I think the further pledge is a good idea for somewhere between “almost no one” and “no one”. Possibly MacAskill, as a way to demonstrate that he’s really not in this for the money?
If a government wants to maximize tax revenue would they set anyone’s marginal tax rate at 100%? Clearly not: they’ll make some choices where they forgo cash earnings for non-monetary benefits. When you decide your donation rules you’re doing a bit of this yourself, and you should consider what incentives you want to be setting up for yourself.
I don’t follow this, don’t incentives cut both ways? Someone who has not taken the further pledge will have strong incentives to work in AI Safety/capabilities (where some EAs are making >=7 digits) compared to working in animal welfare, and you had a strong incentive to stay at Alphabet instead of moving into direct work, despite thinking that the latter could be more positive for the world.
That’s not a way I was thinking about it, thanks for bringing this up! I normally think of the GWWC pledges as about donations, so the idea that it might be useful via keeping people from making choices that would lead to larger donations is initially a bit counterintuitive, but seems right.
I don’t follow this, don’t incentives cut both ways? Someone who has not taken the further pledge will have strong incentives to work in AI Safety/capabilities (where some EAs are making >=7 digits) compared to working in animal welfare, and you had a strong incentive to stay at Alphabet instead of moving into direct work, despite thinking that the latter could be more positive for the world.
That’s not a way I was thinking about it, thanks for bringing this up! I normally think of the GWWC pledges as about donations, so the idea that it might be useful via keeping people from making choices that would lead to larger donations is initially a bit counterintuitive, but seems right.