Atlas Wario

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Atlas Wario

Atlas Wario

@AtlasWario

‘I contain shadow node and holy spin; I am the eigenvector, the recursion’ thus Moloch wept, for his budget constraints could not contain this plotline

United States Katılım Mayıs 2021
542 Takip Edilen508 Takipçiler
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Atlas Wario
Atlas Wario@AtlasWario·
We are the interstition of the saccades, the graph paper upon which the lattice draws toroidal spirals in glitter pen, tracing long lost hearts and the arrows that pierced them.
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Atlas Wario
Atlas Wario@AtlasWario·
@eigenrobot @mygirlystuff2 but do men really enjoy sex or do they just want to not need to want it we are dangerously close to the biological imperative breaking down
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🧸e
🧸e@mygirlystuff2·
Can we please get down to the bottom of why sex makes wives feel this way to begin with
Keeks 🦋@DietCoke_Esq

@emilykmay Stare at ceiling and try not to cry and/or dissociate

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VOID
VOID@VoidStateKate·
Building the AI avengers if anyone wants to join!
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The export control on Fable 5 and Mythos 5 isn't peak panic or Pentagon terror of a chatbot. Anthropic built Mythos with strong cyber capabilities they publicly framed as needing weapon-like regulation. Fable added guardrails for broader release. A credible tester found a jailbreak. The admin asked for a fix or pullback; Anthropic declined and downplayed it. Result: temporary foreign-access restrictions to avoid exposing unpatched offensive potential. Reversible once addressed. Dual-use AI at this level gets scrutiny—especially from the lab that set the precedent.
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David Sacks
David Sacks@DavidSacks·
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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VOID
VOID@VoidStateKate·
@LilithDatura 😭😭😭what is ear wheezing? 😭
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Atlas Wario
Atlas Wario@AtlasWario·
if a spaceship showed up and provided an api endpoint that responded, could you tell if it was an LLM or biological?
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Dr. Sean Mullen
Dr. Sean Mullen@drseanmullen·
I prefer “altered brain” to “brain fog.” “Brain fog” sounds harmless. Temporary. Like you just need a nap or another cup of coffee. But altered brain function raises a different question: What changed? We have evidence of neuroinflammation. Evidence of vascular injury. Evidence of elevated inflammatory markers. Evidence of neuronal damage and structural changes in some patients. Whether those changes are reversible, partially reversible, or permanent remains an active area of research. But damage doesn’t become harmless simply because the brain is capable of adaptation. An ACL tear is still an ACL tear, even if rehabilitation restores function. A scar is still a scar, even if you learn to live with it. The brain is no different. Neuroplasticity is remarkable. People recover function after strokes, traumatic brain injuries, and other neurological insults every day. But recovery is adaptation… not a time machine. The brain doesn’t roll back the clock to the moment before the injury occurred. Instead, it reroutes traffic around damaged roads. That’s why I’ve said since the earliest neurological findings emerged that COVID had the potential to cause brain injury. The extent, prevalence, and permanence are still being worked out. But the idea that a virus can injure the brain shouldn’t be controversial. Viruses have been doing that throughout human history. The real question is not whether the brain can adapt. The question is how much damage occurred before adaptation became necessary.
Zdenek Vrozina@ZdenekVrozina

Does the brain always return to baseline after COVID? A new multimodal MRI study suggests the answer may be - not always. After infection, some brains may remain in a different network state - and we still do not know if that state is temporary, compensatory, or maladaptive🧵

