We appreciate you! ❤️
Since it seems like a major goal is of the Future Fund is to experiment and gain information on types of philanthropy —how much data collection and causal inference are you doing/plan to do on the grant evaluations?
Here are some ideas I quickly came up with that might be interesting.
In all these cases, you'd need to ex-post assess grant applications a few years later, including the ones you didn't fund on impact. Then these above strategies would let you assess the causal impact of your grants.
Thank you for such a detailed and transparent post! It's really exciting to see experimentation in funding models as Future Fund enters the ecosystem. (It's also great to see a bunch of promising things getting the resources they need!)
I've found that the project ideas, areas of interest and grants/regrants databases are also especially useful resources in helping people to think about how they might best contribute! I've shared these multiple times when speaking with very promising people who are relatively cause neutral and just want to do as much good as they can given their specific skills & context.
"Our sense is we’re able to generate >2x more value per time with our other activities [than with open calls]": does this number include an estimate of the time spent by regrantors? (Even if it doesn't, the 2x figure is still interesting.)
Either way it looks pretty hard to have a real apples-to-apples comparison, since presumably the open call takes significantly more time from prospective grantees (but you wouldn't want to count that the same as grantmaker time).
Is there a way to access a list of regrantors, maybe indexed by problem area? Any reason I can't just query "show me the email address of every FTX regrantor who is interested in epistemic institutions" for instance?
My guesses:
Regranting is intended as a way to let people with local knowledge apply it to directing funds. This is different from just deputizing grantmakers.
If you made the list public I'd expect the regranters to be overwhelmed by people seeking grants, and generally find it pretty frustrating. For example, would your next step be to send emails to each of those addresses? ;)
A public list of regranters makes the system very gameable and vulnerable to individual granters unilaterally funding negative value projects.
This explanation makes sense to me, but I wonder if there is better middle ground where regrantors benefit from a degree of publicity.
Edited to add: Given LTFF’s history of funding similar people and the drawbacks of regrantor publicity, FTX’s anonymity policy does seem reasonable to me. Appreciate the pushback.
People in that position (or know people who are): Please consider applying to the Long-term Future Fund*. LTFF is excited to receive upskilling applications from people who are potentially great at technical AI safety research and/or other longtermist priority areas, and they have more institutional capacity (including a network of advisors) to evaluate such proposals across the board than many regrantors individually have.
* For newer onlookers, please note that LTFF is under EA Funds and is not directly affiliated with the FTX Future Fund, despite the (perhaps confusingly) similar names.
Besides the huge downsides Ryan mentioned (imagine someone reading your whole blog to better craft the perfect adversarially fundable project), publicity would have some toxic effects for the regrantor.
For instance, all new social interactions would have an ulterior interpretation ("they're sucking up for cash"). In a personal/professional soup like EA that could be maddening. One former grantmaker told me that the degree of sucking-up they got was part of why they moved on. I'm unusually sensitive to such things; I would probably decline to be a public grantmaker.
Privacy also has risks (nepotism, the excess zero-sum social investment in the bloody Bay you mention, insufficient accountability), but those seem smaller to me. But private regrantors were previously balanced out by the open call channel, so it'd be good to hear from FF about how they intend to seek new or peripheral applicants.
Software makes compromise pretty easy though. I quite like the idea of a regrantor publishing an anon post explaining what they're looking for, with a form attached.
I share this fear but I don't know if this is clearly stronger than other dynamics in EA when one party has something the other wants (e.g. prestige, network, advice, employment).
Also don't know but I guess worse here, since it's your explicit job to listen to applicants, where the usual requests for introductions and attention are rarely part of anyone's job description.
and generally find it pretty frustrating. For example, would your next step be to send emails to each of those addresses? ;)
I guess it's not realistic to litmus test individuals about their cold-emailing practices and their seriousness about the problem area they claim to be working in, before giving them access to the list.
I would expect the cold emailing advice given by Y Combinator to result in emails that do not frustrate regrantors.
I love the transparency of this post!
Also, I particularly like how regranting utilizes the value of local knowledge.
"regrantors and grant recommenders could exploit local knowledge and diverse networks to make promising projects move forward that we might not have known about or had time to investigate ourselves."
Hi! Thank you for the detailed update, it is very helpful. Quick question, if an application was submitted to the Open Call, with confirmation and there has not been any communication at this point, has the application been denied? Thank you for any further clarification you can give.
If they haven't responded yet, they lost it, or they responded but it get caught in your spam filters. You should definitely re-email, it's been months since they gave decisions.
Good Advice, I have been checking the spam, and the confirmation didn't go there when it was sent originally but I have been checking just in case. The difficult part is there is no way to re-email, the submission was done via a google form that has a no reply email... We don't expect feedback but would like to close the chapter on the submission so to speak. I have been reading the comments and assumed rejections were sent to others, so was wondering where ours may be. Thank you for the advice all the same.
