Joined March 2008
74 Photos and videos
RT @IsraelIDFend: Knicks superstar and Finals MVP Jalen Brunson married his high school sweetheart, Dr. Ali Marks — a Jewish physical thera…
407
Useful? No. Cool as shit? Yes! Guy embedded Karpathy's MicroGPT model into hardware.
56,000 tokens/sec at just 80 MHz. 🤯 I burned a full Transformer with KV cache into a custom chip. Designed gate by gate as a 100% digital integrated circuit. Prototyped on a FPGA. (No GPU. No CPU) Just pure digital silicon running @karpathy microGPT, spelling out names on a tiny LCD. This is GateGPT 👇
222
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
I’ve had a number of conversations with folks inside and outside government about the current situation with Anthropic, and here is what I believe to be true: — As we know, Anthropic publicly released its Mythos class models earlier this week under the commercial name Fable. — Fable is Mythos with guardrails. But if those guardrails fail, then you’ve exposed Mythos and its advanced cyber capabilities to people who shouldn’t have them. (Keep in mind that Anthropic itself widely promoted the idea that Mythos was a cyberweapon and needed to be regulated as such. They asked for government regulation of Mythos and championed the guardrails on Fable. If there is a vulnerability — big or small — it is Anthropic’s responsibility to patch.) — A highly credible trusted partner of both Anthropic and the USG who was testing Fable came forward with a jailbreak of those guardrails. The Admin asked Dario to fix the jailbreak or de-deploy the model. Dario refused. — In their blog post, Anthropic defended its decision by saying the jailbreak isn’t serious. That is not what the trusted partner and the USG believe; nor is that kind of minimizing language consistent with Anthropic’s brand as the AI safety company. It’s difficult to fathom how they could claim a jailbreak allowing operability of a cyber weapon could be defined as not “serious.” — In the past, Anthropic has always said that safety must be top priority and taken super seriously. In this case, Anthropic prioritized the continued offering of the consumer model over safety. — In reaction, the Admin issued the export control. The Admin did this reluctantly. It’s been very surprised that Anthropic hasn’t wanted to cooperate with a reasonable safety request (ie fixing the jailbreak issue). Anthropic’s reaction is very much at odds with their branding and ethos as a safe AI research community. — The Admin’s hope now is that Anthropic remediates the safety issue, the export control is lifted, and Fable goes back into general release. The Admin wants all of this to happen as soon as possible. It is frankly bewildered that Anthropic hasn’t wanted to comply with safety requests that it previously said were its highest priority. — Those trying to misdirect and tie this action to the prior DoW/Anthropic issues are wrong. The Admin values Anthropic’s technical capabilities and feels that this issue, while serious, should be easily resolved. The ball is in Anthropic’s court.
2,136
3,152
24,646
7,290,545
Being worth a trillion dollars is not the same thing as having a trillion dollars. Lot of people seem not to realize this.
I really don’t understand true greed. If I was worth $1 trillion, you’d have to physically stop me from solving as many of the world’s problems as possible. Everyone would have a home, food on the table, proper healthcare, happiness. I just don’t get it.
1
2
90
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
At long last, the UN Human Rights Council has formally acknowledged that Hamas in Gaza carried out executions, torture, improperly used medical facilities for terror purposes, and engaged in violent abuses against women and children after October 7. The report captures only a fraction of what actually occurred, in part because documenting these crimes is extraordinarily difficult and because Gazans fear retaliation if they report anything to the UN or other investigators. The findings on Hamas were buried beneath a long section on Israeli settler abuses in the West Bank, but even so, this marks a significant shift for an international body that has long struggled to speak plainly about Hamas’s brutality in Gaza. Most importantly, the report acknowledges but barely scratches the surface of how extensively Hamas has weaponized Gaza’s medical infrastructure, embedding fighters in hospitals, using patients as shields, and turning civilian facilities into operational hubs. The UN even notes that Doctors Without Borders evacuated non-essential staff from Nasser Hospital because Hamas was interfering with the hospital’s operations. When I shared this information, including testimonies from Gazans who documented Hamas’s fascistic behavior inside hospitals, and photos of fighters emerging from Nasser Hospital after the ceasefire, the online “pro-Palestine” chorus had nothing to offer except accusations of Zionist collaboration, accusations of betrayal, and personal insults. This UN report is an indictment not only of Hamas, a violent extremist terror organization responsible for immense suffering, but also of every activist, journalist, and academic who chose to look away. It shows that Hamas’s crimes were so egregious, so undeniable, that even a slow, hesitant, and often ineffectual body like the UNHRC could no longer pretend not to see them. Shame on anyone who still defends Hamas or ever believed its violence constituted “resistance” on behalf of the Palestinian people.
