I've been writing a few posts critical of EA over at my blog. They might be of interest to people here:
- Unflattering aspects of Effective Altruism
- Alternative Visions of Effective Altruism
- Auftragstaktik
- Hurdles of using forecasting as a tool for making sense of AI progress
- Brief thoughts on CEA’s stewardship of the EA Forum
- Why are we not harder, better, faster, stronger?
- ...and there are a few smaller pieces on my blog as well.
I appreciate comments and perspectives anywhere, but prefer them over at the individual posts at my blog, since I have a large number of disagreements with the EA Forum's approach to moderation, curation, aesthetics or cost-effectiveness.
I think the more relevant order of magnitude reference class would be the amount per user Facebook spent on core platform maintenance and moderation (and Facebook has a lot more scaling challenges to solve as well as users to spread costs over, so a better comparator would be the running expenses of a small professional forum)
I don't think FB revenues are remotely relevant to how much value the forum creates, which may be significantly more per user than Facebook if it positively influences decisions people make about employment, founding charities and allocating large chunks of money to effective causes. But the effectiveness of the use of the forum budget isn't whether the total value created is more than the total costs of running, it's decided at the margin by whether going the extra mile with the software and curation actually adds more value.
Or put another way, would people engage differently if the forum was run on stock software by a single sysadmin and some regular posters granted volunteer mod privileges?