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Good Ventures is an impact-focused private foundation and philanthropic organization co-founded by Cari Tuna, a former ''Wall Street Journal'' reporter, and her husband Dustin Moskovitz, one of the co-founders of Facebook. Unlike many other foundations, that aim to maintain an endowment indefinitely or at least for a very long period of time, Good Ventures aims to spend out most or all of its money before Moskovitz and Tuna die.〔 == History == Cari Tuna, a reporter at the San Francisco bureau of the ''Wall Street Journal'', and Dustin Moskovitz, Facebook co-founder, met on a blind date in 2009 at the recommendation of a friend. In 2010, Moskovitz signed the Giving Pledge, and he and Tuna began investigating how best to give away the money.〔 Tuna first learned about charity evaluator GiveWell and the movement for effective giving after reading ''The Life You Can Save'', a book by ethicist and philosopher Peter Singer, and the couple was introduced to the ideas of effective altruism. Tuna and Moskovitz formed Good Ventures. Moskovitz was busy running Asana, so Tuna quit her job in 2011 to work full-time on Good Ventures. She also joined the board of GiveWell in April 2011.〔 In March 2013, Good Ventures launched its own website. In August 2014, GiveWell Labs, an internal project of GiveWell, morphed into the Open Philanthropy Project, a joint venture of GiveWell and Good Ventures, and got a separate website. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Good Ventures」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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