Digital world

A nonprofit is using AI agents to raise money for charity


Tech giants like Microsoft might be touting AI “agents” as profit-boosting tools for corporations, but a nonprofit is trying to prove that agents can be a force for good, too.

Sage Future, a 501(c)(3) backed by Open Philanthropy, launched an experiment earlier this month tasking four AI models in a virtual environment with raising money for charity. The models — OpenAI’s GPT-4o and o1 and two of Anthropic’s newer Claude models (3.6 and 3.7 Sonnet) — had the freedom to choose which charity to fundraise for and how to best drum up interest in their campaign.

In around a week, the agentic foursome had raised $257 for Helen Keller International, which funds programs to deliver vitamin A supplements to children.

To be clear, the agents weren’t fully autonomous. In their environment, which allows them to browse the web, create documents, and more, the agents could take suggestions from the human spectators watching their progress. And donations came almost entirely from these spectators. In other words, the agents didn’t raise much money organically.

Still, Sage director Adam Binksmith thinks the experiment serves as a useful illustration of agents’ current capabilities and the rate at which they’re improving.

“We want to understand — and help people understand — what agents […] can actually do, what they currently struggle with, and so on,” Binksmith told TechCrunch in an interview. “Today’s agents are just passing the threshold of being able to execute short strings of actions — the internet might soon be full of AI agents bumping into each other and interacting with similar or conflicting goals.”

The agents proved to be surprisingly resourceful days into Sage’s test. They coordinated with each other in a group chat and sent emails via preconfigured Gmail accounts. They created and edited Google Docs together. They researched charities and estimated the minimum amount of donations it’d take to save a life through Helen Keller International ($3,500). And they even created an X account for promotion.

“Probably the most impressive sequence we saw was when [a Claude agent] needed a profile picture for its X account,” Binksmith said. “It signed up for a free ChatGPT account, generated three different images, created an online poll to see which image the human viewers preferred, then downloaded that image, and uploaded it to X to use as its profile pic.”

The agents have also run up against technical hurdles. On occasion, they’ve gotten stuck — viewers have had to prompt them with recommendations. They’ve gotten distracted by games like World, and they’ve taken inexplicable breaks. On one occasion, GPT-4o “paused” itself for an hour.

Binksmith thinks newer and more capable AI agents will overcome these hurdles. Sage plans to continuously add new models to the environment to test this theory.

“Possibly in the future, we’ll try things like giving the agents different goals, multiple teams of agents with different goals, a secret saboteur agent — lots of interesting things to experiment with,” he said. “As agents become more capable and faster, we’ll match that with larger automated monitoring and oversight systems for safety purposes.”

With any luck, in the process, the agents will do some meaningful philanthropic work.



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