ai ml researcher
MechtoSWE
I got laid off from my dream role at Tesla after working 10–11 hours, sometimes including weekends for almost a year! I wasn't paid much and was definitely not paid enough for the amount of work I put in. But after the incident, I started reflecting on my experience and what I truly craved. I like solving problems and I honestly do not care about Work-Life Balance as long as I get to solve and work on what I love. I do not see my learning curve on an upward trend and flatlining.
Ethics and Governance of Artificial Intelligence: Evidence from a Survey of Machine Learning Researchers
Zhang, Baobao | Anderljung, Markus (Centre for the Governance of AI, Future of Humanity Institute, University of Oxford) | Kahn, Lauren (Perry World House, University of Pennsylvania) | Dreksler, Noemi (Centre for the Governance of AI, Future of Humanity Institute, University of Oxford) | Horowitz, Michael C. (Perry World House, University of Pennsylvania) | Dafoe, Allan (Centre for the Governance of AI, Future of Humanity Institute, University of Oxford)
Machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) researchers play an important role in the ethics and governance of AI, including through their work, advocacy, and choice of employment. Nevertheless, this influential group's attitudes are not well understood, undermining our ability to discern consensuses or disagreements between AI/ML researchers. To examine these researchers' views, we conducted a survey of those who published in two top AI/ML conferences (N = 524). We compare these results with those from a 2016 survey of AI/ML researchers (Grace et al., 2018) and a 2018 survey of the US public (Zhang & Dafoe, 2020). We find that AI/ML researchers place high levels of trust in international organizations and scientific organizations to shape the development and use of AI in the public interest; moderate trust in most Western tech companies; and low trust in national militaries, Chinese tech companies, and Facebook. While the respondents were overwhelmingly opposed to AI/ML researchers working on lethal autonomous weapons, they are less opposed to researchers working on other military applications of AI, particularly logistics algorithms. A strong majority of respondents think that AI safety research should be prioritized and that ML institutions should conduct pre-publication review to assess potential harms. Being closer to the technology itself, AI/ML researchers are well placed to highlight new risks and develop technical solutions, so this novel attempt to measure their attitudes has broad relevance. The findings should help to improve how researchers, private sector executives, and policymakers think about regulations, governance frameworks, guiding principles, and national and international governance strategies for AI. This article appears in the special track on AI & Society.
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