4 years ago GWWC announced that 5,000 people had signed the pledge to donate 10% of annual income to effective charities. I am surprised that number has not doubled since then.
For EAs who have not yet taken the pledge, I am curious why.
Separate but related, if you have taken the pledge, but are not using the new diamond symbol to promote it, I am curious why. I have been surprised to see that people who had advocated for giving 10 percent to effective charities have not been using the 🔸, but maybe it’s because they have not yet gotten around to doing it.
Norms = social expectations = psychological pressure. If you don't want any social pressure to take the 10% pledge (even among EAs), what you're saying is that you don't want it to be a norm.
Now, I don't think the pressure should be too intense or anything: some may well have good reasons for not taking the pledge. The pressure/encouragement from a username icon is pretty tame, as far as social pressures go. (Nobody is proposing a "walk of shame" where we all throw rotten fruit and denounce the non-pledgers in our midst!) But I think the optimal level of social pressure/norminess is non-zero, because I expect that most EAs on the margins would do better to take the pledge (that belief is precisely why I do want it to become more of a norm -- if I already trusted that the social environment was well-calibrated for optimal decisions here, we wouldn't need to change social norms).
So that's why I think it's good, on the Forum and elsewhere, to use the diamond to promote the 10% pledge.
To be clear:
(1) I don't think the audience "being familiar" with the pledge undercuts the reasons to want it to be more of a norm among EAs (and others).
(2) The possibility that something "might not be the right decision" for some people does not show that it shouldn't be a norm. You need to compare the risks of over-pledging (in the presence of a norm) to the risks of under-pledging (in the absence of a norm). I think we should be more worried about the latter. But if someone wants to make the comparative argument that the former is the greater risk, that would be interesting to hear!