#217 – Beth Barnes on the most important graph in AI right now — and the 7-month rule that governs its progress

#217 – Beth Barnes on the most important graph in AI right now — and the 7-month rule that governs its progress

AI models today have a 50% chance of successfully completing a task that would take an expert human one hour. Seven months ago, that number was roughly 30 minutes — and seven months before that, 15 minutes. (See graph.)

These are substantial, multi-step tasks requiring sustained focus: building web applications, conducting machine learning research, or solving complex programming challenges.

Today’s guest, Beth Barnes, is CEO of METR (Model Evaluation & Threat Research) — the leading organisation measuring these capabilities.

Links to learn more, video, highlights, and full transcript: https://80k.info/bb

Beth's team has been timing how long it takes skilled humans to complete projects of varying length, then seeing how AI models perform on the same work. The resulting paper “Measuring AI ability to complete long tasks” made waves by revealing that the planning horizon of AI models was doubling roughly every seven months. It's regarded by many as the most useful AI forecasting work in years.

Beth has found models can already do “meaningful work” improving themselves, and she wouldn’t be surprised if AI models were able to autonomously self-improve as little as two years from now — in fact, “It seems hard to rule out even shorter [timelines]. Is there 1% chance of this happening in six, nine months? Yeah, that seems pretty plausible.”

Beth adds:

The sense I really want to dispel is, “But the experts must be on top of this. The experts would be telling us if it really was time to freak out.” The experts are not on top of this. Inasmuch as there are experts, they are saying that this is a concerning risk. … And to the extent that I am an expert, I am an expert telling you you should freak out.


What did you think of this episode? https://forms.gle/sFuDkoznxBcHPVmX6


Chapters:

  • Cold open (00:00:00)
  • Who is Beth Barnes? (00:01:19)
  • Can we see AI scheming in the chain of thought? (00:01:52)
  • The chain of thought is essential for safety checking (00:08:58)
  • Alignment faking in large language models (00:12:24)
  • We have to test model honesty even before they're used inside AI companies (00:16:48)
  • We have to test models when unruly and unconstrained (00:25:57)
  • Each 7 months models can do tasks twice as long (00:30:40)
  • METR's research finds AIs are solid at AI research already (00:49:33)
  • AI may turn out to be strong at novel and creative research (00:55:53)
  • When can we expect an algorithmic 'intelligence explosion'? (00:59:11)
  • Recursively self-improving AI might even be here in two years — which is alarming (01:05:02)
  • Could evaluations backfire by increasing AI hype and racing? (01:11:36)
  • Governments first ignore new risks, but can overreact once they arrive (01:26:38)
  • Do we need external auditors doing AI safety tests, not just the companies themselves? (01:35:10)
  • A case against safety-focused people working at frontier AI companies (01:48:44)
  • The new, more dire situation has forced changes to METR's strategy (02:02:29)
  • AI companies are being locally reasonable, but globally reckless (02:10:31)
  • Overrated: Interpretability research (02:15:11)
  • Underrated: Developing more narrow AIs (02:17:01)
  • Underrated: Helping humans judge confusing model outputs (02:23:36)
  • Overrated: Major AI companies' contributions to safety research (02:25:52)
  • Could we have a science of translating AI models' nonhuman language or neuralese? (02:29:24)
  • Could we ban using AI to enhance AI, or is that just naive? (02:31:47)
  • Open-weighting models is often good, and Beth has changed her attitude to it (02:37:52)
  • What we can learn about AGI from the nuclear arms race (02:42:25)
  • Infosec is so bad that no models are truly closed-weight models (02:57:24)
  • AI is more like bioweapons because it undermines the leading power (03:02:02)
  • What METR can do best that others can't (03:12:09)
  • What METR isn't doing that other people have to step up and do (03:27:07)
  • What research METR plans to do next (03:32:09)

This episode was originally recorded on February 17, 2025.

Video editing: Luke Monsour and Simon Monsour
Audio engineering: Ben Cordell, Milo McGuire, Simon Monsour, and Dominic Armstrong
Music: Ben Cordell
Transcriptions and web: Katy Moore

Episoder(326)

Rob & Howie on what we do and don't know about 2019-nCoV

Rob & Howie on what we do and don't know about 2019-nCoV

Two 80,000 Hours researchers, Robert Wiblin and Howie Lempel, record an experimental bonus episode about the new 2019-nCoV virus.See this list of resources, including many discussed in the episode, to...

3 Feb 20201h 18min

#68 - Will MacAskill on the paralysis argument, whether we're at the hinge of history, & his new priorities

#68 - Will MacAskill on the paralysis argument, whether we're at the hinge of history, & his new priorities

You’re given a box with a set of dice in it. If you roll an even number, a person's life is saved. If you roll an odd number, someone else will die. Each time you shake the box you get $10. Should you...

24 Jan 20203h 25min

#44 Classic episode - Paul Christiano on finding real solutions to the AI alignment problem

#44 Classic episode - Paul Christiano on finding real solutions to the AI alignment problem

Rebroadcast: this episode was originally released in October 2018. Paul Christiano is one of the smartest people I know. After our first session produced such great material, we decided to do a seco...

15 Jan 20203h 51min

#33 Classic episode - Anders Sandberg on cryonics, solar flares, and the annual odds of nuclear war

#33 Classic episode - Anders Sandberg on cryonics, solar flares, and the annual odds of nuclear war

Rebroadcast: this episode was originally released in May 2018. Joseph Stalin had a life-extension program dedicated to making himself immortal. What if he had succeeded? According to Bryan Caplan ...

8 Jan 20201h 25min

#17 Classic episode - Will MacAskill on moral uncertainty, utilitarianism & how to avoid being a moral monster

#17 Classic episode - Will MacAskill on moral uncertainty, utilitarianism & how to avoid being a moral monster

Rebroadcast: this episode was originally released in January 2018. Immanuel Kant is a profoundly influential figure in modern philosophy, and was one of the earliest proponents for universal democracy...

31 Des 20191h 52min

#67 – David Chalmers on the nature and ethics of consciousness

#67 – David Chalmers on the nature and ethics of consciousness

What is it like to be you right now? You're seeing this text on the screen, smelling the coffee next to you, and feeling the warmth of the cup. There’s a lot going on in your head — your conscious exp...

16 Des 20194h 41min

#66 – Peter Singer on being provocative, effective altruism, & how his moral views have changed

#66 – Peter Singer on being provocative, effective altruism, & how his moral views have changed

In 1989, the professor of moral philosophy Peter Singer was all over the news for his inflammatory opinions about abortion. But the controversy stemmed from Practical Ethics — a book he’d actually rel...

5 Des 20192h 1min

#65 – Ambassador Bonnie Jenkins on 8 years pursuing WMD arms control, & diversity in diplomacy

#65 – Ambassador Bonnie Jenkins on 8 years pursuing WMD arms control, & diversity in diplomacy

"…it started when the Soviet Union fell apart and there was a real desire to ensure security of nuclear materials and pathogens, and that scientists with [WMD-related] knowledge could get paid so that...

19 Nov 20191h 40min

Populært innen Fakta

fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
foreldreradet
treningspodden
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
jakt-og-fiskepodden
sinnsyn
rss-sunn-okonomi
mikkels-paskenotter
hverdagspsyken
gravid-uke-for-uke
rss-kunsten-a-leve
takk-og-lov-med-anine-kierulf
rss-kull
hagespiren-podcast
rss-var-forste-kaffe
fryktlos
rss-mann-i-krise-med-sagen
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid