As one of the largest single donations ever, Michael and Susan Dell pledged $6.25B to provide 25M American children new investment accounts:
https://apnews.com/article/michael-dell-susan-trump-accounts-stock-market-poverty-inequality-7e2615d50a3fc0563109ed0eeb4c41e1
Rate limiting on the EA Forum is too strict. Given that people karma downvote because of disagreement, rather than because of quality or civility — or they judge quality and/or civility largely on the basis of what they agree or disagree with — there is a huge disincentive against expressing unpopular or controversial opinions (relative to the views of active EA Forum users, not necessarily relative to the general public or relevant expert communities) on certain topics.
This is a message I saw recently:

You aren't just rate limited for 24 hours once you fal...
Can you explain what you mean by "contextualizing more"? (What a curiously recursive question...)
You definitely have more popular opinions (among the EA Forum audience), and also you seem to court controversy less, i.e. a lot of your posts are about topics that aren't controversial on the EA Forum. For example, if you were to make a pseudonymous account and write posts/comments arguing that near-term AGI is highly unlikely, I think you would definitely get a much lower karma to submission ratio, even if you put just as much effort and care into them as the...
Quick take on longtermist donations for giving tuesday.
My favorite donation opportunity is Alex Bores's congressional campaign. I also like Scott Wiener's congressional campaign.
If you have to donate to a normal longtermist 501c3, I think Forethought, METR, and The Midas Project—and LTFF/ARM and Longview's Frontier AI Fund—are good and can use more money (and can't take Good Ventures money). But I focus on evaluating stuff other than normal longtermist c3s, because other stuff seems better and has been investigated much less; I don't feel very strongly abo...
When 80,000 Hours pivoted to AI, I largely stopped listening to the podcast, thinking that as part of the industry I would already know everything. But I recently found myself driving a lot and consuming more audio content, and the recent ones eg with Holden, Daniel K and ASB are incredibly high quality and contain highly nontrivial, grounded opinions. If they keep this up I will probably keep listening until the end times.
Consider whether you're comparatively advantaged to give to non-tax-deductible things.
(Not financial advice.) I think people -- especially donors who are giving >$100k/year -- often default to thinking that they should stick to tax-deductible giving, because they have an unusually high "501c3 multiplier" due to high marginal income tax rates or low cost basis for capital gains taxes. I claim this is a mistake for some donors, because what matters is whether your 501c3 multiplier is unusually high relative to the average dollar in the donor mix, which is...
EAs are trying to win the "attention arms race" by not playing. I think this could be a mistake.
An additional reason EAs may not be playing the attention arms race is that they may be persuaded by the fidelity model of spreading ideas.
I don't think I agree either with the idea of recruiting people from elite colleges or recruiting "Internet weirdoes". I'm not against inviting in either of those kinds of people, but why target them specifically? I prefer a version of the EA movement that is more wholesome, populist, inclusive, and egalitarian.
I don't mean populist in the typical political sense used these days of being against institutions, against experts, highly distrustful, framing things as good people vs. bad people, or adopting the "paranoid style". I mean populist in the sen...
The Double Up Drive is now live, with donation matching and the possibility of a tax receipt when donating from a variety of countries. https://doubleupdrive.org/2025-match-drive-preview/
A number of podcasts are doing a fundraiser for GiveDirectly: https://www.givedirectly.org/happinesslab2025/
Podcast about the fundraiser: https://pca.st/bbz3num9
I admire influential orgs that publicly change their mind due to external feedback, and GiveWell is as usual exemplary of this (see also their grant "lookbacks"). From their recently published Progress on Issues We Identified During Top Charities Red Teaming, here's how external feedback changed their bottomline grantmaking:
...In 2023, we conducted “red teaming” to critically examine our four top charities. We found several issues: 4 mistakes and 10 areas requiring more work. We thought these could significantly affect our 2024 grants: $5m-$40m in grants we w
Posting this here for a wider reach: I'm looking for roommates in SF! Interested in leases that begin in January.
Right now, I know three others who are interested and we have a low-key signal group chat. If you are interested, direct message me here or on one my linked socials and we will hop on a 15-minute call to determine if we would be a good match!
Another Philosophers Against Malaria Fundraiser has begun: https://www.againstmalaria.com/FundraiserGroup.aspx?FundraiserID=9418
In the last years, we got ca $65.000 in donations. Early donations are especially helpful, as they populate the page and give a sense of dynamism!
Any share with philosophers or university patriots that you know would be especially welcome. The fundraiser is a 'competition' between departments that aggregates donations; the winner is announced on the popular philosophy blog 'DailyNous'. Last year, the good folks at Delaware w...
I built an interactive chicken welfare experience - try it and let me know what you think
Ever wondered what "cage-free" actually means versus "free-range"? I just launched A Chicken's World - a 5-minute interactive game where you experience four different farming systems from an egg-laying hen's perspective, then guess which one you just lived through and how common that system is.
Reading "67 square inches per hen" is one thing, but actually trying to move around in that space is another. My hope is that the interactive format makes welfare conditions visc...
Thanks so much to everyone who took the time to play through this and provide such thoughtful feedback! I really appreciate it, and apologies for the delay in implementing these changes.
Here's what I've updated based on your suggestions:
Bug Fixes:
Are there any organizations out there that would describe their niche as advising for small/medium-sized donors? I can't think of any, and I'm wondering why not. I'm not exactly sure what organizations that claim to advise large donors actually do, but it seems plausible that some things are also effective for smaller donors just because there are larger numbers of those. I'm thinking of, for instance:
there was a post about this last year: https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/oFcLqTETnC8rajxeg/advisors-for-smaller-major-donors
tl;dr is (1) a lot of evaluators will do this for their cause area (can't speak to every one but Giving Green is happy to advise donors of any size, just shoot us an email); (2) look into giving circles inside or outside EA
I'd add that it's probably worth seeking a financial advisor for the tax law and will writing type questions -- a lot of EA advisories offer free initial services, but I've been told that total assets >10...
I really like Bob Fischer's point #4 from deep within the comment threads of his recent post and thought to share it more widely, seemed like wise advice to me:
...FWIW, my general orientation to most of the debates about these kinds of theoretical issues is that they should nudge your thinking but not drive it. What should drive your thinking is just: "Suffering is bad. Do something about it." So, yes, the numbers count. Yes, update your strategy based on the odds of making a difference. Yes, care about the counterfactual and, all else equal, put your efforts