Joined December 2017
445 Photos and videos
gtm are notoriously the most trustworthy part of any big organisation. 👍
GPT-5.5 match’s Fable’s performance at ~50% the cost. our goal isn’t just to build more capable models - it’s to make frontier intelligence more accessible with each generation. efficiency is what’s allowed us to scale and bring AI to the 1 billion users using our products every week. it’s an existential challenge we’re obsessed with. and our team is still cooking!!
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i get it is quite upsetting to talk yourself out of an oscar you were a sure thing for, but is completely giving up really the best response?
KALSHI
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surely @zerohedge sold his account to gary marcus absolutely bearholed
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gary marcus is one of the most fascinating case studies on earth and not for the reasons he would like
This tweet from 14 hours ago is on track to get about a million views. But here’s the thing: the conclusion is true, but the tweet itself is already outdated. WSJ’s scoop that OpenAI is considering drastic price cuts - basically lighting money on fire to save customers – is further sign of weakness, and indicator of how much trouble OpenAI is in. And when they go down, they will likely pull Nvidia and Oracle and Coreweave etc down with them. Things are unraveling fast.
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whilst i think there is obvious reason for short term pensive face, i don't really understand the genuinely long term ai bears / deniers 1. the tokens will get orders of magnitude cheaper (eventually) 2. the rate of "adding new thing that super inefficiently eats 10x the tokens" will level out (eventually) obviously the gap between 1 and 2 is bad for markets at the moment, as is the fact that 2 is moving much faster than 1 but over every time frame other than "the next year or two" 1 and 2 compounding over time are gonna be pretty seismic (note that i think markets probably don't have the legs to last the distance on the above without some form of catastrophe on the way - but from a purely "is this really gonna work out" perspective i think the answer is kind of undeniable)
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ai slop posting about ai slop is an interesting choice
Replying to @awscloud
The real bottleneck was never writing code. It's releasing it, debugging it, & keeping it running well. So when @Honeycombio CTO Charity Majors set a productivity target, she didn't chase 10x. She chose 2x, & built from there.
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update
Replying to @Vladcostea
wait, did we say 1% or 10%?!?
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david sacks is to anthropic what kyle salami is to hyperliquid
Signs you might be trying to get your frontier AI lab nationalized: You compare it to nukes… threaten half of white-collar jobs… warn recursive self-improvement could end humanity… then race ahead anyway. In other words, you want the government to save us from… you.
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i think my current favourite thing is watching beanie commentate on the zcash stuff whilst 95 of his last 100 posts have been him shilling some dogshit unimaginative onchain poker game he's invested in sure bro please tell me more
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even as a zec enjoyer there are some absolute top tier memes on the tl today
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watching kalshi people talk to each other on the timeline is like watching the PR team suck off a slack message from the CEO where he quotes a linkedin article he wrote
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ZEC to 10% of BTC isn't gonna be so fun when BTC is at 0
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hard agree weekly episode drops make for shared cultural moments in time imho feels like seasonal drops it's the opposite just one thing that adds to the fragmentation of our shared mythology tht media used to give us
Spider-Noir came and went like it never happened. The binge model is killing TV and it has to go.
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*taps the sign*
saylor might be the real bullcase for zec
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justin drake writing this post almost entirely with ai might be the most bearish thing i've seen. slop at every layer.
Today a crazy quantum story just got wilder. On March 31, the Google Quantum AI team published a landmark result on Shor's algorithm for elliptic curve cryptography. Technically, the paper was a bombshell: a dramatic 10x improvement over the state-of-the-art. As a stunt and wakeup call to the blockchain space, those optimisations were illustrated on secp256k1, the elliptic curve underlying Bitcoin and Ethereum signatures. But perhaps the most striking part of the paper was sociological, not technical. Instead of following standard academic process, the optimisations were kept secret, hidden behind a zero-knowledge (ZK) proof. Google's accompanying blog post mentions they "engaged with the U.S. government". The ZK proof demonstrates the existence of algorithmic improvements without leaking details. Academic censorship with ZK, a historic first! As a co-author of the Google paper I witnessed some of the context surrounding this censorship. To be honest, multiple aspects of that context don't sit well with me. As much as I believe the general public ought to know more, I am limited in my ability to whistleblow. Though let me be clear about one thing: the Google team's professionalism has been absolutely exemplary, and they deserve nothing but praise. Censorship has a way of backfiring. The Streisand effect, where an attempt to bury something only draws more attention to it, is exactly what's unfolding today. First, Google's key optimisation has been rediscovered by the French. And in a thrilling turn of events, a collaborative Shor-at-home challenge just launched. The initiative, available at ecdsa[.]fail, breached a new Shor world record in a matter of hours. Let's start with the rediscovery. Just two months after Google's paper, French quantum expert André Schrottenloher cracks the main secret optimisation. His paper, titled "Optimized Point Addition Circuits for Elliptic Curve Discrete Logarithms", landed on the arXiv today. Big congrats to André, who beat several other nerdsnipped experts to it. In a blog post also published today, Craig Gidney, the world expert on Shor optimisations, revealed that he'd been sitting on this very optimisation for a whole year under censorship