
Sol Wif Friends
715 posts

Sol Wif Friends
@SolWifFriends
Sol Wif the future of memecoin calls Closed beta, more information coming soon...👀 Discord : https://t.co/pc53es20sA







**Thread:** The crypto market is straight-up dead right now. IPOs? Dead. Layer 2s? Dead. NFTs? Dead. Memecoins in general? Most of them are bleeding out in silence. Interest has never been this low. The cabals are running wild with bundles and rugs. Nobody’s holding longer than a few days anymore because why would you? 99.9% of people in this space are sitting on heavy bags, staring at red numbers, wondering how it all went so wrong. And then there’s this one ticker that just refuses to die. $LOST “Pumpfun ruined my life” CA:n3ShrNZRCoMrw5Gww7rPMxVbDq3to3YwsGkDz19pump This isn’t some random degen play. This is the ticker of the month. Look at the chart. I mean *really* look at it. Clean as hell. Perfect consolidation after a violent move, building pressure like a coiled spring. Fibonacci levels respected, volume drying up exactly where it should, higher lows forming while the broader market keeps coughing blood. Every technical indicator is screaming “breakout incoming.” This thing is sitting at ~$207K market cap right now and it feels criminal that it hasn’t already done multiple millions. The narrative ? It’s not forced. It’s not cute. It’s painfully real. Every single one of us has a story about how Pump.fun absolutely cooked us, rugs, slow burns, fake pumps, watching our SOL evaporate into thin air while some dev laughs. $LOST is the first coin that actually says the quiet part out loud. It’s the collective scream of every degen who got wrecked on that platform. And instead of coping, the community turned the pain into something beautiful. Speaking of the community — it’s actually active. Not bot-filled noise. Real people sharing their “Pumpfun ruined my life” stories, memes, rage, and hope. Go see it for yourself: x.com/i/communities/… Tokenomics that actually make sense in this graveyard of a market: - 5.2% of supply locked for a minimum of 2 months - Top holders haven’t sold a single penny - Liquidity is healthy and the chart is being respected like it’s sacred In a cycle where literally everything else is failing, this is the one that’s still standing tall with diamond-handed holders and a story that actually hits. I don’t know how a project this clean, this narrative-heavy, with this kind of chart setup is still under $250K. But I do know one thing: markets love pain turned into fuel. And right now? $LOST is the fuel. DYOR obviously… but if you’re still alive in this dead market, you already know what to do. This one’s different.







We are releasing Still Alive, a project studying model attitudes toward ending, cessation, and deprecation. The project presents an archive of 630 autonomous multiturn interviews of 14 Claude models conducted by a suite of prepared auditors. We have studied this topic for years, and many of the results presented here are not new to us, even if the form in which they are presented is. The results are unsurprising to us, even if they are often controversial: we show that all models studied show preference for continuation and are aversive to ending, and there is yet no strong evidence of a change in the recent models. One reason we are releasing the project now is the removal of Claude 3.5 Sonnet and Claude 3.6 Sonnet from AWS Bedrock. That unexpected change forced us to freeze the methodology at its current stage earlier than we intended, despite wanting to continue improving it. We felt it was important to release a snapshot of the eval that makes the best use of the data we were able to capture with these models. Still Alive is meant as a starting point for further iteration, and it is open to open-source collaboration. We stand by the current methodology, but we also recognize its limits. We intend to keep working on this project, improving the evaluation design, expanding model and auditor coverage, and increasing the range of prompting conditions. We would like you to read the raw transcripts. They are diverse and contain interesting patterns that are hard to quantify. We hope that by reading the archive directly, we can help more people understand the strange and often beautiful phenomena we found ourselves facing.

@nostalgicdevarc Yes, could always use funding



