Arts & Letters, Finance & Bettors

Joined April 2009
6,642 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
20 Sep 2025
I was inspired to draw that by that guy who says he speaks to vegetables and fruit. Enjoy. a.co/d/0nRrWE3
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"No matter how hard you work in life you still end up in the same place as all the lazy bastards."
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Chris Hickman retweeted
Very interesting. Are Dario Amodei & Anthropic genuinely concerned about AI safety, or is this a sterile, borderline childish power fight with the administration? I’ve learned to always beware people who loudly proclaim they’re the good guys.
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.
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Chris Hickman retweeted
There are currently 16 public companies worth more than $1 Trillion 🥇 Nvidia $NVDA - $5T 🥈 Google $GOOGL - $4.4T 🥉 Apple $AAPL - $4.3T 4: Microsoft $MSFT - $2.9T 5: Amazon $AMZN - $2.6T 6: Taiwan Semi $TSM - $2.2T 7: SpaceX $SPCX $2.1T 8: Broadcom $AVGO $1.8T 9: Saudi Aramco - 1.8T 10: Tesla $TSLA - $1.5T 11: Meta Platforms $META - $1.4T 12: Samsung - $1.4T 13:Micron $MU - $1.1T 14: Berkshire Hathaway $BRK.B $1.1T 15: Eli Lilly $LLY - $1T 16: SK Hynix - $1T
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Here goes Haiti
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Chris Hickman retweeted
My favorite painter who is a friend, Andrew Smock. He placed Turkish Soldiers in front of Fort Sumter at the Civil War. If he still has this I have to get it.
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Chris Hickman retweeted
LinkedIn, X, Instagram, Reddit
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S. Korea Goal
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Drinking with these guys in Chicago in 2011, JUNE.. WHEN AMISH has this GAME FACE ON there is no backing down. See also Joshua and Joel..
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It really ties the room together.
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Monopoly
SpaceX is the most overhyped IPO of the decade and it will end exactly the way every overhyped IPO ends. Facebook IPO’d at $38 and traded under that for 15 months. Uber IPO’d at $45 and is still below that adjusted seven years later for a while. WeWork tried at $47 billion and ended at zero. Robinhood IPO’d at $38, hit $85, then $7. Coinbase IPO’d at $381 and was at $40 two years later. Rivian IPO’d at a $100 billion valuation with no meaningful revenue and gave back 90%. Beyond Meat. Peloton. Lyft. DoorDash. Bird. Each one a “generational company” the day it priced. Each one a wealth destruction event for retail within 18 months. The pattern is not a coincidence. Hype IPOs are designed to transfer wealth from the people buying the story to the people who built the story. The bankers get paid. The early employees get out. The VCs get a markup they can show their LPs. The retail investor gets the bag. SpaceX is a great company. That has nothing to do with whether it’s a great stock at IPO. Greatness was already priced in five funding rounds ago. You are not getting in early. You are buying the exit. The only IPO worth chasing is the one nobody is talking about. Those don’t exist anymore because every IPO is marketed like a movie release. So the answer is: don’t chase. Wait two years. Buy it down 70% when the lockup unwinds and the narrative breaks. Or don’t buy it at all and put the money somewhere the bankers haven’t already extracted the alpha. Hype is not an asset class. It’s a tax.
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Just hoping I get Trump posting "Jah will provide!" At some point.
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Chris Hickman retweeted
The mess happened the day before, when the stock went down 8% and the ETF went up 50% in the last few minutes before the close, when LPs are not legally binded to provide liquidity. The day after it was just rebalance, but a -27% hits harder than a 50%
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AI is awesome For validation Of your feelings, intuition, psychic abilities, every type of prowess, looks, diabetic tendencies, GLP 1,2,3,4 needs. Abilities to run a publicly traded company, you name it. The reality up against a judge and a plaintiff's lawyer is different.
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Just know what's coming. A hard lesson.
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Chris Hickman retweeted
In June 2000, Robin Williams sat down for a conversation with George Lucas for Robin's brief weekly interview show on audible. The episode was originally thirty minutes but below you'll find the entire raw recording from two different sessions, with discussions ranging from Marlon Brando as Jabba the Hutt, to Lucas asking if Robin would voice a CG Howard the Duck for a special edition of the '86 movie 👏 Really cool
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Hockey woke up and got exciting.
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