Nonlinear’s Evidence: Debunking False and Misleading Claims

post by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-12T13:16:12.008Z · LW · GW · 171 comments

171 comments

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comment by Ben Pace (Benito) · 2023-12-13T03:19:34.459Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Brief update: I am still in the process of reading this. At this point I have given the post itself a once-over, and begun to read it more slowly (and looking through the appendices as they're linked).

I think any and all primary sources that Kat provides are good (such as the page of records of transactions). I am also grateful that they have not deanonymized Alice and Chloe.

I plan to compare the things that this post says directly against specific claims in mine, and acknowledge anything where I was factually inaccurate. I also plan to do a pass where I figure out which claims of mine this post responds to and which it doesn’t, and I want to reflect on the new info that’s been entered into evidence and how it relates to the overall picture. 

It probably goes without saying that I (and everyone reading) want to believe true things and not false things about this situation. If I made inaccurate statements I would like to know that and correct them.

As I wrote [EA · GW] in my follow-up post, I am not intending to continue spear-heading an investigation into Nonlinear. However this post makes some accusations of wrongdoing on my part, which I intend to respond to, and of course for that it is relevant whether the things I said are actually true.

I hope to write a response sometime this week, but I am not committing to any deadlines.

Not sure if it’s worth mentioning, but I hope that people reading this are aware of what Kat writes at the bottom of the appendices:

A quick note on how we use quotation marks: we sometimes use them for direct quotes and sometimes use them to paraphrase. If you want to find out if they’re a direct quote, just ctrl-f in the original post and see if it is or not.

Many of the things that are quotes next to my name are not things I said and not things that I would endorse, and I believe the same is true of many sentences in quotation marks attributed to Alice/Chloe.

Replies from: Benito, tracingwoodgrains
comment by Ben Pace (Benito) · 2023-12-21T03:56:00.621Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

My attention continues to be on the question of whether my post was accurate and whether this post debunks the claims and narratives shared in mine. To minimize public attention costs and also to preserve my own sanity, I am aiming to engage with Nonlinear’s response in a way that focuses only on the clearest and most direct critiques of my post. I’m currently focusing on 2-3 of the claims in their response that most contradict my post, investigating them further, and intend to publish the results of that.

Once I’ve finished that process and shared my thinking (including making edits to my original post to correct any mistakes), I’ll engage more with the rest of the comments and what the appropriate norms are and whether I should’ve done things substantially differently, but in the meantime I think my efforts are better spent figuring out what is actually true about the relationship Nonlinear had with its employees.

I am trying to avoid writing my bottom line, and reduce any (further) friction to me changing my mind on this subject, which is a decent chunk of why I’m not spending time arguing in the comments right now (I expect that to give me a pretty strong “digging in my heels” incentive).

(...that said, I think Dialogues are pretty great for respectful discussions about high-stakes topics, and I am definitely more open to having dialogues with people who think I clearly messed up or want to discuss some particular issue. Though it’s still probably worth waiting on those until after I’ve sorted out the object level.)

I am currently quite skeptical about the narratives presented in this post for a number of reasons, not least because the post repeatedly fails to engage with or even accurately describe what I wrote. There are many strawman accusations that it successfully knocks down, which you will notice if you compare the claims that Kat rebukes with what I actually wrote in the original. I also question a number of the factual claims and I am investigating those.

Regarding timing, it’d be great to get something out this week, but also it’s literally 5 days away from Christmas. I don’t strongly expect to post before Christmas Eve, and I don’t want to disrupt my and others’ vacation days by posting in between, so if I’ve not written a post by EOD on the 23rd by then I will not post until the New Year (no earlier than Jan 2nd).

Replies from: ea247
comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-21T15:43:42.988Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I’m currently focusing on 2-3 of the claims in their response that most contradict my post, investigating them further, and intend to publish the results of that.

I hope that while you’re investigating this, you talk to us and ask us for any evidence we have. We’re more than happy to share relevant evidence and are willing to set reasonable deadlines for how long it’ll take for us to send it to you. 

We also don’t want to waste more people’s time on going back and forth publicly about the evidence when you can easily check with us first before publishing. 

I also recommend you talk to us and see our evidence before you write the post. If you’ve already written the post, it’s hard to update afterward when you get more information. And it’s hard to write an accurate post before you’ve seen all the relevant information. 

We did not share all of the relevant evidence because it was already hundreds of pages long and we tried to prioritize. We have more evidence that might be relevant to your post. 

I am trying to avoid writing my bottom line, and reduce any (further) friction to me changing my mind on this subject, which is a decent chunk of why I’m not spending time arguing in the comments right now (I expect that to give me a pretty strong “digging in my heels” incentive).

I think this is smart and appreciate it. 

Replies from: bec-hawk
comment by Rebecca (bec-hawk) · 2023-12-22T09:32:13.571Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I strongly think that much or even most of the commentary could have been discarded in favour of more evidence

comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T13:26:43.571Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think it's worth explicitly stating that while I think most in this community are reading "I plan to compare the things that this post says directly against specific claims in mine, and acknowledge anything where I was factually inaccurate" as an example of a positive norm, it reads to me as a strongly negative one. 

Specifically: Based on this comment [EA(p) · GW(p)], it sounds like you knew or should have known much of this evidence was available upon the decision to publish your original post, and you went ahead regardless without waiting to review claims that falsify parts of your original post. In other words, you mixed what appear to be materially false claims with true ones in a post aimed explicitly at destroying the reputation of an organization. The correct time to update factual inaccuracies in something so high-stakes is not after-the-fact, it is prior to publication, and the presence of correctable falsehoods in the original, whether or not you subsequently correct them, is a major issue.

Replies from: habryka4, faul_sname
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-14T22:37:05.834Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Specifically: Based on this comment [EA(p) · GW(p)], it sounds like you knew or should have known much of this evidence was available upon the decision to publish your original post, and you went ahead regardless without waiting to review claims that falsify parts of your original post.

To be clear, as I think I have stated in like dozens of places, at the time the post was written, all evidence that Ben was given made it into the post. There are no glaring omissions, the post accurately captured Ben's epistemic state at the time. 

The only thing happening was that Nonlinear was claiming many of the concrete claims were false, which we did not believe them on (and I still don't believe them on). Spencer sent us a screenshot about the vegan food stuff 2 hours before publication, which Ben didn't get around to editing in before the post went live, but that's all the evidence that I know about that you could somehow argue we had but didn't include. It is not accurate that Nonlinear sent credible signals of having counterevidence before the post went live (and if someone wants to, I would probably be up for arranging a call with a neutral third party to walk them through the totality of our Nonlinear communications and see whether they find anything that really seems like it had to be included).

(The one other thing that didn't end up in the post was Alice's side-business, which we did know about but didn't consider very important, and Nonlinear didn't bring it up in the pre-publication conversations we had. Ben is sad about not including it, but it also didn't seem that material to the case given that it probably never made much money, though me and Ben still think it would have been good to include. However, again, Nonlinear did not poke us about this or share evidence that it was important or was an important omission before publishing)

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains, vlad-firoiu, daniel-glasscock
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-15T00:41:11.041Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I responded to your EA forum comments much earlier in the day, but my responses are still stuck in the mod filter, so I might repeat myself a bit here. I'm not part of EA, but I've been around the rationalist sphere for a long while and I have more experience than most here with investigative journalism–adjacent work. 

You regularly mention hundreds of hours of work, a deadline you had to meet, the inconvenience you would have faced upon delaying, and the chance that you might have chosen not to publish at all had you delayed. 

That's all very well and good, but honestly doesn't sway the needle for me at all in terms of your duty in the situation. Self-imposed deadlines are not an excuse to avoid hearing out one party to a conflict you're publishing.

In those hundreds of hours, so far as I can tell, you spent a grand total of three gathering one side of the story—the side of a group Ben's post was explicitly adversarial towards and explicitly aimed at destroying the reputation of. When they told him they were compiling a detailed list of evidence to respond to some of his claims, you guys flatly refused to investigate further or delay your self-imposed deadline. I cover a story like this almost every week for the podcast I work for, and I put more time into gathering opposing stories than that. 

I believe you when you say that (almost) all evidence Ben was given made it into the post. I emphatically disagree that holding a firm publication deadline was reasonable when you were being warned of evidence that would materially contradict many claims within your post. When the reputation of someone within their own community is at stake, you want to dot every i and cross every t, and spending hundreds of hours over the course of several months collecting accusations and a single-digit number in a week collecting rebuttals, up to and including making significant corrections on the final day and rejecting other significant corrections as being too late to add, does not meet that standard. 

Trying someone in the court of public opinion can be as serious a matter as trying them in the court of law, and while you say the goal of the post was not to judge, that is both hard to square with lines like "I expect that if Nonlinear does more hiring in the EA ecosystem it is more-likely-than-not to chew up and spit out other bright-eyed young EAs who want to do good in the world" and hard to square with the duty you take on by electing to publish an exposé about someone. You have to play the role of judge in an article like that, and you are not fulfilling your duty by circulating allegations without putting in sufficient due diligence. 

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T03:40:53.074Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

In those hundreds of hours, so far as I can tell, you spent a grand total of three gathering one side of the story—the side of a group Ben's post was explicitly adversarial towards and explicitly aimed at destroying the reputation of.

Look, man, what do you want us to do. We talked to dozens of other people working at the organization, extensively cross-checked the stories they told us, and also did extensive independent research to figure out what happened. Also, our sources were terrified of retribution and did not want to be exposed to the leadership. 

We talked to them multiple times, for many hours, though yeah, we weren't able to show them everything we were planning to publish. What is the threshold of hours of engagement where it's OK to publish such an article according to your perspective?

This is all totally standard stuff when you do investigative reporting. Of course you don't always give the organization you are reporting on full access to your article before you publish it. I wish people could reliably do that, but it's genuinely hard with sources who are worried about retribution.

I encourage you to talk to any investigative reporter with experience in the field and ask them whether your demands here are at all realistic for anyone working in the space.

and spending hundreds of hours over the course of several months collecting accusations and a single-digit number in a week collecting rebuttals, up to and including making significant corrections on the final day

This is also really not an accurate summary. Most of the months were spent crossing the i's and dotting the t's. They were spent trying to find contradictory evidence, and they were also spent following up on concrete things that the Nonlinear leadership told us about. 

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains, drew-spartz
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-15T04:33:00.923Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I told you what I wanted you to do. You say it's unrealistic, I say that I wouldn't think to hold you to a standard I don't hold myself to.

I'm a blogger and a podcast producer, not an investigative journalist, and I'm paid to focus on internet nonsense, not truly critical, world-saving stuff. But I do my fair share of investigative work. This article is one of my recent high-effort investigations, over someone getting punched on a beach after a long series of ugly subculture drama—a much lower-stakes sequence than the one you covered, but one no less personal or painful for the participants. 

The "antagonists" were not particularly communicative, but I reached out to them multiple times, including right before publication, checking if I could ask questions and asking them to review my claims about them for accuracy. I went to the person closest to them who was informed on the situation and got as much information as I could from them. I spent hours talking with my primary sources, the victim and his boyfriend, and collecting as much hard evidence as possible. I spent a long time weighing which points were material and which would just serve to stir up and uncover old drama. Parties claimed I was making major material errors at several points during the process, and I dug into their claims as thoroughly as I could and asked for all available evidence to verify. Often, the disputes they claimed were material hinged on dissatisfaction with framing.

All sources were, mutually, worried about retribution and vitriol from the other parties involved. All sources were part of the same niche subculture spaces, all had interacted many times over the past half-decade, mostly unhappily, and all had complicated, ugly backstories. 

I was not paid for this, except inasmuch as I'm paid a part-time monthly salary for podcast production work. I did it in my spare time while balancing a full law school schedule. I approached it with care, with seriousness, and with full understanding of the reputational effects I expected it to have and the evidence I had backing and justifying those effects. What I want you to do is exactly what I would do if I were assigned this task, given comparable timing and hour constraints. No more, no less. 

There's no threshold of hours of engagement. The test I am describing is this: are you receiving, or do you seem likely to receive, new material facts that contradict elements of your narrative? You were, up until two hours before publication, with a promise that there was more on the way. There is nothing unreasonable about saying publication should be delayed in that circumstance.

Anyway, look, I'm not an investigative reporter with experience in the field, much as I LARP as one online. That said, I'm on good personal terms with several and am happy to put my money where my mouth is and check with them. Let me know if the following is an appropriate summary or whether you'd make changes:

Say you were advising someone on a story they'd been working on for six months aimed at presenting an exposé of a group their sources were confident was doing harm. They'd contacted dozens of people, cross-checked stories, and did extensive independent research over the course of hundreds of hours, paying their key sources for the trouble. Their sources, who will be anonymous but realistically identifiable in the article, express serious concerns about retribution and request a precise, known-in-advance publication date. Towards the end, they contact the group in question, with their primary conversation lasting a few hours and coming less than a week before their scheduled publication date. The group claims that several points in their article are materially wrong and libelous and asks for another week to compile evidence to rebut those claims, growing increasingly frantic as the publication date approaches and escalating to a threat of a libel suit. On the last day before publication, they show a draft to another person close to the story, who makes at least one clear correction of material fact, then, with a couple of hours to go before the scheduled publication, provides evidence contradicting another of the article's supporting claims. 

Would you advise them to publish the article in its current form, make a last-minute edit to include the final piece of material evidence, wait another week to review the claimed rebuttal, or take some other course of action?

Replies from: habryka4, ea247
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T04:49:35.251Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I like this summary, actually! Some small edits I would make: 

On the last day before publication, they show a draft to another person close to the story, who makes at least one clear correction of material fact, then, with a couple of hours to go before the scheduled publication, provides evidence contradicting another of the article's supporting claims. 

This is currently inaccurate. Spencer did not point out a material inaccuracy. Here is the original quote that we showed Spencer: 

(After making that decision I was also linked to this ominous yet still vague EA Forum thread [EA(p) · GW(p)], which further links to a lot of Glassdoor reviews for the previous company run by Nonlinear Cofounder Emerson Spartz, with many strongly negative reviews saying things like “I still have nightmares. Like, actual nightmares while I'm asleep.” and “On any given week in the office, the chances were pretty high that someone would end up crying, screaming or melting down.” and “Don't work here unless you want to be belittled, stretched too thin, and undervalued.” and “No amount of snacks make up for the toxic and traumatizing workplace environment nurtured here”.)

This is all totally accurate. Spencer pointed out that a good chunk of the relevant review period was not the one in which Emerson was CEO, and so not all of these reviews must be of Emerson as CEO (which we did not claim, but I can see how someone might read it that way). So we edited it to be the following: 

(After making that decision I was also linked to this ominous yet still vague EA Forum thread [EA(p) · GW(p)], that includes a former coworker of Kat Woods saying they did not like working with her, more comments like the one I received above, and links to a lot of strongly negative Glassdoor reviews for Nonlinear Cofounder Emerson Spartz's former company “Dose”. Note that more than half of the negative reviews are for the company after Emerson sold it, but this is a concerning one from 2015 (while Emerson Spartz was CEO/Cofounder): "All of these super positive reviews are being commissioned by upper management. That is the first thing you should know about Spartz, and I think that gives a pretty good idea of the company's priorities… care more about the people who are working for you and less about your public image". A 2017 review says "The culture is toxic with a lot of cliques, internal conflict, and finger pointing." There are also far worse reviews about a hellish work place which are very worrying, but they’re from the period after Emerson’s LinkedIn says he left, so I’m not sure to what extent he is responsible he is for them.)

I think the previous reviews were relevant to the case at hand, and the evidence was accurate as presented (even if they were about the company that Emerson left behind, and not while he was there, though some of the reviews were about Emerson). We did nevertheless replace it with just reviews from the relevant time period, to make things more robust, but I do not consider the previous presentation inaccurate, and the pointer to the glassdoor page to still be relevant evidence (especially given the one review we quoted here, which mentions Spartz directly).

As such, it is not accurate to say that material inaccuracies were pointed out to us in the post. 

Towards the end, they contact the group in question, with their primary conversation lasting a few hours and coming less than a week before their scheduled publication date. 

This is also inaccurate in that we first talked to Nonlinear about the accusations many months before the publication date, when we weren't sure yet whether we would publish anything on this topic. What is accurate is that we only informed Nonlinear that we are going to publish a post and informed them about the material facts. 

Here is how I would currently phrase things, leaving most of your language intact: 

Say you were advising someone on a story they'd been working on for six months aimed at presenting an exposé of a group their sources were confident was doing harm. They'd contacted dozens of people, cross-checked stories, and did extensive independent research over the course of hundreds of hours. 

Their sources, who will be anonymous but realistically identifiable in the article, express serious concerns about retribution and request a known-in-advance publication date. 

They have talked to the group they are investigating multiple times to gather evidence, but have not informed them that they are planning to release an exposé with the evidence they gathered. 7 days before their scheduled publication date they contact the group and inform them about their intent to publish and the key claims they are planning to include in their exposé.

The group claims that several points in their article are materially wrong and libelous and asks for another week to compile evidence to rebut those claims, growing increasingly frantic as the publication date approaches and escalating to a threat of a libel suit. 

On the last day before publication, they show a draft to another person close to the story who points out a detail that does not directly contradict anything in the post, but seems indirectly implied to be false, which they correct in the final publication. Then with two hours to go before the scheduled publication, the same contact provides evidence against one of the statements made in the post, though also does not definitely disprove it.

Would you advise them to publish the article in its current form, or delay publication, despite the credible requests about the sources about retribution and the promise of the scheduled publication date?

If you would be up for sending something like this to someone who works in investigative journalism, I would actually appreciate it. Some things that seem relevant to clarify: 

  1. I would really like you to avoid framing the question too much. I think this is very easy among friends.
  2. I think it would be good to differentiate "what he considers prudent for your own libel risk" from "what he considers his ethical responsibility". I think it's somewhat plausible (though not that likely) that he would be like "well, you really want to avoid a libel suit so you have to halt publication", but I am more interested what he would consider ethical, ignoring self-interest (I think whether it was prudent to go ahead given libel risk is an interesting question, but not I hope to answer with this inquiry). 

Thank you for offering to do this. I do find myself pretty interested in the answer. I don't think an answer one way or another would totally flip me here, but I would definitely update somewhat.

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-15T04:56:52.941Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

It's tempting to nitpick the edits a bit, but I think this is probably close enough to get good answers while being approximately satisfactory to both of us. I'll let you know how it goes.

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T04:59:54.785Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thank you, I appreciate it! 

