earth-life is but a brutal and beautiful metaphor. authenticity is the new currency. AI will help show us what it truly means to be human

Joined March 2007
186 Photos and videos
đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
Lunar observatories would go so hard
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
Quantum physics says you've never actually touched anything in your life
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
Set in motion. 🔃
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I want a tab that *excludes* any NON verified real-name name accounts. Words hiding behind pseudonyms interest me less and less. Even if it's the same AI augmented posts at least I know someone is putting their actual name behind it. @nikitabier
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
What was your great-great grandfather called? 
? In 4 generations, no one will know your name. Not even the people who share your genes. Stop taking everything so seriously and just enjoy the ride.
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
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Elon created $1 trillion of value. Congress created $39 trillion of debt. Elon’s wealth is not the problem

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The quality of this, in the style of the whiskey-speech, is so good I’m convinced @pmarca still has mythos-access. Bravo.
If, when you say regulation, you mean the dead and clammy hand of the commissar—the gentleman who has never in his life built a single thing, drafting rules to govern a thing he cannot define, to be enforced by men who cannot read them; if you mean the form in triplicate, the impact assessment upon the impact assessment, the compliance officer who breeds, in the warm dark of the org chart, further compliance officers unto the third and fourth generation; if you mean the moat—the deep cold moat that the giant digs around his own castle and christens, with a perfectly straight face, public safety—the drawbridge he hauls up behind himself the very instant he is across, lest any hungrier and hungrier man should follow; if you mean the precautionary principle, which, had it governed our grandfathers, would have banned the wheel pending further study of the hill, and left us yet shivering and raw in the mouth of the cave, blessing its excellent ventilation; if you mean the European disease—that magnificent open-air museum of a continent, which produces in our time precisely two things in great abundance, and they are regulation, and the eloquent and well-footnoted regret of cultivated men explaining at length why they have produced nothing else; if you mean the license required to think, the permission slip for honest arithmetic, the king’s wax stamp pressed upon the forehead of every new idea before it may draw its first breath; if you mean the agency dispatched, with trumpets, to slay a single dragon, which arrives at the cave, surveys the accommodations, and moves in—and spends the ensuing century laying eggs and devouring the very villagers it was sworn to defend; if you mean the startup that perishes not of the market’s honest verdict but of the filing fee, the genius decamping by the next tide to a freer and warmer shore; if you mean the law that arrives, faithful as the swallows, exactly one whole epoch too late—helmeted, plumed, and magnificently armed—to regulate the stagecoach—then certainly, my friends, I am against it. But—but, my friends—if, when you say regulation, you mean instead the humble steel guardrail upon the mountain road at midnight, the very thing you curse on the easy days and bless on your knees the one night the fog comes down; if you mean the brakes—for it is the brakes, and not the engine alone, that permit a sane man to drive fast and yet arrive alive—and the buttress, without which no cathedral was ever flung so high, but only in spite of which, but because of which; if you mean the meat inspector, who is the single homely reason a man may eat a sausage in this republic without first composing his last will and testament; if you mean the firebreak cut clean through the forest before the dry season of the burning, the smallpox cordon, the buoy that marks the channel, the rule of the road that lets ten thousand strangers hurtle past one another in the dark at fearful speed and arrive, by its quiet grace, every one of them home; if you mean the honest scale and the true weight, the reason a pound is a pound and a dollar a dollar from Natchez to Nome; if you mean the firm and decent wall between the counterfeit voice and the widow’s bank account, between the deepfaked candidate and the ballot box on the eve of the vote, between the loosed and loveless machine and the schoolyard it neither knows nor pities; if you mean the simple plank of law that says the strong shall not, in the gray dawn, feed the weak quietly into the furnace and sell the rising smoke as progress; if you mean, in the end, the one slender thread of trust without which no citizen will ever dare to use the marvelous thing at all—for where there is no rule there is no trust, and where there is no trust there is no commerce, and a miracle that no man dares to touch is no miracle, but only a handsome and expensive ghost—then certainly I am for it. This is my stand. I will not retreat from it. I will not compromise one inch of it.
