Hi, we’re JP and Sam, we work as software engineers at the Centre for Effective Altruism (CEA). We’re answering questions about our work on some of the projects many EAs use every day (including this Forum, Giving What We Can, EA Funds, and a bunch of other behind the scenes stuff).
Also, CEA and GWWC are both hiring software engineers, so it’s a good opportunity to ask questions about what it’s like to work here before you apply!
We’ll be answering questions on Tuesday, March 16th.
CEA and GWWC are both hiring software engineers. We build and maintain the tech that any new engineers will be working with (including this Forum), and we know what it’s like to work here. AMA!
JP previously worked at an aerospace startup detecting methane emissions with spectrometers on airplanes. He’s interested in table tennis, plants and economics.
Sam started at GWWC back in 2015, then built EA Funds from the ground up over the course of a few months while CEA was in Y Combinator. He has a past life in party politics.
Ask us about:
- Working on a small team
- Non-profit vs startups
- Our tech stacks
- Anything!
NB: EA Funds is now largely an independent org, so Sam will generally be talking about what it was like working at CEA until very recently. However we still work closely together because we make a good team and are working on very related projects.
Bonus: Although Ben West is no longer primarily an engineer, he built a popular healthcare analytics platform and founded a successful startup. He’ll be managing the new CEA engineer. You can also ask him anything.
Thanks for this response Max!
1. I’m torn. On one hand (as I mentioned to Aaron) I appreciate that CEA is making efforts to offer realistic estimates instead of overpromising or telling people what they want to hear. If CEA is going to prioritize the EA Wiki and would rather not outsource management of EA.org, I’m legitimately grateful that you’re just coming out and saying that. I may not agree with these prioritization decisions (I see it as continuing a problematic pattern of taking on new responsibilities before fulfilling existing ones), but at the end of the day those decisions are yours to make and not mine.
On the other hand, I feel like substantial improvements could be made with negligible effort. For instance, I think you’d make enormous progress if you simply added the introductory article on Global Health and Development to the reading list on the EA.org homepage, replacing “Crucial Considerations and Wise Philanthropy”.
Global Health is currently a glaring omission since it is the most popular cause in the EA community and it is highly accessible to an introductory audience. And I think nearly everyone (near-or-long-termist) would agree that “Crucial Considerations” (currently second on the reading list after a brief introduction to EA) is quite obviously not meant for an introductory audience. It assumes a working understanding of x-risk (in general and specific x-risks), has numerous slides with complex equations, and uses highly technical language that will be inscrutable to most people who have only read a brief intro to EA (e.g. “we should oppose extra funding for nanotechnology even though superintelligence and ubiquitous surveillance might be very dangerous on their own, including posing existential risk, given certain background assumptions about the technological completion conjecture.”
You’ve written (in the same comment you quoted): “I think that CEA has a history of pushing longtermism in somewhat underhand ways… given this background of pushing longtermism, I think it’s reasonable to be skeptical of CEA’s approach on this sort of thing.” You don’t need to hire a contractor or prioritize an overhaul of the ea.org site to address my skepticism. But it would go a long way if Aaron were to spend a day looking for low hanging fruit like my suggested change, or even if you just took the tiny step of adding Global Health to the list of (mostly longtermist) causes on the homepage. I assume the omission of Global Health was an oversight. But now that it’s been called to your attention, if you still don’t think Global Health should be added to the homepage I doubt there’s anything you can say or do to resolve my skepticism.
2. Running EffectiveAltruism.org is just one example of work that CEA undertakes on behalf of the broader community (EAG, groups work, and community health are other examples). Generally speaking, how (if at all) do you think CEA should be accountable to the broader community when conducting this work? To use an absurd example, if CEA announced that the theme for EAG 2022 is going to be “Factory farmed beef… it’s what’s for dinner”, what would you see as the ideal process for resolving the inevitable objections?
Now may not be the right time for you to explain how you think about this, and this comment thread almost certainly isn’t the right place. But I think it’s important for you to address these issues at some point in the not too distant future. And before you make up your mind, I hope you’ll gather input from as broad a cross section of the community as possible.