TL;DR: Lately I talked to several people who'd consider cofounding an EA startup but are blocked by having no concrete idea. Help! Please post your ideas here and I'll get potential CTOs to read them
The rest of the post is only if you're unsure what such people often would or wouldn't want to work on, feel free to skip it and just pitch your idea or share this question with someone else. This is all somewhat time sensitive. Thanks!
They're looking for something that feels like a startup
Such as Momentum, Wave, or Metaculus.
Not something that feels like a side project, such as a small chrome extension.
Also not a "regular" job as a senior software developer. They are aware of the 80k job board as an option, this post is aiming at something else.
Something that EAs have some kind of advantage in
For example "we care about this more than usual". Something that would explain why nobody else already implemented the idea just to make a ton of money.
Ideally there's a CEO
Especially if it's a very ambitious idea such as "a twitter that promotes high quality conversations" which many people tried and it's unclear (to me) how to pull it off.
Ideally the CEO would post here and be open for questions.
Ideas I'm aware of
- Ambitious Altruistic Software Engineering Efforts: Opportunities and Benefits
- Even More Ambitious Altruistic Tech Efforts
- A list of technical EA projects
- What Are Your Software Needs?
I'm still going over them, but this is time sensitive, so posting meanwhile
The closest matches so far:
- Prediction market ideas: I'm checking those out
- Ambitious Twitter-like ideas: Blocked by the CEO problem
I would have thought so too, but I've been mystified by how few of the pandemic-remote-work efforts have been aimed towards "virtual immigration" tools that make it easier for US companies to outsource software developer tasks. Maybe there are legal obstacles to hiring overseas employees (but surely there are lots of easy ways to get around this by having them be "contractors" or something)? I fear that it's not happening simply because places like India or Latin America are poorer than the USA so it's a less lucrative potential market than selling Zoom/Teams licenses to Fortune-500 companies.
The pieces are all there but there seems to be a dearth of explicitly "virtual immigration" oriented companies who are trying to cobble said pieces together:
But maybe there is some logical reason why this seemingly solid plan is not happening, or maybe it is happening but I haven't noticed yet because the startups are still scaling up.