As Chairman of the AGI Panel of the Council of Presidents of the UNations General Assembly I am leading a team of Renan Araújo, Yoshua Bengio, Joon Ho Kwak, Lan Xue, Stuart Russell, Jaan Tallinn, Mariana Todorova, and José Jaime Villalobos to be used by the President of the UN General Assembly to call for a special session of the UN General Assembly specially on AGI. Such a special session it will stimulate a global conversation on beneficial AGI. The AGI Panel's report if voluntary, but between now and the eventual special session meetings, and trips to NY will be required for follow up to the report. All this is not funded, but with support could help insure serious national attention.
How Our Project Will Contribute To The Growth Of The Decentralized AI Platform
The brings the issue of BGI to world leadership attention.
Our Team
Jerome Glenn would be the leading of the team doing most of the follow up work with the Council of the Presidents of the UN General Assembly, and with the Office of the President of the UN General Assembly, and Members of the AGI panal as necessary: Renan Araugo, Yashua Bengio, Joon Ho Kwak, Lan Xue, Stuart Russell, Jaan Tallinn, Mariana Todorova, and Jose Vallalobos.
The world is becoming aware of ChatGPT, and other AI systems, but it is unaware of how big AGI will be and how soon it will be acheived. There calls for international coordination and national guidelines, but these calls confuse artificial narrow intellignece, generative or GenAI, general purpose AI, with AGI and Artificial SuperIntellignece. There is likely to be a UN GA session on AI later this year, but it will look at current forms like the two UN Resolutions. We need an aditional, separate, specific UN General Assembly session on beneficial AGI so that the world can be better informed on how to insure the benefits of future AGI is better. Our work with Council could make that occur.
Our specific solution to this problem
Prepare a document on AGI with the AGI panel; have it approved by the Council of Presidents of the UN General Assembly (the current and next President of the UNGA are members of the Council alone with 14 other previous presidents of the UNGA), if the President of the UN GA approves, then the AGI document would be circulated to all Member Nations of the UN and invited to present their views on how beneficial AGI could emerge.
Existing resources
The AGI Panel, the Council of Presidents of the UN General Assembly, and The Millennium Project
Placeholder for Spotlight Day Pitch-presentations. Video's will be added by the DF team when available.
Total Milestones
2
Total Budget
$35,000 USD
Last Updated
24 Feb 2025
Milestone 1 - Complete AGI document
Description
Present to annual meeting of the Council of Presidents of the UN General Assembly
Deliverables
Recommendations actions by the UN General Assembly
Budget
0
Success Criterion
Approval by the President of the UN General Assembly
Milestone 2 - Follow up actions to the report
Description
Meetings with the Office of the President of the UN General assembly to help shape the special session on AGI; preparation of briefing documents several trips to New York follow up meetings with with representatives for the leading nations.
Deliverables
meetings and briefings
Budget
$35,000 USD
Success Criterion
Continued development of the UN GA special session on AGI, successful meetings with leading nations, and successful meeting of the UN GA the brings beneficial AGI to world attention and better media coverage.
Reviews and Ratings in Deep Funding are structured in 4 categories. This will ensure that the reviewer takes all these perspectives into account in their assessment and it will make it easier to compare different projects on their strengths and weaknesses.
Overall (Primary) This is an average of the 4 perspectives. At the start of this new process, we are assigning an equal weight to all categories, but over time we might change this and make some categories more important than others in the overall score. (This may even be done retroactively).
Feasibility (secondary)
This represents the user's assessment of whether the proposed project is theoretically possible and if it is deemed feasible. E.g. A proposal for nuclear fission might be theoretically possible, but it doesn’t look very feasible in the context of Deep Funding.
Viability (secondary)
This category is somewhat similar to Feasibility, but it interprets the feasibility against factors such as the size and experience of the team, the budget requested, and the estimated timelines. We could frame this as: “What is your level of confidence that this team will be able to complete this project and its milestones in a reasonable time, and successfully deploy it?”
Examples:
A proposal that promises the development of a personal assistant that outperforms existing solutions might be feasible, but if there is no AI expertise in the team the viability rating might be low.