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-15T16:39:58.708Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

The above image contains the full text of my message, absent the rest of the copy-pasted hypo. I'll note in the interests of broad fairness that other involved parties suggested edits, notably that the last-minute evidence was evidence indicating the key witness had lied and that "7 days" is longer than they had to respond to the material claims. I used none of their suggestions. I think the hypo could be a reasonable question across a somewhat broad range of specific factual emphases and think the framing as-is is sufficient to get good answers; in my messages, I did not alter the hypo from the words you chose.

I reached out to three journalists with long investigative track records and have two responses so far. It goes without saying that these are people I have close working relationships, regular communication, or other personal connections with, but I believe the framing and lack of context provided mean they are well-positioned to consider the question in the abstract and on the merits independent of any connections.

The first response (update: from Katie Herzog):

I would delay publication. I’m not sure about the specifics of libel law but putting myself in a publisher’s shoes, they do tend to not want to get sued and your first commitment, beyond getting the scoop or even stopping the hypothetical group from doing harm, should be towards accuracy. 

The second (update: from Jesse Singal):

I think it depends a lot on the group's ability to provide evidence the investigators' claims are wrong. In a situation like that I would really press them on the specifics. They should be able to provide evidence fairly quickly. You don't want a libel suit but you also don't want to let them indefinitely delay the publication of an article that will be damaging to them. It is a tricky situation! I am not sure an investigative reporter would be able to help much more simply because what you're providing is a pretty vague account, though I totally understand the reasons why that's necessary.

UPDATE: 

The third, from Helen Lewis:

This feels like a good example of why you shouldn’t over-promise to your sources—you want a cordial relationship with them but you need boundaries too. I can definitely see a situation where you would agree to give a source a heads up once you’d decided to publish — if it was a story where they’d recounted a violent incident or sexual assault, or if they needed notice to stay somewhere else or watch out for hacking attempts. But I would be very wary of agreeing in advance when I would publish an investigation—it isn’t done until it’s done.

In the end the story is going out under your name, and you will face the legal and ethical consequences, so you can’t publish until you’re satisfied. If the sources are desperate to make the information public, they can make a statement on social media. Working with a journalist involves a trade-off: in exchange for total control, you get greater credibility, plausible deniability and institutional legal protection. If I wasn’t happy with a story against a ticking clock, I wouldn’t be pressured into publication. That’s a huge risk of libelling the subjects of the piece and trashing your professional reputation.

On the request for more time for right to reply, that’s a judgement call—is this a fair period for the allegations involved, or time wasting? It’s not unknown for journalists to put in a right to reply on serious allegations, and the subject ask for more time, and then try to get ahead of the story by breaking it themselves (by denying it).

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T17:50:15.470Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thank you!

Hmm, the first one seems to be responding at the level of "here is how you don't get sued". Would be interested in a follow-up question asking what to do if you are not concerned about getting sued.

The second one makes sense. Would be happy to draft something with more detail as a response, so we can get something out of it. 

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-15T15:22:02.373Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I would change the text. He gave us less than 24 hours.

He sent us the draft in the middle of the night, filled with many accusations we hadn't even heard of, on a day he knew we were traveling and wouldn't be able to respond properly. He said he'd publish it that very day (aka <24 hours)

He ended up publishing it the next day at a time where we normally would have been asleep, except that we'd asked a friend to call us and wake us up if Ben was posting. We ended up having to respond to that post on a fraction of the sleep we usually get. 

You could try to save he gave us 60 hours if you count from the time he spoke to us to the time he published. However, when we spoke to him, we thought he would wait to see our evidence. He also didn't tell us many of the accusations he was going to publish, so I think this is an unfair characterization of the time they gave us

He did not promise to look at the evidence before publishing, so he was consistent in that regard, but we thought he would wait since he explicitly said in a follow up email: "FYI I did update from things you shared that Alice's reports are less reliable than I had thought, and I do expect you'll be able to show a bunch of the things you said."

He did not wait to see the evidence. The evidence he'd already seen had, in his own words, made him realize that Alice was less reliable than he thought, and he knew we were sending him things like interview transcripts and screenshots providing concrete evidence that they'd told him falsehoods and misleading claims. 

And he published anyways. 

I think it would be good to share that with your journalist friends. 

Here's the relevant section explaining the whole timeline

comment by Drew Spartz (drew-spartz) · 2023-12-15T13:29:22.991Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I've been trying to stay out of this, but I'm honestly shocked at this claim you're making.

You say:

We talked to dozens of other people working at the organization, extensively cross-checked the stories they told us

But this is, just, wildly false? You did not speak to dozens of other people working at Nonlinear.

And Ben himself contradicts you. In Ben's post, he says:

My current understanding is that they’ve had around ~4 remote interns, 1 remote employee, and 2 in-person employees (Alice and Chloe).

Ben thinks we’ve only had 7 total team members, but we've actually had 21 - extremely far off.

If you "extensively cross-checked the stories," how did Ben get such a basic number so wrong? And why are you under the impression that you had talked to dozens of employees if Ben did not?

The fact that you spent 1000 hours on this and got such key details this wrong is surprising to me.

Ok, but why is this a big deal? Aside from showing egregiously bad fact checking, a large portion of Ben's post was trying to make the case that there is a pattern of Nonlinear "chewing up and spitting out other bright-eyed young EAs who want to do good in the world." It would significantly weaken your case if it were 2 out of 21 team members [1]were unhappy instead of 2 out of 7.

Not only that, but to my knowledge, Ben did not talk to a single employee or intern since Alice and Chloe to see if these patterns were, in fact, patterns.

This seems like poor truth-seeking to me.

  1. ^

    edit: changed "employees" to "team members"

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T18:40:52.000Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Sorry, saying "worked at" is definitely not the right term, sorry about that. 

We talked to dozens of people who have either worked at Nonlinear, otherwise worked with people currently at Nonlinear, or have substantially engaged with Nonlinear in a professional capacity and so seem like they are in a good position to judge what happened. "Worked at" is definitely the wrong word. I should have said something like "have worked with people at Nonlinear". 

I don't particularly want to litigate the employee thing in this random thread. My best guess is Ben was talking about the number of employees during the specific stretch of months that the article was covering. 

It is also inaccurate that only 2 employees we talked to had bad experiences. As Ben mentions multiple times in the post, many additional people we talked to had bad experiences (though generally of somewhat lesser magnitude). 

comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-14T23:29:32.559Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

This squares very starkly in contrast with Nonlinear's perception of things. It seems to me that all the work in your comment is being done by the "we did not believe them on" bit, which is very subjective and frankly would be ridiculous in something like fair trial -- it would be like saying "the defense is not allowed to bring witnesses or make a case, because despite them claiming that they'll make a strong case, we (the prosection) just don't believe them". You can argue about whether Nonlinear's eventual response was satisfactory (though their evidence seems compelling to me), but I'm not seeing your case on this point in particular.

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-14T23:59:33.825Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Hmm, I don't think I am understanding this comment, so might be best to just clarify. 

Ben's goal with the post was really not to be judge, I hope he made that abundantly clear. The goal was to publish some evidence that had been extensively circulating around privately in the EA Community for a while, so that more people could take it into account, and also allow Nonlinear to publish a response or try to refute that evidence.

For that purpose, the question is whether Ben published anything that he knew was wrong. He did not do so, to the best of my knowledge. Nonlinear objected to a bunch of stuff, and we tried our best to summarize their objections in the post (in the section that is a summary of Nonlinear's position). Lightcone did not (and continues to not) have the capacity to fully validate every claim given to us, though like, we did spend close to a thousand hours in terms of talking to sources and trying to validate and fact-check the things that were given to us. This included talking to Nonlinear and engaging with their evidence, though we were quite limited in what things our sources allowed us to share with them before publication.

Given this, I am not really sure what point you are making in this comment. I think it would have been bad for us to selectively fail to publish evidence that we did have, but we did not do so (though Nonlinear is accusing Ben of doing that, which is false, as far as I can tell). I agree we could have of course spent more time fact-checking things, but again we were limited in what we could share with Nonlinear before publication, and also had already spent hundreds of hours doing that kind of work, conducting interviews with over a dozen different people who had experiences with Nonlinear, cross-checking various details and facts to verify to the best of our ability that they added up.

Replies from: vlad-firoiu
comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-15T00:54:46.066Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Hm, a lot I disagree with here, but a crux is that I think you're not really replying to TracingWoodgrain's original point, which was that Ben knew there might be significant evidence contradicting much of his post but decided not to wait for it and published anyways (which TW considers to be a bad norm). Instead you seem to be changing frame to "did Ben publish anything which he knew for sure wasn't true", which is quite different, particularly in this case where evidence is deliberately not being looked at.

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T04:57:40.835Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Ah, sorry, I did understand your question to be about the latter. That's just a relatively straightforward misunderstanding. Might write more on the former. 

comment by Daniel (daniel-glasscock) · 2023-12-14T23:55:38.893Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Spencer sent us a screenshot about the vegan food stuff 2 hours before publication, which Ben didn't get around to editing in before the post went live, but that's all the evidence that I know about that you could somehow argue we had but didn't include. It is not accurate that Nonlinear sent credible signals of having counterevidence before the post went live

Uh, actually I do think that being sent screenshots showing that claims made in the post are false 2 hours before publication is a credible signal that Nonlinear has counterevidence.

I can’t believe I’m saying this, but I’m currently leaning towards the position that Lightcone deserves to be sued for defamation. Maybe not for “maximum damages permitted by law” (since those are truly excessive), but you probably owe them significant material compensation.

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T00:07:17.271Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Uh, actually I do think that being sent screenshots showing that claims made in the post are false 2 hours before publication is a credible signal that Nonlinear has counterevidence.

Sorry, can you please explain what you would have liked us to do at this point? It's 2 hours to publication, which is a major undergoing basically launching something that has been worked on for hundreds of hours. 

The screenshots relate to one claim in a post with many dozens of claims, and do not directly falsify what is said in the post, but seem to relate to them in a somewhat complicated manner (see this discussion [EA(p) · GW(p)] on the post). We are getting dozens of calls by Nonlinear who are, from our perspective, using a bunch of really quite aggressive tactics to prevent publication of this post at the same time.

Please specify concretely what you would have liked us to do instead? Completely halt publication of the post, against the direct promises we made to our sources, who have shown us credible evidence that they are worried about retaliation? I think the right thing to do is to leave a comment with the evidence, which we were indeed going to do if Kat hadn't already done that within an hour of publication of the post.

Please be concrete what you would have liked us to do instead? I don't think the screenshots were some kind of major smoking gun or whatever, they were a piece of evidence that was definitely related to one of the claims, but definitely not the kind of thing that would cause me to immediately update and throw out or delay the whole post.

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-15T00:58:39.286Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Concretely, here's what you should have done instead:

Pause. Wait. Delay. Completely halt publication of the post, against the direct promises you made to your sources, who have shown you credible evidence that they are worried about retaliation. Make your excuses, make your apologies, recognize that you are on the verge of publishing a partial narrative aimed at dealing serious reputational damage to someone in your sphere, and take a moment to absolutely ensure all the i's are dotted and all the t's are crossed. 

If you receive concrete evidence that you are about to publish a falsehood aimed at inflicting material harm on someone, your duty is simply not to do that. If you are scrambling on the last day to update clear material falsehoods in your post, as Spencer reports with the company reviews, something has failed in your fact-checking process, and you should grimace, take a deep breath, and pause publication until you have things figured out.

Of course Nonlinear was using aggressive tactics. There's no truly returning from reputational damage inflicted by a post of that sort. Even if a response sways some people, it will at best always result in a sharp community divide, with people taking sides and landing with one adversarial party (you) or the other (them). I was unfamiliar with Nonlinear and Lightcone until these events, and don't have any sort of personal stake in the fight other than a desire to see careful standards applied to investigative work. But it seems abundantly clear to me that proper caution was not taken in the publication of the original post, and the root of that seems to be an impression that it's alright to publish material falsehoods if you update later, and that it's more important to keep to a publication schedule than to ensure you're presenting a complete picture. I emphatically disagree on both counts.

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T03:46:16.333Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think the approximate result of this tactic is that we would have never been able to publish such a post (because Nonlinear would have been capable of producing an infinite trickle of relevant-seeming evidence that requires extensive investigation to thoroughly debunk), and that our sources would have been heavily retaliated against and would have regretted talking to us in the first place.

You are free to argue that such posts should approximately never be written, and I am interested in that argument. But I think our willingness to pay to make any kind of investigation in this space happen, and the diligence with which we went about this, including on the dimension of gathering contradicting evidence, is a vast and far outlier for stuff like this. 

If you want anyone to do this kind of thing, you need to be OK with a lower standard for information propagation. And maybe you just don't want posts like this, that's OK. I do think this kind of post is really important and crucial and I desperately wish there were more of them. 

Replies from: jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-15T19:29:40.194Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Nonlinear would have been capable of producing an infinite trickle of relevant-seeming evidence

It reads to me that NL was asking for a specific amount of time to provide you with evidence, and you could have prevented this turning into unbounded delay by saying something like "you've asked for a week to gather evidence, and we'll consider evidence you provide by [168hr in the future]".

our sources would have been heavily retaliated against

Have you elaborated somewhere on this?

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T21:04:07.186Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

It reads to me that NL was asking for a specific amount of time to provide you with evidence, and you could have prevented this turning into unbounded delay by saying something like "you've asked for a week to gather evidence, and we'll consider evidence you provide by [168hr in the future]".

Yeah, I am sorry, I think I was exaggerating the alternative here. 

I do think we kind of did this with our original email and set of calls to them, and then they asked us for an additional week, and we said no. I think it's pretty plausible we should have waited an additional week, and I also felt really conflicted and sad about this at the time. I do think it's not reasonable to treat declining a request for an additional week as some kind of major and extreme faux pas, especially given the threat of libel and other types of what still seem to me to be undue forms of pressure that were applied. 

So in that week Nonlinear sends a giant pile of evidence, which I expect I would not have found very compelling (though I am sure it would have probably been capable of falsifying some relatively minor points). 

Replies from: jkaufman, ea247
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-16T01:42:07.065Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I do think we kind of did this with our original email and set of calls to them, and then they asked us for an additional week, and we said no.

How much of the claims made in the post did you share with them in the original email (or soon after, if you want to start the "clock" then) vs later?

(It sounds to me like there were many claims they believed were false that weren't shared with them until quite close to publication, which matters quite a bit for interpreting the request for a week to provide evidence)

((Your phrasing of "additional week" here and above is weird because it implies they had already had a week during which they knew the post's claims and could be providing conflicting evidence, which I think you're not claiming.))

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-16T02:50:37.662Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

We shared a 2000 word high-level summary of all important claims made in the original post, as far as I can tell. I sadly can't share it in-full here because a bunch of the information would be deanonymizing, but I would be happy to set up a call and show you the email, or answer any specific questions you have about what evidence was shared. 

Here is an overview including a bunch of quotes of what we sent Nonlinear then (and if you think this is important I can also fully remove all deanonymizing information from the email, which would take me on the order of an hour or two, and share it with you):

  • Basic information about when Nonlinear was founded and who worked there during the relevant period
  • Basic details about when Alice and Chloe worked there
  • That Chloe's salary was verbally agreed to be $75k/year, with $1k/month in stipend and the rest in food/board/travel, which ultimately (according to Chloe and Alice) did not actually add up to $75k/year
  • That Alice joined as the sole person in the incubation program, and that she received no salary for the first months of traveling with Nonlinear
  • That Alice often had less than $1000 in her bank account and would often rack up substantial expenses in reimbursements, and that at the end of her employment Nonlinear owed her multiple thousands of dollars
  • There were no written specifications of how healthcare and covered medical bills would work
  • The story with Emerson and Adorian Deck and how it seemed very adversarial
  • Other rumors about Emerson doing questionably legal things in order to intimidate people he was in conflict with
  • As I understand it they were considered to have the lowest monetary value of time in the house, and consequently were given a lot of the menial tasks around the house. 
  • "They also reported being strongly discouraged from spending time away from the Nonlinear house (e.g. living in a separate AirBnb) and with people that you folks didn't consider valuable/worthwhile. They both reported very strong senses of social and financial dependence while working with you."
  • "During her time at Nonlinear, [Alice] quit being a vegan. This was during a time when she caught Covid, and was unable to get enough vegan food to eat for ~2 days.
  • "You asked [Chloe] to do a lot of driving regularly for her job, but she didn't know how to drive. You gave her driving lessons (I believe that was from Drew), and then encouraged her to drive without a license for 1-2 months. She eventually was freaked out about this and stopped and regrets doing it, and thinks that she would not have done so if she wasn't in such an otherwise isolating and dependent environment."
  • "There was a long period of difficult relations with [Alice] and Kat, and some conflict regarding monogamy/polyamory, that disrupted working together quite a bit."
  • "Relatedly, as [Alice] was returning from Mexico, Kat made a request for her to bring back several drugs over the border, some recreational, some for productivity."
  • "Both [Alice] and [Chloe] reported feeling really hurt by their time at Nonlinear, and taking some months to recover before they could go back to work."
  • "[Alice] reports a lot of effusive positive emotions from you, including various familial and sometimes romantic feelings of love, yet also felt threatened in various ways about her career and that she was in some pretty difficult financial circumstances as a result of working for you. These things seem pretty incongruent to me and potentially quite manipulative."
  • "I'm not sure how to quickly summarize this. It seems to me they had a lot of strongly negative experiences or made decisions they regret that you (their employers and managers and the majority of their social environment) have some substantial responsibility for, in setting up this environment."
  • "A number of people I spoke to were concerned about retaliation from you if they shared their experiences with me, and initially only did so under condition of strict confidentiality, which I was willing to offer because I had a bunch of warning flags raised from various people I trust who reached out to me and also from the financial situation Kat reported when we spoke at Lightcone."
  • "[Alice] showed me some texts from Kat that offered support with "basic survival stuff" like housing, if Alice would "commit to not saying bad things about us to them".  This sort of behavior makes it very hard for me to trust impressions I get about your team — if people with negative information are being given strong reasons to keep it quiet, then I can't find out about negative information about you, and I have a lot of uncertainty about how much I don't know. A sense that people were scared to share negative info, and concerns about covering-up negative info, are the main reason I'm trying to find out what happened with [Alice] and [Chloe] and others as much as I am.
  • "[Alice] also showed me texts from Kat saying that [Alice] was saying bad things about you behind your back, and said that if you did the same to her her career in EA "would be over in a few Dm's". I'm interested to know what the content of those hypothetical DM's would be. To be clear this definitely reads to me as a veiled threat.
Replies from: jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-18T16:45:14.109Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I'm confused by the heavy disagree-voting on this comment. Are people saying with their votes that this does not actually cover all the important claims in the post? If someone who disagree-voted (or otherwise disagrees) wanted to comment I'd find that illuminating!

