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John completed a 1-hour task and received adequate compensation for his work. On top of his compensation, we asked him to choose a charity for us to make a $100 donation to. He picked a charity from this list:
Here is the twist: we may donate to the charity that John picked, or we may donate to the charity another participant picked. The other participant received the same compensation but did not have to work for it. We call them "the lucky worker."
We will make exactly one $100 donation to one of the two preferred charities—either the one preferred by John or the one preferred by the lucky worker.
John will not know which charity we donated to unless we tell him. There is no way for him to find out on his own. (The lucky worker will never find out, and we will never tell them.)
John has agreed to all of this. For example, he knows that the donation may go to his preferred charity or to the lucky worker's preferred charity.
When you are ready, click "Next."