Interesting concept but its pretty discouraging browsing the website. I'm a principal analyst specializing in digital forensics and incident response and I've been thinking about ways to pivot into a job for a philanthropic organization of some kind in a role directly contributing towards the mission of helping people. I have basic coding skills but a good amount of expertise in a bunch of other technical skills.
Many of the "paths" they've identified as critical things that require people suggest that to be qualified you need a PHD from one of the best schools in the world, which involves being accepted to one of the best schools in the world or living in china for years to learn the skills required to get a job.
For most of them it seems like they are saying unless you already chose this path a long time ago or you're single and don't mind upending your life for several years, you can give up and donate money to a good cause.
There's even a path for my field "information security" which casually suggests getting into a top 5 school for AI like its something everyone can do and then doing security for an AI lab.
The most laughable recommendation was getting a job in quant so you could donate more money.
Many of the "paths" they've identified as critical things that require people suggest that to be qualified you need a PHD from one of the best schools in the world, which involves being accepted to one of the best schools in the world or living in china for years to learn the skills required to get a job.
For most of them it seems like they are saying unless you already chose this path a long time ago or you're single and don't mind upending your life for several years, you can give up and donate money to a good cause.
There's even a path for my field "information security" which casually suggests getting into a top 5 school for AI like its something everyone can do and then doing security for an AI lab.
The most laughable recommendation was getting a job in quant so you could donate more money.