Lightcone Infrastructure is looking for funding and are working on the following projects:
- We run LessWrong, the AI Alignment Forum, and have written a lot of the code behind the Effective Altruism Forum.
- During 2022 and early 2023 we ran the Lightcone Offices, and are now building out a campus at the Rose Garden Inn in Berkeley, where we've been doing repairs and renovations for the past few months.
- We've also been substantially involved in the Survival and Flourishing Fund's S-Process (having written the app that runs the process) and are now running Lightspeed Grants.
- We also pursue a wide range of other smaller projects in the space of "community infrastructure" and "community crisis management". This includes running events, investigating harm caused by community institutions and actors, supporting programs like SERI MATS, and maintaining various small pieces of software infrastructure.
If you are interested in funding us, please shoot me an email at habryka@lesswrong.com (or if you want to give smaller amounts, you can donate directly via PayPal here).
Funding is quite tight since the collapse of FTX, and I do think we work on projects that have a decent chance of reducing existential risk and generally making humanity's future go a lot better, though this kind of stuff sure is hard to tell. We are looking to raise around $3M to $6M for our operations in the next 12 months.[1]
Also feel free to ask any questions in the comments.
- ^
Two draft readers of this post expressed confusion that Lightcone needs money, given that we just announced a funding process that is promising to give away $5M in the next two months. The answer to that is that we do not own the money moved via Lightspeed Grants and are only providing grant recommendations to Jaan Tallinn and other funders.
We do separately apply for funding from the Survival and Flourishing Fund, through which Jaan has been our second biggest funder. We also continue to actively fundraise from both SFF and Open Philanthropy (our largest funder).
Here are some things I like about owning this space:
Perhaps of interest, when we were considering alternative locations, the main other places that had the properties of my first two bullets were educational religious spaces. The School of Religion, the School of Theology, and a strange surprise-Buddhist-temple that Habryka and I unexpectedly found ourselves in one evening (as the woman was showing us around the school-like building, she fully walked past the temple doors, until I politely asked to look inside, and she unlocked them to show us a ~7k square foot room with a 40-foot high ceiling, filled with golden statues and colorful ribbons hanging from the ceiling and ancient texts inscribed on rotating pillars and 300 folding chairs and a big stage). These places had a lot of beauty. But one of them basically wasn't on sale, and the other two were only partially on sale (we couldn't have owned the whole property and would have to share with some religious groups, which is not a total dealbreaker but I strongly prefer having full ownership).
We also considered renting solely office spaces, which would have been much faster to get started with, and were on the verge of going through on a deal last year. But then at the last minute they explained the elevator needed replacing and would be out of use for the first 2 months of us living there (which is a pretty big obstruction for moving in all of our heavy furniture up ~3 floors). They wouldn't negotiate at all on this and we walked away. I actually heard (epistemic status: I assign 75% to this being true, I have pinged the person who said this to me to double-check) that the elevator only actually got fixed around a month or two ago. To me not having to deal with this is part of the advantage of having full-ownership I describe in the first bullet above.