Replies from: gjm
comment by gjm · 2023-12-18T16:50:43.316Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

One of habryka's other comments in this thread suggests that someone (or some small group of people, or some single person with sockpuppets) is downvoting literally everything habryka posts in this thread.

It would be nice if there were some way for someone with no conflict of interest to investigate that...

comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-16T20:59:40.677Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

then they asked us for an additional week

Where are you getting the idea that Ben gave us a week? The draft was sent to us on the same day Ben said he was going to publish it. On a day Ben knew we were traveling and wouldn't be able to respond properly (sketchy/no internet, chaos of traveling, etc). 

We spoke to Ben 60 hours before he published, and he only told us a subset of all the accusations. A quick re-reading of the post and I found 14 allegations that were new that Ben hadn't discussed on the call. And I only got a short way through re-reading the post (maybe a 20%?) because I find reading it extremely painful. 

Replies from: habryka4, jkaufman
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-16T21:32:07.255Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I posted an approximately full list of claims you were informed of 4 days before publishing.

Would you be able to highlight any important claims that were not included in that list of claims? It is totally possible there are some, but having cross-check the two, I can't find any major ones.

comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-17T02:45:46.110Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I found 14 allegations that were new that Ben hadn't discussed on the call. [in the first ~20%]

Were these fourteen included in the email Ben sent ~5d out (that Habryka summarizes here [LW(p) · GW(p)]) and just not discussed on the call, or are you saying that the fourteen were first introduced to you with the final draft?

Replies from: ea247
comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-17T03:13:19.627Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

First introduced to me in the draft.

Replies from: jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-17T03:53:30.749Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thanks! If you were up for listing some of these fourteen I'd find it really helpful!

comment by faul_sname · 2023-12-14T19:20:30.259Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Strongly positive/negative relative to what? Relative to being more accurate initially, sure. Relative to being wrong but just not acknowledging it, no.

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T19:33:17.671Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Specifically, I think people by default read this post as an example of good epistemic practice in a community built around good epistemic practice. In this case, though, I think the prior bad epistemic practice (not waiting for full information before publishing a highly consequential piece aimed at inflicting reputational damage on someone) is significant enough and bad enough that emphasizing a plan to update after the fact should be viewed primarily through the lens of damage control. 

The standard with this sort of investigative piece should be to gather information of this nature prior to publication to whatever extent possible, where updating on new information after-the-fact is praiseworthy only if that information was not realistically knowable prior to publication. 

You're correct that it's better than being wrong but not acknowledging it, but I think that's a well-established standard in this sphere and there's a stronger need to update based on the importance of gathering relevant information prior to publication.

Replies from: faul_sname
comment by faul_sname · 2023-12-14T19:53:08.518Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

emphasizing a plan to update after the fact should be viewed primarily through the lens of damage control.

Is anyone acting like that is not a damage control measure? I upvoted specifically because "do damage control" is better than "don't". Usually when I see a hit piece, and later there are a bunch of inaccuracies that come to light, I don't in fact see that damage control done afterwards.

Also I think this kind of within-tribe conflict gets lots of attention within the EA and LW social sphere. I expect that if Ben publishes corrections a bunch of people will read them.

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T20:07:32.030Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

My read is that many people still consider the publication of the original post to be prudent and responsible given the circumstances, while any updates based on information that comes to light here will be prudent and responsible given the new information. Instead, I think people should view the original post as imprudent and irresponsible to the extent that it did not give one side of an adversarial situation an adequate hearing-out (and it really seems like it didn't: a three-hour phone call where you misleadingly summarize their response as "Good summary!", then refuse to wait until they can provide a more substantive response, is extraordinarily bad practice given the hundreds of hours he mentions putting into the rest of the investigation), with any subsequent updates being judged as returning towards responsibility after the fact rather than continuing a pattern of prudence.

comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T12:54:48.506Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Epistemic Status, this whole thing exhausts me but I think Nonlinear do get to ask me to take seriously this evidence. I would really like to be able to edit this as people respond, but y'all hate that, so I dunno. But I will probably change my mind on at least1point (80%) and clarify at least 3 if we have a big discussion (90%)

Tl;dr

  • Edit I didn't update much from the original piece and so I didn't update much on this one either. I think this makes my views quite weird tbh.
  • Nonlinear was likely a hard-mode place to work but I'm not sure that's awful
  • Nonlinear seem to move pretty quickly from collaborate mode to conflict mode. Quicker than I do, at least
  • CEA, LessWrong and funders get to decide who they let in and who they don't.  A boundary against behaviour like this for a org to be represented at EAG doesn't seem crazy to me. 
  • This evidence updates me a little
    • That nonlinear are less "a bit dishonest" and more "technically honest, but very hard to negotiate with"
    • The suing thing looks even worse than I thought, given how I don't think that relevant info is deeply wrong. (edit - to me, threats of legal action are a huge escalation, but others less so)
    • That Pace could should have given more time as a show of good faith, but frankly, I don't think it would have worked and I don't know when the suing threat came. Once that was out, I probably endorse publishing

Takes that matter to me from the original post:

  • Are Nonlinear controlling, particularly frame controlling?
  • Are Nonlinear accurate in their speech - when they say they'll do something, will they do it?
  • Will Nonlinear use threats to get what they want?

Meta takes that actually matter to me

  • Did Ben Pace do a fair job here?

Evidence and counter evidence on those takes

  • Frame control 
    • Evidence that I care about
      • The stories from Chloe and Alice painted a picture of Non-Linear. A close, ambitious, high-stress, often renegotiated environment.
      • Others agreed with this, and those that had a rosy view of Non-Linear didn't seem to push against this narrative
    • My view on finishing the first article
      • I am not sure this amounts to frame control. I said a similar thing at the time. But I do think that many people might not want to work with Non-Linear and Non-Linear should be careful who they hire.
      • Nonlinear should have a reputation for being high stress, tough and not for everyone. Nonlinear shouldn't have a reputation for being a safe place for people who don't know themselves really well to work.
    • Evidence from this new article
      • I don't see a lot of it. In fact it sort of seems to make it even more likely to me.
      • When the response to a complaint about being exhausted and working on a weekend, seemingly involuntarily, Is this, I see a lot about boundaries - Note the Non Linear team have written this, not Chloe
        “My boss offered me an all-expenses-paid trip to the Caribbean island St. Barths, which required one hour of work to arrange the boat and ATV rentals (for me to enjoy too). But it was one hour on a weekend, so I complained, and it never happened again.”
      • I agree that this isn't the worst thing, but I can imagine that Chloe felt pushed into doing work she didn't want to do and that everything was up for negotiation. Seems very plausible
      • Even now, small details from the original account have been elided, this from Chloe, "We had guests over and the team with the guests had decided in the morning that it’s a good vacation day for going to St Barths. I laid low because I thought since I’m also on a weekend day, it would not be mine to organize"
      • "Emerson approaches me to ask if I can set up the trip. I tell him I really need the vacation day for myself. He says something like “but organizing stuff is fun for you!”. I don’t know how to respond nor how to get out of it, I don’t feel like I have the energy to negotiate with him so I start work, hoping that if I get it done quickly, I can have the rest of the day for myself. "
      • Yes, I would not work here. Sounds exhausting. But she had agreed and was paid. I employ people and if I felt like I were pushing someone to this extent, I would feel uncomfortable. But adults do get to choose where they work. 
      • But we also get to choose who we recommend. I think I'd make caveats before recommending Nonlinear, but that also doesn't mean I think they have been unacceptable. Feels like we need some new categories here. I would call them a medium to hard difficulty company, not for players new to the game.
      • I don't really care that Alice seemingly lies a lot. Chloe's account seems solid and when we get to the nitty gritty I always seem to find this same thing - events where I wouldn't want to be Alice or Chloe
    • My current views
      • I think I think that Nonlinear was not a criminal or awful place, but it asked a lot of people and those people, given time and space to reflect, might have left earlier than they did. I guess it's great for some and terrible for others.
      • Nonlinear have some duty to ensure that people who will hate it don't get employed by them.
      • They seem to agree:
        • "Nevertheless, some things we are doing differently are: 
          • Not living with employees & all employees being remote.
          • Not using that compensation structure again. 
          • Hiring assistants who’ve already been assistants, so they know they like it."
  • Accuracy
    • Evidence from the original piece
      • Some anecdotes about Emerson being calculating, deceptive
    • My views on finishing the article
      • It maybe updated me a little on them behaving badly
      • I already thought Nonlinear were willing to solve problems in whatever way seemed best to them. And I don't always know that I think that's bad. I like there being different approaches. But communities can decide that something is too far for them.
      • I am not sure that I would advise people employ Nonlinear unless they want this kind of problem solving. 
      • I find the Emerson was intimidating in business deals a pretty weak update because it's like 3rd hand at this point. Hard to know what happened
    • Evidence from the new piece
      • Seems that some of the anecdotes about Emmerson were informed by bits that were taken out. Not sure how to feel about this. Clearly those examples weren't loadbearing for Pace, but I guess I update back a bit
      • The pay stuff does seem pretty inaccurate. Saying [these things were equivalent to $70k] doesn't mean you paid someone $70k and a lot of the discussion is about control. 
      • Likewise it's starting to look like [you can pay yourself what you want] never meant the person had control over the money. And that's a big difference.
    • My current views
      • I wouldn't be super surprised by some bad behavior and dishonesty and I don't think Nonlinear are at my "top tier honest accurate" standard. Probably they aren't at my "normy person" standard either. More like my "interesting wheeler dearler, be careful but not actively hostile" standard. 
      • As someone who likes freedom to act, I can imagine the costs of this reputation to them. But I don't see a lot against it. And sometimes you want a hard knuckle problem solver. 
  • Threats
    • Evidence from the original piece
      • Nonlinear threatened to sue
      • Kat's messages
    • My views on finishing
      • Yeah that's kind of threatening and bullying
    • Evidence from the new piece
      • It does seem pretty plausible that Alice does this a lot (60%?)
      • If I'd read that article and felt as Nonlinear feel I probably would expect huge damage. But, as above, I don't really feel that Pace has been hugely wrong so far on key elements. So I think the suing was too far.
    • My views 
      • I agree that there should be a way to push back, but the pushback has to actually be relevant to the disagreements at hand. Since I don't believe Nonlinear are the worst, just kind of hard-mode employers, a lot of this pushback feels unnecessary.
      • I have had people say saddening things about me. I've been in the headspace where I was hurt and annoyed about what someone was saying about me and wanted to confront them. 
      • I don't endorse saying things like "companies do not hire people who speak ill of their previous employer" (link [EA · GW]). It is possibly true, but it is just so, I dunno, off. Whine to your friends, talk to the LessWrong/Community Health team. At the point where I am trying to do lessons about who to talk to to someone who is upset with me, I find that's a huge red flag and these days I talk to my therapist and I kvetch to my close largely non-EA/rationalist friends.  A lot. I want to be credibly not-lashing-out in such situations. This doesn't look like that.
      • I think the suing suggestions moves this really adversarially. It's such a huge gamble and I don't think they had the cards to back the bet. I think it should still be seen as a big negative against Nonlinear, I guess worse now, even.
  • Ben Pace
    • Evidence from the original piece 
      • He had put it up giving Nonlinear a couple of days to respond
      • Spencer said there were some big issues
    • My views after the first piece
      • I empathised with Pace, especially given the suing threats. If someone is threatening me, I can see the temptation to push that beyond my control to back down on
    • Evidence from the new piece
      • Here are the most substantive disagreements, in my view:
        • Alice as a bad actor
          • Pace does make clear that Alice is sometimes dishonest. 
          • Nonlinear gestures at a set of stories that paint alice as doing this all the time. 
          • I dunno. I guess I think Alice can behave pretty badly and so can Nonlinear. The question is whether she lies about stuff that matters. 
        • Housing
          • Pace: "Everyone lived in the same house. Emerson and Kat would share a room, and the others would make do with what else was available, often sharing bedrooms."
          • Nonlinear "Strange, false accusation: Alice spent 2 of the 4 months living/working apart (dozens of EAs can verify she lived/worked in the FTX condos, which we did not live at)"
          • I guess that when they travelled the world, where most of the stories come from, they did live apart from others, but yeah, a bit
        • Family
          • Pace: "Alice and Chloe report that they were advised not to spend time with ‘low value people’, including their families, romantic partners, and anyone local to where they were staying, with the exception of guests/visitors that Nonlinear invited. Alice and Chloe report this made them very socially dependent on Kat/Emerson/Drew and otherwise very isolated."
          • Nonlinear: "Bizarre, false accusation given that Alice spent 1 of the 4 months with her family Kat encouraged her to set up regular calls with her family, and she did."
          • Both stories can be true. Again I can imagine that sometime Nonlinear too pains to really care about the needs of employees and sometimes they didn't. I guess I'd have liked the addional context here, though Pace made clear that he was only providingthe worst stories
    • My views after the second piece
      • Yeah maybe Ben could have given them a week, but I don't see that my views have changed much and it does seem like Nonlinear would try all sorts of shenanigans in that week. 
      • The threatening to sue also would make me want to publish quickly also, (edit but it's less clear to me that I endorse this)
      • Nonlinear spent 3 months writing a response which has not moved me much, so I don't know how a week would have helped.
      • Ben seemed to do a fine job. This does seem like info that should have been out in the open. Perhaps people are over updating on it, but I guess I think that's on people. I never thought Nonlinear deserved to be shut down and I still don't
      • (edit If you read it and thought that Nonlinear were the worst then maybe you have more of a grievance against Pace, but equally that seems bad on your part)


Summary of response

I continue to think that Nonlinear is a hard place for many people to work. I update a little away from Nonlinear being a bit dishonest to them being technically honest, but misleading, but not such that I'd never work with them (though I'd give caveats to others). I move a little towards thinking Pace should have given more time, but only a little

My key takeaway here is that much of this damage seemed done already. By how they responded to this and my own experiences, I believe that there was a tax on discussing issues about Nonlinear.  This isn't unique to Nonlinear, there are others who I think behave badly but about who it is costly to share info. I am sure others think I behave badly, people have told me they think I suppress bad info about me. It's a hard problem. I think Pace's original article was less bad than many options. I hope funders still feel able to fund Nonlinear if Nonlinear will do work they want done in a way they are happy with.

I don't think there was much trust between Nonlinear and Pace,  Alice, Chloe and others. Seems this was always gonna be hard to resolve, I guess I push that fault more on Nonlinear, but I'm pretty uncertain. 60% maybe?

What next

My general view is that people should get the reputations they deserve and if they want different reputations they should credibly change. Personally, Nonlinear's reputation as a non-standard move fast and break things org seems pretty reasonable. Also their new reputation as only techinically honest and overly threatening also seems fair. To change that I guess they might want to apologise for the threat to sue, acknowledge ways in which staff weren't making choices that enlightened versions of them would have and talk about how they will do things differently or how these things didn't happen.

Other notes

The fact that their response is so long and doesn't seem to focus on cruxes is also a sort of broad problem here. it suggests Nonlinear don't really understand Pace or me (not that they should, but they really haven't convinced me). I don't have much hope for resolution.

I don't respond to a lot of the other stuff here because I don't think it's relevant. 

Replies from: vlad-firoiu, DaystarEld, vlad-firoiu
comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-18T19:03:16.378Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Just read your comment again and there were a few things that I felt strong disagreement toward. One was you saying that

The stories from Chloe and Alice painted a picture of Non-Linear. A close, ambitious, high-stress, often renegotiated environment."

This feels like a pretty big euphemism for Ben's piece, which paints Nonlinear as cruel and abusive.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-18T19:22:44.800Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

You can read my comments at the time, I don't think I considered Nonlinear as cruel or abusive. I guess that I might describe the worst of their behaviour like that, maybe, but people behave within broad ranges.
 

Replies from: vlad-firoiu
comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-19T02:45:54.328Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Ah perhaps I misunderstood you then -- it sounds like this quote was specifically your own takeaway from reading Ben's original article, rather than a characterization of the article itself. It's possible that I'm seeing your position a bit better now -- previously I thought you largely agreed with Ben's article, but on another reread of your comment it seems that you generally hold significantly more moderate view on Nonlinear. (Although your other comment implies that you do believe "Ben's account holds up", so I remain confused.)

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-19T15:12:26.211Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Well I guess I can only talk about my takeaways from Ben's article. Like who gets to say what Ben's article really means? I think probably you should see my reading as pretty different to the median reading. I think I can justify that but if I had realised how differently you all read the article I would have said sooner.

comment by DaystarEld · 2023-12-14T20:45:49.954Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

FWIW I think my main takeaway here is that if you update at all on any point of untrustworthiness of the original sources, that update should propagate toward the rest of the points.

I think most brains are bad at this, naturally, and it's just a hard thing to do without effort, which is why things like Gish gallops and character assassinations work even when debunked.

My secondary takeaway is that people should not update as hard as they do on people threatening to "retaliate" against social harm done to them unless the claims are very obviously true or the "retaliation" is very obviously false. If we don't know if they're true or not, then what the accuser feels is "retribution" will be felt by the accused as "justice," and I think that both are natural feelings most people would have, but most people have not been publicly pilloried and so cannot connect as easily with the empathy for that position.

comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-14T22:54:04.259Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

There's a lot in here but I was immediately confused by "Nonlinear seem to move pretty quickly from collaborate mode to conflict mode. Quicker than I do, at least". My understanding is that they were hearing about their ex-employees saying damaging untrue things for over a year but chose not to retaliate partly because they didn't want to hurt their ex-employees' reputations, until Ben forced their hand with his deliberately one-sided "Sharing Information" post. That sounds fairly (some might say overly) collaborative to me.

Edit: Here by "retaliate" I mean defending themselves in the way they did with this post, which does have the side effect of harming Alice and Chloe's reputations. Even then, they purposefuly decided not to de-anonymize their employees, and have a section [LW · GW] on how they don't consider them to have had ill intentions.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T23:04:21.963Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

What is the best example of an untrue thing that Ben said? Perhaps I struggle because I took it literally when Pace said that Alice was a bit unreliable.

Replies from: vlad-firoiu
comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-15T00:11:54.478Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Just to clarify, I was specifically referring to untrue things that the employees said, not Ben (and likewise retaliation against the employees, not against Ben).

If the line you're taking is that "Ben technically only relayed information given to him by Alice, while admitting that she might be unreliable", I don't think that's very tenable. Publishing like that is implicitly an endorsement, and unlike you I suspect most people ignored the disclaimer, because it would be strange for someone to publish such damaging things that they actually weren't sure were true. This comment [EA(p) · GW(p)] I made on Ben's original post also touches on this.

