Joined September 2009
2,841 Photos and videos
Este es uno de esos momentos "AJÁ" que solo entiendes luego de experimentar la fatíga de IA.
A super interesting new study from Harvard Business Review. A 8-month field study at a US tech company with about 200 employees found that AI use did not shrink work, it intensified it, and made employees busier. Task expansion happened because AI filled in gaps in knowledge, so people started doing work that used to belong to other roles or would have been outsourced or deferred. That shift created extra coordination and review work for specialists, including fixing AI-assisted drafts and coaching colleagues whose work was only partly correct or complete. Boundaries blurred because starting became as easy as writing a prompt, so work slipped into lunch, meetings, and the minutes right before stepping away. Multitasking rose because people ran multiple AI threads at once and kept checking outputs, which increased attention switching and mental load. Over time, this faster rhythm raised expectations for speed through what became visible and normal, even without explicit pressure from managers.
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Vengo a QUEJARME: ¡¿cómo que productos de Skincare que en Europa/USA cuestan aprox $20 USD... en Venezuela cuestan $88?!
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And its like... crystal clear from THAT angle
Never cared about curling until I found out Sweden set up a surveillance operation to catch Canada cheating. Now I’m invested. 🥌👀
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Pensé que la primera reunión de Therians sería en Barinas...
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"Nuestra AI ha estado alucinando analíticas por 3 meses" He visto gente usando la IA sin ningín tipo de supervisión real y este es el tipo de cosas que pasan. Se tomaron decisiones de negocios basadas en datos FALSOS... En esas estamos.
“AI wiLL RePlAcE eVeRy WhItE cOllAr JoB”
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This is not going to be used mainly for Dogs, in case that's not quite clear.
Ring paid somewhere between $8 and $10 million for a 30-second Super Bowl spot to tell 120 million viewers that their cameras now scan neighborhoods using AI. The math is wild. Ring has roughly 20 million devices in American homes. Search Party is enabled by default. The opt-out rate on default settings in consumer tech is historically around 5%. So approximately 19 million cameras are now running AI pattern matching on anything that moves past your front door. Today the target is dogs. The same infrastructure already handles “Familiar Faces,” which builds biometric profiles of every person your camera sees, whether they know about it or not. Ring settled with the FTC for $5.8 million after employees had unrestricted access to customers’ bedroom and bathroom footage for years. They’re now partnered with Flock Safety, which routes footage to local law enforcement. ICE has accessed Flock data through local police departments acting as intermediaries. Senator Markey’s investigation found Ring’s privacy protections only apply to device owners. If you’re a neighbor, a delivery driver, a passerby, you have no rights and no recourse. This tells you everything about Amazon’s actual product. The customer paid for the camera. The customer pays the electricity. The customer pays the $3.99/month subscription. And Amazon gets a surveillance grid that would cost tens of billions to build from scratch, with an AI layer activated by default, and a law enforcement pipeline already connected. They wrapped all of that in a lost puppy commercial because that’s the only version of this story anyone would willingly opt into.
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Aidnes retweeted
This is being read as a philosophical farewell. It’s a resignation letter from the head of Anthropic’s Safeguards Research Team, and the most important sentence is buried in paragraph three. “I’ve repeatedly seen how hard it is to truly let our values govern our actions. I’ve seen this within myself, within the organization, where we constantly face pressures to set aside what matters most.” That’s the person responsible for keeping Claude safe telling you the pressures to ship are winning. Mrinank Sharma built the Constitutional Classifiers system, developed defenses against AI-assisted bioterrorism, and authored one of the first AI safety cases ever written. Two years of work at the exact intersection of “make the model safe” and “ship the model fast.” And he just walked away. Now zoom out. Dylan Scandinaro, another Anthropic AI safety researcher, left last week to become OpenAI’s Head of Preparedness. Harsh Mehta and Behnam Neyshabur, both senior technical staff, also departed in the past two weeks. Four notable exits in a single month from the company that sells itself as the responsible AI lab. Meanwhile, Anthropic is in talks to raise at a $350B valuation and just launched Opus 4.6 last Thursday. The commercial engine is accelerating. The safety talent is dispersing. This is the core tension of every AI company right now: the people building the guardrails and the people building the revenue targets occupy the same org chart, but they optimize for different variables. When the pressure to scale wins enough internal battles, the safety people don’t fight forever. They leave and write beautifully worded letters about integrity. Sharma’s next move tells you everything. He’s pursuing a poetry degree. When your head of safeguards research decides the most authentic use of his time is writing poems instead of writing safety cases, that’s a signal about what he believes the safety cases were actually accomplishing.
Today is my last day at Anthropic. I resigned. Here is the letter I shared with my colleagues, explaining my decision.
