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Epistemic status: I haven't read much about this story and I don't have a considered opinion about the allegations. My prior is that these things usually turn out to be true after more investigation, and the below was written from the perspective of "I assume that Gates did in fact behave inappropriately in some way."
The link is paywalled to me, but I'm disappointed to see the news. (Though I'm happy to see that Bill and Melinda say they plan to continue the Gates Foundation's work.)
This kind of incident often makes me think of this quote from Holden Karnofsky:
I think this is a very common position within EA — that we should behave ethically in "standard" ways and avoid using altruistic work to cover or excuse unethical behavior. (See this great comment from Julia Wise or "Everyday Longtermism" for more on that view.)
I don't remember seeing anyone in the community condone someone's unethical behavior on the basis of their impact (vs. contesting whether the behavior itself was unethical, as in debates over Peter Singer's most controversial views). Are there any examples I'm missing?
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The story also makes me think of Thomas Pogge, who was involved in EA early on but doesn't seem to have been involved after being accused of sexual harassment. I'd guess that wasn't a coincidence, though I only know my own story: the Yale EA group, which I led at the time, dropped him as an advisor after this happened. (It never occurred to us to defend his behavior.)
This isn't to say that EA should avoid future contact with Gates. But I don't expect to see anyone say "it's fine he did that stuff, because he saved so many lives".