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Astrid Sorflaten leads operations at the Forecasting Research Institute, focusing on maximizing impact through efficient operations and project management. She previously led operations at early-stage organizations in both the nonprofit and corporate sectors, including developing systems and infrastructure for a rapidly growing team at the UK nonprofit Good Law Project.
Poseidon Research is an independent AI safety laboratory conducting deep technical research in interpretability, control, and secure monitoring to make advanced AI systems transparent, trustworthy, and governable.
Arden Berg is an Investor at Macroscopic Ventures, working on the organization’s investment portfolio with a background in economics and prior work investigating the trajectory of AI.
Patricio Vercesi is an Argentine individual based in Córdoba, Argentina, with involvement in the AI safety community. He co-authored a research project titled "Public Opinion and Its Importance to AI Policy" submitted to Apart Research as part of the EAGx LatAm Epoch AI Hackathon in July 2023. He is listed as a volunteer with PauseAI, an AI safety advocacy organization. He received a small grant from the Long-Term Future Fund to study machine learning at university and pursue AI safety independently over a 10-month period, reflecting an early-career path into AI safety work.
Conor McGlynn is a doctoral candidate in Public Policy (Science, Technology and Policy Studies) at Harvard Kennedy School and a fellow at the Harvard STS Program. He holds a B.A. in Economics and Philosophy from Trinity College Dublin and an M.Phil. in Philosophy from the University of Cambridge, where he focused on ethics and public policy. Before his PhD, he worked in EU affairs in Brussels as a Robert Schuman Trainee at the European Parliament and subsequently as a government relations consultant specializing in emerging technology and biotech regulation. He was a Schwarzman Scholar at Tsinghua University in Beijing (2019-2020), where he researched the governance of lethal autonomous weapon systems, and a Fulbright Irish Schuman Awardee at the Kissinger Institute on US-China Relations in Washington D.C. (2020-2021), focusing on global governance of emerging technologies. He was an IAPS 2025 AI Policy Fellow with a project on international technology competition, and co-authored the paper "Promising Topics for U.S.-China Dialogues on AI Risks and Governance" presented at the ACM FAccT conference in 2025. He received a grant from the Long-Term Future Fund to upskill for AI governance work before beginning his Science and Technology Policy PhD.
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Joe Collman is a Technical AI Governance Researcher at the Machine Intelligence Research Institute (MIRI), where he joined the Technical Governance Team in late 2024. He holds a Bachelor's degree in Mathematics from the University of Warwick (2000-2004). His research career in AI safety began with a focus on AI Safety via Debate and iterated amplification, including a stint as a Collaborating Researcher at OpenAI in early 2020 working specifically on AI Safety via Debate, and multiple grants from the Long-Term Future Fund supporting independent research on debate algorithms and human alignment in amplification. He has also served as Technical Lead and AI Safety cause area manager at the Stanford Existential Risks Initiative, as a Technical Generalist at the Berkeley Existential Risk Initiative, and as a Teaching Fellow for BlueDot Impact's AI Safety Fundamentals course. At MIRI, he co-authored "Existing Safety Frameworks Imply Unreasonable Confidence" (2025), arguing that current AI lab safety frameworks reflect systematic overconfidence. He is an active contributor to the Alignment Forum and LessWrong under the handle joe-collman.
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A not-for-profit policy institute that advises governments and political leaders worldwide on strategy, policy, and delivery, with a major focus on AI governance and technology adoption in the public sector.
Yashvardhan Sharma is an AI safety and policy researcher focused on compute governance, AI hardware, and model safety evaluation. He studied artificial intelligence, machine learning, and economics at Minerva University, where he led Minerva Effective Altruism and AI Safety. He is affiliated with FAR.AI, where he has co-authored research on adversarial AI safety including red-teaming studies of leading frontier models ("Illusory Safety") and jailbreak vulnerability analysis. He also co-authored "Distributed and Decentralised Training: Technical Governance Challenges in a Shifting AI Landscape," examining policy implications of shifts from centralized to distributed AI training. He previously served as Office Manager at SERI-MATS and received a stipend from the Long-Term Future Fund to research specialized AI hardware requirements for large AI training runs, mentored by Asher Brass at the Institute for AI Policy and Strategy (IAPS).
Peter McIntyre is a board member of Longview Inc. Ltd, the UK legal entity of Longview Philanthropy.
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Senior Advisor at Langsikt, working part-time on biotechnology and security. She is trained as a molecular biologist at the University of Glasgow, Imperial College London and the Institute of Cancer Research, where her PhD was awarded H.M. The King’s Gold Medal in 2015. She has previously been a senior adviser at the Norwegian Biotechnology Advisory Board and serves as a special adviser to the Norwegian Cancer Society.
Co-founder of Compassion Aligned Machine Learning (CaML), where she works on aligning AI systems with the welfare of non-human and other sentient beings using synthetic training data and compassion benchmarks such as ANIMA and related evaluations; previously designed security systems at Anthropic and has several years of cybersecurity and engineering experience.
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Florent Berthet is Director of Operations at CeSIA, where he oversees the organisation’s day-to-day operations in support of its AI safety research, education, and policy work.
Sabhanaz Rashid Diya is a CIGI senior fellow and founder of Tech Global Institute, a tech policy think tank focused on reducing equity and accountability gaps between technology companies and the global majority, advising governments and international organizations on AI, platform governance and digital rights.
