Welcome! Use this thread to introduce yourself or ask questions about anything that confuses you about EA, or the EA Forum.
Get started on the EA Forum
The "Guide to norms on the Forum" shares more about the kind of discussions we'd like to see on the Forum, and when the moderation team intervenes. For resources that can help you learn about effective altruism, check this list of links.
1. Introduce yourself
If you'd like, share how you became interested in effective altruism, what causes you work on and prioritize, and other fun facts about yourself, in the comments below (For inspiration, you can see the last open thread here). You can also add this information to your Forum bio to help other Forum users get to know you.
2. Ask questions (and answer others' questions)
If anything about the Forum, or effective altruism in general, confuses you, ask your questions in the comments below, or message me. You can also answer other people's questions or discuss the answers. (You might be interested in sharing your question as its own post, if it's on a more complicated or substantial topic.)
Resources like the EA Handbook and the Topics wiki might be helpful for exploring topics related to effective altruism — see more here.
3. Explore and join the conversation
You can check the resources below, start browsing posts on the Frontpage, or explore the "Best of the EA Forum."
You can also start writing! For exploratory or quick thoughts, consider sharing a "Quick take" (or write a post for longer or more fleshed-out content).
If you're unsure whether your first post is suitable for the Forum (or whether it should be a question, quick take, etc...) message me and I'll look it over.
Featured resources (for everyone)
- How to use the Forum outlines the Forum's rules, answers frequently asked questions, etc.
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- The EA Newsletter is a monthly newsletter that compiles EA-related news from around the world and highlights some opportunities to get involved.
Hi everyone! I'm Joanna, 25 year old from Poland. My main EA interests are factory farming, wild animal suffering and s-risks.
I've been thinking of myself as a negative utilitarian for a long time, but the extent of my contribution was being a silent, resigned vegan. I hit rock bottom in September this year after reaching a conclusion that my life is probably a net negative for the world and that I unwittingly cause more suffering than my life is worth. I got support from a community built around David Pearce's 'Hedonistic Imperative' and that's how I learned about EA, so I guess you could say it saved my life.
Since then I've been volunteering for Anima International and offering skilled volunteering for other EA-aligned animal advocacy orgs as a graphic designer (feel free to contact me if you need some graphic design done!)
I'm also trying to decide what to do with my 80.000-n hours, but the more I read the less certain I am (and there wasn't much certainty to begin with). I've worked as a senior artist for the gamedev industry, so my skillset is pretty narrow and mostly redundant due to AI. So far I've finished some courses (mainly on effective animal advocacy and nonprofit work) and I'm now learning data science, economics and biology.
Giving status: monthly donations to ACE and Otwarte Klatki (Anima International); planning to take the GWWC pledge when I have stable income (I'm currently freelancing and in the process of transitioning to a more impactful career path)
degree of initiation into EA: I'm currently halfway through the EA Handbook and 3/4 through the 80.000 Hours career planning course; I've read 'Doing Good Better', '80.000 Hours', 'Map and Territory', 'Hedonistic Imperative', 'Thinking, fast and slow', 'Famine, affluence and morality'; started reading 'Animal Liberation Now', but it was too brutal. I also finished AAC's effective animal advocacy course.
Favourite EA forum post: on the fence between https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/Dtr8aHqCQSDhyueFZ/the-possibility-of-an-ongoing-moral-catastrophe-summary and https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/RZEvk6cBtBg2mpgwS/trigger-warning-violence-animal-vs-human-welfare-sharing
Favourite EA book: 'Doing Good Better', (or, if I can go a bit wider, 'Map and Territory')
What I can offer: volunteering as a graphic designer, I'm also pretty good at tedious labour (like data cleanup) in google sheets.
Hoping to: get more clarity regarding career path and building skills useful for the movement.
Interests outside EA: metalearning, PKMs, productivity, psychology, art (the practical side of it)
Glad to be here!
Hi everyone,
My name is Hans Erickson, I am a 65 year old IT professional that is semi-retired. I still own a small IT support company and have an employee who backfills for me, which allows me to travel.
On a trip to Africa in 2022, I was on a safari and was taken through a remote Botswana village that was the home of our tour guide. He pointed out the school house as we passed through. I had been in Africa once before 15 years earlier participating in a technology conference in Lagos, Nigeria. In my research at the time, I discovered the appalling lack of internet connectivity to the majority of the continent. I asked our tour guide about this, and he confirmed the school had no internet.
