Scrubbing yourself from archive.org seems to be an action taken not from desire to save time communicating, but from a desire to avoid others learning. It seems like that’s a pretty big factor that’s going on here and would be worth mentioning.
This is especially jarring alongside the subsequent recommendation (3.2.5) that one should withhold judgement on whether ‘Leverage 1.0’ was a good use of resources given (inter alia) the difficulties of assessing unpublished research.
Happily, given the laudable intention of Leverage to present their work going forward (including, one presumes, developments of efforts under ‘Leverage 1.0’), folks who weren’t around at the start of the decade will be able to do this—and those of us who were should find the ~2012 evidence base superseded.
This is especially jarring alongside the subsequent recommendation (3.2.5) that one should withhold judgement on whether ‘Leverage 1.0’ was a good use of resources given (inter alia) the difficulties of assessing unpublished research.
Happily, given the laudable intention of Leverage to present their work going forward (including, one presumes, developments of efforts under ‘Leverage 1.0’), folks who weren’t around at the start of the decade will be able to do this—and those of us who were should find the ~2012 evidence base superseded.
For reference, a version & commentary of some Leverage 1.0 research:
https://​​rationalconspiracy.com/​​2014/​​04/​​22/​​the-problem-with-connection-theory/​​ (a)