In addition to everything mentioned so far, there’s the information and retributive justice effect of the public exposé, which can be positive. As long as it doesn’t devolve into a witch hunt, we want to discourage people from using EA resources and trust in the ways Nonlinear did, and this only works if it’s public. If this isn’t big enough, think about the possibility of preventing FTX. (I don’t know if the actual fraud was preventable, but negative aspects of SBF’s character and the lack of separation between FTX and Alameda could have been well substantiated and made public. Just the reputation of EAs doing due diligence here could have prevented a lot of harm.)
In addition to everything mentioned so far, there’s the information and retributive justice effect of the public exposé, which can be positive. As long as it doesn’t devolve into a witch hunt, we want to discourage people from using EA resources and trust in the ways Nonlinear did, and this only works if it’s public. If this isn’t big enough, think about the possibility of preventing FTX. (I don’t know if the actual fraud was preventable, but negative aspects of SBF’s character and the lack of separation between FTX and Alameda could have been well substantiated and made public. Just the reputation of EAs doing due diligence here could have prevented a lot of harm.)