I’m Emma from the Communications team at the Centre for Effective Altruism (CEA). I want to flag a few media items related to EA that have come out recently or will be coming out soon, given they’ll touch on topics—like FTX—that I expect will be of interest to Forum readers.
- The CEO of CEA, @Zachary Robinson, wrote an op-ed that came out today addressing Sam Bankman-Fried and the continuing value of EA. (Read here)
- @William_MacAskill will appear on two podcasts and will discuss FTX: Clearer Thinking with Spencer Greenberg and the Making Sense Podcast with Sam Harris.
- The podcast episode with Sam Harris will likely be released next week and is aimed at a general audience.
- Update on April 1: this episode is now available for listening here.
- The podcast episode with Spencer Greenberg will likely be released in two weeks and is aimed at people more familiar with the EA movement.
- Update on April 16: this episode is now available for listening here. (A linkpost from the host, Spencer Greenberg, is also here.)
- The podcast episode with Sam Harris will likely be released next week and is aimed at a general audience.
I’ll add links for these episodes once they become available and plan to update this post as needed.
The Washington Post article rings quite hollow. It claims that CEA and other EA organizations have taken FTX's downfall as an opportunity for "reflection and institutional reform", and cites the legal investigation CEA sponsored as evidence of this.
However, as far as I can tell the primary goal of that legal investigation was mostly PR-related,[1] trying to clear CEA's name and prove to the outside world that no one knew the full extend of FTX's fraud, and was not aimed at facilitating an internal reflection process (or at the very least people I've talked to at CEA described it to me as something they did not at all expect to be helpful as part of a reflection process, and multiple described the constraints imposed by it as harmful).
If-anything the legal investigation seems to have actually substantially interferred with CEA reflection processes, with Will MacAskill himself telling me that the EV board prevented him from publishing his reflections on FTX due to legal and PR concerns, and due to it maybe making the legal investigation seem less legitimate.
Overall, the piece reads like a puff piece and not like something that displays real reflection. I mean, it's fine to write puff-pieces from time to time, but it rings hollow in a world where actual institutional reform as a result of FTX has been almost completely absent.
Edit: I mean PR here not necessarily in a shallow sense. I think it's reasonable for CEA to want to clear its name. It just has basically nothing to do with an "internal reflection process" and "institutional reform" and claiming it does seems deceptive to me
I don't love this article but it's fine. In general many other articles about EA are too negative so it doesn't really seem worth writing a big correction when the median person who hears about EA probably hears about the right thing.
Specifically, are new readers gonna believe that EA has done a load of useful soul-searching because this articles says it? I doubt it. There are enough articles saying that EAs are a bunch of cynical psychopaths that many will probably assume this is the fluff piece (that it is).
I don't really think this meta discussion... (read more)