Index
Grant: Center for a New American Security — Outreach on Technological Risk Led by Richard Danzig (Coefficient Giving → Center for a New American Security)
Verdictconfirmed95%
1 check · 4/9/2026Deterministic match: grantee, amount, date matched in source snapshot (2714 rows)
Our claim
entire record- Name
- Center for a New American Security — Outreach on Technological Risk Led by Richard Danzig
- Amount
- $400,352
- Currency
- USD
- Date
- September 2018
- Notes
[Global Catastrophic Risks] Grant investigator: Claire Zabel This page was reviewed but not written by the grant investigator. Center for a New American Security staff also reviewed this page prior to publication. The Open Philanthropy Project recommended a grant of $400,352 t… expand
[Global Catastrophic Risks] Grant investigator: Claire Zabel This page was reviewed but not written by the grant investigator. Center for a New American Security staff also reviewed this page prior to publication. The Open Philanthropy Project recommended a grant of $400,352 to the Center for a New American Security to support outreach by Richard Danzig, former Secretary of the Navy, on technological risks. This is a renewal and expansion of our August 2017 grant, which allowed Dr. Danzig to produce Technology Roulette, a report intended for the national security community detailing the management of risks from losing control of advanced technology. Dr. Danzig intends to use these new funds to continue sharing these ideas with U.S. government officials, as well as spreading them to national security leaders abroad. This grant falls within our work on global catastrophic risks.
Source evidence
1 src · 1 checkconfirmed95%deterministic-row-match · 4/9/2026
- Name
- Center for a New American Security — Outreach on Technological Risk Led by Richard Danzig
- Grantee
- Center for a New American Security
- Focus Area
- Global Catastrophic Risks
- Amount
- $40
NoteDeterministic match: grantee, amount, date matched in source snapshot (2714 rows)
Case № v0Fal5VAWYFiled 4/9/2026Confidence 95%