- FTX, a big source of EA funding, has imploded.
- There's mounting evidence that FTX was engaged in theft/fraud, which would be straightforwardly unethical.
- There's been a big drop in the funding that EA organisations expect to receive over the next few years.
- Because these organisations were acting under false information, they would've made (ex-post) wrong decisions, which they will now need to revise.
Which revisions are most pressing?
A reread of 'Judicious Ambition' post from not so long ago is interesting:
"In 2013, it made sense for us to work in a poorly-lit basement, eating baguettes and hummus. Now it doesn’t. Frugality is now comparatively less valuable."
So, I guess, bring the hummus back?
Jokes aside, an explosion in funding changed EA from 'hedge fund for charity' into 'VC for charity'. This analogy goes a long way to explain shifts in attitude, decisions, exuberance. So perhaps going back to hedge-fundiness, and shifting the focus back from 'company builders' building the next big thing to less scalable but cost-effective operations is a good direction?
As someone who (briefly) worked in VC and cofounded nonprofits, I'm not sure that's a good signal.
"VC for charity" makes more sense when you consider that VC focus on high upside, diversification, lower information and higher uncertainty, which reflects the current stage of the EA movement. EA is still discovering new effective interventions, launching new experimental projects, building capacity of new founders and discovering new ways of doing good on a systemic level. Even today, there's an acknowledgement that we might not know what the most cost-effec... (read more)