Note that the headline (“Good Judgement Project: gjopen.com”) is still confusing, since it seems to be saying GJP = GJO. The thing that ties the items under that headline is that they are all projects of GJI. Also, “Of the questions which have been added recently” is misleading since it seems to be about the previous paragraph (the superforecasters-only questions), but in fact all the links go to GJO.
Edited again. If you want, throw me a bone: what’s the last explicit probabilistic prediction you’ve made? Also, I liked your review on How to Measure Anything, which feels relevant to the topic at hand. NNTR.
The last explicit probabilistic prediction I made was probably a series of forecasts on my most recent internal Open Phil grant writeup, since it’s part of our internal writeup template to prompt the grant investigator for explicit probabilistic forecasts about the grant. But it could’ve easily been elsewhere; I do somewhat-often make probabilistic forecasts just in conversation, or in GDoc/Slack comments, though for those I usually spend less time pinning down a totally precise formulation of the forecasting statement, since it’s more about quickly indicating to others roughly what my views are rather than about establishing my calibration across a large number of precisely stated forecasts.
Note that the headline (“Good Judgement Project: gjopen.com”) is still confusing, since it seems to be saying GJP = GJO. The thing that ties the items under that headline is that they are all projects of GJI. Also, “Of the questions which have been added recently” is misleading since it seems to be about the previous paragraph (the superforecasters-only questions), but in fact all the links go to GJO.
Edited again. If you want, throw me a bone: what’s the last explicit probabilistic prediction you’ve made? Also, I liked your review on How to Measure Anything, which feels relevant to the topic at hand. NNTR.
The headline looks broken in my browser. It looks like this:
/(Good Judgement?[^]*)|(Superforecast(ing|er))/gi
The last explicit probabilistic prediction I made was probably a series of forecasts on my most recent internal Open Phil grant writeup, since it’s part of our internal writeup template to prompt the grant investigator for explicit probabilistic forecasts about the grant. But it could’ve easily been elsewhere; I do somewhat-often make probabilistic forecasts just in conversation, or in GDoc/Slack comments, though for those I usually spend less time pinning down a totally precise formulation of the forecasting statement, since it’s more about quickly indicating to others roughly what my views are rather than about establishing my calibration across a large number of precisely stated forecasts.