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Culture War Roundup for the week of December 5, 2022

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I Accidentally Got SBF To Admit to Fraud

So...SBF is simply a moron. I've been trying to resist that conclusion, but now I'm asking myself why I bothered.

In the link above Youtuber Coffeezilla drops into a call with SBF (a second time! Why is he still taking calls??) and proceeds to basically get him to admit that funds were comingled.

Coffeezilla noted that SBF always deflects the issue by arguing that some accounts were trading on margin and so were deliberately open to being used by Alameda, unlike regular accounts. So literally all he does - and all any journalist needed to do - was just keep drilling down on whether the FTX only customers who weren't doing that could still get their funds. SBF obviously has no answer. Even worse, he basically screws himself by admitting that they had one withdrawal process which was him admitting to comingling funds.

So...the guy is just a moron. He doesn't have some grand legal plan to plead negligence or ignorance. He has a half-baked plan based on the idea that everyone is dumber than him (despite multiple counterexamples) and he falls apart the minute anyone puts any thought into his answers.

The entire video is actually a good look at how a journalist should view someone like SBF and his word games and deflections and how they should strategize to defeat them (and the end has the sort of pure joy at skewering the target that I bet all journalists feel but are too dignified to admit when picking up their Pulitzer). And this is coming from someone who thought the idea of people like Coffeezilla being "journalists" laughable.

But he has legitimately done the best job of questioning SBF out of everyone (Stefanopoulos was the close second)

SBF and his friends stole billions of dollars. Either they go to jail at some point, or they manage to sneak away like most crypto fraudsters. Neither outcome would be remarkable.

This kind of gotcha journalism is lame. SBF gives the same so slow stupid answers to every question and never really says anything concrete. Hopefully his new lawyer can convince him to stop embarrassing himself.

The interesting part is the people who jumped ship back before any of this came out, when Bankman-Fried was still being lionised as a genius and philanthropist. Some of them make vague allusions to being scared to say anything because Bankman-Fried was vindictive, and that's probably true: at the time, he had enough clout and good reputation that he could have make things uncomfortable for people who spoke out against him.

But that's a deficit of the EA crowd that I've noted (reading back the reports around sex pests and worse in the community, it struck me very much): nobody wants to be a nark. There's a real reluctance and indeed abhorrence of "going to the cops". Reading the various accounts of, and reactions to, that case about a harasser and abuser had me yelling all through it "For fuck's sake, he did that, why didn't you go to the cops???"

But, no. There's so much nuance, you see, and context, and grey areas, and that might be victim blaming, and this is not the community norm to be vindictive and punitive, and and and... so in several cases there were formal committees which set up and investigated and issued a report and said, in effect, 'we can't do anything about anything'.

Bankman-Fried got away with all this for so long because EA/Rationalist values are to be nice people and value community and not to engage with the state because of their non-traditional values and attitudes (I mean, cops are all part of the carceral state which has a monopoly on violence and and and).

So there were people who, back at the start, had an idea shady shit was going on but they didn't want to rock the boat especially not drag the other people still there into trouble, so they just left. It would be very, very interesting to track them down and find out what they knew; why did you resign as co-CEO of Alameda, for instance? Why did this set of people leave? What was going on, that they didn't like and didn't think was what they signed up to?

But we probably won't ever get that, because Bay Area Omertà.

because Bay Area Omertà.

Yeah I've heard some awful shit (like death threats to AI researchers from AI safety folks) but can never actually accuse anyone because the code of silence among that group is surprisingly strong.

There are some public accusations - such as stuff against leverage research here, here, drama in comments, commentary, potentially wrong initation of curzi post. Even there there's a sense it should've been public earlier. There's also the ziz stuff.

There are also periodic struggle sessions about being safe for women - in the comments specific people are called out for misconduct.

Any of these would make for great effortposts on the marsey site!

On the forum in particular and in EA discourse in general, there is a tendency to give less weight/be more critical of posts that are more emotion-heavy and less rational

Boy oh boy. It's sad to see how much effort Scott et al. need to expend on defense in the comments for every post like this, and they can just post the same one each week until people are ground down and give in. The last one was demanding Title IX inquisitions for EA, right?