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The Killing Spree Tied to a Silicon Valley Intellectual Movement

2025/3/3
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Zusha Ellinson
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Zusha Ellinson: 我报道了与Zizians相关的系列谋杀案,该组织起源于一个关注人工智能安全的硅谷理性主义者团体。起初,两起看似无关的谋杀案,一起发生在佛蒙特州边境,一名边境巡逻员在与全副武装的嫌疑人枪战中丧生;另一起发生在加州,一名房东被刺死。但调查发现,两名嫌疑人都是年轻的计算机科学家、素食主义者,并且对人工智能安全感兴趣,这与加州的理性主义者社区存在关联。这个社区对科技界有很大影响,但其中却滋生出了一个暴力极端的素食主义者组织。 Zizians的领导者Lasoda,最初是一位来自阿拉斯加的优秀计算机科学家,在加入理性主义者社区后,逐渐转变为极端激进的素食主义者,并自称为Ziz。她穿着黑色长袍,宣扬暴力,甚至在网上讨论对肉食者的惩罚。理性主义者社区与Zizians决裂后,Zizians的活动愈发极端,最终导致了多起谋杀案。 Ziz曾假死,并在之后多次出现,参与了多起暴力事件。目前,她因多项罪名被捕,并被拒绝保释。Zizians的动机尚不明确,但他们的行为对理性主义者社区以及人工智能安全领域都产生了深远的影响。 Ryan Knudsen: 本期节目探讨了硅谷理性主义运动与Zizians极端组织之间的关联,以及该事件对理性主义运动的影响。理性主义者社区是一个关注人工智能安全、理性、逻辑和概率的团体,他们致力于开发对人类安全的人工智能。然而,这个开放的社区也吸引了一些边缘人士,最终导致了Zizians的出现和一系列暴力事件。 Zizians的极端行为引发了理性主义者社区的反思,他们开始探讨社区的开放性是否导致了不良后果,以及是否应该对社区成员进行更严格的筛选。Zizians事件也对理性主义运动的声誉造成了损害,人们开始质疑理性主义者在人工智能安全领域的权威性。 Zizians事件与Sam Bankman-Fried的欺诈案类似,都引发了对相关运动内部机制的质疑。这些事件提醒我们,即使是看似理性和进步的运动,也可能滋生极端主义和暴力行为,因此需要对社区的文化和价值观进行持续的反思和调整。

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The episode begins with an exploration of recent killings tied to individuals connected with a group known as the Zizians. These killings span from Vermont to California and involve suspects with backgrounds in computer science and a shared interest in veganism and AI safety.
  • A Border Patrol agent and a landlord in California were killed in separate incidents within three days.
  • The suspects in both cases were young computer scientists, vegans, and interested in AI safety.
  • These characteristics linked them to the Rationalist community, a group influential in tech circles.

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In January, near the Canadian border with Vermont, a Border Patrol agent pulled over a suspicious vehicle with two passengers inside. This Border Patrol agent in Vermont was stopping a car because there had been suspicions about these two people. They're wearing all black, they're armed to the teeth. That's our colleague Zusha Ellenson. It was a shooting and they got into a gunfight. Breaking news out of Vermont for you tonight. A U.S. Border Patrol agent we have learned has died along with another...

The Border Patrol agent was killed in the shootout, as was one of the suspicious passengers. Meanwhile, thousands of miles away, in California... There was a landlord in Vallejo, California, a little working-class city north of San Francisco, that was stabbed to death. New at 10, Vallejo police are investigating the city's first homicide of the year. Officers say they found one man who had been stabbed. They took that person...

The killing of the Border Patrol agent and the landlord occurred within three days of one another. On the face of these two murders, you'd think they'd have nothing in common. And then the authorities revealed the suspects. And they were both young. They were both computer scientists. They were both vegans. And they were both interested in artificial intelligence safety. Computer scientists. Vegans. Interested in AI safety.

Those characteristics of the alleged suspects were familiar to an influential community of thinkers in California called the Rationalists. It's a very potent, brainy, brilliant community that's having a big influence in tech. And somehow, from this community emerged this group of violent, militant vegans. Welcome to The Journal, our show about money, business, and power. I'm Ryan Knudsen. It's Monday, March 3rd.

Coming up on the show, a Silicon Valley intellectual society kicked them out. Now they're tied to a killing spree.

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They like to talk about, debate big existential questions. They love reason, logic, and probability. A lot of people may have not heard about the rationalists, but they're very influential.

Many rationalists today are devoted to developing artificial intelligence in a way that's safe for humanity. They talk a lot about this idea of the robot apocalypse, of an evil AI killing off humanity, and they spend a lot of their time trying to prevent that. When you think about a robot apocalypse, most Americans are like, "Oh, that's in a movie." But, you know, to them, this is very serious. The rationalist movement has drawn some influential people.

