In this new podcast episode, I discuss with Will MacAskill what the Effective Altruism community can learn from the FTX / SBF debacle, why Will has been limited in what he could say about this topic in the past, and what future directions for the Effective Altruism community and his own research Will is most enthusiastic about:
Yes, but not at great length.
From my memory, which definitely could be faulty since I only listened once:
He admits people did tell him Sam was untrustworthy. He says that his impression was something like "there was a big fight and I can't really tell what happened or who is right" (not a direct quote!). Stresses that many of the people who warned him about Sam continued to have large amounts of money on FTX later, so they didn't expect the scale of fraud we actually saw either. (They all seem to have told TIME that originally also.) Says Sam wrote a lot of reflections (10k words) on what had gone wrong at early Alameda and how to avoid similar mistakes again, and that he (Will) now understands that Sam was actually omitting stuff that made him look bad, but at the time, his desire to learn from his mistakes seemed convincing.
He denies threatening Tara, and says he spoke to Tara and she agreed that while their conversation got heated, he did not threaten her.