106
1,516
3,362
84,994
12 hours later... Claude Fable (with the help of Gemini and Codex via mco) is almost done with one-shot refactor of a large React app, migrated client side rendering to framework rendering. Will it work? Your guess is as good as mine, but the mco process generally results in bug free code so I'm hopeful, but my god it's slow.
1
1
172
Are there any really good and active discord groups around local LLMs or agentic development? I love X/Twitter but with the new algorithm, it's like a 10% chance that any post a user makes actually gets seen by the intended audience. Where else to hang out with AI devs?
1
1
116
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
🚨 Early this morning, @FBI and partners arrested 7 individuals on a 10 count indictment for allegedly targeting University of Michigan leaders and businesses in the Eastern Michigan region with violent threats and attacks. The indictment alleges that after the October 7, 2023 Hamas terrorist attack on Israel, these individuals - a group of college-aged adults - engaged in a coordinated campaign of violent, criminal acts seeking to pressure University of Michigan leaders and other businesses in the Eastern District of Michigan to cut off all ties with Israel. The subjects allegedly vandalized the victims’ property, spray painted their homes with messages like “Intifada” and “Free Palestine,” left threatening notes on their doors, and even broke windows of the victims’ homes - throwing glass jars filled with chemicals while children slept inside. They deliberately chose the one-year anniversary of Hamas’s attack to engage in some of their most visible criminal acts - including one subject who specifically targeted the Bloomfield Township Jewish Federation on October 7, 2024. On the same day, another subject - employed by the University - vandalized the University President’s home. The alleged criminal targeting occurred for over a year - beginning approximately March 2024 and continuing until April 2025. @FBIDetroit and our partners pursued a thorough, detailed investigation of this case - and subjects have been charged for their alleged role in conspiracies to transmit threats in interstate and foreign commerce.
1,116
3,539
16,849
1,124,780
So excited for Anthropic's Claude Fable model to sit there in my menu bar unused because I can't afford it.
1
1
145
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
Hot take: We don't need a more powerful model like Mythos right now. GPT-5.5 (5.6 coming soon), Opus 4.8, and similar models are already more than capable for most use cases. What we need to solve is the cost problem. If AI keeps getting significantly more expensive, 99% of developers won't be able to afford these models at scale and will end up going back to manual coding.
348
59
1,204
133,486
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
Can’t Israel just stop trying to prevent Terrorists from destroying it. It’s like…enough already. Obviously the Iranian Regime, Hezbollah, the Houthis, and Hamas want to wipe you out…just let them already, it’s annoying! Stop your expansionist dream of building homes schools and playgrounds in your historic homeland the size of New Jersey, and just become the 23rd Arab State, so we can all feel comfortable that a single Jewish State no longer exists. Just lay down your arms, allow Iran and its Terrorists proxies to slaughter every Jew from the river to the sea, and stop insisting on living, thriving, creating, producing and surviving. It’s really that simple. It is really that simple.
77
253
1,446
37,189
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
Benjamin Netanyahu: "Radical Islamic terrorists want to conquer the Middle East, kill all the Christians and Jews, and then proceed to Europe and from there to America. Israel stands in their way of doing it." He is 100% correct.
771
3,416
11,010
79,249
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
The problem is not Hamas. The problem is not Hezbollah. The problem is not the Houthis. The problem is not Iran. The problem is the savage barbaric stone age ideology called Islam.
106
87
463
7,946
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
🧵Hamas admits AGAIN: Qassam fighter Mishaal Shahwan posed as a “journalist” one of dozens now admitted by Hamas & PIJ. When Israel said terrorists were posing as press no one believed it—but evidence from Hamas, NOT Israel, is now overwhelming. ELEVEN recent examples below. 1/
14
356
819
102,315
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
I wonder if @grahamformaine can please respond the people who are doing this? Or maybe @RoKhanna? What about @BernieSanders? Or even @SenGillibrand? This has been relentless. All from Graham Platner fans. Do any of you stand up for women?
