Giving What We Can (GWWC) is embarking on an exciting new chapter: after years of support, we will be spinning out of the Effective Ventures Foundation UK and US (collectively referred to as “EV”), our parent charities in the US and UK respectively, to become an independent organisation.
Rest assured that our core mission, commitments, and focus on effective giving remain unchanged. We believe this transition will allow us to better serve our community and to achieve our mission more effectively. Below, you'll find all the details you need, including what is changing, what isn't, and how you can get involved.
A heartfelt thanks
First and foremost, we owe a very big thank you to the team at EV. Their support over the years has helped us to grow and have a meaningful impact in the world. We could not be more grateful for their support.
A big thank you also to our members and donors who have supported us along the way. In particular I’d like to thank the many of you who we’ve consulted throughout the process of arriving at this decision and working on a plan.
Why spin out?
When GWWC was founded in 2009, it was among the first in a small constellation of initiatives aimed at fostering what would soon be called “effective altruism.” In 2011, following the establishment of 80,000 Hours, both organisations came together to form the Centre for Effective Altruism (which is now EV to disambiguate from the project called Centre for Effective Altruism, which is also housed within EV).
A lot has changed in the intervening years, both within GWWC and within EV. Today, EV is home to more than 10 different initiatives and is focused on a broad range of issues. As for GWWC, we have developed ambitious plans for our future and are committed to focusing more than ever on our core mission: to make effective and significant giving a cultural norm.
We’ve been considering this option for quite some time and have come to the conclusion that the best way to achieve our mission is to be an independent organisation. Being independent will allow us to:
- Align our organisational structure and governance more closely with our mission.
- Better manage our own legal and reputational risks.
- Have greater clarity and transparency of our inner workings and governance to the outside world.
- Have greater control over our operational costs.
We believe that these changes will enable us to serve our community better and to contribute more effectively to growing effective giving.
The details
For most of you, very little will change. There will be a multi-stage transition period (most of which we estimate will be completed over the next 12 months) and any relevant changes will be communicated in a timely and transparent manner. Here’s what to expect:
What's changing
- We have registered Giving What We Can USA Inc. as a 501(c)(3) charity in the US, and have started the process of registering charities in the UK and Canada. There will be a transfer of GWWC-specific intellectual property, contracts, services, and data (e.g. brand, databases, website, files) to the new entities (exact structure to be determined) and a transition of the donation platform across to the new entities. Our supported programs (e.g. charitable projects and grantmaking funds) will need to be onboarded as programs with our new entities before any switch over dates (TBC) in each country.
- We are recruiting new governance and advisory boards for the new entities.
- We're also pursuing affiliate arrangements to continue to expand effective-giving support into new countries (e.g. our collaboration with EA Australia to launch GWWC Australia). This will include adapting our approach to local tax situations, cultural contexts, languages, and currencies.
What's not changing
- Our dedication to fostering a culture of effective and meaningful giving continues unabated, guided by our long-standing mission.
- Our community of members who have taken our pledge will continue to grow and be supported throughout the transition period and beyond.
- Our trusted donation platform will continue being maintained and improved, serving as a gateway to impactful philanthropy.
- Our research and inclusion criteria will continue iterating and improving, as we strive to be a robust and compelling resource for giving effectively.
- We will continue to support fundraising for and grantmaking to our range of supported programs (both within and outside of EV).
How you can help
- Apply to our governance or advisory boards
- Offer to help with board recruitment
- Support operational funding (currently offering a 1:1 match)
- For donors looking to donate greater than $10,000 we would appreciate funding being directed to our new entities, please contact us if you would like to provide this support.
This is an exceptionally important time for us and your support is greatly appreciated.
Have more questions?
Please feel free to email luke.freeman@givingwhatwecan.org with any questions you have.
Note: EV has also been reconsidering their future organisational plans and have posted an update about it here.
I feel quite confused about what empirical evidence from the forum would change your mind. I personally don't think that the comment folding of weakly negative comments has much effect on future engagement (particularly if it's a reasonable comment).
I initially thought that if your hypothesis about hiding influencing voting is correct and people regularly do the voting on expected Karma, then I think you should expect to see quite a few "reasonable to you" low negative karma comments (as they have been voted negative and then stayed negative due to hiding low visibility). I don't think I have really observed this, but maybe you can give an example?
Maybe you'd say that the comments in the position are actually 'band wagon-ed" to be very negative (in which case you should be able to find some reasonable-to-you comments that are very negative, but you also probably shouldn't believe the low negative karma hiding comments leads to little viewership (you should believe it leads to more viewership).
Maybe you could say, "Well both things are true at different times," which produces a bimodal distribution - I think that this gets a substantial "complexity penalty", though it's plausible - that said, I'd be pretty interested in seeing comments that are reasonable to you ending up negatively downvoted at all after more than 4 days, I think it's pretty rare.
Could you possibly make a prediction about a karma score on some kind of comment that you expect to see that is much more likely in worlds where you are right relative to worlds where you are wrong?
(I'm sure people will look at this and think we are rabbit-holing about something unimportant, but I think understanding karma dynamics is fairly important, and this isn't derailing any interesting discussion. afaict)