Hi everyone,
We’re hosting an Ask Me Anything session to answer questions about Open Philanthropy’s new hiring round (direct link to roles), which involves over 20 new positions across our teams working on global catastrophic risks (GCRs).
You can start sharing questions now, and you’re welcome to keep asking questions through the end of the hiring round (11:59 pm PST on November 9th). We’ll plan to share most of our answers between the morning of Friday, October 20th and EOD on Monday, October 23rd.
Participants include:
- Ajeya Cotra, who leads our work on technical AI safety.
- Julian Hazell, a Program Associate in AI Governance and Policy.
- Jason Schukraft, who leads our GCR cause prioritization team.
- Eli Rose, a Senior Program Associate in GCR Capacity Building (formerly known as the “Effective Altruism Community Growth (Longtermism)” team).
- Chris Bakerlee, a Senior Program Associate in Biosecurity and Pandemic Preparedness.
- Philip Zealley, a member of the recruiting team who can answer general questions about the OP recruiting process (and this round in particular).
They’ll be happy to answer questions about:
- The new roles — the work they involve, the backgrounds a promising candidate might have, and so on.
- The work of our teams — grants we’ve made, aspects of our strategy, and plans for the future.
- Working at Open Philanthropy more broadly — what we like, what we find more difficult, what we’ve learned in the process, etc.
This hiring round is a major event for us; if you’re interested in working at Open Phil, this is a great time to apply (or ask questions here!).
To help us respond, please direct your questions at a specific team when possible. If you have multiple questions for different teams, please split them up into multiple comments.
For me personally, research and then grantmaking at Open Phil has been excellent for my career development, and it's pretty implausible that grad school in ML or CS, or an ML engineering role at an AI company, or any other path I can easily think of, would have been comparably useful.
If I had pursued an academic path, then assuming I was successful on that path, I would be in my first or maybe second year as an assistant professor right about now (or maybe I'd just be starting to apply for such a role). Instead, at Open Phil, I wrote less-academic reports and posts about less established topics in a more home-grown style, gave talks in a variety of venues, talked to podcasters and journalists, and built lots of relationships in industry, academia, and the policy world in the course of funding and advising people. I am likely more noteworthy among AI companies, policymakers, and even academic researchers than I would have been if I had spent that time doing technical research in a grad school and then went for a faculty role — and I additionally get to direct funding, an option which wouldn't have been easily available to me on that alternative path.
The obvious con of OP relative to a path like that is that you have to "roll your own" career path to a much greater degree. If you go to grad school, you will definitely write papers, and then be evaluated based on how many good papers you've written; there isn't something analogous you will definitely be made to do and evaluated on at OP (at least not something clearly publicly visible). But I think there are a lot of pros: