This is a linkpost for https://thefilancabinet.com/episodes/2023/02/05/6-oliver-habryka.html
OK sorry to over-advertise but it seemed like this one would be of interest to the LessWrong and EA communities. Episode description below, audio is here, or search for "The Filan Cabinet Habryka" wherever you listen to podcasts.
In this episode I speak with Oliver Habryka, head of Lightcone Infrastructure, the organization that runs the internet forum LessWrong, about his projects in the rationality and existential risk spaces. Topics we talk about include:
- How did LessWrong get revived?
- How good is LessWrong?
- Is there anything that beats essays for making intellectual contributions on the internet?
- Why did the team behind LessWrong pivot to property development?
- What does the FTX situation tell us about the wider LessWrong and Effective Altruism communities?
- What projects could help improve the world's rationality?
Maybe most relevant excerpt for the forum (taken from 01:08:45, might contain some mistakes):
Man, I'm just gonna take this moment to have a Habryka appreciation subthread. For someone with his responsibilities to just speak from the heart and report what he sees with his eyeballs is rarer than I wish it was, but in my mind he really sets the bar and the tone for how EA leadership should aspire to be acting in public.
Adding to the appreciation subthread:
Oliver Habryka's comments here and on Twitter, the ones honestly just defending his beliefs even when controversial have made me feel safer and more comfortable in EA. It's wholesome
Also I think I probably use the word "integrity" a lot more now because of him lol
Like I think he has made an actual difference in me being more honest and more willing to share my actual beliefs with others.
My guess is that some people may come away thinking something like "Will, Toby, Beckstead, Owen, and other people who remain senior in EA executed things like the CEA-GWWC merger." Is this correct, or was it mainly the Leverage people (Kerry, Tyler, Larissa, and Tara)? I don't actually know, but it may be worth clarifying.
My understanding of what was going on at the time was that the board and advisors failed to prevent Leverage from gaining a lot of influence over CEA until they finally intervened in December 2018, but that they would not have endorsed what was going on if they had fully understood the situation. Whether someone was more like a victim, a bystander, or actively deceptive matters a lot, I think.
Will was I think still CEO when the decision was made and was directly involved in the decision. Beckstead was board member but I think was quite checked out. A lot of the momentum came from Tara, and Kerry was also pretty involved.
Agree that it matters that some people were more like victims. I do think Will meaningfully contributed to the atmosphere, and do think Nick sure failed to play his role as a board member. I don't think Owen played much of a role. I had a number of interactions with Toby that made me also not trust him (when I organized EA Global 2015 he invited his wife to change the program substantially to be more in line with a bunch of social justice considerations because she seemed to care about it, and she also leveraged her connection with him to violate a bunch of rules at EAG about not having loud children present in sessions that was one of the top complaints we got that year at the Oxford conference, and when we asked her to please be less loud or leave she was like "I am Toby's wife, you don't get to tell me what to do").
There things were substantially less severe, but it did feel like a pretty straightforward abuse of power, and has generally made me not trust Toby very much. I've also never brought this up with him, so it's pretty plausible he would have taken reasonable action if he had known.
In any case, I don't think there was really anyone I interfaced with at CEA who struck me as high-integrity who was involved in the leadership. I think Nick Beckstead was probably the best and I've generally respected him a good amount over the years. I also trust Owen a good amount, though he was just starting to get involved with stuff at the time. Julia Wise also seems like a high-integrity person, but always intentionally avoided being directly involved in leadership.
I think CEA after Open Phil stepped in and fired a bunch of people has been much less of a deceptive environment, though still quite dysfunctional, and still not very high-integrity (but definitely with less egregious lying and deception and backstabbing).
Wait, was Tara a Leverage person? Kerry and Larissa work for Leverage now and Tyler was affiliated in the past, but I wasn't under the impression Tara was particularly involved with Leverage -- though I could of course be wrong!
I do not read Oli as saying that Tara was at Leverage, and I've never heard that she was.
Yes, to be clear I don't think Oli was necessarily claiming that -- I was replying to Jonas here, who listed Tara as one of "the Leverage people" in his own comment.
Here is a full transcript of the episode (not prepared by me): https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/4NFDwQRhHBB2Ad4ZY/the-filan-cabinet-podcast-with-oliver-habryka-transcript
I ended up talking to Will two weeks ago about some of the content of this podcast and some comments I left on the forum and made some updates. I posted them in this comment, though I'll also quote them here for convenience:
can't find on stitcher. AXRP is on stitcher though.
Can you let me know if you can now find it on stitcher?
yep just followed. Thanks!
Thanks for letting me know - it should be added now.