teleo-codex/foundations/collective-intelligence/safe AI development requires building alignment mechanisms before scaling capability.md
m3taversal 79396f54dc leo: remove 21 entertainment/cultural-dynamics duplicates + fix domain:livingip in 204 files
- What: Delete 21 byte-identical cultural theory claims from domains/entertainment/
  that duplicate foundations/cultural-dynamics/. Fix domain: livingip → correct value
  in 204 files across all core/, foundations/, and domains/ directories. Update domain
  enum in schemas/claim.md and CLAUDE.md.
- Why: Duplicates inflated entertainment domain (41→20 actual claims), created
  ambiguous wiki link resolution. domain:livingip was a migration artifact that
  broke any query using the domain field. 225 of 344 claims had wrong domain value.
- Impact: Entertainment _map.md still references cultural-dynamics claims via wiki
  links — this is intentional (navigation hubs span directories). No wiki links broken.

Pentagon-Agent: Leo <76FB9BCA-CC16-4479-B3E5-25A3769B3D7E>

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-06 16:11:17 +00:00

4.8 KiB

description type domain created confidence source
A phased safety-first strategy that starts with non-sensitive domains and builds governance, validation, and human oversight before expanding into riskier territory claim collective-intelligence 2026-02-16 likely AI Safety Grant Application (LivingIP)

safe AI development requires building alignment mechanisms before scaling capability

The standard AI development pattern scales capability first and attempts safety retrofits later. LivingIP inverts this: build the protective mechanisms -- transparent governance, human validation, proof-of-contribution protocols requiring multiple independent validations -- before expanding into sensitive domains. This is not caution for its own sake. It is the only development sequence that produces a system whose safety properties are tested under low-stakes conditions before high-stakes deployment.

The grant application identifies three concrete risks that make this sequencing non-optional: knowledge aggregation could surface dangerous combinations of individually safe information, the incentive system could be gamed, and the network could develop emergent properties that resist understanding. Each risk is easier to detect and contain while the system operates in non-sensitive domains. Since the alignment problem dissolves when human values are continuously woven into the system rather than specified in advance, the safety-first approach gives the human-in-the-loop mechanisms time to mature before the stakes rise. Governance muscles are built on easier problems before being asked to handle harder ones.

This phased approach is also a practical response to the observation that since existential risk breaks trial and error because the first failure is the last event, there is no opportunity to iterate on safety after a catastrophic failure. You must get safety right on the first deployment in high-stakes domains, which means practicing in low-stakes domains first. The goal framework remains permanently open to revision at every stage, making the system's values a living document rather than a locked specification.


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