Early on, venture capitalist Peter Thiel funded a rationalist research organization. And former OpenAI researcher Paul Cristiano now leads the federal government's AI Safety Institute. Has the rationalist movement had a real impact on AI safety?

Absolutely. I feel like they've sort of spearheaded this whole movement to slow down AI, to make sure AI is done in a way that doesn't harm people. I mean, the development of AI has been so rapid, right? And often in Silicon Valley, you don't have a voice that's saying we need to slow down and do things in a different way. Much of the Rationalist's heady conversations take place online.

There's this famous online forum called Less Wrong where they debate everything, the rationalists. They love debating everything. This post is a collection of 11 different proposals for building safe, advanced AI. Less Wrong is filled with long-winded and complex posts. To give you a sense of what it's like on the Less Wrong forum, we asked the journal team to read some examples.

The stereotyped image of AI catastrophe is a powerful, malicious AI system that takes its creators by surprise and quickly achieves a decisive advantage over the rest of humanity. I shall argue that the most critical aspects of today's and tomorrow's world-scale ethical problems have and will have to do with algorithms, not robots.

It's a lot of very high IQ people, a lot of software engineers, very brainy people. When I entered college, they told me a Harvard education would empower me to do anything I want. The world would be my oyster. They attract a lot of people who don't feel comfortable in other areas of society, like transgender folks, autistic folks, contrarians like atheists.

Throughout my life, I've often thought that other people had beliefs that were really repugnant and stupid. Below are all the cruxes I could identify from my conclusion that veganism has trade-offs. And the community really, for a long time, didn't care who joined. They welcomed anyone. They welcomed any idea. They were eager to embrace anyone and any idea, no matter how outlandish it seemed to the outside.

This welcoming intellectual online forum caught the eye of a budding rationalist in Alaska, a promising computer programmer fresh out of college. I'm just going to refer to her by her last name, Lasoda. Lasoda was a brilliant young computer scientist from Alaska, graduated magna cum laude, came to the Bay Area about a decade ago looking to work in tech and looking to get into this rationality movement.

In the Bay Area, Lasoda found community and an identity. She came out as transgender. She embraced veganism. She was interested in startups. And she started living on a tugboat in the waters south of San Francisco with a handful of other like-minded rationalists. So Lasoda comes into this mix in about 2016 and loves it. But even in this community of oddballs, Lasoda stood out.

Over time, Lasota's persona evolved into something more conspicuous and extreme. And she started going by the name Ziz. Ziz, which is an alien villain from an online comic.

Lasoda started wearing black robes everywhere and started adhering to this philosophy of, they call it vegan Sith, is what they call it after the people in Star Wars. The bad guys from Star Wars are the Siths. Yeah. The emperor was a Sith. Very bad. Yeah. Controlling everything. Exactly. At one point, Ziz wrote a cryptic blog post about what she called her, quote, journey to the dark side.

And people started to get creeped out. You know, just very intense person, tall, blonde hair, long blonde hair, wearing dark robes, talking intensely about veganism, and talking about, allegedly on online forums, about punishing meat eaters, you know, very violent stuff, about having Nuremberg trials for meat eaters. The rationalists began distancing themselves from Ziz. They started calling her and her friends on the tugboat the Zizians.

Have any of Ziz's followers said anything about why they were drawn to her? We have not been able to talk to people who were Zizians themselves. But we've talked to parents of people who were drawn in to the Zizians. And what people said is that the followers were all somewhat insecure, people who didn't quite fit in even in this community.

and who were really drawn to that militance that Ziz had. Ziz was very charismatic for that community. The Zizians began developing their own theories. Ziz was interested in an idea that the left and right sides of the human brain could be separated into two different identities. To study this, she and other Zizians attempted to keep one half of their brain awake while sleeping. The Zizians wanted to present their research at rationalist organizations like the Center for Applied Rationality in Berkeley.

The organizations were rather dismissive. They said, we don't think, you know, this is real research. And they turned down their offer to speak about it. And that's really when the transformation took a very dark turn. In 2019, Ziz and three other Zizians showed up at a Center for Applied Rationality alumni reunion event. They protested this reunion of rationalists.

wearing dark robes and Guy Fawkes masks. They blocked the entrance. This was very dramatic for the rationalist movement. And police had to come and arrest them. And this really represented the beginning of the hostility and the split from the rationalists. As part of the split, the Zizians publicly blasted the rationalist movement. Said they were corrupt, said they were anti-trans, and believed that her group was, you know, the real, true, pure group.

The rationalist organizations denied the Zizians' accusations. But soon, the growing rebellion didn't seem like it mattered. Because by the summer of 2022, the Zizians' run appeared to be over. And why is that? That's because the Coast Guard gets a call in August of 2022 saying that Lesotho has gone overboard on a ship in the San Francisco Bay. The Coast Guard searched the waters of the Bay Area for Ziz's body, but nothing turned up. Ziz was presumed dead.

