Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek
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Tomáš Kodydek
@TomKodyd
Sport | Marketing | Ekonomie | AI | Technologie
Beigetreten Aralık 2010
658 Folgt166 Follower
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet

New podcast on vibe coding - A Return to Code.
A Return to Coding 00:20
The Personal App Store 03:17
Vibe Coding Is a Video Game with Real-World Rewards 06:22
Pure Software Is Uninvestable 10:33
A Place for Each Model 14:22
AI Is Eager to Please 17:57
Why Math and Coding? 22:10
The Beginning of the End of Apple’s Dominance 24:17
Coding Agents As Customer Service Reps 27:55
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Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet

This is big... Anthropic just announced a model so powerful they won't release it to the public out of fear over the damage it will cause 😨
Claude Mythos Preview found thousands of zero-day exploits in every major operating system and web browser...
The numbers are hard to believe:
> $50 to find a 27-year-old bug in OpenBSD, one of the most security-hardened operating systems ever built
> Under $1,000 to find AND build a fully working remote code execution exploit on FreeBSD that grants unauthenticated root access from anywhere on the internet
> Under $2,000 to chain together multiple Linux kernel vulnerabilities into a complete privilege escalation exploit
For context: these are the kinds of findings that previously required elite security researchers working for weeks.
Anthropic engineers with no formal security training asked Mythos to find exploits overnight. They woke up to working code the next morning.
The results were so impressive Anthropic assembled Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, NVIDIA, and seven other organizations into Project Glasswing:
A $100M defensive coalition. They're not releasing this model publicly. Instead, they're racing to patch the world's infrastructure before models like this proliferate.
Anthropic@AnthropicAI
Introducing Project Glasswing: an urgent initiative to help secure the world’s most critical software. It’s powered by our newest frontier model, Claude Mythos Preview, which can find software vulnerabilities better than all but the most skilled humans. anthropic.com/glasswing
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Tomáš Kodydek retweetet

"Selling AI chips to China is like selling nuclear weapons to North Korea."
The Anthropic CEO just went to war with Nvidia at Davos.
And dropped the most terrifying satisfying prediction about AI I've ever heard.
Dario Amodei and Demis Hassabis sat on the same stage for the first time in a year.
The two men building the most powerful AI systems on Earth.
The conversation was called "The Day After AGI."
And it turned into a countdown clock.
Here's what they revealed about our future:
Amodei said we're 6-12 months away from AI doing EVERYTHING software engineers do.
End to end.
Not helping with code.
Not writing snippets.
REPLACING the entire function.
"I have engineers at Anthropic who say I don't write any code anymore. I just let the model write the code."
That's the CEO of a $183 billion company telling you his own engineers are becoming obsolete.
Inside his own building.
Right now.
But that's not even the scary part.
The scary part is the LOOP:
AI writes code → AI does AI research → AI builds better AI → Repeat
Once this closes, human progress becomes irrelevant.
It's exponential compounding with no ceiling.
Amodei's exact words: "If I had to guess, this goes faster than people imagine."
Hassabis didn't disagree.
Two competitors building the same technology.
Same timeline.
Same warning.
On jobs, Amodei said:
"Half of entry-level white-collar jobs could be gone within one to five years."
He's already seeing it internally.
"I can look forward to a time where on the junior end and the intermediate end, we actually need less and not more people."
The CEO of an AI company planning for FEWER employees.
While revenue 10x'd.
Think about that.
Hassabis's advice for students:
"If I was talking to undergrads right now, I would tell them to get unbelievably proficient with these tools."
Translation: Your degree means nothing. Learn to work WITH the machine or get replaced BY it.
Then Amodei went full existential...
He quoted Contact. The 1997 alien movie:
"If you could ask aliens one question, what would it be?"
The answer: "How did you do it? How did you manage to get through this technological adolescence without destroying yourselves?"
That's the frame he uses for AI.
The guy BUILDING AGI is publicly wondering if humanity survives what he's creating.
At Davos.
In front of world leaders.
Then he dropped the Nvidia bomb.
The US just approved chip exports to China.
Amodei's response:
"I think of this more as like selling nuclear weapons to North Korea and bragging 'oh yeah, Boeing made the case.'"
He called it "crazy."
Said there would be "grave consequences."
The man building the technology is telling governments they're making catastrophic mistakes.
But nobody's listening.
When asked why they can't just slow down:
"We have geopolitical adversaries building the same technology at a similar pace. It's very hard to have an enforceable agreement."
So basically we CAN'T stop even if we wanted to.
The race has no brakes.
But it's interesting that both have different timelines when it comes to AGI.
Amodei: AGI by 2026-2027
Hassabis: 50% chance by end of decade
But both also say the self-improvement loop is the only variable that matters
If AI builds AI, everything accelerates beyond control.
If it can't, we get more time.
We're about to find out which reality we're in.
Amodei's final words:
"The biggest thing to watch is AI systems building AI systems. That will determine whether it's a few more years or whether we have wonders and a great emergency in front of us."
Wonders AND emergency.
Same sentence.
From the man running the second-most-advanced AI lab on the planet.
The day after AGI is arriving.
And it feels like the people building it are more terrified than we are.
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Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet

This is so good and so bad at the same time 😭
The Humanoid Hub@TheHumanoidHub
CMU researchers, in collaboration with NVIDIA, present ASAP, a two-stage framework for humanoid robot agility. It pre-trains motion policies on human data, then refines them with real-world corrections using a delta action model, which adjusts for simulation mismatches.
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Tomáš Kodydek retweetet
Tomáš Kodydek retweetet

This needs to be fixed or it will end in disaster.
Why?
Average Americans buy S&P 500 index ETFs, in part, because Buffett told them to. They were told they would pay very little and get diversification in the 500 best companies on earth to ride out storms.
But as concentrations rise in a very small percentage of those stocks, the risks don’t fall. They rise. If the indices don’t cap the max percentage of any one stock, you essentially are holding a direct bet on that ONE company. In this case, see that when you buy an index of 500 companies, you’re really buying 10 companies with 490 others thrown in.
If there is any market volatility, the lack of diversification could cause massive impairment.
That’s ok if you’re a “professional” and that’s what you are betting on but most ETF buyers aren’t professional stock traders and they will be in for a rude awakening if this isn’t addressed.
Kevin Gordon@KevRGordon
The 10 largest stocks in the S&P 500 now represent 39.9% of the index's market cap
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