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In episode 17 of The Gradient Podcast, we talk to Miles Brundage, Head of Policy Research at OpenAI and a researcher passionate about the responsible governance of artificial intelligence.
Subscribe to The Gradient Podcast: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Pocket Casts | RSS
Links:
* Will Technology Make Work Better for Everyone?
* Economic Possibilities for Our Children: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Work, Education, and Leisure
* Taking Superintelligence Seriously
* The Malicious Use of Artificial Intelligence: Forecasting, Prevention, and Mitigation
* Release Strategies and the Social Impact of Language Models
* All the News that’s Fit to Fabricate: AI-Generated Text as a Tool of Media Misinformation
* Toward Trustworthy AI Development: Mechanisms for Supporting Verifiable Claims
Timeline:
(00:00) Intro(01:05) How did you get started in AI(07:05) Writing about AI on Slate(09:20) Start of PhD(13:00) AI and the End of Scarcity(18:12) Malicious Uses of AI(28:00) GPT-2 and Publication Norms(33:30) AI-Generated Text for Misinformation(37:05) State of AI Misinformation(41:30) Trustworthy AI(48:50) OpenAI Policy Research Team(53:15) Outro
Miles is a researcher and research manager, and is passionate about the responsible governance of artificial intelligence. In 2018, he joined OpenAI, where he began as a Research Scientist and recently became Head of Policy Research. Before that, he was a Research Fellow at the University of Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute, where he is still a Research Affiliate).He also serves as a member of Axon's AI and Policing Technology Ethics Board. He completed a PhD in Human and Social Dimensions of Science and Technology from Arizona State University in 2019.
Podcast Theme: “MusicVAE: Trio 16-bar Sample #2” from "MusicVAE: A Hierarchical Latent Vector Model for Learning Long-Term Structure in Music"
Hosted by Andrey Kurenkov (@andrey_kurenkov), a PhD student with the Stanford Vision and Learning Lab working on learning techniques for robotic manipulation and search.
By Daniel Bashir4.7
4747 ratings
In episode 17 of The Gradient Podcast, we talk to Miles Brundage, Head of Policy Research at OpenAI and a researcher passionate about the responsible governance of artificial intelligence.
Subscribe to The Gradient Podcast: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Pocket Casts | RSS
Links:
* Will Technology Make Work Better for Everyone?
* Economic Possibilities for Our Children: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Work, Education, and Leisure
* Taking Superintelligence Seriously
* The Malicious Use of Artificial Intelligence: Forecasting, Prevention, and Mitigation
* Release Strategies and the Social Impact of Language Models
* All the News that’s Fit to Fabricate: AI-Generated Text as a Tool of Media Misinformation
* Toward Trustworthy AI Development: Mechanisms for Supporting Verifiable Claims
Timeline:
(00:00) Intro(01:05) How did you get started in AI(07:05) Writing about AI on Slate(09:20) Start of PhD(13:00) AI and the End of Scarcity(18:12) Malicious Uses of AI(28:00) GPT-2 and Publication Norms(33:30) AI-Generated Text for Misinformation(37:05) State of AI Misinformation(41:30) Trustworthy AI(48:50) OpenAI Policy Research Team(53:15) Outro
Miles is a researcher and research manager, and is passionate about the responsible governance of artificial intelligence. In 2018, he joined OpenAI, where he began as a Research Scientist and recently became Head of Policy Research. Before that, he was a Research Fellow at the University of Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute, where he is still a Research Affiliate).He also serves as a member of Axon's AI and Policing Technology Ethics Board. He completed a PhD in Human and Social Dimensions of Science and Technology from Arizona State University in 2019.
Podcast Theme: “MusicVAE: Trio 16-bar Sample #2” from "MusicVAE: A Hierarchical Latent Vector Model for Learning Long-Term Structure in Music"
Hosted by Andrey Kurenkov (@andrey_kurenkov), a PhD student with the Stanford Vision and Learning Lab working on learning techniques for robotic manipulation and search.

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