Replies from: habryka4, Nathan Young
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T00:25:31.467Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Ben definitely did pretty extensive due-diligence for all claims from Alice that made it into the post, to the degree to which it was possible to do what without engaging even more extensively with Nonlinear itself, which was hard because of the preferences of many of our sources (and like, I think for the sake of calibrating people on the reliability of sources, I think it is better practice to include statements and counter-statements in a post like this, since it puts what people said on the record, which then allows people to judge other things that person has said).

Replies from: daniel-glasscock, vlad-firoiu
comment by Daniel (daniel-glasscock) · 2023-12-16T19:45:25.391Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think what is bugging me about this whole situation is that there doesn't seem to be any mechanism of accountability for the (allegedly) false and/or highly misleading claims made by Alice. You seem to be saying something like, "we didn't make false and/or highly misleading claims, we just repeated the false and/or highly misleading claims that Alice told us, then we said that Alice was maybe unreliable," as if this somehow makes the responsibility (legal, ethical, or otherwise) to tell the truth disappear. 

Here is what Ben said in his post, Closing Notes on Nonlinear Investigation [EA · GW]:

"Eventually, after getting to talk with Alice and Chloe, it seemed to me Alice and Chloe would be satisfied to share a post containing accusations that were received as credible. They expected that the default trajectory, if someone wrote up a post, was that the community wouldn't take any serious action, that Nonlinear would be angry for "bad-mouthing" them, and quietly retaliate against them (by, for instance, reaching out to their employer and recommending firing them, and confidentially sharing very negative stories). They wanted to be confident that any accusations made would be strong enough that people wouldn't just shrug and move on with their lives. If that happened, the main effect would be to hurt them further and drive them out of the ecosystem.

It seemed to me that I could not personally vouch for any of the claims (at the time), but also that if I did vouch for them, then people would take them seriously. I didn't know either Alice or Chloe before, and I didn't know Nonlinear, so I needed to do a relatively effortful investigation to get a better picture of what Nonlinear was like, in order to share the accusations that I had heard."

It's not 100% clear, but it seems like Ben is saying that he does (at the time he wrote that post) vouch for the claims of Alice that he included in his post. If Ben did vouch for those claims, and those claims were wrong, and those wrong claims caused large amounts of damage to Nonlinear, and Ben thinks that any retaliation against Alice is unacceptable, then that leaves Ben Pace and Lightcone ultimately responsible does it not? 

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-16T21:39:43.941Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think there is totally some shared responsibility for any claims that Ben endorsed, and I also think the post could have done a better job at making many things more explicit quotes, so that they would seem less endorsed, where Ben's ability to independently verify them was limited.

I don't think any retaliation against Alice is unacceptable. I think if Alice did indeed make important accusatory claims that were inaccurate, she should face some consequences. I think Ben and Lightcone should also lose points for anything that seems endorsed in the post, or does not have an explicit disclaimer right next to the relevant piece of text, that is verified to be false.

We're working on some comments and posts that engage with that question more thoroughly, and I expect we will take responsibility for some errors here. I also still believe that the overall standard of care and attention in this investigation was really very high, and I expect won't be met by future investigations by different people. Some errors are unavoidable given the time available to do this, and the complexity of the situation.

In as much as Ben's central claims in the post are falsified, then I think that would be pretty massive and would make me think we made a much bigger mistake, but that seems quite unlikely to me at this point (though more of that in future comments).

Replies from: jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-17T01:54:22.290Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think if Alice did indeed make important accusatory claims that were inaccurate, she should face some consequences.

What sort of consequences are you thinking could apply, given that she made these accusations pseudonymously and I assume doxxing and libel suits are off limits?

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-17T02:05:04.776Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I don't know, and agree it's messy, but also it doesn't seem hopeless. 

I think there will be some degree to which clearly demonstrating that false accusations were made will ripple out into the social graph naturally (even with the anonymization), and will have consequences. I also think there are some ways to privately reach out to some smaller subset of people who might have a particularly good reason to know about this. 

I think if the accusations are very thoroughly falsified and shown to be highly deceptive in their presentation, I can also imagine some scenarios where it might make sense to stop anonymizing, though I think the bar for that does seem pretty high.

Replies from: Larks
comment by Larks · 2023-12-17T03:47:56.173Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think there will be some degree to which clearly demonstrating that false accusations were made will ripple out into the social graph naturally (even with the anonymization), and will have consequences. I also think there are some ways to privately reach out to some smaller subset of people who might have a particularly good reason to know about this. 

If this is an acceptable resolution, why didn't you just let the problems with NonLinear ripply out into the social graph naturally?

Replies from: habryka4, Lukas_Gloor
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-17T07:46:12.658Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think that's a good question, and indeed I think that should be the default thing that happens!

In this case we decided to do something different because we received a lot of evidence that Nonlinear was actively suppressing negative information about them. As Ben's post states, the primary reason we got involved with this was that we heard Nonlinear was actively pressuring past employees to not say bad things about them, and many employees we talked to fely very scared of retribution if they told anyone about this, even privately, as long as it could somehow get back to Nonlinear:

Most importantly to me, I especially [wanted to write this post] because it seems to me that Nonlinear has tried to prevent this negative information from being shared

For me the moment I decided that it would be good for us to dedicate substantial time to this was when I saw the "your career in EA could be over in a few messages" screenshot messages. I think if someone starts sending messages like this, different systems need to kick in to preserve healthy information flow.

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-17T18:02:39.630Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

(In case people are confused about the vote totals here and in other parts of the thread, practically all my comments on this post regardless of content, have been getting downvoted shortly after posting with a total downvote strength of 10, usually split over 2-3 votes. I also think there is a lot of legitimate voting in this thread, but I am pretty sure in this specific pattern.)

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-18T12:23:03.288Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

This matches my experience too. When I initially made pretty milquetoast criticisms here all of my comments went down by ~10.

comment by Lukas_Gloor · 2023-12-17T15:31:38.513Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

An organization gets applications from all kinds of people at once, whereas an individual can only ever work at one org. It's easier to discreetly contact most of the most relevant parties about some individual than it is to do the same with an organization.

I also think it's fair to hold orgs that recruit within the EA or rationalist communities to slightly higher standards because they benefit directly from association with these communities.

That said, I agree with habryka (and others) that 

I think if the accusations are very thoroughly falsified and shown to be highly deceptive in their presentation, I can also imagine some scenarios where it might make sense to stop anonymizing, though I think the bar for that does seem pretty high.

Replies from: Larks
comment by Larks · 2023-12-17T21:07:57.014Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I agree in general, but think the force of this is weaker in this specific instance because NonLinear seems like a really small org. Most of the issues raised seem to be associated with in-person work and I would be surprised if NonLinear ever went above 10 in-person employees. So at most this seems like one order of magnitude in difference. Clearly the case is different for major corporations or orgs that directly interact with many more people. 

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-17T23:07:03.678Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Note that one of the reasons why I cared about getting this report out was that Nonlinear was getting more influential as a middleman in the AI Safety funding ecosystem, through which they affected many people's lives and I think had influence beyond what a naive headcount would suggest. The Nonlinear network had many hundreds of applications. 

As a personal example, I also think Lightcone, given that its at the center of a bunch of funding stuff, and infrastructure work, should also be subject to greater scrutiny than specific individuals, given the number of individuals that are affected by our work. And we are about the same size as Nonlinear, I think.

comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-15T02:22:47.631Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Ok, so it sounds like a crux for you is that Ben in fact had high confidence in what he was relaying from Alice being true. In a dispute like this I don't think you can do very good due diligence when avoiding the people who are most likely to have counter-evidence; even if it is well-intentioned, it's a sort of conscious confirmation bias. Ben sort of admits to using poor epistemics in his disclaimer (at the top of his original post) about how to update from reading his post, but doesn't seem to update much on this himself (?), which seems like an error to me particularly when the stakes are this high. Perhaps it's unnecessary, but I will also point out that deliberately using poor epistemics feels pretty contrary to the spirit of rationality, which for good reason has fought for truth and against poor epistemics.

(I further argue against the premise of the disclaimer and Ben posting without hearing both sides here [EA(p) · GW(p)]).

comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-15T13:11:26.561Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

No I'm not saying that.

I am saying about halfway between that and "Ben's account holds up".

What specifically is the most grievous error here.

Replies from: vlad-firoiu, vlad-firoiu
comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-18T15:56:24.384Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I'm not really sure what we're arguing at this point. My initial reply was about how collaborative Nonlinear had been, which I don't think you've addressed and isn't particularly related to whether Ben said true things. I'd also add that in my view Ben posting without getting Nonlinear's side of the story was itself pretty uncollaborative, and so the "retaliation" against him (in the form of criticizing him for the way he wrote his post) to me seems entirely justified.

Replies from: vlad-firoiu
comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-18T18:19:56.879Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thinking about this more, my guess is that by "uncollaborative" you were specifically referring to Nonlinear's threat to file for libel against Ben. I agree you could call it that, but I don't see it as disproportionate given the adversarial nature of Ben's investigation and the massive cost it has had on Nonlinear. I'd be happy to hear your thoughts on this point.

comment by Vlad Firoiu (vlad-firoiu) · 2023-12-19T15:31:45.280Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Ok, so I'm guessing your position is that a) you, having read Nonlinear's reply, continue to believe that most of what Ben relayed from Alice was true, and b) if a few things turn out to be untrue it's not a big deal because it doesn't change the overall story, and in any case Ben admitted that Alice might be unreliable.

I'm not entirely sure how you weigh (a) and (b) but it makes more sense to me if your crux is (a), that most of Alice's claims are true. For that, I'm not sure where to start; as far as I've seen they all seem to be false. I guess we could start with the claims about not being paid, e.g. from Ben's high level overview:

Salary negotiations were consistently a major stressor for Alice’s entire time at Nonlinear. Over her time there she spent through all of her financial runway, and spent a significant portion of her last few months there financially in the red (having more bills and medical expenses than the money in her bank account) in part due to waiting on salary payments from Nonlinear. She eventually quit due to a combination of running exceedingly low on personal funds and wanting financial independence from Nonlinear, and as she quit she gave Nonlinear (on their request) full ownership of the organization that she had otherwise finished incubating.

Nonlinear has several rows in their overview table [LW · GW] which contradict this account:

  • Alice "wasn't getting paid" only due to her own rather strange mistakes, such as not logging her expenses or not checking her own bank account to see that the money was actually there.
  • Alice eventually got to choose her own salary.
  • Alice claimed to be making significant income from her side business.
  • Alice had much less involvement and ownership of "the organization" than she claimed, and was repeatedly informed of this (this section of the appendix is relevant).

Ben also admits that "[Alice] also had a substantial number of emergency health issues covered [by Nonlinear]".

We could also talk about Alice's accusations of not being fed vegan food or being forced to travel with illegal drugs. I'm not sure if this is what you meant by "grievous error" though -- please let me know if I'm barking up the wrong tree.

Replies from: habryka4, Nathan Young
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-20T18:42:41.333Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
  • Alice "wasn't getting paid" only due to her own rather strange mistakes, such as not logging her expenses or not checking her own bank account to see that the money was actually there.
  • Alice eventually got to choose her own salary.
  • Alice claimed to be making significant income from her side business.

I would currently like to register (before people assume the above is true) that I am quite confident that the three claims in this quote are inaccurate (based on both existing evidence and more recent evidence that I was shown).

I expect Ben will elaborate on this in his fuller response, but it seemed good to clarify this, and set expectations about which claims I am pretty sure will be falsified.

Replies from: philh, IsabelJ
comment by philh · 2023-12-21T12:39:26.203Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Alice claimed to be making significant income from her side business.

To clarify further, my read of things is that you think the inaccurate claim would be

  • Alice was in fact making significant income from her side business.

but that you wouldn't dispute

  • Alice claimed to NL that she was making significant income from her side business.

Is that right? Or do you additionally think the second is inaccurate?

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-21T17:27:47.511Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

We have very compelling evidence of the first being false. I would also absolutely dispute the second. Alice has told Nonlinear that if she worked on her Amazon business full-time, she would make $3000/mo, which seems right though maybe a bit optimistic to me (but of course she wasn't working on it full-time while she was working for Nonlinear).

That to me fully explains the screenshot that Nonlinear posted[1], which is the only direct evidence presented, and indeed seems more consistent with what Emerson is saying (why would he be referring to a total net-income of $3k/mo otherwise, if at this point Alice was already working for Nonlinear and so presumably was now making at least $4k/mo and more like $7k-9k/mo if you count benefits).

  1. ^
Replies from: ea247
comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-21T18:20:57.250Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

This text was sent on November 4th, almost a month before she arrived to come travel with us (not to work for us).

Emerson is not referring to her saying she would make $3000 a month if she worked full-time on her Amazon business. The context of the conversation is she's trying to figure out whether she should spend an additional $90 to visit her family before joining us, and Emerson is replying saying "If you make $3k a month [$90] is very little money", so he's telling her she should spend the $90 to spend time with family. Directly going against the "keeping her isolated from family" story and also supporting (albeit not conclusively proving) that Alice had told him she made $3k per month with her business. 

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-21T19:32:57.837Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Sure! I could have checked the date, but in that case this evidence also doesn't support your case here.

If indeed she was making $3000/mo at that point in time (which, to be clear, I don't think you've demonstrated), working on it with much more of her time than she would while she was working at Nonlinear, wouldn't this be basically confirmation that she wasn't going to make $3000/mo while working with Nonlinear, given that she was spending much less time on it? 

The relevant claim at hand is whether she ever made $3000/mo at the same time as she was working with you at Nonlinear (and you heavily implied that that is what she claimed here). I would be quite surprised if Alice ever claimed this was the case to you.

comment by isabel (IsabelJ) · 2023-12-20T21:19:33.103Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

this seems like a comment that it seems reasonable to disagree with (e.g. think that habryka is wrong and subsequent evidence will not show what he predicts it will show) but it seems straightforwardly good epistemics to make clear predictions about which claims will and won't be falsified in the upcoming post, so I'm not sure why this comment is as being downvoted more than disagree voted (or downvoted at all). 

am I confused about what karma vs agreement voting is supposed to signify? 

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-20T21:25:58.850Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Approximately all my comments on this thread have been downvoted like this, as soon as they were posted. There are definitely some people with strong feelings downvoting a lot of things on this post very quickly, though most comments end up clawing themselves back into positive karma after a few hours.

comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-19T16:19:42.923Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

continue to believe that most of what Ben relayed from Alice was true

I can believe she is being precise without conveying an accurate picture. I am not sure that I ever thought that alice's account was the most accurate version of events.

comment by Minh Nguyen (Hard_On_Collider) · 2023-12-12T14:42:10.427Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

[crossposted from EA Forum, to emphasise an important point. hope that's OK! will delete if it isn't]

How do we prevent the methodology of exclusively seeking and publishing negative information, without fact checking, from becoming an acceptable norm?

Re: Checking that claims are true

Adding on as former Nonlinear intern who was aware of a “falling out” between Alice and Nonlinear for almost a year now:

  1. To my knowledge, Nonlinear was given very few/practically no opportunities to respond to the many claims made in “Sharing Information About Nonlinear” before they were posted, despite repeatedly communicating for several months that this counter-evidence was available to Ben and some CEA employees.
  2. I understand that the power asymmetry, high-trust environment and ethical standards within EA makes this complicated to resolve. However, my issue is that the vast majority of the claims made were easily verifiable/falsifiable. Things like payment/lack of payment, delivery orders, messages, receipts, who stayed where etc. all have paper trails. If it's so trivially easy to verify, there is a responsibility to verify!

I’m not against Ben and Alice choosing to post this. I believe we should normalise people exercising their option to speak out publicly. The alternative is being silenced by massive power asymmetry.

What I am against, is the way these allegations were made, which did not prioritise verifying allegations/claims when repeatedly presented with significant, factual counter-evidence.

Why was Nonlinear not given some chance to present counterevidence? It’s clear the initial investigation took months to gather; only a few days (two days, I think) before posting were Kat and Emerson presented with this, after reaching out to Ben several times! Even granting Nonlinear a day to submit an official refutation of the top 5-10 claims for review would have made a difference.[1] And that’s before factoring in the asymmetry required to refute these allegations with evidence vs making the initial allegations.

I think the handling of this community issue was not healthy for EA/longtermism. Fewer people will read this post than the initial allegations, and Nonlinear’s reputation has definitely been harmed. At best, future whistleblowers are less likely to be believed. I don’t see this as a win for anyone.

Personal Story: How unverified allegations cause harm to real people

Throughout this discussion, there was this undertone that over-weighting Alice’s claims justified the increased reputational risk to Nonlinear, because Kat and Emerson are “better-off” than Alice, so harming them is a more “acceptable” risk because Kat and Emerson will still do fine, whereas Alice is new and less established in EA.

I’d like to say that these allegations don’t just affect Emerson and Kat. It affects the many independent AI Safety researchers Nonlinear helps fund.[2] It also affects Nonlinear’s other employees. It has personally affected me. I am from Southeast Asia, where it’s much harder to find work in EA/longtermism than in EA hubs. Nonlinear was the first (and currently only) EA org I’ve interned at.

Nonlinear had formally stopped hiring interns when I applied, due to the incidents mentioned above. I contributed to the Superlinear bounty platform as a remote volunteer, without knowing it was owned by Nonlinear, or what Nonlinear was. I had spent so much time trying to contribute to EA part-time, that I wanted to make the experience easier for others.

When I was hired as an intern, I texted my friend “What’s Nonlinear? Are they … like, a big deal?”. My friend explained that having Nonlinear as a reference would help me gain admission to EA conferences, and be taken seriously for EA job applications.

Now that Nonlinear’s reputation within EA has been seriously harmed, I’ve been very concerned about how this affects my ability to contribute within EA. Should I add Nonlinear/Kat as references and risk very negative associations, or omit them and risk being overlooked in favour of other applicants who do have references from prominent EAs? It means a lot to me because, as a non-US/EU/UK citizen, I know I’m always applying at a significant disadvantage.[3] I will always have fewer opportunities than an EA born in London who goes to a prestigious UK college with an active EA chapter and many EA internship options, who doesn’t have additional Visa requirements. And if I get rejected for a role, I often don’t get to know why.

I didn’t mention this before, because I cared about whether Alice was actually abused. I had a hunch they were making false claims, but I didn’t want to invalidate victims who might be telling the truth. As of now, this seems … less likely.

These allegations do cause harm: to me, to other Nonlinear employees trying to contribute to EA and the people Nonlinear helps through our work.

In the future, please verify these more seriously. Thank you.

