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Ataftoti

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Can I ask for a link to this 'indirect post'? I'm interested in the generalized lessons being advertised here, but couldn't find the post after looking on LW.

The obvious default conclusion here is that there is nothing inherent in his personality that made him more likely to do this, compared to other EAs.

Other EAs haven't gambled billions of customer funds simply because they didn't have billions of customer funds. If they had been in SBF's situation they may have fallen to the temptation too.

Needless to say, I think what SBF did was unquestionably wrong and condemn it. I'm simply also pessimistic enough to think that I myself, and other regularly-adjusted-humans around me, would also fall to such temptations. Somehow, I really doubt that 100% of the people condemning SBF would have resisted the temptation if they were put into the same situation.

I think the main thrust of the article is the speculation about "Customer C", in this case, Alameda.  That speculation being that FTX lended Alameda customer funds for its own token.

However, this also offers a way out, on the condition that Alameda didn't lose whatever it got. In Matt Levine's analogy, the funds are lost because "Customer C" ran away for selfish reasons, to the detriment of the bank. In this case, Alameda and FTX are both closely associated with Bankman-Fried.

If Alameda still has the assets gotten from FTX customers, it would then be possible to move that back to FTX customers. FTX and Alameda would still be finished in a business sense, but the damage to customers would be minimized.

Of course this is all just blind speculation on my part, and it doesn't look good because Alameda probably already spent all the assets it got from FTX to pay off previous loans. If that is the case then we're still in the same situation with customer funds lost.