Note this is a sincere question. Not intended to cause controversy. It was inspired by this post questioning another OP Grant.
Full Disclosure
I applied to the Atlas Fellowship but was rejected. However, I attended SPARC, a free in-person program that teaches rationality tools to high schoolers (and follows a similar structure to Atlas Fellowship's summer program). I'm friends with many Atlas Fellows.
What is the Atlas Fellowship?
For those newer to the EA Community, the Atlas Fellowship is a competitive program for high schoolers. If you are awarded it, you receive,
- A $50k scholarship (or $12,000 for Atlas India).
- Atlas Fellows can spend this money on anything considered an "academic expense". This includes travel expenses if justification can be provided.
- A fully-funded 11-day summer program in the Bay Area in a large former fraternity on UC Berkley's campus.
- College admissions preparation for top universities. (The admissions tutors are paid $200-300/hr).
- Access to the $1m Atlas Fund to learn, experiment, and build impactful projects.
For 500 finalists, they receive $1,000 and 5 free books.
Total Cost of Prizes
$50k x 100 + $12k x 20 + $1k x 500 + $1m fund = $6.74m
This does not include the instructors, venue, or travel costs.
What made me write this post?
- This came to my attention after reading EA London's monthly newsletter. It highlighted new grants that Open Philanthropy made. I learnt that OP made an additional $1.8m grant to the Atlas Fellowship in December 2022
- This is on top of a $5m grant they made in March 2022 and a $5m grant that the FTX Future Fund made.
- There is much discussion (even amongst Atlas Fellows) that it is not a good use of money and that high schoolers don't need $50k scholarships; therefore, I felt raising this question is worthwhile and of interest to the wider community.
Questions I have for Open Philanthropy and the Atlas Fellowship
- Why do high schoolers need $50k scholarships? If the reason is to attract talent, why is this required when programs such as SPARC and ESPR do an excellent job of attracting talented high schoolers?
- Note that SPARC and ESPR have been running for close to a decade. Many alumni go to top universities worldwide (MIT, Stanford, Oxford, etc.)
- I estimate each Atlas Fellow costs $80-90k, given you need to divide the total costs by the number of fellows (i.e., instructor and venue costs should be considered).
- If the answer is to attract better talent, is there a significant difference in talent between Atlas Fellows and those attending SPARC and ESPR that makes this $80-90k money worthwhile? (Note that this would be over 20 lives saved through the Against Malaria Foundation).
- Why was a $50k scholarship offered if a $25k scholarship would attract, say, 80-90% of the same applicants?
- I suspect that a $5k unconditional grant that they can spend on whatever would attract just as many quality applications and be much cheaper.
- What is the breakdown of the socioeconomic background of Atlas Fellows? What countries are all Atlas Fellows from? What about the finalists?
- Atlas says they're doing "talent search". This connotes finding talent from under-resourced communities or poor students. Do the statistics match this?
- From friends who are Atlas Fellows, they said many Atlas Fellows do not require the scholarship as their parents earn a lot and can already pay for college. This makes me question why some people are accepted as $50k to the Against Malaria Foundation, which would save over ten lives. (Even more, if you consider the cost per participant is $80-90k). What are the Atlas Fellows spending the money on if their parents have more than enough to pay for college?
- What measures do they have to identify talent that otherwise would not have been identified? The Atlas Fellowship claims to do research, but many fellows seem to be identified through traditional methods (i.e., reaching out to Olympiad communities worldwide).
- Atlas is planning on running a school called Atlas Academy Beta, as outlined in this document. Why does this make sense?
Rumours I would like addressed
Many rumours circulate amongst Atlas Fellows that I would like addressed and would also be of public interest,
- Atlas reportedly spent $10,000 on a coffee table. Is this true? Why was the table so expensive?
- There is a claim that "Atlas has no inventory stock. They overspend, buy more than they need, and if they lose an item, they buy another." Is this true?
- Clarification: added to this comment.
- A contractor for Atlas reported Sydney Von Arex (one of the co-founders) saying, "I do not believe in budgets". Is this true?
- I suspect this to be true as it would match my model of Bay Area EA's lack of planning and overspending on events. I can go into further detail on this.