  1. ^

    The first time I asked Nonlinear about the allegations, it took me maybe 5-10 minutes to figure out there were multiple misleading statements, since I was shown message logs.

  2. ^

     In fundraising, reputation matters. Serious, public allegations of abuse means funders are (rightfully) hesitant, and less funding goes to researchers.

  3. ^

     If you are reading this and trying to get into AI Safety/longtermism from a non EA hub, do reach out and I’ll try to reply when I can! We gotta support each other >:)

comment by geoffreymiller · 2023-12-13T01:20:16.392Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Whatever people think about this particular reply by Nonlinear, I hope it's clear to most EAs that Ben Pace could have done a much better job fact-checking his allegations against Nonlinear, and in getting their side of the story.

In my comment [EA · GW] on Ben Pace's original post 3 months ago, I argued that EAs & Rationalists are not typically trained as investigative journalists, and we should be very careful when we try to do investigative journalism -- an epistemically and ethically very complex and challenging profession, which typically requires years of training and experience -- including many experiences of getting taken in by individuals and allegations that seemed credible at first, but that proved, on further investigation, to have been false, exaggerated, incoherent, and/or vengeful.

EAs pride ourselves on our skepticism and our epistemic standards when we're identifying large-scope, neglected, tractable causes areas to support, and when we're evaluating different policies and interventions to promote sentient well-being. But those EA skills overlap very little with the kinds of investigative journalism skills required to figure out who's really telling the truth, in contexts involving disgruntled ex-employees versus their former managers and colleagues. 

EA epistemics are well suited to the domains of science and policy. We're often not as savvy when it comes to interpersonal relationships and human psychology -- which is the relevant domain here.

In my opinion, Mr. Pace did a rather poor job of playing the investigative journalism role, insofar as most of the facts and claims and perspectives posted by Kat Woods here were not even included or addressed by Ben Pace.

I think in the future, EAs making serious allegations about particular individuals or organizations should be held to a pretty high standard of doing their due diligence, fact-checking their claims with all relevant parties, showing patience and maturity before publishing their investigations, and expecting that they will be held accountable for any serious errors and omissions that they make.

(Note: this reply is cross-posted from EA Forum; my original comment is here [EA · GW].)

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T13:00:43.860Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Ehhh, I don't really agree. To me the load bearing facts seem about right. I empathise that not much was to be gained by painstakingly discussing every detail. Pace was pretty clear how much was hearsay. I would have liked more room for response until the suing threat came.  At that point, yeah, publish.

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains, tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T13:30:31.231Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I fundamentally disagree with the way a lot of rationalists are treating the threat of legal action. The legal system is a failsafe to ensure means for protection against serious misbehavior. Based on this post, I think Nonlinear is correct to assert that several of the claims in the original article were false and likely libelous. Legal action in response to libelous claims aimed at destroying your reputation in your community is not escalatory, it is proportionate, and a threat of it should be a reminder that the situation is serious, not treated as casus belli to publish any and all information.

Replies from: Nathan Young, habryka4
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T13:39:46.437Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think that the threat to sue could have been okay if there were significant errors in Pace's piece, but what are they? What specific phrases do you think are likely libelous.

To me, the threat to sue over minor inaccuracies, usually clearly marked as "Alice said" etc and given Alice was described as an unreliable narrator, seems like a bad norm and one I want to push back against. 

Also I think the legal system is really dysfunctional. It seems that Nonlinear was creating an environment where it was hard to report accurately about them and to sue people who write articles like this would, I think further that, whether they would win or not. They have that right, sure, but respect them less for the threat, especially given, personally the article itself doesn't seem to allege awful behaviour in my view.

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T14:00:02.198Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

As the publisher, Ben has a duty beyond simply uncritically repeating a source’s claims, if he knew or had reason to know those claims are materially false—including not taking reasonable steps to verify truth. The claim about being asked to transport illegal recreational drugs across a border is the most immediately clear one to me. Nonlinear told him it was false, had screenshots available to the contrary, and he published it. Whether he preceded it with “Alice says” makes little difference in terms of either moral or legal responsibility.

I respect that you don’t see the allegations as awful, but it looks like they had a dramatically negative effect on the reputation of the organization as a whole. The bar for writing something that has dramatic negative effects on someone’s reputation is and should be high; the court of public opinion is no better or more functional than the court of law.

It seems fundamentally inaccurate to me to treat lawsuit threats as an escalation to the decision to publish something that will destroy an organization’s reputation within their own community. Whatever the merits of any specific suit, those are equally adversarial decisions and the one is a proportionate response to the other, not an escalation.

Replies from: Nathan Young, RamblinDash
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T14:26:28.571Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Pace reports Nonlinear said they did ask for people to bring illegal recreational drugs over the border for them. Have they claimed he was lying when he reports them here [EA · GW]:

"Third; the semi-employee was also asked to bring some productivity-related and recreational drugs over the border for us. In general we didn't push hard on this. For one, this is an activity she already did (with other drugs). For two, we thought it didn't need prescription in the country she was visiting, and when we found out otherwise, we dropped it. And for three, she used a bunch of our drugs herself, so it's not fair to say that this request was made entirely selfishly. I think this just seems like an extension of the sorts of actions she's generally open to"

Again, I don't care about this much, but Pace can't be accused of not following the facts if Nonlinear said they did something very similar to the thing they are accused of on another occasion, right?

Pace says "I bring this up as an example of the sorts of requests that Kat/Emerson/Drew felt comfortable making during Alice’s time there."

Pace reports Nonlinear as saying "I think this just seems like an extension of the sorts of actions she's generally open to"

Looks pretty similar to me. Sometimes people take drugs across borders. That's on them, but if you're asking employees to do it, then that's the kind of thing you ask employees to do. 

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T14:48:30.241Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

My understanding is that they are addressing the same event (pharmacy for antibiotics and ADHD meds) in all locations, and they make it clear in his post they dispute every part of his frame about that event, including his presentation of their response as basically agreeing with him.

I’m not sure the value in focusing on a specific story when I’m making a general behavioral claim, though. My stance is this:

If (1) you inform someone that you are going to publish something that will be severely detrimental to their reputation and (2) they assert you are making several materially false claims in that publication, claims they have hard evidence exist, then (3) it is unreasonable not to wait to review that evidence, and (4) a libel suit is proportionate, not escalatory, in response to the actual publication of falsehoods that severely damage someone’s reputation.

From those, it follows that warning of a potential libel suit in advance of publication should absolutely not be read as “I am being unreasonably threatened and therefore should publish immediately to stand up to bullies.” It should be read as “I am entering a serious, mutually adversarial situation and I should be absolutely sure, to the best of my ability, that I have my facts straight.” The initial seriously adversarial decision is the choice to publish allegations, not the choice to sue. Both can be correct or incorrect depending on specific circumstance.

The decision to publish immediately, and your endorsement of that decision, is a bad misread of the situation—not defecting in response to defecting, but carelessness bordering on malice in an already adversarial context—and one that causes predictable harm should any allegations be materially, provably false.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T15:01:48.066Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think a legal threat is like a bet "I'm so confident that you are wrong that I'm going to waste both of our time and cause huge amounts of damage".

I currently think they lose that bet. The best example of libel you can find is small and I am pretty uncertain of it. I can imagine going either way.

I consider a libel suit a weighty thing to threaten and if you do there better be a serious reason. I don't see it. So it should come with big costs.

To me, it's a bigger threat than the discrepancies I see here.

Replies from: gwern, tracingwoodgrains
comment by gwern · 2023-12-19T19:10:29.542Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think a legal threat is like a bet “I’m so confident that you are wrong that I’m going to waste both of our time and cause huge amounts of damage”.

No, it's not. That's nothing like how legal threats work in the real world.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-20T13:33:50.884Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

What are legal threats like in the real world?

I've been threated with legal action once (by Jay Z's record company for a parody I made) and it felt like a bet. I probably could win if I spent a lot of money, but I didn't have that money and so I took the song down. 

comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T15:05:15.817Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

“I’m going to expend both of our time and cause huge amounts of damage” happened upon publication of the initial allegations. It was guaranteed to happen upon publication of the initial allegations. It was, in simple fact, the expected result of the initial allegations.

The original post was a weighty decision and if you post it there has better be a serious reason. A legal case is procedurally more weighty than inflicting massive reputational damage on someone in their own community, but it’s not clear that it’s morally more weighty, and treating it as escalatory feels like a category error no matter who you think wins the overall “bet” between Ben and Nonlinear.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T15:10:49.490Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Sure, but I think that Ben win's that bet. To me it looks like the reputational adjustment he sought was worth it. 

The libel case, not so much.

And I think the libel case wastes a huge amount more resources and currently it doesn't improve Nonlinear's reputation. After the case, I guess, or reading this file I think I'm pretty static on before it. 

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T15:15:58.476Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

“I’m correct in seeking to inflict enormous reputational damage on you, therefore you are unjustified in responding with a threat of legal action, and your threat of legal action justifies me refusing to proactively examine promised exculpatory evidence” is the position I hear you endorsing, and I find it bizarre.

No! You can’t enter an adversarial frame, then object when people accurately treat it as adversarial and use their adversarial response as an excuse to avoid due diligence! That is not, or should not be, how any of this sort of investigative journalism works.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T15:32:16.003Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

How about

"I’m correct in seeking to inflict large reputational damage on you because I can back up my claims, but should escale with a threat of legal action without seemingly being likely to win it,  your frivolous threat of legal action justifies me reducing my engagement with this process"

You're right that I feel less certain of this. But I do think there is a difference between accusations you can back up and those you can't. 

I guess I don't see it as adversarial to reveal the truth. I don't sense Pace was being directed about this. The libel threat feels directed.

I guess I think you see the two parties as the the same in some key way. I don't. 

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T15:38:52.757Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

No. He knew he was operating on partial information; he knew they had a great deal of information they were willing to give him in a short time span; he had no way of evaluating the quality of the evidence they would give before they would give it. He was not justified in half-doing his job whether or not they were being unpleasant in response—a threat of legal action is emphatically not an excuse to avoid considering their evidence prior to publication or rushing publication unless it becomes clear they are unreasonably delaying. A week or two, in response to serious allegations, is not an unreasonable delay, and no matter the ultimate strength of their story he neglected his responsibility to proactively understand it.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T15:45:23.058Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

he knew they had a great deal of information they were willing to give him in a short time span

This seems likely false given how long this process took.

he had no way of evaluating the quality of the evidence they would give before they would give it

I could agree, though it's unclear when the threat was made. If after the initial call then this isn't true.

 

Yeah I still think he should have initially offered a week. I say as much. On the shortening, i don't know.

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T15:51:38.353Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

When they asked for, and were denied, one week to compile evidence, I don’t think it’s reasonable to conclude much of anything based on the final response process taking longer.

It’s absolutely adversarial to reveal the truth if the truth is harmful to someone. It’s critical to distinguish between “adversarial” and “bad.” Choosing to investigate a group over a long period of time and then publish information to damage them is fundamentally an adversarial act. Not a bad thing, but for one who aims to practice investigative journalism, vital to keep in mind.

If your goal is to reveal the truth and not to inflict harm on someone, you should wait until you have all sides as thoroughly as you can reasonably get them, and not cut that process short when the party you are making allegations against responds with understandable antagonism—until and unless they refuse to cooperate further and have no more useful information to give.

Replies from: DaystarEld, Nathan Young
comment by DaystarEld · 2023-12-14T17:36:31.144Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I also want to add that I think the community in general has shown a mild failure in treating the legal action threat as evidence of wrongdoing even if the lawsuit would ultimately fail.

It is really bad to treat a libel suit threat as some horrible thing that no one "innocent" would ever do. It's a form of demonizing anyone who has ever used or thought to use the legal system defensively.

Which if intended, seems to be fundentally missing what the point of a legal system should be. It is no doubt a problem that people with lots of power, whether it's fame or money or whatever, are more likely to win legal battles.

But it's also a way more truth oriented process than the court of public opinion. And many people who would have stood 0 chance of getting justice without it have gotten some through it.

Do such threats have a chilling effect on criticism? Of course, and that's a problem, particularly if they're used too often or too quickly.

But the solution cannot be "no one makes such threats no matter what." Because then there's no recourse but the court of public opinion, which is not something anyone should feel comfortable ceding their life and wellbeing to.

I think someone outside the community seeing this sort of reaction of people inside it being shunned, demonized, etc for threatening to use a very core right that they're entitled to would likely find it... pretty sketchy.

Because it can easily be construed as "we resolve these things 'in house,' via our own methods. No need to get Outsiders involved."

And man, it sure would be great if we had that sort of high trust effective investigation capability in the community.

But we really have not shown that capability yet, and even if we do, no one should feel like they're giving up their basic rights to be a member of good standing in the community.

I think many if not most people in Emerson's position, feeling like they were about to be lied about in a life-destroying way, had facts to rebut the lies, and were being essentially ignored in requests to clarify the truth, would think of legal action.

Whether they would be wrong in how easy it would be to win is a different issue entirely from that very (from base society perspective) normal view.

Replies from: Douglas_Knight
comment by Douglas_Knight · 2023-12-16T17:56:45.715Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

What the legal system should be is irrelevant.

comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T16:14:39.417Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think I agree with that. But I think legal action is a big escalation. If they'd said, "we asked for more time and didn't get it" I think I'd have been a bit more on their side. 

Or if it turned out the legal action was warranted.

comment by RamblinDash · 2023-12-14T14:45:20.262Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Whether he preceded it with “Alice says” makes little difference in terms of either moral or legal responsibility.

 

Morally, I agree with you. Legally, I think you are not correct at least as pertains to US law, which has much higher standards to meet for defamation claims than most European countries. In the US, the truth of the statement is generally an absolute defense to liability. If I publish a story of the form "A says B committed a crime; B denies/disputes it", then in general I would not have liability if A in fact said that, because my statement was true (though A might have liability, of course).

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T14:53:30.157Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

My understanding of truth as an absolute defense to libel (disclaimer: law student, not lawyer, and referring to hastily examined case law, not deeply researched understanding) is that it refers to the truth of the core statement, not the truthful replication of defamation. In other words, I believe you can still be liable for publishing “A claims X” when X is false and you had reason to know that, depending on the circumstances.

Replies from: jkaufman, RamblinDash
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-18T17:17:41.452Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

If people are interested in reading more about this, I think the thing to look into is "republication liability", and in the US seems to be pretty unsettled, with some state-by-state variation.

It doesn't look like a bare defense of "I wrote 'Alice told me X' and can prove that Alice told me X" is sufficient, but it also looks like just demonstrating that X is false is not enough. Some considerations, depending on where you are:

  • Did the author know X was false?

  • Did the author put sufficient effort into assessing the truth of X?

  • Was the author acting as a neutral reporter of facts?

(Not a lawyer, or even a law student)

Replies from: jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-18T17:49:10.851Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

As these apply to the allegations in Ben's post:

  • Did the author know X was false? -- I doubt it, with the possible exception of not updating the post after receiving Spencer's screenshots 2-3hr before publication.

  • Did the author put sufficient effort into assessing the truth of X? -- Probably not, since the general goal was signal-boosting the concerns and the final 'adversarial' fact checking was quite short (especially for any allegations first raised in the draft NL received right before publishing).

  • Was the author acting as a neutral reporter of facts? -- Probably not, since Ben's post is pretty clearly trying to signal-boost a bunch of allegations about NL.

comment by RamblinDash · 2023-12-14T16:37:03.771Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

You could be right. I don't practice in this area and thus don't claim to have greater knowledge than you on this. I still disagree, but people should understand this is a sorta equal epistemic status disagreement.

comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-14T22:50:04.329Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

likely libelous

The original post is really quite careful in its epistemic status and in clearly referencing to sources claiming something. You could run this by a lawyer with experience in libel law, and I think they would conclude that a suit did not have much of a chance of success.

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains, tracingwoodgrains, purple_cat
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-15T15:56:46.232Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I am not a lawyer, and none of the following should be construed as legal advice, only a personal opinion about the scope of libel law based on a quick dive into relevant national court cases, with no attempt to address the merits of this situation specifically. I got curious about all of this and wanted to take a closer look at elements of the legal issues in play. I'm placing this comment here out of convenience, though it has relevance to my conversation with @RamblinDash [LW · GW] as well.

I'll touch on a few legal points that seem relevant, though this is necessarily a partial list, filtered approximately by "what was easily in reach in the casebook I had on hand".

1. Referencing claims made by specific sources:

Under Restatement (Second) of Torts § 578, a broadly but not universally accepted summation of common law torts, someone who repeats defamatory material from someone else is liable to the same extent as if they were the original publisher, even if they mention the name of the original source and state they do not believe the claim. Claims of belief or disbelief, while not determinative, come into play when determining damages. 

Two important Supreme Court cases, St. Amant v. Thompson, 390 U.S. 727 (1968) and Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton, 491 U.S. 657 (1989), while focused primarily on the question of what constitutes actual malice, take for granted that publishers can be held liable for the claims of their sources. St. Amant focuses on a defendant who read questions he had asked someone else, Albin, about a public official, and Albin's false answers. In Harte-Hanks, the defendant publisher of the Journal News ran a story quoting false claims from one Alice Thompson that a judicial candidate, Connaughton, had bribed her and her sister. 

Harte-Hanks is particularly useful to understand the scope of libel and the bar to meet for libel against a public official, the "actual malice" standard. Thompson's allegations of wrongful conduct were denied by Connaughton and five other witnesses. Thompson's sister Patsy Stephens, who had allegedly been present, was available for interview, but the newspaper did not interview her. The Journal News editorial director wrote an editorial two days before the article indicating that an article about impropriety would surface soon, taken as evidence that it had decided to publish the article before verifying its sources. The First Amendment has been interpreted since New York Times v. Sullivan as presenting a high bar to prove defamation against public figures (the above "actual malice" standard), with a high value placed on protecting freedom of speech; this case (with several indications of serious impropriety) fails that standard and the publication was ruled libelous.

2. Epistemic uncertainty:

Restatement (Second) of Torts § 566 touches on expressions of opinion, clarifying that opinions are actionable to the extent they are based on express or implied defamatory factual claims.

Per Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co., 497 U.S. 1 (1990), opinions that rest on factual claims (e.g. "In my opinion John Jones is a liar") can imply assertions of objective fact, and connotations that are susceptible to being proven true or false can still be considered. Opinions are not privileged in a way fundamentally distinct from facts.

There's a lot more that goes into the determination, including the hard-to-pin-down idea of what makes someone a public versus a private figure, privileges that can be asserted, differences between case law in different jurisdictions, and so forth, and I am neither qualified to make a sound declaration on the merits nor interested in doing so. I've just been curious about the specifics of libel for a while and now seemed like as good a time as any to familiarize myself a bit more with the case law. 

