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Ray Blasing's avatar

Nan, I hope this forecast is right, but I’m less concerned about the supply of philanthropic capital than the apparent decline in philanthropic conviction.

AI will undoubtedly create a new generation of billionaires. The real question is whether they’ll feel a meaningful obligation to society once they get there.

Recent trends aren’t encouraging. New Giving Pledge signatories have slowed. Some prominent tech leaders have become openly skeptical of large-scale philanthropy. Peter Thiel has publicly criticized the Giving Pledge model and encouraged wealthy peers to distance themselves from it. Meanwhile, many companies that once championed ESG and stakeholder capitalism have quietly retreated when political pressure mounted.

Philanthropy is ultimately a function of values, not wealth. If commitments to societal well-being disappear when they become controversial, inconvenient, or costly, they were never much of a commitment in the first place.

The future may depend less on how much wealth AI creates than on whether its beneficiaries see themselves as stewards of society—or simply winners of the race.

Nathan Young's avatar

If I were to push back on this, I'd say that the frame is very much about what 'other people' can do. And instead I think these problems will be solved by individuals and teams. So either you the reader are such an individual or you aren't. I don't think reading this and nodding changes much if you don't do anything towards it.

I think if you think this is good advice, perhaps spending 3 minutes thinking if you have a specific problem to solve or piece of infrastructure to build. And if not, then stop thinking until next time this comes up. But if so, create time to work on that problem. Then, when the money arrives you'll be able to usefully use it.

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