here's why I think this situation is likely:

  1. Intelligence is a complicated messy thing in humans.
  2. Intelligence is a complicated messy thing in existing AI systems.
  3. There might not be any simple primitive which works reliably for such a messy thing.
  4. Often the best way to secure a messy thing is to assemble many layers of security — think aeroplane safety, the immune system, or internet firewalls.

3. Synergy
We might end up in a situation where among our top 20 methods, none of them works in isolation. But when we assemble the various methods, suddenly that works great because there's a weird synergy between the different methods.

I'm not confident this is true, but nonetheless:

  1. Sometimes synergy does occur.
  2. We might be lucky.
  3. Even if hodge-podge alignment is a "Hail Mary" solution, it's relatively more dignified than others.

4. Expanded Options
There is a canonical embedding of primitives into assemblages. So this proposal expands the set of potential methods without eliminating any. In fact, there's a combinatorial explosion in the number of potential options. If we expand our potential options, then our best option will (in general) improve.

5. Different talent-profile
Hodge-podge alignment doesn't invent the primitive ideas — instead, it converts these ideas into composable code and studies their assemblages. This process requires talent, but it requires a different talent profile than other alignment strategies — it needs more software engineers and fewer mathematicians.

6. Short-term gains
Hodge-podge alignment could make significant gains in the short-term because there's a lot of "theoretical overhang" in AI alignment — i.e. there are many ideas that haven't yet been implemented in Python.

7. Universality
Hodge-podge alignment is like the universal object in the category of alignment strategies. An "assemblage" captures what we mean (in the broadest sense) by a potential solution to the alignment problem.

8. Parallelisable and scalable
Hodge-podge alignment is highly parallelisable and scalable. Different primitive methods can be documented and implemented independently. Different assemblages can be studied independently.

Immediate next steps: If enough people say this is worthwhile (relative to how many say the opposite) then I'll explore this further. For the next step, I might post a distillation of David Jaz Myers Categorical systems theory which treats dynamic systems and their typed wirings as polymorphic lenses.

New Comment
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The main problem I see with hodge-podge-style strategies is that most alignment ideas fail in roughly-the-same cases, for roughly-the-same reasons. It's the same hard cases/hard subproblems which kill most plans. In particular, section B.2 (and to a lesser extent B.1 - B.3) of List of Lethalities covers "core problems" which strategies usually fail to handle.

I think there's an existing phrase called "defense in depth", which somehow feels... more like the right spirit? [This is related to the 'swiss cheese' model you bring up in the motivation section.] It's not that we're going to throw together a bunch of miscellaneous stuff and it'll work; it's that we're not going to trust any particular defense that we have enough that we don't also want other defenses.

The problem with the swiss cheese model here is illustrative of why this is unpromising as stated. In the swiss cheese model you start with some working system, and then the world throws unexpected accidents at you, and you need to protect the working system from being interrupted by an accident. This is not our position with respect to aligned AI - a misaligned AI is not well-modeled as an aligned AI plus some misaligning factors. That is living in the should-universe-plus-diff. If you prevent all "accidents," the AI will not revert to its normal non-accident home state of human-friendliness.

Yes, combining multiple safety features is done all the time, e.g. if you're designing a fusion reactor. But you don't design a working fusion reactor by taking twenty non-working designs and summing all their features. Such an approach to fusion-reactor design wouldn't work because:

  • features of a fusion reactor only improve its function with in a specific context that has to be taken into account during design
  • probably some of the features you're adding were bad ideas to begin with, and those can cancel out all the fusion you were trying to promote with all the other features, because fusion is a rare and special thing that takes work to make happen
  • some of the other features are working at cross-purposes - e.g. one feature might involve outside resources, and another feature might involve isolating the system from the outside
  • Some of the features will have unexpected synergy, which will go unnoticed because synergy requires carefully setting parameters by thinking about what produces fusion, not just about combining features.