This is an online portal with information on donations that were announced publicly (or have been shared with permission) that were of interest to Vipul Naik. The git repository with the code for this portal, as well as all the underlying data, is available on GitHub. All payment amounts are in current United States dollars (USD). The repository of donations is being seeded with an initial collation by Issa Rice as well as continued contributions from him (see his commits and the contract work page listing all financially compensated contributions to the site) but all responsibility for errors and inaccuracies belongs to Vipul Naik. Current data is preliminary and has not been completely vetted and normalized; if sharing a link to this site or any page on this site, please include the caveat that the data is preliminary (if you want to share without including caveats, please check with Vipul Naik). We expect to have completed the first round of development by the end of July 2024. See the about page for more details. Also of interest: pageview data on analytics.vipulnaik.com, tutorial in README, request for feedback to EA Forum.
We do not have any donor information for the donor Tate Williams in our system.
No donations recorded so far, so not printing the statistics table!
If you hover over a cell for a given cause area and year, you will get a tooltip with the number of donees and the number of donations.
Note: Cause area classification used here may not match that used by donor for all cases.
Cause area | Number of donations | Number of donees | Total |
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Total | 0 | 0 | 0.00 |
Skipping spending graph as there is at most one year’s worth of donations.
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Donee | Cause area | Metadata | Total |
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Total | -- | -- | 0.00 |
Skipping spending graph as there is at most one year’s worth of donations.
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Title (URL linked) | Publication date | Author | Publisher | Affected donors | Affected donees | Affected influencers | Document scope | Cause area | Notes |
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Important But Neglected: Why an Effective Altruist Funder Is Giving Millions to AI Security | 2019-03-20 | Tate Williams | Inside Philanthropy | Open Philanthropy | Center for Security and Emerging Technology | Third-party coverage of donor strategy | AI safety|Biosecurity and pandemic preparedness|Global catastrophic risks|Security | The article focuses on grantmaking by the Open Philanthropy Project in the areas of global catastrophic risks and security, particularly in AI safety and biosecurity and pandemic preparedness. It includes quotes from Luke Muehlhauser, Senior Research Analyst at the Open Philanthropy Project and the investigator for the $55 million grant https://www.openphilanthropy.org/giving/grants/georgetown-university-center-security-and-emerging-technology to the Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET). Muehlhauser was previously Executive Director at the Machine Intelligence Research Institute. It also includes a quote from Holden Karnofsky, who sees the early interest of effective altruists in AI safety as prescient. The CSET grant is discussed in the context of the Open Philanthropy Project's hits-based giving approach, as well as the interest in the policy space in better understanding of safety and governance issues related to technology and AI. | |
A Research Funder Knocks on the NIH's Door Looking for Ideas—And Big Grants Flow | 2018-01-11 | Tate Williams | Inside Philanthropy | Open Philanthropy | Arizona State University University of Notre Dame Rockefeller University University of California, San Francisco | Third-party coverage of donor strategy | Scientific research | The article discusses the Open Philanthropy Project second chance funding program for rejected applicants of the National Institutes of Health transformative R01 program. | |
Vast Suffering, Clear Solutions: The Logic Behind a Global Push to Help Farm Animals | 2016-11-17 | Tate Williams | Inside Philanthropy | Open Philanthropy | Broad donor strategy | Animal welfare/factory farming | The article reviews Open Philanthropy Project grants for animal welfare, primarily grants focused on cage-free campaigns, decided by program officer Lewis Bollard. The connection with the effective altruist movement is also highlighted. |
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