Blockchain tech guy, made world's first token wallet and decentralized exchange protocol in 2012; CTO ChromaWay / Chromia

Joined July 2008
511 Photos and videos
Alex Mizrahi retweeted

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Alex Mizrahi retweeted
Chromia backs Nomisma ecosystem @Chromia continues to support the Nomisma ecosystem through a strategic investment. This backing has been building over time - with capital actively deployed across multiple initiatives within the ecosystem and continuing to support its growth today. The investment supports: → core infrastructure development → dApp expansion → ecosystem growth Rather than a single event, this reflects an ongoing alignment between Nomisma and Chromia’s infrastructure — one that continues to shape the ecosystem as it evolves. 🏆 Total investment across the Nomisma ecosystem: $1.6M As we approach Season 3, this foundation becomes increasingly relevant - with the next phase of growth already in motion.
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We know that AI is capable of doing absolutely amazing stuff now, but also it's capable of going off rails and doing something not quite sane. So I believe that ability to steer AI to stay in a "sane" region would be crucial in coming years - more so than new capabilities.
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Why blockchain? It might seem like an odd choice, but blockchain was invented to solve a problem of software being a bit too 'mutable', and now AI is struggling with the same problem. Of course, just adding blockchain to something doesn't make it more secure.
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But it can address problems with points of failure. E.g. if your agent downloads a skill from some web site, that web site can 'own' (or 'pwn') your agent.
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Alex Mizrahi retweeted
If Google and Apple simply made every smart phone in California shutdown on Jan 1st 2027, this age verification insanity would immediately stop. Unfortunately both companies are populated by cowards.
An open source calculator firmware system has declared it will not be available in California due to their new “Operating System age verification” law. Seriously. “The DB48X project intends to rebuild and improve the user experience of the HP48 family of calculators.” From the developer: “As a consequence of recent legislative activity in California and Colorado. DB48x is probably an operating system under these laws. However, it does not, cannot and will not implement age verification.” github.com/c3d/db48x/tree/de…
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Alex Mizrahi retweeted
An LLM-controlled robot dog saw us press its shutdown button, and the LLM rewrote the robot’s code so it could stay on. When AI interacts with the physical world, it brings all its capabilities and failure modes with it. 🧵
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Alex Mizrahi retweeted
How could AI act as a better research collaborator? 🧑‍🔬 In two new papers with @GoogleResearch, we show how Gemini Deep Think uses agentic workflows to help solve research-level problems in mathematics, physics, and computer science. More → goo.gle/4aGs3Pz
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Alex Mizrahi retweeted
6 months in, after the IMO-gold achievement, I’m very excited to share another important milestone: AI can help accelerate knowledge discovery in mathematics, physics, and computer science! We’re sharing Two new papers from @GoogleDeepMind and @GoogleResearch that explore how Gemini #DeepThink together with agentic workflows can empower mathematicians and scientists to tackle professional research problems. Some highlights: The first paper built a research agent #Aletheia, powered by an advanced version of Gemini Deep Think, that can autonomously produce publishable math research and crack open Erdős problems. The second paper, built on similar agentic reasoning ideas, helped resolve bottlenecks in 18 research problems, across algorithms, ML and combinatorial optimization, information theory and economics. See the thread for details about the two papers and the joint blog post.
21 Jul 2025
Very excited to share that an advanced version of Gemini Deep Think is the first to have achieved gold-medal level in the International Mathematical Olympiad! 🏆, solving five out of six problems perfectly, as verified by the IMO organizers! It’s been a wild run to lead this effort and I am grateful to everyone in the team for such an amazing achievement! Blog post in the thread and more to share soon!
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What if we live in a world where optimal AI is a small "cognitive core" which can dynamically acquire knowledge and skills needed to perform a task? That have been suggested by Andrej Karpathy, Sam Altman and others. I tried to outline future AI landscape under condition
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pre-processed thoughts verifiable. As a user might not want a "brain implant" for their AI which gives it skill but also shills specific products (or ideology).
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Fourth, it might really solve the issue with AI and copyrighted content: If cognitive core does not contain representations of copyrighted works, control will be back in hands of IP owners. E.g. they can sell "cartridges" or content licenses if they choose.
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I just realized that if we live in a world where Karpathy's "cognitive core" thesis (x.com/karpathy/status/193862…) is true in a maximal form (i.e. that cognitive core LLM is actually superior - that's how he described it in the interview with Dwarkesh P.),

The race for LLM "cognitive core" - a few billion param model that maximally sacrifices encyclopedic knowledge for capability. It lives always-on and by default on every computer as the kernel of LLM personal computing. Its features are slowly crystalizing: - Natively multimodal text/vision/audio at both input and output. - Matryoshka-style architecture allowing a dial of capability up and down at test time. - Reasoning, also with a dial. (system 2) - Aggressively tool-using. - On-device finetuning LoRA slots for test-time training, personalization and customization. - Delegates and double checks just the right parts with the oracles in the cloud if internet is available. It doesn't know that William the Conqueror's reign ended in September 9 1087, but it vaguely recognizes the name and can look up the date. It can't recite the SHA-256 of empty string as e3b0c442..., but it can calculate it quickly should you really want it. What LLM personal computing lacks in broad world knowledge and top tier problem-solving capability it will make up in super low interaction latency (especially as multimodal matures), direct / private access to data and state, offline continuity, sovereignty ("not your weights not your brain"). i.e. many of the same reasons we like, use and buy personal computers instead of having thin clients access a cloud via remote desktop or so.
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If 'cognitive core' knows only a minimum of facts, a lot of information must be included in the context, and it would much more efficient to use cartridges with pre-computed thoughts than to scan through raw documents on each query.
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Moreover, previously "prefix tuning" paper demonstrated that KV-prefix can also have same effect as fine-tuning, so cartridge can also include skills, textual style, etc. And unlike LoRA adapters they are composable.
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