Replies from: habryka4, RamblinDash
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T18:54:34.630Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I also appreciate this!

comment by RamblinDash · 2023-12-15T17:54:58.800Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thanks for the research! I'm guessing that there's probably a lot of nuance here, such as if, e.g. the President falsely accuses someone, then the false accusation is independently newsworthy and that might be protective of the media outlet who repeated it while saying that it doesn't believe the President's accusation. But I've updated my view on the core question and disendorsed my initial comment.

Replies from: tracingwoodgrains
comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-15T18:12:00.450Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Yes, my understanding (again: not lawyer, not legal advice) is that a lot of that gets covered under the Fair Reporting privilege, which allows reporters to provide fair and accurate summaries of public meetings (eg rallies, speeches, Congress), including defamatory comments made by public officials at those meetings. It's also worth mentioning the broader Neutral Reportage privilege, adopted in a few jurisdictions but rejected in others, providing freedom to neutrally report untrue statements made by a public official or prominent organization, about a public figure or public official, relating to or creating a public controversy. Edwards v. National Audubon Soc'y, Inc., 556 F.2d 113 (2d Cir. 1977) (in which the New York Times faced lawsuits for reporting that the Audubon Society had accused several scientists of being paid by pesticide companies to lie) is the key case to look at there.

comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-15T00:29:57.626Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I would be curious for that to occur and will make no confident proclamations about what they would or would not say. I suspect the epistemic status markers included are not nearly as protective as you would assume to the extent actual, materially harmful falsehoods were published, but I could be mistaken.

comment by purple_cat · 2023-12-15T03:49:13.891Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

"The original post is really quite careful in its epistemic status and in clearly referencing to sources claiming something."

This is insufficient. See: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2017/01/13/when-there-is-serious-reason-to-doubt-rumors-and-allegations-is-it-libelous-to-publish-them/
 

 1. The republication rule: Say that Alan writes, “Betty alleges Charlie committed armed robbery.” Alan’s statement is literally true: Betty did make the allegation. But the statement Alan is reporting on (Betty’s statement) is false. American libel law has long adopted the “republication rule,” under which Alan is potentially liable for defamation — if Betty’s allegation actually proves to be false — even if he expressly attributes the statement to Betty. (See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 578.)

And this is true even if Alan distances himself from the allegation, for instance by saying that Charlie has denied the statement, or that Betty has reason to lie. The principle is that “Tale bearers are as bad as the tale makers.”

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-15T19:15:41.282Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Yes, just citing someone is not sufficient, though from what I read it does still pretty substantially matter to how these kinds of suits go. 

The more relevant dimension where this matters is that the prosecution would have to prove that Ben knew the information was inaccurate, which is a lot harder if the post is pretty clear about its sources and epistemic status and evidence that was available. 

comment by TracingWoodgrains (tracingwoodgrains) · 2023-12-14T17:03:23.716Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I want to make a separate reply to register specifically in light of the downvotes you've attracted that while I disagree with your conclusions on the merits here, I think your mode of engagement on this is wholly appropriate and that the voting system is being, if not gamed, at least heavily influenced by people with strong emotional investment in the conflict at hand, which should be considered however the votes in the conversation wind up.

comment by Daniel (daniel-glasscock) · 2023-12-12T22:04:46.775Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

This is a better response than I was expecting. Definitely a few non-sequiturs (Ex: you can’t just add travel expenses onto a $1000/month salary and call that $70,000-$75,000 in compensation. The whole point of money is that it’s fungible and can be spent however you like), but the major accusations appear refuted.

The tone is combative, but if the facts are what Nonlinear alleges then a combative tone seems… appropriate? I’m not sure how I feel about the “Sharing Information About Ben Pace” section, but I do think it was a good idea to mention the “elephant in the room” about Ben possibly white-knighting for Alice, since that’s the only way I can get this whole saga to make sense.

Replies from: pktechgirl
comment by Elizabeth (pktechgirl) · 2023-12-17T21:51:07.881Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

major accusations appear refuted

Note that the accusations Nonlinear lists in the document, with quote marks, are sometimes quite different than what Ben Pace put in his post. So even if you think they've strongly refuted a particular accusation, that doesn't necessarily mean they've refuted something Ben said. 

Replies from: daniel-glasscock
comment by Daniel (daniel-glasscock) · 2023-12-17T23:23:49.774Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Yeah, I've been going back and checking things as they were stated in the original "Sharing Information About Nonlinear" [EA · GW] post. Rereading it, I was surprised at how few specific loadbearing factual claims there were at all. Lots of "vibes-based reasoning" as they say. I think the most damning single paragraph with a concrete claim was:

  • Chloe’s salary was verbally agreed to come out to around $75k/year. However, she was only paid $1k/month, and otherwise had many basic things compensated i.e. rent, groceries, travel. This was supposed to make traveling together easier, and supposed to come out to the same salary level. While Emerson did compensate Alice and Chloe with food and board and travel, Chloe does not believe that she was compensated to an amount equivalent to the salary discussed, and I believe no accounting was done for either Alice or Chloe to ensure that any salary matched up. (I’ve done some spot-checks of the costs of their AirBnbs and travel, and Alice/Chloe’s epistemic state seems pretty reasonable to me.)

I think this is just false. Nonlinear provided enough screenshot evidence to prove that Chloe agreed to exactly the arrangement that she ultimately got. Yes, it was a shitty job, but it was also a shitty job offer, and Chloe seems to have agreed to that shitty job offer. 

Also, the more I read about and cross-reference the Alice stuff, the less it makes sense. Either Nonlinear is putting on a masterclass Chewbacca defense, or none of the Alice information provided by either party is evidence of anything.

Replies from: habryka4, habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-18T00:16:39.922Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

In terms of relevant factual claims in the post, here are some more: 

  • "Chloe’s and Alice’s finances (along with Kat's and Drew's) all came directly from Emerson's personal funds (not from the non-profit). This left them having to get permission for their personal purchases"
  • "From talking with both Alice and Nonlinear, it turned out that by the end of Alice’s time working there, since the end of February Kat Woods had thought of Alice as an employee that she managed, but that Emerson had not thought of Alice as an employee, primarily just someone who was traveling with them and collaborating because she wanted to, and that the $1k/month plus other compensation was a generous gift."
  • "Over her time there she spent through all of her financial runway, and spent a significant portion of her last few months there financially in the red (having more bills and medical expenses than the money in her bank account)" (I think this one can be disputed depending on how the details of Alice's Amazon business shake out, and I also think depending on the details of the reimbursement situation)
  • "From talking with both Alice and Nonlinear, it turned out that by the end of Alice’s time working there, since the end of February Kat Woods had thought of Alice as an employee that she managed, but that Emerson had not thought of Alice as an employee, primarily just someone who was traveling with them and collaborating because she wanted to, and that the $1k/month plus other compensation was a generous gift."
  • "Alice quit being vegan while working there. She was sick with covid in a foreign country, with only the three Nonlinear cofounders around, but nobody in the house was willing to go out and get her vegan food, so she barely ate for 2 days. Alice eventually gave in and ate non-vegan food in the house. She also said that the Nonlinear cofounders marked her quitting veganism as a ‘win’, as they thad been arguing that she should not be vegan. (Nonlinear disputes this, and says that they did go out and buy her some vegan burgers food and had some vegan food in the house. They agree that she quit being vegan at this time, and say it was because being vegan was unusually hard due to being in Puerto Rico. Alice disputes that she received any vegan burgers.)" (I think this one feels pretty debunked based on the screenshots that Nonlinear sent, though I do also still assign some probability to Alice being able to clarify what is going on with this accusation given the facts that Nonlinear presented)
  • "Everyone lived in the same house. Emerson and Kat would share a room, and the others would make do with what else was available, often sharing bedrooms. Nonlinear primarily moved around countries where they typically knew no locals and the employees regularly had nobody to interact with other than the cofounders, and employees report that they were denied requests to live in a separate AirBnb from the cofounders."
  • "The employees were very unclear on the boundaries of what would and wouldn’t be paid for by Nonlinear. For instance, Alice and Chloe report that they once spent several days driving around Puerto Rico looking for cheaper medical care for one of them before presenting it to senior staff, as they didn’t know whether medical care would be covered, so they wanted to make sure that it was as cheap as possible to increase the chance of senior staff saying yes."
  • "One of the central reasons Alice says that she stayed on this long was because she was expecting financial independence with the launch of her incubated project that had $100k allocated to it (fundraised from FTX). In her final month there Kat informed her that while she would work quite independently, they would keep the money in the Nonlinear bank account and she would ask for it, meaning she wouldn’t have the financial independence from them that she had been expecting, and learning this was what caused Alice to quit."
  • "In a conversation between Emerson Spartz and one of the employees, the employee asked for advice for a friend that wanted to find another job while being employed, without letting their current employer know about their decision to leave yet. Emerson reportedly immediately stated that he now has to update towards considering that the said employee herself is considering leaving Nonlinear. He went on to tell her that he gets mad at his employees who leave his company for other jobs that are equally good or less good; he said he understands if employees leave for clearly better opportunities. The employee reports that this led them to be very afraid of leaving the job, both because of the way Emerson made the update on thinking the employee is now trying to leave, as well as the notion of Emerson being retaliative towards employees that leave for “bad reasons”."
  • "Many different people reported that Emerson Spartz would boast about his business negotiations tactics to employees and visitors. He would encourage his employees to read many books on strategy and influence. When they read the book The 48 Laws of Power he would give examples of him following the “laws” in his past business practices. One story that he told to both employees and visitors was about his intimidation tactics when involved in a conflict with a former teenage mentee of his, Adorian Deck. [...] In one version, he claimed that he strong-armed Adorian and his mother with endless legal threats and they backed down and left him with full control of the brand. This person I spoke to couldn’t recall the details but said that Emerson tried to frighten Deck and his mother, and that they (the person Emerson was bragging to) found it “frightening” and thought the behavior was “behavior that’s like 7 standard deviations away from usual norms in this area.”"
  • "Someone else I spoke to reported him repeatedly saying that he would be “very antagonistic” toward people he was in conflict with. He reportedly gave the example that, if someone tried to sue him, he would be willing to go into legal gray areas in order to “crush his enemies” (a phrase he apparently used a lot), including hiring someone to stalk the person and their family in order to freak them out. "
  • "After Chloe eventually quit, Alice reports that Kat/Emerson would “trash talk” her, saying she was never an “A player”, criticizing her on lots of dimensions (competence, ethics, drama, etc) in spite of previously primarily giving Chloe high praise. This reportedly happened commonly toward other people who ended or turned down working together with Nonlinear. "
  • This conversation:
  • "Multiple people who worked with Kat reported that Kat had a pattern of enforcing arbitrary short deadlines on people in order to get them to make the decision she wants e.g. “I need a decision by the end of this call”, or (in an email to Alice) “This is urgent and important. There are people working on saving the world and we can’t let our issues hold them back from doing their work.” "
  • "Alice reported that she would get [very intense compliments] near-daily. She eventually had the sense that this was said in order to get something out of her. She reported that one time, after a series of such compliments, the Kat Woods then turned and recorded a near-identical series of compliments into their phone for a different person. Kat Woods reportedly several times cried while telling Alice that she wanted the employee in their life forever and was worried that this employee would ever not be in Kat’s life."
  • "Other times when Alice would come to Kat with money troubles and asking for a pay rise, Alice reports that Kat would tell them that this was a psychological issue and that actually they had safety, for instance they could move back in with their parents, so they didn’t need to worry."
  • "Alice also reports that she was explicitly advised by Kat Woods to cry and look cute when asking Emerson Spartz for a salary improvement, in order to get the salary improvement that she wanted, and was told this was a reliable way to get things from Emerson. (Alice reports that she did not follow this advice.)"
  • "By the same reasoning, the employees reported that they were given 100% of the menial tasks around the house (cleaning, tidying, etc) due to their lower value of time to the company. For instance, if a cofounder spilled food in the kitchen, the employees would clean it up. This was generally reported as feeling very demeaning."
  • "Alice and Chloe reported a substantial conflict within the household between Kat and Alice. Alice was polyamorous, and she and Drew entered into a casual romantic relationship. Kat previously had a polyamorous marriage that ended in divorce, and is now monogamously partnered with Emerson. Kat reportedly told Alice that she didn't mind polyamory "on the other side of the world”, but couldn't stand it right next to her, and probably either Alice would need to become monogamous or Alice should leave the organization. Alice didn't become monogamous. Alice reports that Kat became increasingly cold over multiple months, and was very hard to work with.[7]"
  • "Alice reports then taking a vacation to visit her family, and trying to figure out how to repair the relationship with Kat. Before she went on vacation, Kat requested that Alice bring a variety of illegal drugs across the border for her (some recreational, some for productivity). Alice argued that this would be dangerous for her personally, but Emerson and Kat reportedly argued that it is not dangerous at all and was “absolutely risk-free”. Privately, Drew said that Kat would “love her forever” if she did this. I bring this up as an example of the sorts of requests that Kat/Emerson/Drew felt comfortable making during Alice’s time there."
  • "Chloe was hired by Nonlinear with the intent to have them do executive assistant tasks for Nonlinear (this is the job ad they responded to). After being hired and flying out, Chloe was informed that on a daily basis their job would involve driving e.g. to get groceries when they were in different countries. She explained that she didn’t have a drivers’ license and didn’t know how to drive. Kat/Emerson proposed that Chloe learn to drive, and Drew gave her some driving lessons. When Chloe learned to drive well enough in parking lots, she said she was ready to get her license, but she discovered that she couldn’t get a license in a foreign country. Kat/Emerson/Drew reportedly didn’t seem to think that mattered or was even part of the plan, and strongly encouraged Chloe to just drive without a license to do their work, so she drove ~daily for 1-2 months without a license. "
  • "Some unpaid interns (who worked remotely for Nonlinear for 1-3 months) said that they regretted not getting paid, and that when they brought it up with Kat Woods she said some positive sounding things and they expected she would get back to them about it, but that never happened during the rest of their internships."

Yes, to be clear, many of these things are hearsay, and will be hard for either party to verify or falsify. But I think there really are a lot of pretty clear facts here that aren't just "vibes-based reasoning". 

I think some of the concrete factual assertions in the post do appear to be wrong (like in the vegan case and conflating salary with outstanding reimbursements), and also omit a bunch of important context (like possibly, depending on how much money it made, the existence of Alice's Amazon business or that for a decent chunk of their time at Nonlinear they stayed at the FTX apartments). And those are the ones that I am most interested in following up on, and I think it would be appropriate for Ben, Alice and Chloe to acknowledge, or provide additional evidence around if they want to argue that they are indeed true.

But I think dismissing Ben's post as primarily vibes based reasoning seems quite strawmanny to me. Many of the accusations here seem substantial and not just vibes-based to me. 

Replies from: daniel-glasscock
comment by Daniel (daniel-glasscock) · 2023-12-18T01:46:35.300Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I did notice these. I specifically used the word "loadbearing" because almost all of these either don't matter much or their interpretation is entirely context-dependent. I focused on the salary bullet-point because failing to pay agreed salary is both 

1. A big deal, and 

2. Bad in almost any context. 

The other ones that I think are pretty bad are the Adderall smuggling and the driving without a license, but my prior on "what is the worst thing the median EA org has done" is somewhere between willful licensing noncompliance and illegal amphetamine distribution.

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-18T01:55:12.454Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Hmm, at least for me many of the quotes above are substantially more load-bearing, but also not totally crazy that this differs between people. I do think in that case it might make sense to say "load bearing for my overall judgement of Nonlinear", since I (and Ben) do think many of the above are on a similar or higher level of being concerning than the salary point, and Ben intended to communicate that.

I also want to highlight that I do currently believe that Alice was asked to smuggle harder drugs across the border than Adderall (though the Adderall one seems confirmed), and that Nonlinear are disputing this because it will be hard to prove, not because its false (though I am also not like 90%+ confident).

comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-17T23:52:14.561Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think this is just false. Nonlinear provided enough screenshot evidence to prove that Chloe agreed to exactly the arrangement that she ultimately got. Yes, it was a shitty job, but it was also a shitty job offer, and Chloe seems to have agreed to that shitty job offer. 

I don't think you can describe that paragraph as "straightforwardly false". 

It is correct that Chloe's compensation was verbally agreed to come out to around ~$70k-$82k a year (the $75k number comes from a conversation with Kat, Kat's job interview transcript seems to suggest the total compensation would be $70k of benefits plus $1k/mo of stipend for a total of $82k[1]), and that's why she was interested in the job. Nonlinear then offered a contract where $1k/mo of those $70k-$82k would be paid out as stipend, and she would be provided benefits adding up to the remainder (which wasn't specified in the contract, but was explained during the relevant interview which Kat posted the transcript off). 

However, the benefits did not add up to ~$60-$72k [2], and Nonlinear did not really have any accounting basis on which to claim that the benefits would add up to at least $60k-$72, which strikes me as pretty deceptive. The section you quote is pretty explicit that indeed part of the agreement was that the way Chloe would get compensated to a $70k-$80k equivalent was via being compensated indirectly via benefits, and that the issue at hand was that those benefits did not add up to their promised numbers. 

So overall, this paragraph seems accurate to me. Which part here is false? 

  1. ^
  2. ^

    It requires some additional analysis to show why the compensation that Nonlinear claims does not actually add up to the promised amount of compensation. I encourage you to look through the posted "Alice + Chloe Finances" document and decide for yourself whether the listed expenses make sense to include as part of compensation.

Replies from: daniel-glasscock, pktechgirl, ea247
comment by Daniel (daniel-glasscock) · 2023-12-18T02:44:09.625Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Maybe I'm projecting more economic literacy than I should, but anytime I read something like "benefits package worth $X", I always decompose it into its component parts mentally. A benefits package nominally worth $X will provide economic value less than $X, because there is option value lost compared to if you were given liquid cash instead. 

The way I would conceptualize the compensation offered (and the way it is presented in the Nonlinear screenshots) is $1000/month + all expenses paid while traveling around fancy destinations with the family. I kind of doubt that Chloe had a mental model of how $40,000/yr in fancy travel destinations differs from $70,000/yr in fancy travel destinations. There could potentially be unrecorded verbal conversations that would make me feel differently about this, but I don't currently feel like Chloe got materially shafted other than that she probably didn't enjoy the travel as much as she thought she would.

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-18T03:44:29.852Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Yeah, I agree that a compensation package costing $X will be worth less than $X, and as an employee it totally makes sense to adjust for that.

