According to public reports, Dan Hendrycks has been influenced by EA since he was a freshman (https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/07/06/opinion/ai-safety-human-extinction-dan-hendrycks-cais/).
He did the 80,000 hours program.
He worries about AI bringing about the end of humanity, if not the planet.
After getting his Ph.D., he started an AI safety organization instead of joining one of the many AI startups.
And he's taken $13M in donations from two EA orgs - OpenPhilanthropy and FTX Foundation.
Yet he denies being an Effective Altruism member when asked about it by the press. For instance (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2024-06-27/an-up-and-coming-ai-safety-thinker-on-why-you-should-still-be-worried)
As an aside, Hendrycks is not alone in this. The founders of the Future of Life Institute have done the same thing (https://www.insidecyberwarfare.com/p/an-open-source-investigation-into).
I'm curious to know what others think about Hendryck's attempts to disassociate himself from Effective Altruism.
Let me be clear: I find the Bay Area EA Community on AI risk intellectually dissatisfying and have ever since I started my PhD in Berkeley. Contribution/complaint ratio is off, ego/skill ratio is off, tendency to armchair analyze deep learning systems instead of having experiments drive decisions was historically off, intellectual diversity/monoculture/overly deferential patterns are really off.
I am not a "strong axiological longtermist" and weigh normative factors such as special obligations and, especially, desert.
The Bay Area EA Community was the only game in town on AI risk for a long time. I do hope AI safety outgrows EA.
I don't think Dan's statement implies the existence of those fairly specific beliefs you must endorse to "count" as an EA. Given that there is no authoritative measure of who is / isn't an EA, it is more akin to a social identity one can choose to embrace or reject.
It's common for an individual to decide not to identify with a certain community because of their aversion to a subpart or subgroup of that community. This remains true even where the subgroup is only a minority of the larger community, or the subpart is only a minor-ish portion of the community... (read more)