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling 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.
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I guess the net-present value of being a US citizen just 100x:d
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
#ă€ă¶ă‚„ăGLSL float i,e,R,s;vec3 q,p,d=vec3(FC.xy/r*.8-vec2(.4,-.6),1);for(q.zy--;i <80.;){o.rgb =hsv(q.z,.5,min(e*s-.3,1.)/35.);s=5.;p=q =d*e*R*.3;p=vec3(log(R=length(p*1.3)),exp2(-p.z/R),atan(p.y,p.x)-t*.3);for(e=--p.y;s<1e3;s =s)e =cos(dot(sin(p*s),cos(p.yyz*s t*.9)))/s*.45;}
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
Det var en gĂ„ng pĂ„ nittiotalet dĂ„ stark kryptering klassades som krigsmateriel i USA. Den som mejlade en PGP-nyckel över Atlanten var tekniskt sett vapenexportör. Vi som var med dĂ„ minns hur fĂ„nigt det kĂ€ndes och hur det sedermera föll ihop. Matematik lĂ„ter sig nĂ€mligen inte tullbelĂ€ggas. Nu kollar jag USA mot Paraguya, men lĂ€ser samtidigt om exportkontroller pĂ„ AI och att Anthropics Fable5 och Mythos5. Anthropic stoppar access för hela vĂ€rlden direkt, för att upprĂ€tthĂ„lla compliance med amerikanska myndigheter. Det kĂ€nns igen. Det Ă€r dĂ„lig politik. Marknader avskyr vakuum. Ransonerar man amerikanska modeller och chip vĂ€nder sig europeiska bolag snabbt nĂ„gonannanstans. Det kan handla om open source, olika lokala byggen eller kanske viktigast och obekvĂ€mast till kinesiska modeller som numera Ă€r bĂ„de bra och billiga. Varje restriktion mĂ„ste ses som en subvention till konkurrenten. Fragmentering gör AI farligare, inte sĂ€krare. Om varje region bygger sin egen, sĂ€mre granskade stack fĂ„r vi snabbt fĂ€rre gemensamma normer. Öppenhet mellan demokratier Ă€r en sĂ€kerhetsstrategi, inte en eftergift. Krypteringskrigen slutade med att amerikanerna till slut gjorde en överenskommelse med bland annat Europa och vĂ€rlden fick sĂ€ker e-handel och sĂ€kert Internet. Jag misstĂ€nker att AI-historien slutar likadant: tekniken vinner, murarna förlorar. FrĂ„gan Ă€r bara hur mycket tid, vĂ€lstĂ„nd och vĂ€nskap vi hinner slösa bort pĂ„ vĂ€gen? Free Fable5!
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Get those t-shirt printers heated up again, we've got weights to print
Replying to @firstadopter
this is the cryptography export scare of the late 1990s all over again
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It was certainly short and we got devoured in the end
AHAHAHAHA
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
I asked Claude Fable 5 to reverse engineer a 1993 DOS game with no source code. It read the raw machine code, rewrote the engine in C, and gave me a fully editable port for every platform. 30 min from EXE to iPhone. Sharing it all so you can revive your own childhood games!
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We are here to create. Not to fester.
Carl Jung said that one of the most destructive forces a person can carry is unused creative energy.
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
We've completely lost the tactile thrill of chunky, high-end remotes.
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
We hear it as consumption. But it's almost all for allocation. This is a huge issue we need to get past. Name anyone you would rather see allocate 1T . Well done.
Elon Musk has become the first trillionaire in history.
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
Pessimists sound smart.  Optimists build the world.
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
If you took $1 Trillion from Elon (assuming it was cash), it would run the U.S. government for 49 days. Not even 2 months. The U.S. doesn't have a billionaire/trillionaire problem, it has a spending problem.
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đŸ‘ŸJohn Lagerling retweeted
Why yes, I did invest in the people who built a skyscraper that flies from Texas to Australia in 45 minutes and streams it live in HD for the entire trip. What do you think I’m stupid?
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