Longreads + Open Thread

Happiness, Milgram, Delivery, China, Spreadsheets, Alpha, Trading, Hassabis

Longreads

Books

The Infinity Machine: Demis Hassabis, DeepMind, and the Quest for Superintelligence: One of my favorite video game concepts from my high school years was Black & White, a game in which the player plays the role of a deity who needs to attract followers through acts of mercy (e.g. miraculous rainfall on crops) or wrath (equally miraculous fireballs that destroy the crops). It was a fun concept, with a dynamic world that really felt like it was responding to what players did. It was less fun as a game, in part because the simulation was realistically complex enough that it was hard to affect things. One of the developers on that game turned out to be one Demis Hassabis, a chess and programming prodigy. So, we go way back. (As do the two million or so other people who bought the game.)

Hassabis later shifted his interests again. In fact, he is, at any given moment, doing exactly what the protagonist of a sci-fi book about someone who creates AGI would be doing. In the 90s, that meant building video games with elaborate simulations of interacting agents. In the early 2000s, he's getting a PhD in neuroscience. And in the 2010s and 2020s, he's working on AI, first at an independent DeepMind, and then at Google. (Disclosure: long GOOGL. It's always nice when your due diligence is available on Kindle.)

He did some clever neuroscientific work early on. He spent some time with memory: you can imagine your memory functioning like a camera, where it records detailed scenes in high fidelity. Or you can imagine a more compressed form, something more like a director, who describes what each participant should do but doesn't feed them lines word by word. Hassabis' view was the latter, and he was able to perform some experiments on people with brain damage to confirm it.

He eventually decided that AI was a more important goal to pursue. That's worked out quite well for him so far, but it's been a tricky path. Given that this is a book about a) a scientist, and b) someone who might end up being a major contributor to the technology that ultimately solves science, it's surprising how much of it is about investor relations. DeepMind had trouble getting its message across to VCs, and being acquired didn't solve that. And this was a trickier problem than with most companies. DeepMind employees, including Hassabis, seem to genuinely believe that the technology they're building could usher in either an era of unprecedented abundance or the end of the world. They eventually solved this, but the time period during which they hashed it out turned out to overlap with the period during which OpenAI realized that the transformer architecture meant that text-based models could start performing much, much better.

As that rivalry heats up, the book inevitably becomes more of a news digest. Fortunately, it's pretty exciting news. At least in the domain of white-collar tasks, he's contributed to automating a meaningful share of labor, and enhancing the value of the labor-hours that remain. It's just hard to spot the bullseye with a biography like this, and it's an admirable sacrifice (in expected value terms) to commit to writing about the head of an AI lab, given how rapid the turnover is in the most respected lab category.

Open Thread

Diff Jobs

Companies in the Diff network are actively looking for talent. See a sampling of current open roles below:

Even if you don't see an exact match for your skills and interests right now, we're happy to talk early so we can let you know if a good opportunity comes up.

If you’re at a company that's looking for talent, we should talk! Diff Jobs works with companies across fintech, hard tech, consumer software, enterprise software, and other areas—any company where finding unusually effective people is a top priority.