How should we adapt animal advocacy to near-term AGI?

By Max Taylor @ 2025-03-27T19:00 (+111)

Many thanks to Constance Li, Rachel Mason, Ronen Bar, Sam Tucker-Davis, and Yip Fai Tse for providing valuable feedback. This post does not necessarily reflect the views of my employer.

Artificial General Intelligence (basically, ‘AI that is as good as, or better than, humans at most intellectual tasks’) seems increasingly likely to be developed in the next 5-10 years. As others have written, this has major implications for EA priorities, including animal advocacy, but it’s hard to know how this should shape our strategy. This post sets out a few starting points and I’m really interested in hearing others’ ideas, even if they’re very uncertain and half-baked.

Is AGI coming in the next 5-10 years?

This is very well covered elsewhere but basically it looks increasingly likely, e.g.:

What could AGI mean for animals?

AGI’s implications for animals depend heavily on who controls the AGI models. For example:

Outcomes will vary wildly depending on the values their controllers instil in them.

AGI's initial conditions and values might quickly amplify into dramatic consequences for billions of animals before meaningful course corrections become possible.

Different values could lead to vastly different outcomes for wild animals as well as for farmed ones.

There are many ways that AGI could affect humans that would have significant knock-on effects on animals.

Animal advocacy itself would need to transform in a rapidly changing, AI-dominated landscape.

What should we do about it?

Reflect AGI in our goal as a movement

I’ve generally been doing/supporting animal advocacy with the implicit goal of ‘help end factory farming and create a robust community of wild animal welfare advocates by 2100’.

But if we assume a 50% probability of AGI in the next 5-10 years, this goal should probably be more like ‘ensure that advanced AI and the people who control it are aligned with animals’ interests by 2030, still do some other work that will help animals if AGI timelines end up being much further off, and align those two strands of work as much as possible’.

Act now, rather than wait until it’s too late

It doesn’t seem good enough to wait until AGI is here, then lobby for it to prioritize animals’ interests.

Support the work that best fulfils our AGI-aligned goals

Strategic individual and geographic targeting could dramatically increase our impact in short AGI timelines. For example, rather than broad public education campaigns, it could be most impactful to direct resources to ensuring that influential AGI decision-makers in specific strategic locations (e.g. the Bay Area or Beijing) incorporate basic moral consideration of animals in their work. 

With this in mind, the most important kinds of work I should support right now might include:[1]

Most of these projects will be highly useful for animals no matter when, or even whether, AGI is developed. For example, building relationships with AI labs establishes credibility and communication channels that will be valuable even if AGI takes several decades to develop. Likewise, investing in alternative protein infrastructure now prepares for a future where AGI can rapidly scale its adoption, and also provides a long-term solution to factory farming even without AGI.

Conclusion

Overall, this currently seems like a critical, time-sensitive, and massively overlooked element of our animal advocacy strategy. It’s right to acknowledge the uncertainty around AGI timelines and the unpredictability of post-AGI futures, but that’s an argument for investing many more resources into thinking about what this means in practice for our day-to-day work, not for maintaining the status quo until it’s too late. What do others think?

  1. ^

    I’ve written about some of these ideas in more detail in this post, and Sam Tucker-Davis of Open Paws has set out more ideas here.

  2. ^

    This goes beyond the focus on AI and animals, but AI sentience work (e.g. the NYU Center for Mind, Ethics, and Policy) also seems important: getting a better handle on the possibility of sentient AI and mitigating the possibility of its creation until those risks have been addressed


Kevin Xia 🔸 @ 2025-03-28T14:45 (+21)

Thank you for writing this up, Max! The more I dive into AI for Animals, the more it seems to be just about the most important (and drastically underdiscussed) topic within the farmed animal movement, both in terms of risks and opportunities.

MichaelDickens @ 2025-03-28T03:42 (+11)

Increasing the amount of animal-friendly content that is likely to feature in AI training data

My understanding is that current AIs' (professed) values are largely determined by RLHF, not by training data. Therefore it would be more effective to persuade the people in charge of RLHF policies to make them more animal-friendly.

But I have no idea whether RLHF will continue to be relevant as AI gets more powerful, or if RLHF affects AI's actual values rather than merely its professed values.

Ronen Bar @ 2025-03-28T10:53 (+8)

I agree, it is crucial that the animal advocacy movement learn research and prepare a wise and informed strategy for pre AGI and post AGI times.

Karen Singleton @ 2025-04-03T02:29 (+6)

Thank you for this post. I think it does a great job of outlining the double-edged sword we're facing -  - the potential for AI to either end enormous suffering or amplify it exponentially.