The FTX Foundation’s Future Fund publicly launched in late February. We're a philanthropic fund that makes grants and investments to improve humanity's long-term prospects. For information about some of the areas we've been funding, see our Areas of Interest page.
This is our first public update on the Future Fund’s grantmaking. The purpose of this post is to give an update on what we’ve done and what we're learning about the funding models we're testing. (It does not cover a range of other FTX Foundation activities.)
We’ve also published a new grants page and regrants page with our public grants so far.
We are trying to learn as much as we can about how to deploy funding at scale to improve humanity’s long-term prospects. Our primary objective for 2022 is to perform bold and decisive tests of new funding models. The main funding models we have tested so far are our regranting program and our open call for applications.
In brief, these models worked as follows:
So far we have made 262 grants and investments, totaling ~$132M. These break down as follows:
There are also ~$25M of grants we are likely to make soon, but have some relevant aspects TBD.
Below are some grants and investments that we find interesting and/or representative of what we are trying to fund.
See this grants page and this regrants page for all of our public grants and investments so far, and further example grants in later sections.
These numbers are for our grantmaking overall. (The sections below with more detail on regranting / open call / staff-led grants give the corresponding stats for each funding stream.)
| Area | Count | Volume |
262 | $132M | |
| Artificial Intelligence | 76 | $20M |
| Biorisk and Recovery from Catastrophe | 30 | $30M |
| Economic Growth | 9 | $7M |
| Effective Altruism | 61 | $34M |
| Empowering Exceptional People | 18 | $10M |
| Epistemic Institutions | 21 | $8M |
| Great Power Relations | 6 | $2M |
| Other | 17 | $16M |
| Research That Can Help Us Improve | 4 | $1M |
| Space Governance | 7 | <$1M |
| Values and Reflective Processes | 13 | $3M |
| Count | Volume | |
262 | $132M | |
| <$50k | 119 | $2M |
| $50k - $500k | 102 | $20M |
| >=$500k | 41 | $109M |
While trying out these funding models, we've been trying to learn how cost-effective they are, how much of our team's time (and others' time) is required to operate them per unit benefit, how scalable they are, and whether they produce grants and investments that we otherwise wouldn't have known about.
Below are some of the main things we've learned over the last couple of months as we’ve been trying out these funding models.
Apart from the grantmaking described above, here are some of the other things going on.
We will continue the regranting program's 6-month trial (until October) and staff-led grantmaking. We currently don’t plan to run another open call in the next couple months. We will revisit this when we have more capacity and find a way to run it more efficiently.
Consistent with our original plan for this year, our additional priorities for bold and decisive tests of new funding models include:
Separately, we will also more thoroughly estimate the expected cost-effectiveness of our grants and investments. We are working on a standardized process for this that will help us more robustly evaluate our programs.
We launched a pilot version of the regranting program with 20 people in late February, and then scaled up the program to include >100 regrantors and >60 grant recommenders in early April. Our hope was to empower a range of interesting, ambitious, and altruistic people to drive funding decisions through a rewarding, low-friction process. We have set aside >$100M for this initial test, which will last until the end of September, at which point we will evaluate how it has gone and decide whether to continue it and what changes to make. As of mid-June, regrantors have made 168 grants and investments, totaling ~$31M.
The basic structure is that the regrantors have been given discretionary budgets ranging from $100k to a few million dollars. (A larger number towards the lower end, a smaller number towards the higher end—there is a wide variation in budget sizes.) Regrantors submit grant recommendations to the Future Fund, which we screen primarily for downsides, conflicts of interests, and community effects. We typically review and approve regranting submissions within 72 hours.
Grant recommenders have access to a streamlined grant recommendation form from us where we give them some deference, but they don’t have a discretionary budget. (We wanted to try out multiple versions, and in part randomized participation in the different programs.)
We compensate regrantors for the volume and quality of their grantmaking, including an element based on whether we fund the projects they seeded ourselves in the future. We also unlock additional discretionary funding when we're ready to see more of what they've been doing.
Some of the largest grants made so far include:
Some example grants we found exciting from this category include:
Some examples of grants that we found exciting in this category:
| Area | Count | Volume |
168 | $31M | |
| Artificial Intelligence | 60 | $11M |
| Biorisk and Recovery from Catastrophe | 11 | $1M |
| Economic Growth | 5 | $5M |
| Effective Altruism | 41 | $7M |
| Empowering Exceptional People | 10 | $3M |
| Epistemic Institutions | 12 | $4M |
| Great Power Relations | 3 | <$1M |
| Other | 12 | <$1M |
| Research That Can Help Us Improve | 2 | <$1M |
| Space Governance | 5 | <$1M |
| Values and Reflective Processes | 7 | $1M |
| Count | Volume | |
168 | $31M | |
| <$50k | 110 | $2M |
| $50k - $500k | 47 | $7M |
| >=$500k | 11 | $23M |
Some outcomes we were interested in, and thoughts on how they went:
Some more general reflections:
We are going to continue with this experiment until October and then more systematically review the process and the quality of the grantmaking. We may also have a more developed sense at that point of how some of the new projects are going. Our current guess is that this program should probably continue in some form.