I volunteered to set up Starlink internet for the school when the service became available. Just a month ago Starlink officially began service in Botswana. I reached out to my contact and the school administrator that he had connected me to. Because it is a government school, they required formal approval, so I have written letters and responded to questions, but still no approval. I am hopeful now that it is in the hands of their IT administrators that a final approval is coming.
There are approx. 150 students attending the school. My plan is to install the starlink dish, Ubiquiti AP's and remote monitoring equipment, connect everything, and supply some chromebooks for student and administration use. I will also configure a google school account, which provides robust tools for school administrators and students.
I have volunteered to support the starlink subscription for a three year period, after which I hope to convince local authorities or Starlink to continue the service.
I only read the 'Doing Goog Better' book after having made this agreement. In the interest of effective altruism, I was hoping to learn from someone the metrics that would be most beneficial to track for a project like this. I am aware that risks are involved with providing high speed internet in a rural setting, but I am not sure exactly what those risks might be.
Any suggestions or thoughts would be appreciated.
Thanks so much for posting Hans and thanks for your efforts to help. I've lived in UgAnda for 10 years and worked in remote rural areas. This isn't my area of expertise but I might have something useful to share Have private messaged you and keen to have a chat if you are.
That's lovely Hans! Perhaps @NickLaing might have takes on your measurement question?
Thanks for joining the EA Forum.
I'm Toby, the Content Manager for the Forum (I run events, write newsletters, and talk with authors about their work).
Let me know if you have any questions about EA, or using the Forum.
Hi everyone,
My name is Greg Kawere, I am a 39-year-old Zimbabwean and a technology researcher interested in AI Ethics, Data Journalism, and Entrepreneurship Ecosystems.
I hope to create a vibrant EA community in Zimbabwe, particularly in the Chimbidzikai Village where I am based. Philosophically I come from the epistemology community so EA has always intrigued me.
My professional life started as a Web Developer, then a journalist and I later transitioned to product management roles.
I am building the Bikita Institute of Technology a free community college that trains out-of-school rural youth in STEM courses.
Professionally I am trying to pivot to academia specifically AI ethics and governance through either a fellowship or studying for a Masters in AI Ethics.
My work at BIT enables me to transform lives by empowering my community with in-demand STEM skills that they can use to secure remote jobs.
A bit of a background of Bikita, it's a rural district where people rely on small-scale agriculture and remittance for survival.
Unfortunately, livelihoods have been compromised by extreme weather caused by climate change. This started with the Cyclone Idai floods of 2019 followed by the current El Nino induced droughts.
I reason that if I can train the out-of-school youth in STEM courses that are internationally accredited and then help them secure remote jobs I could transform my community.
This BIT project started when two local youths approached me about teaching them how to code in March 2024. We began operations from a solar-powered computer lab housed in a tent using Starlink for our internet.
I now have 20+ students and the community is helping me build a classroom block. I am trying to get BIT accredited by OTHM so that we can offer their Diplomas in IT, AI, Data Science, and Software Engineering.
It's been a rollercoaster journey but I believe that if BIT can train 60 students per year who go on to graduate, in the next 5 years the impact on 300 lives and their families will be transformational to my community.
That's enough sharing for the day
Enjoy
Your work at BIT sounds really fantastic. Well done!
Amazing work Greg. I am based in South Africa and would love to land a hand.
Hi Tandokazi that would be great my email is greg@bit.ac.zw
👍🏿
Hey Greg!
Welcome to the EA Forum :)
I'm Toby, the Content Manager for the Forum (I run events, write newsletters, and talk with authors about their work).
Let me know if you have any questions about EA, or using the Forum.
Hi everyone!
I'm Andre, I'm 25 and am currently living in Ireland. I found the EA community after reading the book The Life You Can Save, which resonated strongly with me! So much so that I'm currently reconsidering my plans and will possibly change careers to something with a positive impact (I currently work in the assisted/autonomous driving industry). I've been learning about the EA movement every since I found out about it, and I'm looking forward to the next session of the EA Introductory Program and to meeting people in the community.
A fun fact about me is that I actually come from a small Portuguese island in the Atlantic. From my childhood home it would take me 15 minutes to either get to the sea or to get lost in a mountain - I think that because of this, I now love the natural world.
Anyway, looking forward to learning more about the community and meeting some of you :D
Hey Andre!
Welcome to the EA Forum :) I'm Toby, the Content Manager for the Forum (I run events, write newsletters, and talk with authors about their work). Let me know if you have any questions about EA, or using the Forum.
The religious iconography in this post tickles me :)