They run an obituary in a newspaper in Alaska saying, quote, "Loving adventure, friends and family, music, blueberries, biking, computer games and animals. You are missed." Their leader was gone, but the Zizians lived on. That's after the break.

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It's your turn. Visit servicenow.com. About three months after Ziz's obituary was published, the Zizians ran into trouble. The group had moved off their tugboat and onto a plot of land in Vallejo, California. But they weren't making rent, and their landlord tried to kick the Zizians off his property. The landlord, who's 80 years old at the time, a guy named Curtis Lynn, is trying to evict the Zizians, and they attack him with knives and a sword.

He loses an eye, but he has a gun. He shoots back. He loses an eye? Yeah. Yeah, he loses an eye. He shoots back during the violent confrontation. One of the Zizians is killed. Two of them are arrested. And who should be spotted at the crime scene? None other than the supposedly dead Lasoda. Ziz. Ziz is alive. So she faked her own death? Ziz faked her own death. That's exactly right.

A prosecutor's email to Ziz's attorney confirmed the sudden reappearance. Ziz was, quote, "alive and well." She wasn't charged in the sword attack on the landlord, but two other Zizians were. They've both denied the charges. What happens next? Ziz shows up in an even more sinister spot across the country in Pennsylvania just a few weeks later. On New Year's Eve in 2022, an older couple in Pennsylvania was shot and killed in their home.

When the police went to question the couple's daughter, they found her at a hotel with Ziz. But when they approached Ziz to talk to Ziz, Ziz just plays dead and lies there. Won't say anything. They arrested Ziz for alleged obstruction. Her attorney disputed the charges. Ziz made bail and then vanished again. After the murders in Pennsylvania, the rationalist community in Berkeley really starts to get freaked out. Someone puts what they call a community alert system

on this forum called Less Wrong where the rationalists like to debate things. And they say, you know, people are concerned that Ziz and her associates are violent and that there's a real threat here. That post went out in early 2023, putting the rationalists on high alert. But after that, the Zizians went quiet and no one really heard from them.

Until this past January, when those two killings happened. The border patrol agent in Vermont and that landlord in California. The landlord in California was the same man who lost his eye in the sword attack a few years earlier. And he was set to testify against the Zizians in that case when he was killed.

All told, six people have died in connection with the Zizians. There's the landlord, the border patrol agent, the couple in Pennsylvania, and two Zizians themselves, who were killed during the various confrontations. The motivation behind these killings is still unclear. In February, Ziz was arrested on trespassing, obstruction, and gun charges following a manhunt. A judge ordered that she be held without bail. She's denied any wrongdoing.

How is the rationalist movement processing what's going on? Someone posted on the Rationalist Forum about why do so many rationalists turn crazy? A leader in the rationalist community, a person named Oliver Habrika, made a post on LessWrong inviting the rationalists to do what they do best: debate and reflect. This time, the topic of the discussion was themselves. We asked one of our colleagues to read it out loud.

I think there is a common thread between a lot of the people behaving in crazy or reckless ways that it can be explained and that understanding what is going on there might be of enormous importance in modeling the future impact of the extended less wrong social network.

These rationalists are asking questions like, were there dynamics in our group that sort of bred cult-like behavior that led to this sort of thing? I think a lot of this is just that we aren't very conventional. And so we tend to develop novel standards and social structures. Another thing they've been talking about a lot is how open the community was. They really just would allow anyone to come and go.

And they feel like that openness has really helped them and helped the movement do things that other folks couldn't do, but also let in people who, you know, were not welcome elsewhere for a good reason. There are fewer norms that we share with more long-lived groups, which might act as antibodies for the most destructive kinds of ideas.

But at the center of it is sort of a soul-searching. It's like, did our movement go wrong in some way? And it's reminiscent of the soul-searching that took place after Sam Bankman Freed was convicted of, you know, one of the biggest frauds in history. Sam Bankman Freed, the founder of FTX, who was convicted of fraud, was a follower of a movement called Effective Altruism, which has a lot of overlap with rationalism and its approach and community.

Since his conviction, the effective altruism movement has suffered reputational damage and increased scrutiny. And after that, people ask, well, you know, is there something wrong with this movement that this guy turned out so badly? And it's a very similar situation now. Do you think that this movement

Incident with the Zizians might damage the rationalist movement's reputation or the movement itself? Yeah, that's a really great question. How is it going to change this movement that's had so much influence in Silicon Valley? I think the one thing it might do is make people look at their movement a little more askance, you know, with a little more suspicion in their mind when they're talking about AI safety. You know, will people take them seriously in these really important debates?

when they have this group of militant vegans that came from their ranks. That's all for today. Monday, March 3rd. The Journal is a co-production of Spotify and The Wall Street Journal. If you like our show, follow us on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. We're out every weekday afternoon. Thanks for listening. See you tomorrow.