But then I think separately it's important that the package did actually cost $X, especially if the $X was supposed to include many of the things that determine your very basic quality of life, like food, toiletries, rent, basic transportation, medical care, etc. I also think it matters how far Chloe got into the hiring process of Nonlinear on the assumption that total compensation would be "equivalent to $X", which to be clear, I don't currently know the details off.

Replies from: ea247
comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-18T11:21:59.359Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

She was interviewed three times and was told about compensation during the second interview.

We only mentioned the "equivalent to" thing once in an offhand manner. Every single other communication that we have on record is just talking about all expenses paid plus a stipend. [Edit: it was actually two places we found. The other was on the job ad, saying "Compensation: $60,000 - $100,000"]

And the compensation did not actually cost $70,000, like we said in that conversation. It cost more!

We added up everything and shared it with her. She knew and didn't tell Ben. Worse, she told Ben the opposite. She told Ben no accounting had been done for that and showed him her own accounting that she knew was incomplete and thus inaccurate.

Replies from: jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-19T11:45:51.816Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Every single other communication that we have on record is just talking about all expenses paid plus a stipend.

[EDIT: this was not the right job description; see below]

 

@Elizabeth [LW · GW]  brought up [LW(p) · GW(p)] what looks like the job description for Chloe's position, which has "Compensation: $60,000 - $100,000". These seem to be in tension?

Replies from: daniel-glasscock, ea247
comment by Daniel (daniel-glasscock) · 2023-12-19T15:07:56.844Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Wait, that link goes to an archive page from well after Chloe was hired. When I look back to the screen captures from the period of time that Chloe would have seen, there are no specific numbers given for compensation (would link them myself, but I’m on mobile at the moment).

If the ad that Chloe saw said $60,000 - $100,000 in compensation in big bold letters at the top, then that seems like a bait and switch, but the archives from late 2021 list travel as the first benefit, which seems accurate to what the compensation package actually was.

Replies from: jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-19T16:21:56.582Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Good catch! That's quite weird -- why would you update a job ad to include compensation information after closing applications?

Here are the versions I see:

  • 2021-10-22, 2021-11-18, 2021-12-03: "Pay: amount dependent on role fit and employee needs", "The application deadline is November 1st, 2021, midnight UK time"

  • 2022-07-03: "Application Deadline: July 21st", "Target Start Date: September", "Compensation: $60,000 - $100,000 / year".

Ben's post has:

Chloe worked there from January 2022 to July 2022.

So it looks to me like what we were looking at was a post-Chloe version, probably trying to hire her replacement, and the version Chloe would have seen didn't have that information.

comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-19T12:13:01.164Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Ah, you're right. So we said twice how much we estimated the compensation package to be worth. Will edit original comment to reflect that. 

Replies from: jkaufman, jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-19T16:23:48.784Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I'm sorry, as Daniel pointed out above [LW(p) · GW(p)] this is from a later version of the job description, so this was all in the wrong direction.

comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-19T13:31:02.398Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think this one is a bit different: with the interview it reads reasonably clearly to me that you're talking about a low amount of cash plus expenses, but the job ad doesn't say anything about that. Was the transcribed interview (which I think I remember you saying was the second one?) the first time you raised that almost all the compensation would be via covering expenses?

comment by Elizabeth (pktechgirl) · 2023-12-18T03:43:19.907Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I don't think I'd feel much better about the situation if the travel expenses had added up to $70k. It's not reasonable to bill an employee for their boss's travel tastes (even people who like traveling rarely want to spend 80% of their income on it, and those that do want to choose their own trips). 

Replies from: jkaufman, jkaufman, ea247
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-18T13:09:55.219Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

even people who like traveling rarely want to spend 80% of their income on it

Two additional perspectives for looking at how much we should expect this to be a bad deal:

  • Spending 80% of your income on traveling is uncommon, but spending 80% of your income on housing, food, and transportation while paying a premium for living in a desirable location is actually pretty common among young professionals?

  • After graduating college I spent several months washing dishes for ~$200/wk, because I wanted to spend the summer at at a camp that charged vacationers ~$800/wk. I knew what I was getting into, had a good time, and don't feel like I was exploited.

Replies from: pktechgirl, ea247
comment by Elizabeth (pktechgirl) · 2023-12-19T02:37:06.850Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think "Chloe made an informed decision to do this" is a reasonable argument. I don't think the evidence so far proves that was what happened[1], but if proven I’d agree it answered my concern on this front.

But if that’s the argument, why bring up the amount Nonlinear spent on her at all? The question would be whether they covered the agreed upon expenses to the agreed upon level (no promising luxury housing and delivering tenements- admittedly unlikely to be the problem here- and no promising medical care and then arguing about necessary expenses- and it sounds like there was ambiguity on what would be covered there). Nonlinear could spend less than projections while still following the agreement and it would be fine. 

If you are calculating expenses, it's a mess. Many people do spend 80%+ of their income on housing, food, medical, etc, but you still can’t count $1 on housing your employer chose as equivalent to $1 on housing you chose. It's (probably) not $0 either, housing is housing, but figuring out the discount factor is hard even when everyone feels good about the situation. Figuring it out now seems impossible.

As I see it the options are:

  1. Nonlinear and Chloe agreed she’d be paid travel expenses + a stipend. The $ total of the expenses is irrelevant as long as they covered what they said they would.
  2. Nonlinear led Chloe to believe she’d be paid $N in salary, and then coerced or tricked her into accepting expenses + stipend. The dollar value of the expenses is irrelevant here too.
  3. Nonlinear and Chloe agreed she’d be paid a stipend plus $70k/year in travel and living expenses, with most living choices made by Nonlinear. This agreement begs for trouble. How do you divide expenses? Do you split the airbnb evenly? By bedroom? Is it fair Kat + Emerson get a discount for sharing a room when they're dating? What happens when Chloe's boyfriend visits? How much does Chloe value that trip to St Barts when what she wanted was a day away from her job? How do you check if the boss is reporting honestly? This is the scenario in which actual expenses incurred are most relevant, but it’s such a doomed agreement I can’t bring myself to care.
  1. ^

    The contract looks pretty clear, but by Kat's own account Chloe seemed to be operating under a different set of beliefs while working. This might be a reading comprehension issue on her part, but I think there’s a lot of room for her to feel misled by verbal statements made earlier. Or by the job listing, which lists compensation as $60k-$100k/year without mentioning much of it will be paid in travel. 

Replies from: jkaufman, ea247
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-19T10:00:23.172Z · LW(p) · GW(p)
  1. Nonlinear and Chloe agreed she’d be paid travel expenses + a stipend. The $ total of the expenses is irrelevant as long as they covered what they said they would.

That's currently my view, yes. The evidence NL has provided for this (contract, texts, transcript) seems pretty strong to me, and while I could imagine Chloe presenting counter evidence (was never sent the contract, screenshots are misleadingly cropped) it's not what I'm expecting?

EDIT: But thanks for pointing out the job ad: if a role is advertised that way and someone applies expecting that I'd think there would be more than NL has said on the way to ending up with the arrangement they seem to have gone with. I've now asked Kat about it [LW(p) · GW(p)].

EDIT2: The job ad bit is all a red herring [LW(p) · GW(p)]: it's post-Chloe and the original one just said "amount dependent on role fit and employee needs".

why bring up the amount Nonlinear spent on her at all?

Isn't it Ben and Chloe who are bringing this up? And then NL is engaging because the amount spent does seem to matter to some people?

Replies from: pktechgirl
comment by Elizabeth (pktechgirl) · 2023-12-19T21:56:55.362Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Isn't it Ben and Chloe who are bringing this up? And then NL is engaging because the amount spent does seem to matter to some people?

 

My original comment is pushing back against habryka doing so. 

Replies from: jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-19T23:11:21.212Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Whoops, thanks! Lost the thread here...

comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-19T12:22:08.588Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

The evidence that she made an informed decision are:

Her correctly explaining in her own words how the compensation package works seems like more than enough evidence that she understood the compensation package she was signing up for. The fact that we also sent her a work contract and also recorded the original conversation in question and you can see it yourself I think proves more than can usually ever be proven in such cases that she made an informed decision about the compensation package. 

Replies from: pktechgirl, bec-hawk
comment by Elizabeth (pktechgirl) · 2023-12-20T00:23:14.849Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Your document says you sent the contract to Chloe 6 days after her start date. When did she sign it? 

comment by Rebecca (bec-hawk) · 2023-12-20T02:14:23.831Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

FYI, when I click on some proportion (possibly 100%?) of these links to the Google doc (including the links in your comment here) it just takes me to the very start of Google doc, the beginning of the contents section, and I can’t always figure out which section to click on. Possibly a mobile issue with Google docs, but thought I should let you know 🙂

Replies from: ea247
comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-20T02:18:18.195Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thanks for letting me know! Strange. It shouldn't be doing that. Usually if you wait a couple of seconds, it'll jump to the right section. It's working on both my mobile and laptop.

If you try waiting a couple seconds and that doesn't work, let me know. Maybe DM me and then we can troubleshoot, then we can post the solution up when we figure it out. 

Replies from: bec-hawk
comment by Rebecca (bec-hawk) · 2023-12-20T21:20:56.132Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Thanks for checking! Have now figured out the issue, the thing I described was happening when Google docs opened in safari (which I knew), but I’ve now gotten it to open in the app proper.

comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-18T16:25:25.420Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Good points! Added some more points here as well [LW(p) · GW(p)]. 

The "spending 80% on travel" is quit misleading, because it comes from counting AirBnB costs as "travel" expenses. That would make sense if they were just traveling for a short period of time, say, to go to an EAG, but if you only live in AirBnBs, then counting that as travel instead of rent seems misleading. 

If that's true, I have spent $0 on housing in the last 4 years, and that doesn't seem right. 

If you don't count housing as a travel expense, then it comes to only 6% on travel, which is pretty reasonable given that we literally travel full-time. 

(Also, it's irrelevant because rent shouldn't count as travel expenses, but even if we did count it, it would still only come out to 68%, not 80%. I don't know where this 80% is coming from.)

comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-18T12:13:18.132Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

It's not reasonable to bill an employee for their boss's travel tastes

From the evidence above the deal was pretty clearly $1k/mo + NL pays for stuff. Reading the interview transcript, Kat's saying this can be thought of as being worth $70k isn't an offer to pay $70k with deductions for stuff.

Now, Chloe clearly didn't end up liking the deal and I think the deal was probably not legal [1][2], but those are different objections!

[1] When they were in Puerto Rico $1k/mo ($5.68/hr) was below the minimum wage.

[2] Multijurisdictional employment is famously complex, and digital nomads commonly ignore the legal requirements of working from the various countries. I have no evidence on how NL handled this, but since it's so hard and so rarely done right my guess is NL commonly was employing Alice and Chloe illegally.

comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-18T16:16:18.380Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

80% of the money we spent on their compensation was not going to travel. Copy-pasting comments from the thread [EA(p) · GW(p)] over here where this number was originally said:

"

spend >80% of their income as travel

Where are you getting that number from? It was a mix of rent, food, medical, productivity tools, etc. Some quick math I did shows that only 6% of the money we spent on her was for travel. 

Math from this doc

Flights:800+190=990

Total spent on her when she was compensated with room, board, travel, and medical + stipend: 17,174

990/17174 = 6%

(I didn't include the flight from the Bahamas to London because that was when she was picking her own cash salary, rather than the all expenses paid + stipend. We'd just already booked it before she'd switched to cash. 

If you want to include that, it's hard, because then should we include the cash comp or not?)

It's also important to emphasize that even though compensation is not the same as purely cash pay, she signed up for the compensation package that she got. When she asked to get compensated purely in cash, we said yes.

So it's not like she was forced to spend money in a certain way. It's like if you signed up for a fellowship that covered room and board and a stipend. Later, you decide that you want to spend the money differently, so you talk to the person in charge and they say it's fine for you to be purely compensated with cash. There's no forcing you at any point in that process to spend your money in a particular way. 

Second follow up comment:

most people in Alice or Chloe's shoes would've preferred to be paid the equivalent cash amount

Alice did, and then when she asked she got it. Chloe never requested this. 

It's really important that they signed up for this. If we had promised them $75,000 cash salary and then instead gave them this compensation package, I think that is indeed unethical and unfair. However if they knew what they were signing up for and it was clearly communicated and they said yes, then that is totally fine and an informed choice they made.

I don't see an alternative. I can't read minds. I couldn't change their comp package if I didn't know they wanted to. And when I did know, I said yes. 

If they chose this compensation package when they could have applied for other jobs with a more standard package or could have asked for a standard package, then they did indeed choose this compensation package. 

Additionally, we need to be able to distinguish between “this was what they chose” and “this was what they would have preferred if they could have had anything in the world right away without having to ask”. 

Like, imagine I applied the same standards to funders. “I asked for $50,000 and they gave me $50,000, but I would have preferred $75,000. Yes, I didn’t ask for $75,000, but most people in my shoes would prefer $75,000 over $50,000.” (Or replace with whatever numbers make most sense to you)

This follows the same structure of the argument “Alice and Chloe signed up for a all-expenses-paid + stipend compensation package and they got that, but they would have preferred a cash salary of a similar value to the comp package. Yes, they didn’t ask for that, but most people in their shoes would prefer a cash salary over the other comp package.”

Or maybe a better analogy is a charity applying for funding and the grantmaker donates but with earmarked funds. All orgs would prefer unearmarked funds (flexible funds are more useful than earmarked ones), but that doesn’t mean it’s unethical for a donor to earmark their donations. 

 

Is rent a travel expense? 

Counting rent while traveling if this was a part-time travel experience seems reasonable. For example, if they usually live in the Bay area and they're expected to travel to London for EAG, the cost of the Airbnb in London is clearly a travel expense. 

However, if they are always traveling and they do not have a permanent place anywhere, that does not seem like a travel expense but rather just regular rent. Neither of them had a permanent place. Alice had been nomadic before she even met us. Counting that as a travel expense in this context doesn't make sense and will lead to people being misled.

Think about it. Otherwise then, for the last 4 years I have paid zero rent? Clearly, if you are a full-time nomad then airbnbs are just rent, not travel.

 

How to calculate total compensation

I quickly googled “when people describe a compensation package do they usually include medical” and the first result said: 

“Health Insurance Benefits are a huge piece of your overall compensation package. This can include Medical, Dental, Vision, as well as HSA/FSA accounts. When calculating how much your benefits are worth, think about what percentage your employer is going to be covering. Is your employer covering 100% of the cost? 80%? Does that change if you were to include a spouse or dependents in the coverage? These are all important questions to ask when evaluating an offer package and figuring out how much your health benefits are worth.”

A total compensation package goes beyond your new hires' base pay rate. It also includes items like health insurance, bonuses, and paid time off

When I Google “how to calculate the value of your compensation package” these are the first results:

“To calculate total compensation for an employee, take the sum of their base salary and the dollar value of all additional benefits. Additional benefits include insurance benefits, commissions and bonuses, time-off benefits, and perks.

Total compensation is the combined value of your salary, bonuses, a 401(k) match, free office coffee, and more. All those freebies or conveniences that feel like work perks—including your PTO—are actually parts of your total compensation package, and they can have just as much value as your salary.”

Since Google knows my history, I thought maybe it's giving me a biased result. So I tried searching in incognito mode so it wasn't taking into account my recent posting, and it gave the same results. 

Now, I do think that a compensation package is clearly different from cash salary. We say that right away [EA · GW] at the almost the very beginning of our post. But we did not describe it to them or to anybody as a $75,000 salary cash. We described it as a compensation package that we estimated to be worth around $70,000.

Once, off hand, in a recorded interview. Every single other communication was just saying all expenses paid plus stipend. 

They were informed about this beforehand and they signed up for it. If they had wanted something different, all they had to do was ask. Or they could have applied to a different job. When Alice did, she got it.

If people come away from reading this thinking that we said that we paid them both a cash salary of $75,000 or that it's the same as a $75,000 cash salary, then they made the same mistake that Chloe seems to have made. Chloe kept on saying that we offered to pay her something equivalent to a $75,000 cash salary. We were saying that this was worth around $70,000. I think her interpreting it this way led to a lot of suffering. We tried to explain it to her a bunch of times that that was not what we were saying but she did not seem to be able to update. I do think people seem to struggle with this a lot.

I think the main thing though, and the way I think about it at least, is as a consequentialist. I don't think in terms of how much money is it worth etc. I tend to think of it as are you getting your needs met? What about your preferences? And I think the key is that she was living an exceptionally comfortable lifestyle. She was living the almost exactly the same lifestyle as myself.

She also had plenty of freedom and options. She publicly says she had savings and we covered everything so well that, as far as we can tell, all of her stipend went into savings as well. She got her dream job 2 and 1/2 months after she quit. And she could have gotten a regular dev job far faster if she wanted. 

I don't know how she would have spent the money otherwise, But that seems irrelevant. It seems like if somebody got a scholarship that included room and board, and then they get upset, because they would have spent it on a different house. If they accept the scholarship, then that is how they would spend it. They would spend it on that house and that food, because that is what they chose. They could have just tried to get a different scholarship or a job. In fact, if you accept that scholarship, and then speak to the people who gave you it and say that you would prefer cash instead and they say yes, that is exceptionally generous and way outside the norm of what is expected. 

If a scholarship/fellowship/job offered you room and board and you accepted and then later asked for cash instead I suspect that 98% of them would say no. 

She is trying to make it sound like a hardship and us being unreasonable when it is incredibly unreasonable to ask for your compensation package to be changed so quickly after you accepted it. 

Most people do not ask for changes in compensation until they've been working for at least a year. 

Most people if they’re offered room and board + stipend never get the option of switching to cash only.

Most people don’t accept a compensation package and then later say they would have preferred a different compensation package and therefore they were financially controlled. 

Most people don’t go to the EA Hotel and say that they’re being financially controlled because they got room and board and a stipend and couldn’t choose to spend the money on something else. 

Most people don’t say that a scholarship offering to pay for room and board is somehow bad because the student could have used that money to spend less on a room or paid for a different room. 

Sure, everybody would prefer that. But they are not entitled to that. 

Sure, some people might misinterpret a compensation package being estimated to be worth $X as being the same as a cash salary of $X. But as long as you clearly communicate what they’re signing up for and they have other options and they choose the compensation package, then nothing wrong was done. If they later change their mind and want something different, they have to ask or quit and find a job that meets their criteria. They can’t make a choice, later want to make a different choice, then try to pillory an person for not reading their mind and giving them everything they ask for right away. 

People can’t say “They told me I’d get paid $X and I got paid $X but I think $Y would be better, therefore we have to warn the community about the ‘predator’ in our midst, ‘chewing up and spitting out’ the youth of the community.” 

