We were shocked and immensely saddened to learn of the recent events at FTX. Our hearts go out to the thousands of FTX customers whose finances may have been jeopardized or destroyed.
We are now unable to perform our work or process grants, and we have fundamental questions about the legitimacy and integrity of the business operations that were funding the FTX Foundation and the Future Fund. As a result, we resigned earlier today.
We don’t yet have a full picture of what went wrong, and we are following the news online as it unfolds. But to the extent that the leadership of FTX may have engaged in deception or dishonesty, we condemn that behavior in the strongest possible terms. We believe that being a good actor in the world means striving to act with honesty and integrity.
We are devastated to say that it looks likely that there are many committed grants that the Future Fund will be unable to honor. We are so sorry that it has come to this. We are no longer employed by the Future Fund, but, in our personal capacities, we are exploring ways to help with this awful situation. We joined the Future Fund to support incredible people and projects, and this outcome is heartbreaking to us.
We appreciate the grantees' work to help build a better future, and we have been honored to support it. We're sorry that we won't be able to continue to do so going forward, and we deeply regret the difficult, painful, and stressful position that many of you are now in.
To reach us, grantees may email grantee-reachout@googlegroups.com. We know grantees must have many questions, and in our personal capacities we will try to answer them as best as we can given the circumstances.
Nick Beckstead
Leopold Aschenbrenner
Avital Balwit
Ketan Ramakrishnan
Will MacAskill
So far I have been running on the policy that I will accept money from people who seem immoral to me, and indeed I preferred getting money from Sam instead of Open Philanthropy or other EA funders because I thought this would leave the other funders with more marginal resources that could be used to better ends (Edit: I also separately thought that FTX Foundation money would come with more freedom for Lightcone to pursue its aims independently, which I do think was a major consideration I don't want to elide).
To be clear, I think there is a reasonable case to be made for the other end of this tradeoff, but I currently still believe that it's OK for EAs to take money from people whose values or virtues they think are bad (and that indeed this is often better than taking money from the people who share your values and virtues, as long as its openly and willingly given). I think the actual tradeoffs are messy, and indeed I ended up encouraging us to go with a different funder for a loan arrangement for a property purchase we ended up making, since that kind of long-term relationship seemed much worse to me, and I was more worried about that entangling us more with FTX.
To be again clear, I was not suspecting large-scale fraud. My sense was that Sam was working in a shady industry while being pretty dishonest in the way the crypto industry often is, but was primarily making money by causing tons of people to speculate in crypto while also being really good at trading against them and eating their lunch, which I think is like, not a great thing to do, but was ultimately within the law and was following reasonable deontological constraints in my opinion.
I am seriously considering giving back a bunch of the money we received. I also for pretty similar reasons think that giving that money back does definitely not entail giving that money back to FTX right now, who maybe are just staging a hack on their own servers (or are being hacked) and should not be trusted with more resources. I expect this will instead require some kind of more sophisticated mechanism of actually helping the people who lost funds (conditional on the bankruptcy proceedings not doing clawbacks, which I think is reasonable given that I think clawbacks are unlikely).
I think it personally might have been better to have a policy of refusing funds from institutions that I think are bad and have power in my social ecosystem, so that I feel more comfortable speaking out against them. I personally prefer the policy of taking their money while also having a policy of just speaking out against them anyways (Dylan Matthews did this in one of his Future Perfect articles in a way I find quite admirable), but I do recognize this is setting myself up for a lot of trust in my own future integrity, and it might be better to tie myself to a mast here.
I think the key damage caused by people in my reference class receiving funds from FTX was that they felt less comfortable criticizing FTX, and I think indeed in-retrospect I was more hesitant than I wish I would have been to speak out against Sam and FTX for this reason, and am currently spending a lot of my time trying to understand how to update and learn from this. It's pretty plausible to me that I fucked up pretty badly here, though I currently think my fuckup was not being more public about my concerns, and not the part where I accepted Sam's money. I also think confidentiality concerns were a major problem here, and it's pretty plausible another component of my fuckup was to agree to too much confidentiality in a way that limited what I could say here.