- [Encrypted in rot13 by the moderation team] Gurer ner ehzbhef gung Flqarl Iba Nek (bar bs Ngynf' pb-sbhaqref) vf qngvat/qngrq Pynver Mnory'f (gur tenag vairfgvtngbe sbe Ngynf nf yvfgrq ba gur cntr sbe gur svefg Ngynf tenag yvfgrq ba Bcra Cuvynaguebcl’f jrofvgr) uhfonaq, Ohpx Fuyrtrevf. Vf guvf gehr? Jul jnf gur tenag vairfgvtngbe sbe Ngynf Sryybjfuvc gur pb-sbhaqre'f oblsevraq'f jvsr? Abgr gung nyy guerr ner xabja gb or cbylnzbebhf va Onl Nern pbzzhavgvrf.
- I suspect this may be true and coincides with comments on the EA Forums about EA funding being intermingled with personal relationships.
Edit 1: Corrected a typo in the encrypted text ('husband' to 'wife'). This is a mistake that someone pointed out.
Edit 2: After seeing this post, someone DM'd me on the EA Forums with this screenshot. From it, I suspect that some Atlas money is not being used for Atlas purposes, given that Sydney encouraged someone to put "Fellow" to be reimbursed as one despite them never having applied and attending an another event (seemingly associated with LessWrong). On the announcement post for the LessWrong Lurkshop it does say at the bottom that the workshop is funded by the Atlas Fellowship. But, all this makes me question how Atlas are writing their grant requests (i.e., do they just ask for a fixed amount of money that they can spend on whatever or did they explicitly say to OP in their grant request they're running this).

Edit 3: Someone also DM'd me this. To add to my point of too much money to teenangers, there is an 18-year-old Atlas Fellow who has both the Open Philanthropy Undergraduate Scholarship (which covers all tuition and living expenses) and the Atlas Fellowship (which is a $50k scholarship). [Two links removed by moderators; see comment.]
The disturbing part is that on the OP Undergraduate Scholarship website, it says, "and who do not qualify as domestic students at these institutions for the purposes of admission and financial aid." But it is clear, upon investigation into their background, that this Atlas Fellow DOES qualify as a domestic student as they have grown up in the UK which means either OP doesn't care about their own policies or this Atlas Fellow lied and it went unnoticed.
Edit 4: Updated total cost of prizes from $5.74m to $6.74m as someone pointed out I forgot to include the $1m Atlas Fund.
Edit 5: Added clarification to the claim on "no inventory stock".
Edit 6: After this post came out, the Atlas Fellowship website was updated to remove Sydney from the cofounders. See now vs earlier (on archive.org). Why was she removed? Was this only publicly to prevent further controversy regarding grantor-grantee relationships and she will still be helping out behind-the-scenes or was she actually removed?
Atlas at some point bought this table, I think: https://sisyphus-industries.com/product/metal-coffee-table/. At that link it costs around $2200, so I highly doubt the $10,000 number.
Lightcone then bought that table from Atlas a few months ago at the listing price, since Jonas thought the purchase seemed excessive, so Atlas actually didn't end up paying anything. I am really glad we bought it from them, it's probably my favorite piece of furniture in the whole venue we are currently renovating.
If you think it was a waste of money, I have made much worse interior design decisions (in-general furniture is really annoyingly expensive, and I've bought couches for $2000 that turned out to just not work for us at all and were too hard to sell), and I consider this one a pretty strong hit. (To clarify, the reason why it's so expensive is because it's a kinetic sculpture with a moving magnet and a magnetic ball that draws programmable patterns into the sand at the center of the table, so it's not just like, a pretty coffee table)
The table is currently serving as a centerpiece of our central workspace social room, and has a pretty large effect on good conversations happening since it seems to hit the right balance of being visually interesting without being too distracting while also being functional, and despite this kind of sounding ridiculous, if for some reason it was impossible for Lightcone to pay for this table (which I don't think it is since I think interior design matters), I would pay for it from my own personal funds.
In general, as someone who has now helped prepare on the order of 20 venues for workshops and conferences, it seems pretty obvious to me that interior design matters quite a bit for workshop venues. I think it would indeed be pretty crazy to pay $2000 for every coffee table in your venue, but a single central design piece can make a huge difference to a room, and I've spent hundreds of hours trying to design rooms to facilitate good conversations with my counterfactual earning rate being in the hundreds of dollars per hours, and I think it definitely is sometimes worth my time/money to buy an occasional expensive piece of furniture.
[comment no longer endorsed, though I still think it's reasonable to value his time highly, just not quite as highly]
FWIW, I think Habryka should probably value his time at >$1700 per hour. Put differently, I think if longtermist funders could spend $3.4 million per year to get another Habryka, that seems like a good use of longtermist resources to me. I'm not totally confident in this judgment and have some uncertainty about this, but here some intuitions/examples: 1) having another Habryka could've reduced community exposure to FTX and fallout from th... (read more)