They can say "They offered me $X and I got paid $X, and I would have preferred $Y, and when I asked for $Y, I got $Y." 

They can say "They offered me $X and I got paid $X. I would have preferred $Y, but I never asked for $Y and that made me sad. I guess I should learn from this and get better at asking people for things instead of expecting mind-reading and getting everything that I want immediately without asking."

Replies from: pktechgirl, jkaufman
comment by Elizabeth (pktechgirl) · 2023-12-20T00:39:58.419Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Was medical considered part of compensation? In the appendix you describe it as Emerson "generously covering" them, and that Alice never had an agreement to have them covered.

comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-18T16:40:33.942Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I know it's hard having lots of critical attention and upending your schedule to respond to inquisitive internet people, but if you were able to be a bit more concise I think it would be really helpful for readers. Your comment is ~2k words, but reads to me like it has more like 750 words worth of things to say.

Replies from: ea247
comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-18T17:12:10.795Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Yeah, I agree. I find it quite difficult to write concisely. I am trying to get better, but as you can clearly see, I have not succeeded to the optimal amount yet. 😛

comment by KatWoods (ea247) · 2023-12-20T16:51:18.390Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I have noticed that you are asking yourself “can I believe this?” when assessing Alice and Chloe’s claims and “must I believe this?” when assessing our claims. Please try to apply similar evidentiary standards to all claims. 

she would be provided benefits adding up to the remainder (which wasn't specified in the contract, but was explained during the relevant interview which Kat posted the transcript off). 

Where does it say that in the transcript? I’m reading it again and I just don’t see where we say anything even like that. 

And it would be really weird to say that too. I’ve never heard of somebody offering room & board + a stipend who’s said that it has to add up to a certain amount, otherwise you pay the difference (but you don’t pay the difference if the costs go over). 

Kat's job interview transcript seems to suggest the total compensation would be $70k of benefits plus $1k/mo of stipend for a total of $82k

This isn’t what was said. It was (paraphrasing to get rid of verbal tiks): “So what we’re thinking is basically, like having a package where it’s about equivalent of being paid like 70k a year in terms of:

  • Housing
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Random fun stuff
  • $1k a month for things not covered by that. 

Saying “and then on top of that” is just another way for saying “and”. It was a verbal conversation, not a legal contract. 

The contract states clearly that there wasn’t any “and then we’ll pay the difference if it’s below $70k” clause.

She clearly communicated that she understood the compensation package before she arrived. 


 

Replies from: habryka4
comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-20T17:10:34.069Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I have noticed that you are asking yourself “can I believe this?” when assessing Alice and Chloe’s claims and “must I believe this?” when assessing our claims. Please try to apply similar evidentiary standards to all claims. 

This seems to confidently speak about the internals of my mind, which isn't always a bad thing to do, but in this case I don't think is accurately capturing reality. My guess is its best to keep at least this conversation at the level of facts and arguments.

And it would be really weird to say that too. I’ve never heard of somebody offering room & board + a stipend who’s said that it has to add up to a certain amount, otherwise you pay the difference (but you don’t pay the difference if the costs go over). 

I did not say here that you "have to pay the difference" (and I don't think anyone else has said that).

I don't understand the relevance of this screenshot. I don't think it matters for anyone's model whether Chloe thought of the $1000/mo as salary or stipend. She says "you mentioned that everything is covered", which is vague and doesn't tell us what exactly she thought was covered.

The contract states clearly that there wasn’t any “and then we’ll pay the difference if it’s below $70k” clause.

Yes, I agree that the literal contract is quite relevant, though again, nobody said that there was such a clause. The relevant component is whether the expectation was set that the benefits would add up to ~$70k, and whether that expectation was set accurately. If my employer sells me on a job by offering me a compensation package they estimate to be worth $70k, and then they spend much less than that, then that clearly seems like cause for a legitimate grievance.

I do think the contract generally does matter. It also matters a bunch when Chloe actually signed the contract since it determines for how much of your relevant work period you were on the same page about at least the legal context. Could you confirm when Chloe actually signed the contract?

comment by David Hornbein · 2023-12-12T23:49:13.512Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

On Pace's original post I wrote [LW · GW]:

"think about how bad you expect the information would be if I selected for the worst, credible info I could share"

Alright. Knowing nothing about Nonlinear or about Ben, but based on the rationalist milieu, then for an org that’s weird but basically fine I’d expect to see stuff like ex-employees alleging a nebulously “abusive” environment based on their own legitimately bad experiences and painting a gestalt picture that suggests unpleasant practices but without any smoking-gun allegations of really egregious concrete behavior (as distinct from very bad effects on the accusers); allegations of nepotism based on social connections between the org’s leadership and their funders or staff; accusations of shoddy or motivated research which require hours to evaluate; sources staying anonymous for fear of “retaliation” but without being able to point to any legible instances of retaliation or concrete threats to justify this; and/or thirdhand reports of lying or misdirection around complicated social situations.

[reads post]

This sure has a lot more allegations of very specific and egregious behavior than that, yeah.

Having looked at the evidence and documentation which Nonlinear provides, it seems like the smoking-gun allegations of really egregious concrete behavior are probably just false. I have edited my earlier comment accordingly.

comment by Archimedes · 2023-12-26T21:18:55.624Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

All the pics and bragging about how wonderful their adventures were really rub me the wrong way. It comes across as incredibly tone deaf to the allegations and focusing on irrelevant things. Hot tubs, beaches, and sunsets are not so important if you’re suffering from deeper issues. Good relationship dynamics are way more important than scenery and perks, especially in a small group setting.

comment by Noosphere89 (sharmake-farah) · 2023-12-16T14:58:49.121Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

My general sentiment is similar to Yarrow Bouchard's comment below, in that I believe that the most explosive/smoking gun claims from Ben's post are either false or exaggerated, but the way Kat, Emerson and Drew reacted with is an extreme red flag, so much so that while I agree with TracingWoodgrains and Geoffrey Miller on why Ben needed to be more accurate, I understand why Ben would just go straight to posting as soon as the suing threat happened.

I'd probably not fund Nonlinear, if I was a grantor right now.

https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/H4DYehKLxZ5NpQdBC/?commentId=7YxPKCW3nCwWn2swb [EA · GW]

comment by spencerg · 2023-12-12T16:33:28.307Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I’m glad to see that Nonlinear’s evidence is now public, since Ben’s post did not seem to be a thorough investigation. As I said to Ben before he posted his original post, I knew of evidence that strongly contradicted his post, and I encouraged him to temporarily pause the release of his post so he could review the evidence carefully, but he would not delay. [cross posted this comment on EA forum]

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T13:03:53.628Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

What new evidence do you think I should update on if my view was "Nonlinear is a hard but rewarding place to work, with edit slightly aggressive tendencies that suppress bad stories. Some people will end up badly hurt by this. Both parties can try and avoid that happening."

Cos that was roughly my view and it still is. 

comment by tailcalled · 2023-12-12T22:59:57.192Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

2 EAs are Secretly Evil Hypothesis: 2 (of 21) Nonlinear employees felt bad because while Kat/Emerson seem like kind, uplifting charity workers publicly, behind closed doors they are ill-intentioned ne’er do wells.

2 EAs are Mentally Unwell Hypothesis: They felt bad because, sadly, they had long-term mental health issues, which continued for the 4-5 months they worked for us.
 

This feels overly binary. What about:

EA is Secretly Evil and 2 EAs are Mentally Unwell Hypothesis: EA is a sort of mixture between utilitarian world conquest, a pyramid scheme and a pseudocharity focused on providing comfort for elites, which is kind of evil, and Nonlinear's main offer to Alice/Chloe was entrance into this scheme. Most people would stay away form this, but especially Alice sucks at maintaining any sort of independent boundaries/power, and the pair ultimately ended up conflicted between trying to enter EA and trying to do something else, leading to a lot of contradictions.

Epistemic status: low-confidence. I've had trouble following along on the Nonlinear controversy, so I am probably getting some facts wrong, plus I only looked through like 10 of the points in the report before they started feeling repetitive.

The "EA is Secretly Evil" part is kind of a hypothesis that has been forwarded from a lot of other contexts so it is more of a prior thing (though I heard that Emerson Spartz stole some kid's big youtube channel, did this turn out to be a lie or was it legit?). A lot of the counterevidence seems to fit this hypothesis perfectly well (even if it also fits the 2 EAs are Mentally Unwell Hypothesis).

As a general principle it seems suspicious if the hypothesis space is low-dimensional, especially if there's a direct correspondence between the hypotheses and the parties to a conflict. I think it indicates that there is not great information integration between the parties, and that the hypotheses available are simply the parties' preferred narratives, which could both deviate far from the truth.

Uhm, anyway I'm about to go to bed so I won't be able to respond to comments until tomorrow. I'm sorry for dropping such a spicy-yet-uninformed comment and then dropping away. I want to re-emphasize that my take is badly-informed so feel free to disagree and ignore me if you don't independently find it compelling, and please don't Aumann-agree overly strongly with me.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T13:02:51.103Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think I go with "Nonlinear is a hard but rewarding place to work, with *edit* slightly aggressive tendencies that suppress bad stories. Some people will get broken over this. Both parties can try and avoid that happening." 

Replies from: elityre, tailcalled
comment by Eli Tyre (elityre) · 2023-12-14T21:57:25.008Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think this is a very reasonable view and think it deserves less-karma hate. 

I'm not sure what the magnitudes involved are, and I might not endorse "slightly aggressive", but at present, my max-probability guess is that some version of this hypothesis is the true one.

comment by tailcalled · 2023-12-14T13:21:32.168Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think this overlaps with what I said, except I'm more specific/concrete? E.g. whereas you say "Nonlinear is ... rewarding", I am more specific in saying what the rewards are, namely "entry into ... utilitarian world conquest, a pyramid scheme and a pseudocharity focused on providing comfort for elites". Like there's no doubt that Nonlinear provided lots of connections to high-ranking EAs and lots of luxurious vacations, and it also sounds like Nonlinear's response to the accusations of not providing enough reward was to mention precisely these things, so these seem like the main rewards nonlinear provided.

Possibly other Nonlinear employees can chime in and mention non-luxury-vacation non-EA-connection rewards they've gotten. Like in terms of pay it seems like Alice/Chloe earned way less than I do in my job, and I don't think this is disputed.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T13:34:09.865Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I don't think there is enough evidence here of the pyramid scheme pseudocharity bit. Why have such a complex hypthesis when my simpler one will do?

Replies from: tailcalled
comment by tailcalled · 2023-12-14T13:54:11.160Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

One should definitely be cautious in concluding for certain that these are the rewards, but I think it is worth promoting the hypothesis to attention due to the convergence of multiple reasons:

  • If it is a pyramid scheme and a pseudocharity, that seems important to know so it can be stopped or at least doesn't distract from genuine charities.
  • The general prior probability for the pyramid scheme/comfort pseudocharity is I think high enough to promote the hypothesis for attention even without evidence, and the mechanism for this seems clear enough: pyramid schemes are incentivized because they allow founders to extract resources from their followers, and turning those pyramid schemes to provide luxury for top members is helpful to incentivize these members to participate or strengthen the scheme.
  • By explicitly stating the details of alternative hypotheses, it becomes easier to figure out what would constitute evidence for or against them.

In the context of the Nonlinear drama, I find that this hypothesis resolves several things that might otherwise seem confusingly contradictory. For instance, assuming the hypothesis is true, here's a model for how Alice could feel simultaneously isolated and excited:

If, in order to run their pyramid scheme, Nonlinear raised a lot of excitement, this would raIse the hypothesis "EA/Nonlinear is excellent!" to consideration. But if Alice/Chloe never saw any definite good consequences of EA/Nonlinear for themselves, what they saw would also be compatible with a hypothesis of "EA/Nonlinear is a pyramid scheme". Thus they would have a very wide range of uncertainty about how good EA/Nonlinear is, and if the upper range was true it would of course be logical to be excited about joining them, but if the lower range is true it would of course also be logical to be sad about not developing non-EA resources, i.e. to feel isolated by the time spent on EA/Nonlinear. Thus simultaneously feeling excited about connections and isolated.

Replies from: Nathan Young
comment by Nathan Young · 2023-12-14T14:20:47.812Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Surely, "it was a big gamble that didn't pay off" works as well as an explanation here. They didn't realise how bad it would be and regret taking up the offer.

Replies from: tailcalled
comment by tailcalled · 2023-12-14T14:23:15.961Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I guess, but it doesn't explain why it was so bad.

I should say, I don't mean "it doesn't explain why" is a knockdown debunking because usually when stuff happens, one doesn't find out why. (But it can still be desirable to know why to be better educated about how it will generalize, hence why I post a hypothesis that I think is worthy of investigation and which I suspect helps me to make sense of things.)

comment by geoffreymiller · 2023-12-13T21:03:12.889Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

There's a human cognitive bias that may be relevant to this whole discussion, but that may not be widely appreciated in Rationalist circles yet: gender bias in 'moral typecasting'.

In a 2020 paper, my U. New Mexico colleague Tania Reynolds and coauthors found a systematic bias for women to be more easily categorized as victims and men as perpetrators, in situations where harm seems to have been done. The ran six studies in four countries (total N=3,317). 

(Ever since a seminal paper by Gray & Wegner (2009), there's been a fast-growing literature on moral typecasting. Beyond this Nonlinear dispute, it's something that Rationalists might find useful in thinking about human moral psychology.) 

If this dispute over Nonlinear is framed as male Emerson Spartz (at Nonlinear) vs. the females 'Alice' and 'Chloe', people may tend to see Nonlinear as the harm perpetrator. If it's framed as male Ben Pace (at LessWrong) vs. female Kat Woods (at Nonlinear), people may tend to see Ben as the harm-perpetrator.

This is just one of the many human cognitive biases that's worth bearing in mind when trying to evaluate conflicting evidence in complex situations. 

Maybe it's relevant here, maybe it's not. But the psychological evidence suggests it may be relevant more often than we realize.

(Note: this is a very slightly edited version of a comment originally posted on EA Forum here [EA · GW]). 

Replies from: tailcalled, tailcalled
comment by tailcalled · 2023-12-13T23:02:07.282Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Cognitive bias against men, or stereotype accuracy that men do in fact tend to be perpetrators? I don't think it's a secret that men are more antisocial, and the original accusations against Nonlinear include Emerson seeming dangerously powerseeking in a way that I don't think has been seriously disputed yet. It could be that e.g. Emerson Spartz was manipulating everything at Nonlinear, and this lead to conflicts between Alice/Chloe and Kat, which in turn lead to Ben targeting Kat too much. If something like this works out, I think it could be correct to take the female side over the male side in both conflicts.

comment by tailcalled · 2023-12-13T23:06:14.269Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Does any of the moral typecasting research take regression to the mean into account?

comment by Roko · 2023-12-13T15:14:17.020Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Does someone have a 100 word summary of the whole affair?

My impression is that two nonlinear employees were upset that they weren't getting paid enough and had hurt feelings about some minor incidents like not getting a veggieburger, so they wrote some mean blog posts about the Nonlinear leadership, and the Nonlinear leadership responded that actually they were getting paid enough (seems to amount to something like $100k/yr all in?) and that they'd mostly made it up.

Is that accurate?

Replies from: frontier64
comment by frontier64 · 2023-12-13T19:58:45.078Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

"My impression is that two nonlinear employees were upset that they weren't getting paid enough, and had hurt feelings about some minor incidents like not getting a veggieburger, and made some major claims like being forced to carry illegal drugs across national borders. so They came into contact with Ben Pace, who wrote some a mean blog posts about the Nonlinear leadership and also paid the former employees for their story. Tthe Nonlinear leadership responded that actually they were getting paid enough (seems to amount to something like $100k/yr all in?) and that they'd mostly made it up."

My summary in track changes.

Replies from: jkaufman, Roko
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-17T02:00:39.549Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

$100k/yr all in?

Where is this coming from? My interpretation [EA · GW] of the situation is that they were only being paid $1k/month but also that this was very clearly agreed on up front.

Replies from: frontier64
comment by frontier64 · 2023-12-17T16:20:49.974Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

That’s what nonlinear says it amounts to including all travel expenses, living, etc. Which I really don’t see why other people here choose not to include. If I was an unskilled laborer and my boss was taking me to Costa Rica, giving me my own room with an ocean view, paying for all my meals and transportation, and all my other expenses, that would be a pretty good compensation package.

Replies from: jkaufman, habryka4
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-17T21:15:56.443Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Separate from everything else, I'm confused why you're glossing Alice and Chloe's work as "unskilled labor"?

Replies from: frontier64
comment by frontier64 · 2023-12-19T16:26:45.464Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

That's what it seems like they were doing to me from discussions about their work.

definition of unskilled labor: "labor that requires relatively little or no training or experience for its satisfactory performance"

What I've read alice and chloe did:

  • booking flights
  • driving to places
  • renting transportation
  • cleaning up around the house
  • doing laundry
  • filling out forms
  • buying groceries

edit: Looked at the responsibilities on the job description. Reads like unskilled labor there to me. Especially how the story seems to be that even for filing miscellaneous forms the executive assistant got a ton of help from management and couldn't do it on their own.

If you have a different opinion on what their work amounted to I'd be interested to hear it. But it's definitely not even close to a crux for me.

Replies from: jkaufman
comment by jefftk (jkaufman) · 2023-12-19T16:35:56.712Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Administrative assistants are generally considered skilled, and in the US are legally classified as such (more). I think you're assuming a baseline level of professional skills that "unskilled" does not normally entail.

(Whether their work was skilled, semi-skilled, or unskilled is also not a crux for me: it's pretty irrelevant to whether NL acted poorly. I just want accuracy.)

comment by habryka (habryka4) · 2023-12-17T19:58:47.539Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Nonlinear's own analysis puts the annualized compensation at $70-75k/yr: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1JWZ9vpVqqTkRfWWHYA4pZP7DNJdVUI83lnjna0W2W20/edit 

Annualized first 3 months (not counting when she chose her own pay): $74,940
Annualized when she chose her own salary (25% of her time working at Nonlinear): $72,000 ($6k/month times 12)

The $100k number comes from including some independent income sources, the size of which is relevant to some other questions, but nobody is arguing the total compensation was $100k/yr.

comment by Roko · 2023-12-15T12:36:08.576Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Well, that's progress.

comment by Review Bot · 2024-02-14T19:26:17.192Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

The LessWrong Review [? · GW] runs every year to select the posts that have most stood the test of time. This post is not yet eligible for review, but will be at the end of 2024. The top fifty or so posts are featured prominently on the site throughout the year. Will this post make the top fifty?