Teun van der Weij is a Dutch AI safety researcher and Member of Technical Staff at Apollo Research in Zurich, where he focuses on evaluating AI capabilities and propensities related to scheming and AI control. He completed an MSc at Utrecht University (2022-2024) and a BSc summa cum laude at University College Groningen (2018-2021). He was a scholar in the MATS 5.0 program, where he researched sandbagging and how personas affect the cognition of language models under mentor Francis Rhys Ward. His most prominent work is the paper "AI Sandbagging: Language Models can Strategically Underperform on Evaluations," published at ICLR 2025, which demonstrated that frontier models like GPT-4 and Claude 3 Opus can be prompted or fine-tuned to selectively hide capabilities during evaluations. He also co-authored earlier work on shutdown avoidance in language models and activation steering. In addition to his research role, he co-founded the European Network for AI Safety (ENAIS) and serves on its board.
Riccardo Varenna is a founder with over nine years of experience scaling startups and has recently co-founded TamperSec, where he works on protecting hardware against sophisticated attacks.
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Kelvin Yu is a non-resident fellow at the Foundation for American Innovation whose work focuses on advancing U.S. technological and industrial policy. He previously led AI policy for the House Science Committee, completed fellowships with In-Q-Tel and Horizon Institute for Public Service, and before moving to Washington built and invested in early-stage startups in San Francisco as a founding engineer and venture investor.
Neuroscientist and entrepreneur focused on neurotechnology; founder, CEO and Research Director at Intheon, which develops platforms such as NeuroScale for real‑time biosignal processing, co‑founder of the Mainly Mozart "Mozart & the Mind" festival, and a partner at Lionheart Ventures.
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A Substack newsletter by Anton Leicht covering the political economy of AI progress, examining how institutions and political incentives interact with rapid technological change.
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Friendly Ambitious Nerd - https://mattbrooks.xyz/
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Alana Xiang (Chinese name: Zhengbo Xiang) is an AI safety researcher and entrepreneur who previously attended Stanford University before leaving to work in AI. She worked part-time at ARC Evals (now METR) in 2022-2023, contributing to evaluations of frontier AI models. In summer 2023, she was a Research Fellow at the Center on Long-Term Risk, focusing on reducing risks from advanced AI systems. She received funding from the Long-Term Future Fund for six months of independent AI alignment research and upskilling. She has described herself as a "smol alignment researcher" and explored research directions in AI alignment, evaluations, and adjacent AI safety topics. As of recent years, she has been associated with Calaveras AI, an AI data company.
Sarah Hastings-Woodhouse is a UK-based AI safety communicator and writer currently serving as Digital Communications Officer at the UK AI Security Institute (AISI). She holds a BA in English Literature from the University of Exeter (2017-2020) and previously worked as a Content Writer at FindAUniversity creating resources for postgraduate students before transitioning into AI safety work. She has contributed writing and research to the Future of Life Institute, Clearer Thinking, AI Frontiers, and participated in the Pivotal Research Fellowship. She hosts the "Consistently Candid" podcast, which focuses on making AI safety and existential risk accessible to non-technical audiences through in-depth interviews with researchers and advocates in the field. She received Long-Term Future Fund grants supporting her career transition into AI safety communications and for producing her podcast. She also maintains a Substack (longerramblings.substack.com) where she writes about AI safety topics including analyses of AI lab safety plans.
Tim Shavers leads AI safety and governance grantmaking at Astralis Foundation and advises the impact-first VC fund Halcyon Ventures. A graduate of Harvard College and Yale Law School, he spent nearly 20 years at McKinsey and more than a decade in venture capital and now also serves as a Senior Advisor with cFactual.
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Britanee TeBrake is a talent leader and consultant who specializes in fractional leadership for early- and mid-stage startups, advising companies on talent strategy, recruitment, and building high-performing teams drawing on extensive experience in talent acquisition and executive search.
Celia Ford is an AI reporter at Transformer, covering both technical and policy developments. She was previously a Future Perfect fellow at Vox and a AAAS Mass Media Fellow at Wired, and she holds a PhD in neuroscience from the University of California, Berkeley.
Cyborgism is an AI safety research agenda and community proposing that human-AI collaboration systems — where humans are cognitively augmented by LLMs rather than replaced by autonomous AI agents — can accelerate alignment research while preserving human control.
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UK government research organization that tests frontier AI systems, advances AI safety science, and informs policymakers about the risks and capabilities of advanced AI.
CAISI is the U.S. government's primary point of contact for AI testing and research within NIST, focused on developing voluntary AI standards and conducting evaluations of frontier AI systems. It was renamed from the U.S. AI Safety Institute in June 2025.
Caleb Rak is an operations professional in the AI safety and effective altruism community. He grew up in Norwich, Connecticut and attended Norwich Free Academy, where he was a 2017 National Merit Scholarship Finalist. He went on to Harvard University, graduating with a degree in Comparative Literature and Linguistics; his senior thesis was titled "Translating Zhou Zuoren: The Vernacular Essay and the Individual." After graduating, he became involved in EA community-building through roles at SPARC (a rationality and EA summer program for high school students) and Canopy Retreats (an organization supporting logistics for EA community events). He now works in Operations at Iliad (iliad.ac), an applied mathematics research organization focused on AI alignment that runs the Agent Foundations conference series. In that capacity, he received a $20,700 Long-Term Future Fund grant to organize the Agent Foundations 2025 workshop at Carnegie Mellon University, a five-day gathering of approximately 30 researchers working on mathematical foundations of AI alignment.
Board Member at the Transformative Futures Institute and Harbert Eminent Scholar in Business Analytics at Auburn University’s Raymond J. Harbert College of Business, whose research has focused on information systems support for managerial problem formulation.