I hold that there could be a well maintained wiki article on top EA orgs and then people could anonymously have added many non-linear stories a while ago. I would happily have added comments about their move fast and break things approach and maybe had a better way to raise it with them.
There would have been edit wars and an earlier investigation.
How much would you pay to have brought this forward 6 months or a year. And likewise for whatever other startling revelations there are. In which case, I suggest a functional wiki is worth 5% − 10% of that amount, per case.
My question is “Who would want to run an EA org or project in that kind of environment?”. Presumably, you’d be down, but my bet is that the vast majority of people wouldn’t.
This could have been a wiki
I hold that there could be a well maintained wiki article on top EA orgs and then people could anonymously have added many non-linear stories a while ago. I would happily have added comments about their move fast and break things approach and maybe had a better way to raise it with them.
There would have been edit wars and an earlier investigation.
How much would you pay to have brought this forward 6 months or a year. And likewise for whatever other startling revelations there are. In which case, I suggest a functional wiki is worth 5% − 10% of that amount, per case.
My question is “Who would want to run an EA org or project in that kind of environment?”. Presumably, you’d be down, but my bet is that the vast majority of people wouldn’t.
Given that people are suggesting a length set of org norms, I’m not sure that avoiding taxing orgs is their top concern.
While I support your right to disagreevote anonymously, I also challenge someone to articulate the disagreement.