Hi, we’re JP and Sam, we work as software engineers at the Centre for Effective Altruism (CEA). We’re answering questions about our work on some of the projects many EAs use every day (including this Forum, Giving What We Can, EA Funds, and a bunch of other behind the scenes stuff).
Also, CEA and GWWC are both hiring software engineers, so it’s a good opportunity to ask questions about what it’s like to work here before you apply!
We’ll be answering questions on Tuesday, March 16th.
CEA and GWWC are both hiring software engineers. We build and maintain the tech that any new engineers will be working with (including this Forum), and we know what it’s like to work here. AMA!
JP previously worked at an aerospace startup detecting methane emissions with spectrometers on airplanes. He’s interested in table tennis, plants and economics.
Sam started at GWWC back in 2015, then built EA Funds from the ground up over the course of a few months while CEA was in Y Combinator. He has a past life in party politics.
Ask us about:
- Working on a small team
- Non-profit vs startups
- Our tech stacks
- Anything!
NB: EA Funds is now largely an independent org, so Sam will generally be talking about what it was like working at CEA until very recently. However we still work closely together because we make a good team and are working on very related projects.
Bonus: Although Ben West is no longer primarily an engineer, he built a popular healthcare analytics platform and founded a successful startup. He’ll be managing the new CEA engineer. You can also ask him anything.
I’m glad there are some changes planned to the introductory materials and resources page. As you update this material, what reference class will you be using? Do you want effectivealtruism.org to reflect the views of the EA community? Engaged EAs? CEA? EA “leaders”?
I’m also curious if/how that reference class will be communicated on the site, as I think that’s been a problem in the past. For the past few years (until the modest changes you made recently) the resources page has been virtually identical to the EA Handbook 2.0, which (for better or worse) “emphasized [CEA’s] longtermist view of cause prioritization, contained little information about why many EAs prioritize global health and animal advocacy, and focused on risks from AI to a much greater extent than any other cause.” If it was a problem that the handbook “ostensibly represented EA thinking as a whole, but actually represented the views of some of CEA’s staff”, I'd think that problem is magnified immensely when that content is on ea.org.
Would CEA ever consider temporarily or permanently transferring the broader ownership of effectivealtruism.org to another person/organization? It seems like the site could easily be a full time job for one or more people. Beyond updating the content, someone could be A/B testing different types of content and sharing those lessons with the community, optimizing conversions, running marketing tests, doing SEO, publishing regular updates on traffic and engagement, etc.
CEA hasn’t really prioritized ea.org over the last couple of years and doesn’t want to commit to prioritizing it going forward (and I commend you for trying to give realistic expectations about your future priorities). But it really feels like a missed opportunity that the landing page for people who google “effective altruism” has been deprioritized for so long. With so many EAs looking for jobs and/or volunteer opportunities and $1.8 million in the EA Infrastructure Fund (which is now considering active grantmaking), it seems like CEA might be able to delegate this work to someone who could make substantial progress (even if CEA wants to "use the Forum as a portal to a wider range of EA content/opportunities" in parallel.)
(And ironically, effectivealtruism.org is down at time of writing. Just submitted a ticket via the EA funds page…)