- 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?
EA is constrained by the following formula:
Number of Donors x Average Donation = Number of Grants x Average Grant
If we lose a big donor, there are four things EA can do:
Here's a tentative idea: EA needs more prizes and other forms of retrodictive funding. This will shift risk from the grant-maker to the researcher, which might be good because the researcher is more informed about the likelihood of success than the grant-maker.
It's a process to recruit billionaires/turn EAs into billionaires, but one estimate was another 3.5 EA billionaires by 2027 (written pre FTX implosion). In the analyses I've seen for last dollar cost effectiveness, they have tended to ignore the possibility of EA adding funds over time. Of course we don't want to run out of money just when we need some big surge. But we could spend a lot of money in... (read more)