pressure. Interestingly, André missed a handful of minor optimisations, both from Google's original publication and from improvements found since. It's plausible there's still plenty of juice left to squeeze out of Shor, and this is exactly what the ecdsa[.]fail challenge is about. The verifier program developed for the ZK proof does double duty, automatically filtering for valid submissions. Dozens of compounding small and micro improvements are rolling in. As of the time of writing there's an 8.4% improvement to Google's circuit, as measured by the product of logical qubit count and Toffoli gate count. Nice! The nerdsnipping ran deeper than anyone expected. Over the last few weeks it became clear it extended well beyond André and other quantum experts. Behind the scenes, a small army of amateurs quietly got to work. Inspired by Karpathy-style autoresearch, they turned AI on Shor. Ironically, the verifier program for the ZK proof makes an ideal reward function for AIs. The barrier to entry for this modern style of research is refreshingly low, with several non-experts, even a teenager, finding nice optimisations. Get in touch if you'd like to join a Telegram group with fellow autoresearchers :) Part 2: neutral atoms and qday The story doesn't end with Google. On the same day Google went public, a stealthy startup called Oratomic published its own Shor paper in a coordinated release. It made a splash, ultimately becoming the most upvoted paper on scirate[.]com, a website ranking arXiv papers. Oratomic's claim was wild. By building on Google's logical optimisations and applying custom physical optimisations for neutral atoms, they claimed just 10K physical qubits were sufficient to run Shor's algorithm on secp256k1. That number is mind-bogglingly low. Knowing essentially nothing about neutral atoms when Oratomic's paper landed, I was intrigued and decided to learn more about the tech. I fell straight down the rabbit hole and spent a couple hundred hours on the topic. I got a little obsessed and watched every YouTube video I could find and spoke to a bunch of experts. My conclusion? The tech is real, very real. Even Google recently decided to start a neutral atom lab, a notable pivot from their sole focus on superconducting qubits. If you care about qday, i.e. the day a quantum computer will break the first piece of cryptography in production, neutral atoms demand your attention. I shared some of my learnings on Shor and neutral atoms in a 30min talk at the ZKProof cryptography conference. You can find it on YouTube by searching "zkproof neutral atom". Here's an interesting observation about this duo of breakthrough papers: neither Google nor Oratomic say a word about what their results mean for qday. No timelines. Zero. Nada. That is especially baffling given that the whole point of whitehat quantum cryptanalysis is to inform qday estimations and help the general public make good decisions. So let me attempt to partially fill the silence, similarly to what Scott Aaronson did in his April 29 post. Given everything I know, including scary non-public information, I now put the odds of qday by 2032 at 50%. 10% by 2030. Anecdotally, the US government has its own date: 2035. Originating at the NSA and later adopted by NIST, it's when branches of the US government will be disallowed from using quantum-vulnerable cryptography. In plain language: with hindsight, that date is a joke and should be discounted entirely. I don't see how NIST avoids being forced to pull it forward by years. Part 3: post-quantum cryptography There are good reasons to sound the alarm today, but please do not panic. Rushing carelessly towards immature post-quantum cryptography is a recipe for disaster. IMO a good target date for migration is 2029, roughly 3.5 years out. 2029 happens to be the date selected by Google, Cloudflare, and the Ethereum Foundation. These days most of my time goes to safely migrating Ethereum towards post-quantum cryptography as part of the broader lean Ethereum effort. There's a lot to do. We need to rip out and replace BLS signatures at the consensus layer, KZG commitments at the data layer, and ECDSA signatures at the execution layer. The plan to get there is compelling, and is based on hash-based cryptography. Within the Ethereum Foundation we've developed a Swiss army knife called leanVM (github[.]com/leanEthereum/leanVM) powered by the magic of hash-based SNARKs. Thanks to truly exceptional work by Emile, Thomas, and others, its performance is derisked. Regarding security, leanVM is a jewel, a minimal zkVM crafted for end-to-end formal verification and maximum security. Want to help? There are two $1M initiatives. First, the Proximity Prize (proximityprize[.]org). Solve a long-standing mathematical conjecture in coding theory, improve hash-based SNARKs, and go home a millionaire. Second, the Poseidon Initiative (poseidon-initiative[.]info), offers $1M for breaking Poseidon, the SNARK-friendly hash function.
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all the aussies pissing and moaning about how bad australia is have never travelled the world lmao yes, the tax changes are absurd - even then, it is comfortably better here than almost every other country on earth ya fucking dorks
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as a kiwi living in australia i find this stuff hilarious i love my country, but it is near-on third world and gets worse every time i go back (even in the areas you'd consider wealthy) aus cgt changes are dumb but aussies saying NZ is economic shangri-la are delusional
NZ has no CGT. I invested very successfully in NZ industrial property in NZ & would do so again in a heart beat. No way I will invest in Oz anymore. An environment utterly hostile to success. #auspol
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there is no harder substance on earth than gary marcus's dick when he sees the opportunity to shout i told you so
i warned these guys of exactly this problem - no moat because everyone is training on same data - two years ago. and warned them that AI would become a commodity. now they think they have made some big discovery. 🤣 the inability of these guys to listen to anyone outside of Silicon Valley is gonna cost them a truly enormous amount of money. (and no proprietary data is not going to make that much of a difference, except in some narrow use cases)
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origin blew
JUST IN: Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin New Glenn rocket explodes during a static-fire test.
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hey i promise to sell the next zcash top (this is a lie)
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