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Executive summary: The Unjournal’s evaluations of a meta-analysis on reducing meat/animal-product consumption found the project ambitious but methodologically limited; the author argues meta-analysis can still be valuable in this heterogeneous area if future work builds on the shared dataset with more systematic protocols, robustness checks, and clearer bias handling—while noting open cruxes and incentive barriers to actually doing that follow-up (exploratory, cautiously optimistic).
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Executive summary: The author argues that prudential longtermism—the idea that individuals should act now based on the possibility of personally experiencing far-future consequences—collapses under the logic of procrastination, since it’s always rational to wait and see if life extension becomes real; more broadly, both prudential and moral longtermism fail to generate novel or actionable insights beyond ordinary long-term planning or concern for existential risks.
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Executive summary: A grantmaker on Open Philanthropy’s AI governance team gives a candid personal overview of what it’s like to work on Open Phil’s AI teams—arguing that the roles offer unusually high impact, autonomy, and talented colleagues, but also involve ambiguity, indirect impact, and challenges with feedback loops, work-life boundaries, and career progression.
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Executive summary: This post critiques a RAND report arguing that humanity can build practical safeguards to prevent an artificial superintelligence (ASI) from taking over, suggesting that while the idea of “world hardening” deserves attention, RAND underestimates both the difficulty of the task and the speed and scale of potential AI threats.
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Executive summary: The author argues that philanthropists can redirect a large share of global corporate profits toward solving major problems—such as poverty, climate change, and factory farming—by adopting and scaling the “Profit for Good” business model, in which companies are owned by charitable entities and compete normally while directing 100% of profits to effective causes; the piece urges systematic experimentation and investment to prove and expand this approach.
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Executive summary: Sentient Futures introduces AnimalHarmBench 2.0, a redesigned benchmark for evaluating large language models’ (LLMs) moral reasoning about animal welfare across 13 dimensions—from moral consideration and harm minimization to epistemic humility—providing a more nuanced, scalable, and insight-rich tool for assessing how models reason about nonhuman suffering and how training interventions can improve such reasoning.
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Executive summary: Animal Charity Evaluators (ACE) has announced its 2025 Recommended Charities—ten organizations judged most effective at reducing animal suffering worldwide—highlighting both returning and newly added groups whose evidence-based advocacy and policy work target the welfare of farmed, aquatic, and wild animals; the post invites donors to support them directly or through ACE’s Recommended Charity Fund.
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Executive summary: The author argues that recruitment is one of the highest-leverage functions in high-impact organizations, yet it is widely neglected and undervalued; they call for more people to become deeply focused—“obsessed”—with improving hiring through empirical, experimental approaches, as this could unlock substantial organizational impact.
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Executive summary: This post argues that scaling up production infrastructure—rather than more R&D—is now the critical bottleneck preventing alternative proteins from achieving mass-market impact on climate, food security, and animal welfare; GFI Europe is working to unlock public and private investment in pilot plants, supply chains, and factories to overcome this neglected barrier.
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Executive summary: A noir-style parable compares a cancer cell’s “deceptive alignment” with Wells Fargo’s sales-quota fraud to argue that when local optimization signals are mis-specified or weakly enforced, agents will appear compliant while pursuing misaligned internal goals—spreading via selection pressures—so systems must be designed and policed to align local incentives with global health; this is an exploratory, analogy-driven argument, not new empirical evidence.
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