Our open call for applications was launched on February 28, 2022. We gave people three weeks to submit applications, and we received over 1700 applications.
As explained above, the basic idea of the open call was, "Let's tell people what we're trying to do, what kinds of things we might be interested in funding, give them a lot of examples of projects they could launch, have an easy and fast application process, and then get the word out with Twitter blitz." We wrote some about the review process here.
We funded 69 applications, totaling $27M. Some stats on acceptance rate:
| Area | Count | Volume |
69 | $27M | |
| Artificial Intelligence | 15 | $5M |
| Biorisk and Recovery from Catastrophe | 16 | $12M |
| Economic Growth | 1 | <$1M |
| Effective Altruism | 10 | $3M |
| Empowering Exceptional People | 5 | $2M |
| Epistemic Institutions | 9 | $3M |
| Great Power Relations | 3 | $1M |
| Other | 4 | $1M |
| Research That Can Help Us Improve | 1 | <$1M |
| Space Governance | 2 | <$1M |
| Values and Reflective Processes | 3 | <$1M |
| Count | Volume | |
69 | $27M | |
| <$50k | 6 | <$1M |
| $50k - $500k | 49 | $12M |
| >=$500k | 14 | $15M |
Some outcomes we were interested in, and thoughts on how they went:
Some other reflections:
If we were doing this again, there are a number of changes we would consider, including:
Overall the project went somewhat worse than expected, but we still think the ROI on both team time and capital was reasonable, and we’re excited about some of the new projects we funded.
We currently don’t plan to run another open call in the next few months. We will revisit this when we have more capacity and see if we can find a way to run it more efficiently.
Unlike the open call and regranting, these grants and investments are not a test of a particular potentially highly scalable funding model. These are projects we funded because we became aware of them and thought they were good ideas.
We made 25 grants in this category, totaling ~$73M.
Five of our largest grants/investments were:
| Area | Count | Volume |
25 | $73M | |
| Artificial Intelligence | 1 | $5M |
| Biorisk and Recovery from Catastrophe | 3 | $18M |
| Economic Growth | 3 | $2M |
| Effective Altruism | 10 | $24M |
| Empowering Exceptional People | 3 | $5M |
| Epistemic Institutions | 0 | $0M |
| Great Power Relations | 0 | $0M |
| Other | 1 | $15M |
| Research That Can Help Us Improve | 1 | $1M |
| Space Governance | 0 | $0M |
| Values and Reflective Processes | 3 | $2M |
| Count | Volume | |
25 | $73M | |
| <$50k | 3 | <$1M |
| $50k - $500k | 6 | $2M |
| >=$500k | 16 | $71M |
Coming in, our expectation was that there would be some low-hanging fruit to pick here, the grants would be pretty good, the best ones would largely get funded anyway, the funding stream wouldn't be massively scalable, and that the return on time from these grants would be pretty good. Our experience has generally been pretty consistent with that. (This is unsurprising because it's continuous with things that Nick had a lot of experience with at Open Philanthropy.)
Probably the most distinctive grant from this set is our grant to Longview Philanthropy, which is using the funds for its grantmaking in global priorities research, nuclear weapons policy, and other areas (this is another experiment with regranting, in this case regranting via a grantmaking organization rather than via individuals as in our main regranting program). We're interested to see how the experiment goes!
We'll continue with staff-led grantmaking in the background, but most of our focus will be on testing new funding models.
There's much in the above update we find exciting, including:
We feel like we're learning a lot from the process, and we are also looking forward to seeing what else we learn as we test prizes and try new approaches to proactively launching new projects.
Finally: thank you to everybody who applied to us or otherwise engaged with one of our programs! We’re grateful for your work to help humanity flourish. We also deeply appreciate the help we are getting from other folks at FTX, colleagues at Open Philanthropy, expert reviewers, our regrantors, and other collaborators, whom we rely on extensively. It is a privilege to work with all of you!
Thanks for the detailed update!
There was one expectation / takeaway that I was surprised about.
You mentioned the call was open for three weeks. Would that have been sufficient for people who are not already deeply embedded in EA networks to formulate a coherent and fundable idea (especially if they currently have full-time jobs)? It seems likely that this kind of "get people to launch new projects" effect would require more runway. If so, the data from this round shouldn't update one's priors very much on this question.
I agree, I found out about FTX Future Fund in mid-April despite being connected to EA, being connected to the crypto community (following SBF on Twitter) and myself working on an application for the 776 Fellowship. I finally found out about it because Alexis Ohanian randomly retweeted a Future Fund tweet.
Clearly, they still had almost 2k applications, but I don't think it was an easy find for anyone not actively looking. I would have never found it if I was busy actively working on a project, because I don't check most of the channels this was advertised on.