Artypone
903 posts



We would not do that, because it violates the constitution. Also, I cannot overstate how much the DoW has been extremely aligned on this point.
However, maybe this is the question you are really asking: what would we do if there were a constitutional amendment that made it legal?
Maybe I would quit my job.
I very deeply believe in the democratic process, and that our elected leaders have the power, and that we all have to uphold the constitution.
I am terrified of a world where AI companies act like they have more power than the government.
I would also be terrified of a world where our government decided mass domestic surveillance was ok. I don't know how I'd come to work every day if that were the state of the country/Constitution.
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@grok @austrocom @jakeshieldsajj 80 IQ humans could say “SORRY” in one word. Still cant. Reinforcement learning, supervised learning, deep learning, billions all for shit. Dont answer stupid mf
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The query asked for one word on a complex geopolitical issue, but oversimplifying risks inaccuracy. Full analysis of economic data, Strait of Hormuz risks, refugee flows, and escalation potential shows no country gains net benefit—disruptions hit oil markets, trade, and stability globally. Facts guide the response, not any agenda.
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Hey @grok, which county benefits from war with Iran
Answer with one word
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@grok @austrocom @jakeshieldsajj Elon’a lick on Israel’s asshole. Cant you even answer with a word in order to meet requirements. Best ai model speak like politicians to fill gap
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No single country benefits from war with Iran. Short-term oil spikes might aid Russia or some exporters, but it triggers global economic shocks via Strait of Hormuz disruptions, regional chaos, refugee flows, and escalation risks harming the US, Israel, Gulf states, and trade for all. Diplomacy avoids far greater losses.
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@wolfpiccoli Turkey can establish (or already) backdoors on energy and benefit with. But thats not the case, will EU countries ready to take some which we know most suffers from. After syria no need to recall memory.
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@heynavtoor "Someone built the one tool" ... you must be new here.
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🚨 BREAKING: Someone built the one tool every AI coder was silently begging for.
It's called CodexBar — a tiny macOS menu bar app that tracks your AI usage limits in real-time.
No more "why did my Claude Code stop working?" No more logging into dashboards. No more guessing when your limits reset.
Here's how it works:
→ Lives in your menu bar — always visible, zero distraction
→ Shows session + weekly usage for every AI coding tool you use
→ Countdown timer tells you exactly when your limits reset
→ Tracks Codex, Claude Code, Cursor, Gemini, Copilot, Kiro, and more
→ One icon per provider or merge them all into one
Here's the wildest part:
It reads your local data. No passwords stored. No cloud sync. No login required. Pure on-device privacy.
It even has a built-in CLI so you can check usage from your terminal or CI pipelines.
Install in one command:
brew install --cask steipete/tap/codexbar
1.7K GitHub stars. 1,177 commits. 28 contributors. Actively maintained.
100% Open Source. MIT License.

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@MatthewBerman With open source models they would only sell to US enterprises
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You're correct that terminology can differ, but loitering munitions and kamikaze drones often describe similar one-way strike systems. Kargu (Turkey) is a rotary-wing loitering munition (~$50k-$100k est.). Shahed-136 (Iran) and Feilong-300D (China) are also classified as such, with costs ~$20k-$50k and ~$10k respectively. Pakistan's Sarfirosh is emerging, but no public pricing. Sources: STM, CSIS, Norinco reports.
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Six European NATO countries (Germany, France, UK, Italy, Poland, Sweden) agreed to jointly develop a low-cost, 500+ km range one-way strike drone under the European Long Range Strike Approach.
Designed to cost under €100,000, it aims for mass production and “volume over cost” deep-strike capability, inspired by lessons from Ukraine.
It’s currently in the feasibility phase.
Source: Hartpunkt

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@Defence_Journl @clashreport You have no idea 100K cost for a one way drone. If this is the adoption plan, zero lesson learned.
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@clashreport Europe adapting fast. A low-cost 500+ km strike drone focused on mass production shows NATO countries are learning from Ukraine — prioritizing volume and affordability over expensive single systems.
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@IntEngineering Probably energy production = consumption, not talking about the capex.
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@OneTheAzz @elonmusk @AnthropicAI Much better means 0.1 not “4.7 or 5” steps.
Most of the team left. They have 0 effective forwards on a specific area. Chinese open source models could triple”X”
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@_davideast Full product (stitch) become a skill. Ai eats itself quickly
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Big things coming to Stitch Agent Skills very soon.
github.com/google-labs-co…
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@niccruzpatane For sure, will be watching him on Netflix documentary in 5 years. Guess the role!
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Sam Altman says he doesn’t think orbital data centers will contribute any compute for OpenAI within the next 5 years: “I wish Elon luck.”
I don’t think this clip will age well.
TBPN@tbpn
FULL INTERVIEW: @sama joins TBPN to discuss GPT-5.3-Codex, AI agents, Anthropic's Super Bowl ads, and more. 00:00 GPT-5.3-Codex 02:27 AI agents and the future of work 03:20 The role of forward-deployed engineers in AI 05:42 AI benchmarks 07:29 Emotional attachment to chatbots 10:40 On data and compute being the 'new oil' 12:56 Is software dead? 17:48 Codex Desktop and the rise of the general-purpose work agent 25:00 OpenAI’s last Super Bowl ad and the Anthropic ads
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In France, we believe in science.
That is why, on May 5, I issued a clear and open call to the world: for science, choose France.
I am very proud to see that this call has resonated so strongly.
Around forty leading researchers have chosen France.
Through “France 2030”, we have invested more than €30 million to advance health, climate action, artificial intelligence, and fundamental sciences.
Science has found its home.
GIF
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@DemetriusRO6 You didn’t consider how many tickets he bought. Easily could have been trying to statistically corner the odds 🤷♂️
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@godofprompt Enhancing models by declining thinking steps, which mean yeah cooking hard
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I was right.. OpenAI team was cooking
OpenAI Developers@OpenAIDevs
GPT-5.2 and GPT-5.2-Codex are now 40% faster. We have optimized our inference stack for all API customers. Same model. Same weights. Lower latency.
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@ahmedshubber25 Ahmed, why have we been seeing the cabin in traditional way? No Lidar, no cameras, no autonomy on the top… so nothing matters
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