Senior in Math and CS at Purdue; co-founder of Effective Altruism Purdue and AI Safety Purdue; aspiring AI alignment researcher
I'm the co-founder and one of the main organizers of EA Purdue. Last fall, we got four signups for our intro seminar; this fall, we got around fifty. Here's what's changed over the last year:
Early group organizing can often feel demoralizing and hopeless. You may put a lot of effort into setting things up, only to get a single-digit number of applicants to your first seminar. But the work is worth it - I wouldn't have had the success of this year if I hadn't spent the last year running seminars and filling out registration paperwork. Good luck with your own organizing, and may you find similar success!
I'm fairly convinced by the scale arguments for animal welfare, but have a slight hesitation due to worldview diversification considerations, optics, and a possible lack of room for more funding. If I had to irreversibly allocate the $100m in the next ten minutes, however, I would choose animal welfare.
Thanks! We took an approach of making the fellowship application form as minimal as we could, so most of our applicants were able to put fairly high-quality responses to the remaining questions. We also have experienced a somewhat higher attrition rate for the actual fellowship (4->2 last semester, 50->15 this semester), which we suspect is due to the shorter forms, but we haven't seen any other new problems.