Hide table of contents

Update March 2021: This donation match appears to be available indefinitely.

Facebook's Giving Tuesday donation match ran out quickly this morning, but here's one that's still available:

Every.org will donate $25 to any 501(c)(3) nonprofit up to $250,000 in total for each new referred user who donates $10 or more. This works out to a 250% counterfactual match on $10 in donations--higher than Facebook's, just with a lower limit.

Steps:

  1. Join with: https://www.every.org/@william.kiely/
  2. Donate $10 to a nonprofit of your choice.
  3. Receive $25 in credit immediately.
  4. Donate the $25 you received to a nonprofit of your choice.

I'd recommend just donating via card to save on time, rather than connect your bank account which would save on fees.

The whole process can be completed in less than ~5 minutes and appears to be available to everyone regardless of what country you're in, so I'd suggest taking 5 minutes to make a $10 donation now. Happy Giving Tuesday!


Update Two Weeks In:

As of December 16th, $3,800 in matching referral funds has been given to 152 people who joined using my referral link. These 152 people have made 327 donations ("Joins") on the platform so far totaling $6,075 given to nonprofits (including the matching referral funds). The breakdown of which nonprofits these donations were made to is shown below.

Thank you to everyone who shared this opportunity to get it in front of more people!

The $250,000 in matching referral funds offered by Every.org are nowhere close to being exhausted and will therefore very likely continue to exist until at least December 25th. So please feel free to continue to share this post with your friends and ask them to consider donating to an effective charity!

Comments19


Sorted by Click to highlight new comments since:

I just did this and can attest to it working and being as easy as described in the post. Thanks a lot for the recommendation! 

Ditto, ~3 minutes, +$35 for MIRI.

Anyone financially strapped? PM me and I'll venmo you cash to cover it! 

Does anyone know how the 25$ credit is rewarded? I.E. is it directly applied to the donation you made or is it credited to the account that makes the donation? 

It's credited to the account that makes the donation, so that you can direct it elsewhere if you want. You can see it in your Payments tab: https://www.every.org/my-giving/payment

I just donated $10 but didn't see the $25 credit applied anywhere on my "Payments" tab

I see you joined via my link, but also see that you somehow joined somewhat differently than everyone else (on my Joins tab it says you "joined William Kiely", but does not say this for anyone else on my Joins tab) . I'm not sure what's going on.

Anyway, I'll PM you a $25 gift card now that you can give to a charity of your choice. (I have a few of these for an independent reason.)

Tina (co-founder of Every.org) just replied to your comment with:

It's credited to the account that makes the donation, so that you can direct it elsewhere if you want. You can see it in your Payments tab: https://www.every.org/my-giving/payment

Unfortunately since she is a new user I think her comment is being hidden until she gets above the 10-karma threshold (if I'm not mistaken... I have a vague recollection of there being a 10-karma threshold that caused me trouble once). Upvote her comment here so it's visible. EDIT: Okay, it's now over 10-karma and still hidden; I don't know what the issue is.

Thank you for the assist and for this post! We're seeing the EA crowd coming in strong :)

thanks for easy fuzzies :)

Done - just sent $50 to the Future of Life Institute.

Note: I think it's unlikely the $250,000 will be used up (by 10,000 new users) by the December 25th end date. Why? The most popular user on the site is Tim Ferriss with 462 followers, followed by the founder of Uber and two co-founders of Every.org. They're trying to get traction, but that's hard.

Just got an email saying 230k are still left, so worth pushing this further. 

+$35 for Clean Air Task Force, and +1 that it's a straightforward and very clean interface that took a pleasant 2-3 minutes. Thanks for sharing this here!

Not sure where to donate? Just amplify where other EAs donated on Facebook this morning rather than take time to think about it now. E.g. Against Malaria Foundation or Machine Intelligence Research Institute.

Hi William, I'm going to shamelessly throw this in here for your consideration: https://www.gofundme.com/f/suvita (If there was ever an appropriate place to do this on EA forum, this seems as good as any.) Suvita's work is backed by Charity Entrepreneurship and Founders Pledge. And their programs have been recommended by Giving What We Can. Cheers!

Thanks for sharing! I just donated

Moving these post updates to the comments:

24-Hour Update: Already 103 people have joined downstream of this post, with at least $1,275 of matching funds allocated (and probably more like ~$2,200, assuming the 85% donated/joined rate (=51/60) holds for all 103 people). Wow! Thank you for your generosity everyone!

68-Hour Update: The every.org/metrics dashboard reports that only $12,605 of the $250,000 matching dollars available have been used so far. Assuming the 87% donated/joined rate (=109/225) holds for all 228 people who have joined downstream of this post, the amount of matching dollars directed to EA-aligned nonprofits by all of your donations downstream of this post is approximately ~$4,970, or 39% of all matching funds used so far. Once again, wow! And thank you for continuing to share this great opportunity!

90-Hour Update: We just reached at least $3,000 in matching funds allocated (and probably more like ~$5,475, assuming the 87% donated/joined rate (=120/137) holds for all 251 people). That's a lot of money for effective charities! Thank you for your generosity everyone!

