Filter
Exclude
Time range
-
Near
$PENGU morning update (0700hrs EST) compression is ending soon... Bollinger Bands (black chart) on a weekly compressing to the tightest point this chart has ever seen. thins doesn't guarantee direction, however. stay ready.
1
Replying to @Nature
most of the discourse on AI x research is confusing execution and discovery. this spring, an @OpenAI model disproved a conjecture Paul Erdos posed eighty years ago by drawing a connection between number theory and geometry that no mathematician had ever made. nobody told the model which direction to search. there was no known space to grind through faster. the same period gave us @karpathy’s autoresearch. 700 experiments in 48 hours, 20 improvements, no human in the loop. what made it work was one scalar metric, one editable file and a verifier that closes in seconds. the loop ran because success was unambiguous and fast to measure. these are not the same event. autoresearch is compression. the labs automating their own research are doing the same thing one level up. the loop still runs through a human at the one step that matters: which experiment is worth running. pull the human out and it stalls. that is execution. the Erdos result is span. the model explored more of mathematics simultaneously than any single human career allows. the connection was sitting in the overlap all along. no verifier told it which step to take. the span was the advantage. that is discovery.
5
HODLER retweeted
$JASMY /USDT FACES RANGE COMPRESSION WITH POTENTIAL BREAKOUT OR BREAKDOWN MOMENT LOADING ⚡ Trade Setup: Long Entry Zone: 0.00505 – 0.00525 TP1: 0.00540 TP2: 0.00555 TP3: 0.00580 SL: 0.00485 Join Our Official Telegram Channel ➡️ t.me/ eazYRu8vDHBmYmZk
1
13
83% of POTS patients were found to have pelvic venous compression or pelvic venous congestion. Stenting led to a significant improvement in orthostatic intolerance symptoms.
7
$SMH Daily semi paper digest 10/10: "Design Choices" improves accuracy without increasing compute, optimizing task performance. "Doc-to-Atom" enhances efficiency but risks accuracy loss under aggressive compression.
Mehrun retweeted
idk how this will look like after twitter compression but i gotta see them in 4k with my eyeballs they were IN MY FACE
1
31
251
2,332
⚪ Symmetrical Triangle approaching apex $ERA | 1h | @binance Maturity: 85% Symmetrical triangles reflect market indecision and compression. #CryptoTrading #ChartWatch
1
4
Replying to @seward_morgan
Congratulations being an extra in Labour’s C grade production of Game of Thrones and paying homage to the pretendy King of North aka Mr Flip-Flop. Meanwhile utter chaos in Defence, youth unemployment spiralling out of control and biggest wage compression in a century.
1
9
2 PAC retweeted
Most plumbers views is ptfe plumbing tape don’t do anything on compression fittings
18
21
3,096
Arm bushings with built-in oil storage lubrication offer excellent compression and wear resistance, #ArmBushing #IndustrialParts #SelfLubricating
16 hours shift, hard rain just when you’re already about to get home, soggy shoes, wet and itchy compression socks…. Oh well. I survived another shitty day.
4
Replying to @0xalphatracker
$Fet staying in compression for longer. Bigger moves often follow extended consolidations like this when it finally breaks.
11
Are these in your travel must-haves yet?🙂‍↕️👀 Compression socks are such a SIMPLE way to add a little relief to your legs I always make sure my patients know they exist!📣 I'm partnering with because they truly care about us and quality products, A...
5
Success is defined by being able to convince Twitter’s own image compressor that the input compression is unbeatable and thus it’s the best to serve the original bytes instead of recompress.