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Aidnes retweeted
Talking about voice acting and not mentioning Kenjiro Tsuda would be a sin, the way he voiced Nanami and took his charisma to next level.. Also below is Nanami's final scene that he voiced, didn't add the exact scene as we all know how it went 😭
Animation this, animation that… check out Junya Enoki’s voice acting here, putting his whole soul into it and taking Itadori Yuji to another level 💯
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Aidnes retweeted
His father did not wrestle crocodiles, wrangle cobras, and box kangaroos for you to call Robert Irwin some random white boy.
look at this random white boy who doesnt know a lick of spanish living his best life to bad bunny with no problem. let's learn something from this!
Community note
This “random white boy” is Robert Irwin, a world renowned conservationist, & son of the Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin. google.com/search?q=rober…
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Feb 9
That Bunny was AMAZING. Elmo thinks he should be called Good Bunny! Elmo loves you, Mr. Good Bunny! ❤️🎶🐰
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Aidnes retweeted
you pity the moth confusing a lamp for the moon, yet here you are confusing a screen for the world
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Aidnes retweeted
Ella es tan real por esto.
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Si su hija sufre y llora, es por el Halftime Show de Bad Bunny, señora.
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Que bonito todo, que belleza en lo que se convirtió ese carajo. 10/10 character development arch.
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¿Sabes qué? Me parece increible, quiero hacer algo así. m
I went viral for doing this last year, lots of people hated me for being vain but it was one of the most rewarding things I did in 2025 I’m honoured to say I inspired at least 3 people to start sending letters and I have a 90% open rate on my letters This is your sign to start updating your community on your life
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Aidnes retweeted
Okay so I need to talk about what’s happening with Yann LeCun because this is genuinely one of the wildest exits I’ve ever seen in tech. For those who don’t know—LeCun is one of the “godfathers of AI.” Not a marketing title. The man literally won the Turing Award (basically the Nobel Prize of computer science) for helping invent deep learning. He’s been at Meta for over a decade as their Chief AI Scientist. An absolute legend. So here’s what happened. Zuckerberg got frustrated. Llama wasn’t moving fast enough. The AI race was heating up and Meta felt like it was falling behind. So what does Zuck do? He drops $14 BILLION on Scale AI and hires its 28-year-old co-founder, Alexandr Wang, to run a brand new “Superintelligence Lab.” And then—and this is the part that still blows my mind—he makes Wang… LeCun’s boss. Think about that for a second. A 65-year-old Turing Award winner. Four decades of groundbreaking research. The guy who helped BUILD this entire field. Now reporting to someone whose company… labels data. (Scale AI is impressive, don’t get me wrong, but they don’t actually build AI models. They annotate training data for other companies.) LeCun just did an interview with the Financial Times and honestly? He chose violence. Called Wang “young” and “inexperienced.” Said he has “no experience with research or how you practice research, how you do it. Or what would be attractive or repulsive to a researcher.” And then dropped this absolute gem: “You don’t tell a researcher what to do. You certainly don’t tell a researcher like me what to do.” I mean. The man said what he said. But wait—it gets better. Or worse, depending on how you look at it. LeCun straight up confirmed that Meta’s team “fudged” the Llama 4 benchmark results. Like, actually manipulated them. Used different models on different tests to make the numbers look better. Remember when everyone was suspicious about those benchmarks back in April? Yeah. Turns out they were right to be. Apparently Zuckerberg was furious when this came out internally. LeCun says he “lost confidence in everyone who was involved” and basically sidelined the entire GenAI team. And here’s the thing that really gets me—LeCun has been saying for YEARS that LLMs are a “dead end.” That you can’t get to real intelligence just by predicting the next word. That we need “world models” that actually understand physical reality, not just language patterns. Everyone at Meta wanted him to stop saying this publicly. Bad for the narrative, you know? But LeCun refused. His exact words: “I’m not gonna change my mind because some dude thinks I’m wrong. I’m not wrong.” That’s not arrogance. That’s a scientist who’s seen enough hype cycles to know when something doesn’t add up. So now he’s out. Launching his own company called AMI Labs—Advanced Machine Intelligence. They’re targeting a $3 billion valuation. Building those world models he’s been talking about. Says he’ll have a “baby version” ready within a year. Oh, and apparently French President Macron personally texted him after the news dropped. LeCun won’t say what the message said but like… the man is getting DMs from heads of state now. I don’t know if LeCun is right about everything. Maybe LLMs will surprise us. Maybe Meta will figure it out. But when one of the three people who literally invented modern AI walks out the door saying your entire strategy is fundamentally flawed? I don’t know man. I’d at least ask some questions. The AI wars just got very, very interesting
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no shade to kpop demon hunters but the “i lied to you” sequence in sinners was THEE cinematic moment of the year and fully deserved to win
“Golden” from ‘KPOP DEMON HUNTERS’ wins Best Song at the #CriticsChoiceAwards
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Aidnes retweeted
Apple music should be free on iPhones.
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Aidnes retweeted
Give him the Grammy. Now. And then an Emmy for this performance
Man, his voice is INCREDIBLE. Miles Caton from @SinnersMovie just dropped by our New Year’s Eve show and my jaw was on the floor.
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Nota para la Aidnes del presente y futuro: atender los sueños premonitorios de Juan.
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