Your suggestion to reframe our movement's goal really expanded my thinking: "ensure that advanced AI and the people who control it are aligned with animals' interests by 2030." This feels urgent and necessary given the timelines you've outlined.

I'm particularly concerned that our society's current commodified view of animals could be baked into AGI systems and scaled to unprecedented levels. 

The strategic targets you've identified make perfect sense - especially the focus on AI/animal collaborations and getting animal advocates into rooms where AGI decisions are being made. We should absolutely be leveraging AI-powered advocacy tools while we can still shape their development. 

Thank you for this clarity. I'll be thinking much more deeply about how my own advocacy work needs to adapt to this possible near-future scenario.

Simon Newstead @ 2025-03-28T12:02 (+6)

"Act now, rather than wait until it’s too late" -> well put.

Glad to see the good work of CaML and others highlighted. Positively influencing the models as much as possible right now seems vital.

A random one - is AI for inter-species communication emerging as a thing? Is it viable in the short term, are there promising projects working on it with a view to bringing it to the masses via mobile apps etc? 

Constance Li @ 2025-03-31T20:41 (+5)

Hi Simon! You can find out more about the latest development at Earth Species Project here and Project CETI here. There have been some recent breakthroughs with detecting and classifying animal bioacoustic signals through LLM-type models. 

Max Taylor @ 2025-03-31T09:24 (+4)

Thanks Simon! Yes, AI for inter-species communication is underway. The main organisations working on this at the moment are Earth Species Project (who just received a $17 million grant) and Project CETI. So far as I can tell, work is still in its early stages and mainly focussed on gathering and cleaning audiovisual data and getting a better sense for different species' portfolio of sounds, rather than actual communication. 

I'm still unsure how good this will be for animals. I wrote a brief post on this for the AI for Animals newsletter if you're interested, but the upshot is that I can see plenty of ways for this technology to be abused (e.g. used for hunting, fishing, exploitation of companion animals for entertainment purposes, co-option by the factory farming industry, etc.). I also think there's a risk that we only use it for communication with a handful of popular species (e.g. dogs, cats, whales, dolphins), and don't consider what this means for other less popular species (like farmed chickens).

The most promising project I've seen so far is the partnership between Project CETI and the More Than Human Life (MOTH) Project at New York University, which is focussed on the ethical implications of interspecies communication. I hope that these kinds of guidelines will end up driving progress on this rather than corporate interests... and that we focus on using AI to understand animals better on their own terms, rather than trying to communicate with them purely for our own curiosity and entertainment.

CB🔸 @ 2025-03-29T07:53 (+4)

Fantastic post, very clear. This is a very important topic.

Alistair Stewart @ 2025-03-28T00:21 (+4)

Great piece Max! I feel very similarly.

Vasco Grilo🔸 @ 2025-04-02T18:30 (+2)

Thanks for the post, Max.

AGI might be controlled by lots of people.

Advanced AI is a general purpose technology, so I expect it to be widely distributed across society. I would think about it as electricity or the internet. Relatedly, I expect most AI will come from broad automation, not from research and development (R&D). I agree with the view Ege Erdil describes here.

  • 2024 survey of AI researchers put a 50% chance of AGI by 2047, but this is 13 years earlier than predicted in the 2023 version of the survey.

2047 is the median for all tasks being automated, but the median for all occupations being automated was much further away. Both scenarios should be equivalent, so I think it makes sense to combine the predictions for both of them. This results in the median expert having a median date of full automation of 2073.

CDF of ESPAI survey showing median and central 50% of expert responses.
Johannes Pichler 🔸 @ 2025-04-02T10:45 (+1)

Thanks for this great post, Max! I strongly agree, this is super important. 

Tristan Katz @ 2025-04-01T12:34 (+1)

Thanks for this post - it was desperately needed - but it's striking to me how many questions there are for which we don't have good answers. I would go so far as to say we're largely clueless as to what effects AGI will have on animals.

The recommendations that we try to direct the movement toward considering the role of AI in its future, and try to influence AI decision makers rather than the general public, seem reasonable. Maybe that's the best we can do?

Max Taylor @ 2025-04-01T16:47 (+1)

Thanks Tristan! Definitely agree that AGI's effects on animals (like on humans) are currently extremely uncertain – but by being proactive and strategic, we could still greatly increase the probability that those effects will be positive.

The recommendations I suggested seem broadly sensible to me but I'm sure that some are likely to be much more impactful than others, and some major ones are bound to be missing, and each one of them is sufficiently broad that it could cover a whole range of sub-priorities. This is probably an argument for prioritising the first of the principles that you mention, directing the movement toward considering the role of AI in its future, and agreeing on the set of practical, rapid steps that we need to take over the next few years.