The every.org/metrics dashboard reports that only $13,030 of the $250,000 matching dollars available have been used so far, confirming that it is very likely this opportunity is not going to run out before the December 25th end date. Thank you for continuing to share this great opportunity and helping to direct this money to the nonprofits that will use it to do the most good!

Thanks a lot! 

[comment deleted]1
0
0
Curated and popular this week
Paul Present
 ·  · 28m read
 · 
Note: I am not a malaria expert. This is my best-faith attempt at answering a question that was bothering me, but this field is a large and complex field, and I’ve almost certainly misunderstood something somewhere along the way. Summary While the world made incredible progress in reducing malaria cases from 2000 to 2015, the past 10 years have seen malaria cases stop declining and start rising. I investigated potential reasons behind this increase through reading the existing literature and looking at publicly available data, and I identified three key factors explaining the rise: 1. Population Growth: Africa's population has increased by approximately 75% since 2000. This alone explains most of the increase in absolute case numbers, while cases per capita have remained relatively flat since 2015. 2. Stagnant Funding: After rapid growth starting in 2000, funding for malaria prevention plateaued around 2010. 3. Insecticide Resistance: Mosquitoes have become increasingly resistant to the insecticides used in bednets over the past 20 years. This has made older models of bednets less effective, although they still have some effect. Newer models of bednets developed in response to insecticide resistance are more effective but still not widely deployed.  I very crudely estimate that without any of these factors, there would be 55% fewer malaria cases in the world than what we see today. I think all three of these factors are roughly equally important in explaining the difference.  Alternative explanations like removal of PFAS, climate change, or invasive mosquito species don't appear to be major contributors.  Overall this investigation made me more convinced that bednets are an effective global health intervention.  Introduction In 2015, malaria rates were down, and EAs were celebrating. Giving What We Can posted this incredible gif showing the decrease in malaria cases across Africa since 2000: Giving What We Can said that > The reduction in malaria has be
Rory Fenton
 ·  · 6m read
 · 
Cross-posted from my blog. Contrary to my carefully crafted brand as a weak nerd, I go to a local CrossFit gym a few times a week. Every year, the gym raises funds for a scholarship for teens from lower-income families to attend their summer camp program. I don’t know how many Crossfit-interested low-income teens there are in my small town, but I’ll guess there are perhaps 2 of them who would benefit from the scholarship. After all, CrossFit is pretty niche, and the town is small. Helping youngsters get swole in the Pacific Northwest is not exactly as cost-effective as preventing malaria in Malawi. But I notice I feel drawn to supporting the scholarship anyway. Every time it pops in my head I think, “My money could fully solve this problem”. The camp only costs a few hundred dollars per kid and if there are just 2 kids who need support, I could give $500 and there would no longer be teenagers in my town who want to go to a CrossFit summer camp but can’t. Thanks to me, the hero, this problem would be entirely solved. 100%. That is not how most nonprofit work feels to me. You are only ever making small dents in important problems I want to work on big problems. Global poverty. Malaria. Everyone not suddenly dying. But if I’m honest, what I really want is to solve those problems. Me, personally, solve them. This is a continued source of frustration and sadness because I absolutely cannot solve those problems. Consider what else my $500 CrossFit scholarship might do: * I want to save lives, and USAID suddenly stops giving $7 billion a year to PEPFAR. So I give $500 to the Rapid Response Fund. My donation solves 0.000001% of the problem and I feel like I have failed. * I want to solve climate change, and getting to net zero will require stopping or removing emissions of 1,500 billion tons of carbon dioxide. I give $500 to a policy nonprofit that reduces emissions, in expectation, by 50 tons. My donation solves 0.000000003% of the problem and I feel like I have f
LewisBollard
 ·  · 8m read
 · 
> How the dismal science can help us end the dismal treatment of farm animals By Martin Gould ---------------------------------------- Note: This post was crossposted from the Open Philanthropy Farm Animal Welfare Research Newsletter by the Forum team, with the author's permission. The author may not see or respond to comments on this post. ---------------------------------------- This year we’ll be sharing a few notes from my colleagues on their areas of expertise. The first is from Martin. I’ll be back next month. - Lewis In 2024, Denmark announced plans to introduce the world’s first carbon tax on cow, sheep, and pig farming. Climate advocates celebrated, but animal advocates should be much more cautious. When Denmark’s Aarhus municipality tested a similar tax in 2022, beef purchases dropped by 40% while demand for chicken and pork increased. Beef is the most emissions-intensive meat, so carbon taxes hit it hardest — and Denmark’s policies don’t even cover chicken or fish. When the price of beef rises, consumers mostly shift to other meats like chicken. And replacing beef with chicken means more animals suffer in worse conditions — about 190 chickens are needed to match the meat from one cow, and chickens are raised in much worse conditions. It may be possible to design carbon taxes which avoid this outcome; a recent paper argues that a broad carbon tax would reduce all meat production (although it omits impacts on egg or dairy production). But with cows ten times more emissions-intensive than chicken per kilogram of meat, other governments may follow Denmark’s lead — focusing taxes on the highest emitters while ignoring the welfare implications. Beef is easily the most emissions-intensive meat, but also requires the fewest animals for a given amount. The graph shows climate emissions per tonne of meat on the right-hand side, and the number of animals needed to produce a kilogram of meat on the left. The fish “lives lost” number varies significantly by