Even if youâre skeptical about the direct impact of AI safety work on reducing existential risk (a much longer conversation, and one Iâm not fully qualified to have), thereâs a strong indirect case that the EA and EA-adjacent prioritization of AI in the mid-2010s will end up being hugely important for âtraditionalâ, non-speculative EA causes like global health and animal welfare. Most of Anthropicâs co-founders and many of its early employees were deeply involved in the EA and rationalist communities, and itâs at least plausible that this engagement is what led them to take AI seriously enough to found Anthropic in 2021 or to join early with substantial equity. As Sophie Kimâs post documents, Anthropicâs seven co-founders have pledged to donate 80% of their wealth, which at current valuations could amount to roughly $37.8B combined, nearly ten times what Coefficient Giving has disbursed in its entire history. Including employee equity already in DAFs, the total pool of EA-influenced philanthropic capital could reach nine or ten figures. Itâs not unreasonable to assume that a substantial fraction of this is likely to flow into non-AI causes. Many of these donors signed the GWWC pledge before AI was their focus and hold a worldview and values closely aligned with the broader effective altruism community (vven outside EA, it isnât uncommon for wealthy individuals with modest altruistic inclinations to donate significant amounts to global health causes). Needless to say, this is an average estimate and not guaranteed. Itâs possible that Anthropic or the entire AI ecosystem collapses and these funds never materialize, but itâs also possible that Anthropicâs returns end up being even larger.
Even if youâre skeptical about the direct impact of AI safety work on reducing existential risk (a much longer conversation, and one Iâm not fully qualified to have), thereâs a strong indirect case that the EA and EA-adjacent prioritization of AI in the mid-2010s will end up being hugely important for âtraditionalâ, non-speculative EA causes like global health and animal welfare. Most of Anthropicâs co-founders and many of its early employees were deeply involved in the EA and rationalist communities, and itâs at least plausible that this engagement is what led them to take AI seriously enough to found Anthropic in 2021 or to join early with substantial equity. As Sophie Kimâs post documents, Anthropicâs seven co-founders have pledged to donate 80% of their wealth, which at current valuations could amount to roughly $37.8B combined, nearly ten times what Coefficient Giving has disbursed in its entire history. Including employee equity already in DAFs, the total pool of EA-influenced philanthropic capital could reach nine or ten figures. Itâs not unreasonable to assume that a substantial fraction of this is likely to flow into non-AI causes. Many of these donors signed the GWWC pledge before AI was their focus and hold a worldview and values closely aligned with the broader effective altruism community (vven outside EA, it isnât uncommon for wealthy individuals with modest altruistic inclinations to donate significant amounts to global health causes). Needless to say, this is an average estimate and not guaranteed. Itâs possible that Anthropic or the entire AI ecosystem collapses and these funds never materialize, but itâs also possible that Anthropicâs returns end up being even larger.