High-impact, for simplicity, (they have a very large total number of grants) is set just as the rough status quo of groups on GiveWell, funded by Open Phil, ACE charities etc., FP manage their own list and we >90% are in agreement on what is in that list. None of the largest grants in the list are groups we feel conflicted about.
In an ideal world we would of course evaluate every group their pledgers have counterfactually funded but that’s not really tractable. And we try to only use their quantitative outcomes as one of several signals as to how well they’re doing (it’s very tempting to fall into a rabbit hole of data analysis for a group with such clear and measurable first order outcomes)
High-impact, for simplicity, (they have a very large total number of grants) is set just as the rough status quo of groups on GiveWell, funded by Open Phil, ACE charities etc., FP manage their own list and we >90% are in agreement on what is in that list. None of the largest grants in the list are groups we feel conflicted about.
In an ideal world we would of course evaluate every group their pledgers have counterfactually funded but that’s not really tractable. And we try to only use their quantitative outcomes as one of several signals as to how well they’re doing (it’s very tempting to fall into a rabbit hole of data analysis for a group with such clear and measurable first order outcomes)