Hey everyone! I'm Ben, and I will be doing an AMA for Effective Giving Spotlight week. Some of my relevant background:
- In 2014 I cofounded a company for earning to give (EtG) reasons (largely inspired by 80k), which was later successfully acquired.
- Since late 2018 I have been doing direct work, currently as Interim Managing Director of CEA.
- (With a brief side project of founding a TikTok-related company which was similarly acquired, albeit for way less money.)
- I've had some other EtGish work experience (eight years as a software developer/middle manager, a couple months at Alameda Research) as well
- Additionally, I’ve talked to some people deciding between EtG and direct work because of my standing offer to talk to such folks, so I might have cached thoughts on some questions.
You might want to ask me about:
- Entrepreneurship
- Trade-offs between earning to give and “direct work”
- Cosmetics and skincare for those who (want to) look masculine
- TikTok
- Functional programming (particularly Haskell)
- Or one of my less useful projects
- Anything else (I might skip some questions)
I will plan to answer questions Thursday, November 9th. Post them as comments on this thread.
See also Jeff’s AMA, which is on a similar topic.
I don't recall any discussion of things like "is it okay to steal money if that goes to good causes?" and if you were to visit the AR office during the brief time I was there you would find a huge range of dysfunctions, but not people endorsing theft. (Note that I was there before any of the things people are charged with were alleged to have occurred.)
I hear a broader version of this concern sometimes from people who believe that finance or tech more generally are bad for society, and regardless of whether that's true my experience is that the rank and file people who work in those sectors are basically pretty average people who happen to like math or programming or whatever, and I wouldn't expect more value drift from you working with them than you would from working with the average person.
(I think there's a stronger concern like "the value drift you experience from working the average person is too strong; I want to be surrounded by people who give 90% of their income, are vegan, etc." and if that's your desire then I do suspect that earning to give is probably not right for you.)