A proposal that promises a new Carbon Emission Compensation scheme might be technically feasible, but the viability could be estimated low due to challenges around market penetration and widespread adoption.
Desirability (secondary)
Even if the project team succeeds in creating a product, there is the question of market fit. Is this a project that fulfills an actual need? Is there a lot of competition already? Are the USPs of the project sufficient to make a difference?
Example:
Creating a translation service from, say Spanish to English might be possible, but it's questionable if such a service would be able to get a significant share of the market
Usefulness (secondary)
This is a crucial category that aligns with the main goal of the Deep Funding program. The question to be asked here is: “To what extent will this proposal help to grow the Decentralized AI Platform?”
For proposals that develop or utilize an AI service on the platform, the question could be “How many API calls do we expect it to generate” (and how important / high-valued are these calls?).
For a marketing proposal, the question could be “How large and well-aligned is the target audience?” Another question is related to how the budget is spent. Are the funds mainly used for value creation for the platform or on other things?
Examples:
A metaverse project that spends 95% of its budget on the development of the game and only 5 % on the development of an AI service for the platform might expect a low ‘usefulness’ rating here.
A marketing proposal that creates t-shirts for a local high school, would get a lower ‘usefulness’ rating than a marketing proposal that has a viable plan for targeting highly esteemed universities in a scaleable way.
An AI service that is fully dedicated to a single product, does not take advantage of the purpose of the platform. When the same service would be offered and useful for other parties, this should increase the ‘usefulness’ rating.
About Expert Reviews
Reviews and Ratings in Deep Funding are structured in 4 categories. This will ensure that the reviewer takes all these perspectives into account in their assessment and it will make it easier to compare different projects on their strengths and weaknesses.
Overall (Primary) This is an average of the 4 perspectives. At the start of this new process, we are assigning an equal weight to all categories, but over time we might change this and make some categories more important than others in the overall score. (This may even be done retroactively).
Feasibility (secondary)
This represents the user\'s assessment of whether the proposed project is theoretically possible and if it is deemed feasible. E.g. A proposal for nuclear fission might be theoretically possible, but it doesn’t look very feasible in the context of Deep Funding.
Viability (secondary)
This category is somewhat similar to Feasibility, but it interprets the feasibility against factors such as the size and experience of the team, the budget requested, and the estimated timelines. We could frame this as: “What is your level of confidence that this team will be able to complete this project and its milestones in a reasonable time, and successfully deploy it?”
Examples:
A proposal that promises the development of a personal assistant that outperforms existing solutions might be feasible, but if there is no AI expertise in the team the viability rating might be low.
A proposal that promises a new Carbon Emission Compensation scheme might be technically feasible, but the viability could be estimated low due to challenges around market penetration and widespread adoption.
Desirability (secondary)
Even if the project team succeeds in creating a product, there is the question of market fit. Is this a project that fulfills an actual need? Is there a lot of competition already? Are the USPs of the project sufficient to make a difference?
Example:
Creating a translation service from, say Spanish to English might be possible, but it\'s questionable if such a service would be able to get a significant share of the market
Usefulness (secondary)
This is a crucial category that aligns with the main goal of the Deep Funding program. The question to be asked here is: “To what extent will this proposal help to grow the Decentralized AI Platform?”
For proposals that develop or utilize an AI service on the platform, the question could be “How many API calls do we expect it to generate” (and how important / high-valued are these calls?).
For a marketing proposal, the question could be “How large and well-aligned is the target audience?” Another question is related to how the budget is spent. Are the funds mainly used for value creation for the platform or on other things?
Examples:
A metaverse project that spends 95% of its budget on the development of the game and only 5 % on the development of an AI service for the platform might expect a low ‘usefulness’ rating here.
A marketing proposal that creates t-shirts for a local high school, would get a lower ‘usefulness’ rating than a marketing proposal that has a viable plan for targeting highly esteemed universities in a scaleable way.
An AI service that is fully dedicated to a single product, does not take advantage of the purpose of the platform. When the same service would be offered and useful for other parties, this should increase the ‘usefulness’ rating.
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