It’s an interesting idea, but the track records of the grantees are important information, right? And if the track record includes, say, a previous paper that the funder has already read, then you can’t submit the paper with author names redacted.
Also, ask people seeking funding to make specific, unambiguous, easily falsiable predictions of positive outcomes from their work. And track and follow up on this!
Wouldn’t it be better for the funder to just say “if I’m going to fund Group X for Y months / years of work, I should see what X actually accomplished in the last Y months / years, and assume it will be vaguely similar”? And if Group X has no comparable past experience, then fine, but that equally means that you have no basis for believing their predictions right now.
Also, what if someone predicts that they’ll do A, but then realizes it would be better if they did B? Two possibilities are: (1) You the funder trust their judgment. Then you shouldn’t be putting even minor mental barriers in the way of their pivoting. Pivoting is hard and very good and important! (2) You the funder don’t particular trust the recipient’s judgment, you were only funding it because you wanted that specific deliverable. But then the normal procedure is that the funder and recipient work together to determine the deliverables that the funder wants and that the recipient is able to provide. Like, if I’m funding someone to build a database of AI safety papers, then I wouldn’t ask them to “make falsifiable predictions about the outcomes from their work”, instead I would negotiate a contract with them that says they’re gonna build the database. Right? I mean, I guess you could call that a falsifiable prediction, of sorts, but it’s a funny way to talk about it.
A solution I’ve come around to for this is retroactive funding. As in, if someone did something essentially without funding, that resulted in outcomes, which if you knew were guaranteed, you would have funded/donated to the project, then donate to the person to encourage them to do it more.
It’s an interesting idea, but the track records of the grantees are important information, right? And if the track record includes, say, a previous paper that the funder has already read, then you can’t submit the paper with author names redacted.
Wouldn’t it be better for the funder to just say “if I’m going to fund Group X for Y months / years of work, I should see what X actually accomplished in the last Y months / years, and assume it will be vaguely similar”? And if Group X has no comparable past experience, then fine, but that equally means that you have no basis for believing their predictions right now.
Also, what if someone predicts that they’ll do A, but then realizes it would be better if they did B? Two possibilities are: (1) You the funder trust their judgment. Then you shouldn’t be putting even minor mental barriers in the way of their pivoting. Pivoting is hard and very good and important! (2) You the funder don’t particular trust the recipient’s judgment, you were only funding it because you wanted that specific deliverable. But then the normal procedure is that the funder and recipient work together to determine the deliverables that the funder wants and that the recipient is able to provide. Like, if I’m funding someone to build a database of AI safety papers, then I wouldn’t ask them to “make falsifiable predictions about the outcomes from their work”, instead I would negotiate a contract with them that says they’re gonna build the database. Right? I mean, I guess you could call that a falsifiable prediction, of sorts, but it’s a funny way to talk about it.
A solution I’ve come around to for this is retroactive funding. As in, if someone did something essentially without funding, that resulted in outcomes, which if you knew were guaranteed, you would have funded/donated to the project, then donate to the person to encourage them to do it more.
I think this is easier to anonymize, with the exception of very specific things that people become famous for.