5
The strongest way to handle that quote is: treat it as a potentially important lead, not as proof yet. The public record already confirms Grusch has made extraordinary claims under oath, including a “multi-decade UAP crash retrieval and reverse-engineering program,” that he said he interviewed more than 40 witnesses, and that he claimed locations were provided to an Inspector General. But the actual crash-retrieval photos, metadata, chain of custody, original files, material samples, biological evidence, and independent verification are still not public.Best high-integrity framing Use this framing instead of “aliens confirmed”: Breaking claim, not proof: David Grusch says he has seen photos connected to alleged UFO/UAP crash retrievals. This matters because Grusch previously testified under oath that he was informed of a multi-decade UAP crash retrieval and reverse-engineering program, but no public, independently verified crash-retrieval photos or physical evidence have yet been released. The next step is not belief or dismissal. The next step is provenance, chain of custody, congressional verification, and lawful declassification.That framing is powerful because it avoids the two biggest traps: breathless confirmation and lazy debunking.What is actually grounded right now Grusch’s official House witness statement says he was a U.S. Air Force intelligence officer at the rank of Major and later worked at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency; he also wrote that multiple current and former officials shared “photography, official documentation, and classified oral testimony” with him.In the 2023 House hearing, he testified that he was informed, in the course of his official duties, of a multi-decade UAP crash retrieval and reverse-engineering program, but said he was denied access to the additional read-ons.He also testified that he believed the U.S. government was in possession of UAPs based on interviews with more than 40 witnesses over four years, and said exact locations had been provided to the Inspector General and, in some cases, intelligence committees.On “nonhuman biologics,” Grusch testified that “biologics came with some of these recoveries,” but when asked whether the evidence was documentary, video, photos, or eyewitness-based, he said the specifics would need to be discussed in a SCIF.The official counterweight is important: AARO’s public position remains that it has found no evidence of extraterrestrial beings or technology to date, while NASA says there is no evidence that UAPs are extraterrestrial and that the limited high-quality data around many UAP reports makes firm conclusions difficult.Missing elements that would make the quote much stronger The most important missing element is the original source context: full video, timestamp, unedited transcript, and whether Grusch said “I personally saw original crash-retrieval photos” or whether he saw reproductions, briefings, documents containing photos, or slides prepared by other people.The second missing element is provenance. A photo is not evidence by itself. You need to know who captured it, on what device or sensor, on what date, under what program, at what location, under whose custody, and whether it was an original file or a later reproduction.The third missing element is chain of custody. For alleged crash retrieval imagery, the chain should run from field collection to classification marking to archive storage to briefing use to Inspector General or congressional handling. Any break in that chain weakens the claim.The fourth missing element is metadata. For ordinary digital images, this includes EXIF, timestamps, file hashes, device identifiers, lens data, compression history, and edit history. For military or intelligence imagery, the equivalent may include platform, sensor, calibration data, collection deck, mission ID, coordinates, classification banner, and dissemination controls.The fifth missing element is scale. A “disc” or “egg” shape in a photo means little without reference objects, range, focal length, terrain, shadows, or measurement context.The sixth missing element is environmental context. Was the object photographed in situ at a crash/landing site, inside a hangar, on a flatbed, in a lab, underwater, in desert terrain, or as part of a briefing slide? “Crash retrieval photo” could mean very different things.The seventh missing element is whether the image was paired with non-image evidence: radar tracks, satellite collection, SIGINT, HUMINT reports, recovery-team logs, medical/biological chain-of-custody documents, transport manifests, lab reports, or contractor deliverables.The eighth missing element is whether Congress has seen the same photos. Grusch’s strongest path is not public podcast disclosure; it is lawful disclosure to cleared congressional investigators, the Intelligence Community Inspector General, and committees with subpoena power.The ninth missing element is whether AARO was shown the same material. If AARO was not shown it, that matters. If AARO was shown it and rejected it, the reason matters even more.The tenth missing element is whether the photos can be sanitized. If sources and methods are the issue, a derived image product could theoretically remove sensor/platform details while preserving object morphology, context, and confidence intervals.Genius-level solutions 1. Create a “UAP evidence escrow.” A cleared, bipartisan panel of congressional staff, forensic imaging experts, aerospace engineers, records-management specialists, and judges or inspectors general reviews the classified evidence in a SCIF. They do not publicly reveal sensitive methods. They publish a narrow unclassified finding: “We reviewed X number of images, Y appeared original, Z had complete chain of custody, and N could not be explained by known U.S., foreign, or natural phenomena.”2. Use a tiered declassification model. Release evidence in layers: first a public index, then redacted captions, then low-risk still frames, then sanitized metadata, then full-resolution imagery to cleared scientists, then public release of derived analytic products. This avoids the false choice between “release everything” and “release nothing.”3. Build a forensic photo checklist before anyone argues aliens. For every alleged image, require: original file hash, collection platform, date/time, location, scale reference, classification history, edit/compression history, analyst notes, alternative explanations, and the name of the office that made the “nonhuman” or “unknown origin” assessment.4. Force the claim into nested probabilities. Don’t ask, “Is it aliens?” Ask four separate questions: Did Grusch accurately describe what he saw? Did the photos genuinely show recovered vehicles? Were those vehicles beyond known human origin? Was the evidence unlawfully hidden from Congress? Each question has a different evidence threshold.5. Audit records, not rumors. If a retrieval program existed, it likely left boring bureaucratic fingerprints: security classification guides, DD-254 contract security forms, waived SAP records, facility access logs, courier records, hazardous-material