92
136
572
33,621
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
Even Arab leaders admit it. Everyone is sharing the Bill Clinton clip where he describes how Yasser Arafat rejected a generous peace offer at Camp David that would have given the Palestinians a state on 96 percent of the West Bank, land swaps, and a capital in East Jerusalem. Clinton says Arafat lied to him and that the Palestinian leadership never actually wanted a two-state solution. They wanted to destroy Israel. It’s a video often shared by people like @VividProwess, and it’s an important one for people to see. Of course, critics immediately dismiss it. They claim Clinton is biased or he’s pro-Israel. They’ll tell you that you cannot trust the American perspective. Ok, so let us set that aside. Now watch this. In this powerful interview, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, a major Arab leader who was directly involved in negotiations, says exactly the same thing from the Arab side. He talks about the Mena House Conference in Cairo as well as the Camp David negotiations of 1978. All failed because of the Palestinians repeatedly rejecting any offer. The Oslo accords were signed but because Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad were not involved, they derailed the accords and any chance for peace by initiating 4 years of terrorist suicide attacks in Israel. Then came the second Camp David negotiations in 2000 which Arafat agreed to, then rejected and instead initiated the Second Intifada. Mubarak explains how the Palestinians refused to even participate in the Mena House conference of 1977. He describes repeated opportunities they were given, including a detailed document that called for Israeli withdrawal from the Samaria, Judea and Gaza, security arrangements during a transitional period, and other major concessions. The Israelis were willing to negotiate on difficult issues like who would control security. The Palestinians, according to Mubarak, kept saying no and wasting chance after chance. He speaks with clear frustration about how for decades the Palestinian side has rejected peace initiatives and realistic compromises. The video further shows footage from the PLO representative in 1977, as well as old footage of Egyptian president Sadat who was involved in the Mena House and first Camp David negotiations of 1978. This perhaps is far more impactful than Clinton’s account because it is not a Western or Israeli voice. It is prominent Arab leaders who lived the negotiations, who represented the broader Arab world, and who had zero incentive to defend Israel. When leaders from both sides of the table describe the same pattern of Palestinian rejectionism and violence, it becomes much harder to dismiss as bias. The pattern is clear across decades and across different voices… generous offers, repeated refusals, and continued demands for everything while giving nothing in return. This is not ancient history. It is the core reason the conflict continues today. If you value the truth, please share.
278
6,456
14,615
545,877
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
Excellent question!
494
3,075
16,295
100,233
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
I bucked all advice from my friends (and resisted my conservative bias) and decided to fully trust the Times journalists. As they left my home they asked that I not talk to any other outlets and I insisted then and repeatedly over the following weeks that I would keep my word and only share this story with them. But then the weeks dragged on. They kept coming back to us saying the editors needed more. I needed to go on the record (okay). We need more screenshots (okay). I met every bench mark they set, eager to provide more sources or evidence as needed. After the story went up I began to ask them … wait, where are the stories from the other women? Where are their accusations of sexual assault? Why am I the focus? Why are there 11 paragraphs dedicated to detailing my work history (more than has been published about Graham’s by far)? Why does it say “nobody could corroborate” when I offered them sources that COULD corroborate? Why did they include an out of context quote from a friend joking “do not call Graham” after I called off my wedding? (Because she knew I would never). Where were the screenshots they’d said they would use? Or the mention that I’d supported local democrats and that most of my family (and husband) are liberal? The editors said it was too much, they explained. The Times also failed to include any mention that I DID confide in multiple friends through the years that Graham had been abusive — long before he was running for office. Those friends confirm they told the Times so. It dawned on me that this really was a set up all along. The journalists I trusted who convinced me to share a story I never wanted to tell methodically delayed and twisted this into a gift to the Platner campaign. Violating the trust of his victims. Shattering the trust I placed in them with the most vulnerable story of my life. And at the end of my call with them I reluctantly accepted their insistence that this was still a powerful story and that I had done a brave thing. And I thanked them for all the hard work they had put into it. Still fawning after all these years.
887
3,668
15,073
2,141,006
OpenAI and Anthropic are truly incredible growth stories. So were Yahoo and MySpace. Maybe the next Google or Facebook are sitting around the corner waiting to surprise us all?
1
3
552
🅰🆁🅻🅾 retweeted
Replying to @martianwyrdlord
Enough…

10
87
277
65,413