Seems to me that a better thing to do would be to (a) pick the topic that you want, (b) pick the dollar amount you are willing to spend on some research on that topic, and (c) advertise a paper prize funded at that amount.
Then you get potentially a lot of good research on the topic from lots of different perspectives.
Even better if you can find either a sympathetic editor of a good technical journal that does special editions (I would have suggested Synthese, but some recent political nonsense has probably decreased their value) or make a deal with an academic press to publish the best eight or ten papers together. Alternatively, you give out the award and then release the copyright back to the authors with some comments and encouragement to publish in visible journals.
You might do better with one very good researcher that you choose rather getting contributions from whoever is willing to work on spec.
Series: How to Purchase AI Risk Reduction
I recently explained that one major project undergoing cost-benefit analysis at the Singularity Institute is that of a scholarly AI risk wiki. The proposal is exciting to many, but as Kaj Sotala points out:
Indeed. So here is another thing that donations to SI could purchase: good research papers by skilled academics.
Our recent grant of $20,000 to Rachael Briggs (for an introductory paper on TDT) provides an example of how this works:
For example, SI could award grants for the following papers:
(These are only examples. I don't necessarily think these particular papers would be good investments.)