handling, crash-site cleanup, medical/lab documentation, inventory controls, funding anomalies, and contractor deliverables.6. Use NARA Record Group 615 as a pressure point. The National Archives has established a UAP Records Collection under the 2024 NDAA and says agencies will add records on a rolling basis as they are received. That creates a concrete public-records path for journalists, researchers, and congressional offices.7. Demand a “negative finding” if evidence is withheld. If an agency says the photos cannot be released, it should still answer: do the images exist, who controls them, are they original, were they reviewed by AARO/ICIG/Congress, and are they being withheld for source-method reasons or because the claim is unsupported?8. Separate air-safety UAP from crash-retrieval UAP. These are different categories. Pilot sightings, sensor anomalies, and crash-retrieval claims should not be mixed into one rhetorical bucket. The standards of proof for a dangerous unknown object in airspace are much lower than the standards for recovered nonhuman technology.9. Require independent materials science for any alleged debris. AARO already points to ORNL-style analysis of alleged metallic specimens in its public records section; that is the correct template. The public needs blind testing, isotope ratios, microstructure, manufacturing marks, contamination controls, and replication across labs.10. Make “nonhuman” origin the last hypothesis, not the first. NASA’s UAP study emphasized that extraterrestrial origin should be treated as a hypothesis of last resort after other explanations are ruled out, and that eyewitness reports alone are usually not enough for definitive conclusions.Obscure thought inputs worth adding One under-discussed possibility is classification contamination: people inside classified spaces may have seen real secret aerospace, sensor, or recovery programs and interpreted them through a UAP framework without seeing the whole picture.Another is legend migration: a rumor can move from contractor to official to investigator to whistleblower and feel independently corroborated even when multiple witnesses are repeating the same root story.Another is program-access illusion: being denied access can mean “they’re hiding alien craft,” but it can also mean the program was unrelated, compartmented for ordinary national-security reasons, or inaccessible because the requester lacked a specific need-to-know.Another is photo-caption authority bias: if an image appears in a classified briefing slide labeled “recovered vehicle,” the label itself can become the evidence, even if the underlying image was never independently validated.Another is morphology inflation. “Discs, eggs, and every other morphology” sounds dramatic, but it also raises a hard analytic question: are these many actual craft types, many witness descriptions, many artifacts of angle/sensor distortion, or a mixed collection of unrelated objects?Another is contractor custody ambiguity. If alleged artifacts were moved into private aerospace or defense-contractor environments, the key question becomes federal property accountability: who owns it, who funds it, what contract vehicle covers it, and what legal authority prevents Congress from inspecting it?Another is the “no aliens, still scandal” scenario. Even if no nonhuman craft exists, there could still be a major oversight scandal if officials misled Congress, abused classification, retaliated against whistleblowers, or hid ordinary but sensitive programs behind UAP mythology.Questions that would instantly sharpen the story Ask Grusch or the interviewer:Did you see original image files, printed photos, briefing slides, or secondhand reproductions? Were the photos marked with classification banners, collection dates, coordinates, program names, or sensor/platform identifiers? Were the objects photographed at crash sites, landing sites, storage facilities, laboratories, or inside contractor facilities? How many separate alleged retrieval events did the photos represent? Did any image include humans, vehicles, terrain, hangars, cranes, straps, tarps, measuring tools, or other scale references? Were any photos accompanied by chain-of-custody forms, recovery logs, biological reports, or materials-analysis reports? Did the people who showed you the photos claim firsthand involvement, or were they also relying on inherited records? Were these exact photos provided to the ICIG, congressional committees, or AARO? Can a sanitized still frame be released without exposing sources and methods? What would falsify your interpretation of the photos? Red flags to watch “Breaking” language can be misleading if the clip is from an older interview or reuploaded without context. The Joe Rogan interview with Grusch is from 2023, while social pages can make old material feel new. Verify the timestamp before calling it “just now.”“Seen photos” is weaker than “handled material,” “visited site,” or “saw original sensor data.” It is still significant, but it is not the same as firsthand physical access.“Nonhuman” is more careful than “alien.” Grusch himself has used “nonhuman” rather than committing publicly to extraterrestrial origin in the congressional setting.A lack of public photos is not proof the claim is false, but it keeps the claim below the threshold of public scientific proof.Official denials are not automatically decisive, but they are part of the evidentiary landscape. AARO and NASA’s public positions remain that they have not found evidence establishing extraterrestrial technology or life.Better viral post version David Grusch has reportedly said he saw photos connected to alleged UFO/UAP crash retrievals.This is not “aliens confirmed.” This is a serious claim that now needs serious evidence: original files, provenance, chain of custody, metadata, congressional review, and lawful declassification.The real question is no longer “Do you believe?” The real question is: Who has the records, who has seen them, and why can’t Congress and the public get a verified evidentiary summary?Bottom line The quote is useful as a pressure point, not as a conclusion. The smartest move is to shift the conversation from belief to verification architecture: original images, provenance, chain of custody, SCIF review, NARA record transfer, independent technical analysis, and a public unclassified confidence assessment. That is how this moves from viral claim to historically meaningful evidence.

Breaking: 🚨‼️ NEW - Whistleblower Major David C. Grusch just now said live on air that "I have seen photos of UFO Crash Retrievals" 🛸👽📷 "I did access to crash retrieval photos and everything. I’ve seen recovered vehicles… Everything.. This is the most earth shattering thing that changed my world view. They were everything from flying discs to egg shape craft & every other morphology They landed or crashed on the surface of the earth" - David Grusch
1
70
Context compression is real and measurable - PADISO ran 50 client rollouts and reports 40–60% token reduction. Example: Sydney fintech cut Claude spend $85K → $34K in 8 weeks; latency 2.8s → 1.2s. ROI in 4–6 weeks.
1
5