(This was a quick post, written in around 30 min. It was originally posted on Facebook, where it generated some good discussion.)

I really wish EA had better internal communications.
If I wanted to make a blog post / message / recording accessible to a "large subset of effective altruist professionals", I'm not sure how I'd do that.
I don't think we yet have:
- One accepted chat system
- An internal blogging system
- Any internal email lists (for a very wide net of EA professionals)
It's nice to encourage people to communicate publicly, but there's a lot of communication that's really not meant for that.
Generally, the existing options are:
- Post to your internal org slack/emails (note: many EA orgs are tiny)
- Share with people in your office
- Post to one of a few domain-specific and idiosyncratic Slacks/Discords
- Post publicly, for everyone to see
I think the SBF situation might have shown some substantial vulnerability here. It was a crisis where public statements were taken as serious legal statements. This meant that EA leadership essentially didn’t have a real method of communicating with most EAs.
I feel like much of EA is a lot like one big org that tries really hard not to be one big org. This gives us some advantages of being decentralized, but we are missing a lot of the advantages of centralization. If "Professional EAs" were looked at as one large org, I'd expect that we'd look fairly amateur, compared to other sizeable organizations.
A very simple way to make progress on internal communications is to separate the issue into a few clusters, and then attack each one separately.
- Access/Onboarding/Offboarding
Make official lists that cover "professional/trusted members". You could start with simple criteria like "works at an org funded by an EA funder" or "went to 2+ EAGs". - Negotiation and Moderation
"EA Professionals" might basically be an "enterprise", and need "enterprise tools". These often are expensive and require negotiation. - A Responsible Individual
My preference would be that we find someone who did a good job at this sort of thing in other sizeable companies and try to get them to do it here.
I bet with $200k/year for the talent, plus maybe $200k-$1k/year, we could have a decent setup, assuming we could find good enough talent. That said, this would definitely be work to establish, so I wouldn't expect anything soon.
I think the main issue with this is that this creates some kind of official 'membership' of EA which comes with tonnes of issues. (How do you decide who gets in? Who decides and how that/if people get thrown out? (Would SBF still in this?) Is there a transparent process for this? What kind of obligations do people part of it have (in terms of keeping conversations private for example)? Can you leave voluntarily and are there any repercussions if you do?, ...)
I agree that overseeing permissions would be annoying to do, that's the main thing I'm recommending we eventually have someone paid to do.
I'd note that:
- Lots of similar decisions are already being made. EAGs, Leadership Forums, lots of private Slacks, regional coworking offices, and more.
- I can't imagine anyone reasonable who would keep SBF in, post-scandal.
- There could be a transparent process. I'd encourage starting with something simple, like, "Are you employed by one of these N orgs, or have you met one of these other 3 criteria?"
- "Can you leave volu
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