I thought it was interesting that in Will MacAskill's recent posts about decentralising EA, he said that he will avoid giving opening and closing speeches at EAG.
Currently, the process by which speakers are selected for EAG appears opaque to me, and most talks appear to be by 'senior EAs' and 'EA leaders' with high social status in the community.
To tackle the risk of certain individuals being selected based on social status in the community, I think attendees who are accepted should be able to submit blinded applications containing ideas for talks and workshops for EA conferences. The talks and workshops that the conference organisers believe will provide the most value should then be selected.
I think this could be a nice way to achieve greater value from EA conferences, increase the diversity of speakers / workshop hosts and reduce the impression of specific individuals being 'the face' of EA to spread out PR risks and reduce groupthink.
I like the idea, as long as (like is said below) the selection process is rigorous. For example perhaps a handful of speaking/workship slots could be left open to a competition of sorts, judged by the organisers well before the event. The winners could even be coached to make the talks even better (A bit like TED). I'm a little surprised something like this isn't happening already (maybe it is).
Because you need to see people present to judge a talk, I'm not sure blinding can easily work. Perhaps a couple of external speech/presentation experts could be bought in to judge, who were completely unrelated to EA so they wouldn't know anyone presenting. In any case I would really hope EA types would be able to set aside a decent amount of their bias to judge this kind of thing.
I think its important though to still have many big name, high status people presenting even if their talks aren't necessarily as good. First this gives the event more gravitas, and helps the excitement and vibe of the event as well. Most of us I'd imagine want to see people we've read and heard before presenting on the big stage.
Again, why would anyone "down" karma vote this post? Not clicking is fine as is disagreeing (even strongly) but there's nothing bad faith about this - I don't get it...