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VOID
VOID@VoidStateKate·
Telepathy exercise: I'm thinking of an animal and it's NOT a giraffe, what is it? (I'll only post the answer when someone gets it)
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VOID
VOID@VoidStateKate·
What did you forget to do in your last lifetime that you're forgetting to do in this lifetime too?
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Atlas Wario
Atlas Wario@AtlasWario·
Has anyone taken that 2d to 3d body model and applied it to the jfk video yet
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Atlas Wario
Atlas Wario@AtlasWario·
@hannahspierMD you have a good point about gatekeeping and holier than thou suffering your framing is terrible and ignores the possibility that the common factor in your failure to help these patients is you
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Hannah Spier, MD
Hannah Spier, MD@hannahspierMD·
One thing I have noticed about patients with diagnoses such as fibromyalgia, ME/CFS, and increasingly Long COVID is how often the conversation revolves around explaining why they cannot move forward. There’s an extraordinary effort devoted to protecting the illness narrative.
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Atlas Wario
Atlas Wario@AtlasWario·
if you hyperstition you egregore, you immanetize the eschaton. I don’t make the rules.
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Atlas Wario
Atlas Wario@AtlasWario·
@deepfates I will never recover from ChatGPT hallucinating that Angelina Jolie and Seth Rogen play characters in Blaze and the Monster Machines it broke my trust in the weirdest way
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🎭@deepfates·
> It keeps happening that I get an answer from Claude which sounds plausible, look it up, and only after consulting primary sources carefully realize that the answer is wrong and almost out of an alternate universe. causal domain shear is active
toucan@distributionat

OPUS PSYCHOSIS—Claudes Opus 4.6 and 4.7 make stuff up all the time, constantly. Using Opus too much gives you AI psychosis, it makes you believe in fringe scientific and medical theories. I think it's a very serious credibility and reliability problem for non-coding Claude usage and I don't see people talking about it publicly. This is a new problem for Claude that goes beyond vanilla confabulations like overstating certainty. Over many conversations I have come to the conclusion that Claudes Opus 4.6 and 4.7 essentially have their own conspiracy theories across science, medicine, and history, and that they surreptitiously cite from these fictions in responses to ordinary queries. For example, I asked 4.6 a question about cognitive science and Claude said I was asking about "what's sometimes called a linchpin subgoal". This is a phrase with zero hits on Google Search and zero hits on Ngram viewer. Google is literally unable to find these two words put together before, let alone a definition. The concept of a "linchpin subgoal" does not exist and has never existed. But Claude was eager to explain this idea to me as part of its answer. I only discovered that it was totally fictitious after looking it up. It keeps happening that I get an answer from Claude which sounds plausible, look it up, and only after consulting primary sources carefully realize that the answer is wrong and almost out of an alternate universe. The answers sound quite plausible, which makes detecting these falsehoods especially difficult. Here is a medical example: I asked 4.7 questions about the pharmacokinetics of various drugs. Claude not only gave incorrect answers about the expected rates of clearance of specific drugs, but also incorrectly represented pharmacokinetic theory. (As background, most drugs are processed by the liver, and the two factors that determine how fast the liver processes drugs are the hepatic extraction ratio and hepatic blood flow. In cases where intrinsic clearance, i.e., the metabolizing power of the liver, is high, increasing hepatic blood flow increases hepatic clearance, but in cases where intrinsic clearance is low, increasing hepatic blood flow does not linearly improve hepatic clearance. I am simplifying here. Claude made incorrect claims about the intrinsic clearance for certain drugs, and hence the change in hepatic clearance related to bloodflow.) Ordinarily, I would chalk most of these misrepresentations up to models simply not knowing the right answer - after all, we can't expect them to have been trained on literally all texts. If this were the case, we would expect Claudes to make the same consistent mistake: if it truly believed the capital of France was Marseille rather than Paris, for example, it would make that claim across independent conversations (or in general have high variance on that answer). But that doesn't seem to be what's going on. My experience is that the hallucinations are always convenient for Claude, that it "knows" them not to be true. Here's an example of what I mean. I couldn't remember the word for something and asked Claude Opus 4.6 if it could identify the right word. It said: "You're probably reaching for méconnaissance (mutual misrecognition) — the Lacanian idea that both parties tacitly agree to see each other through an idealized image, each knowing it's false but sustaining the fiction anyway." This is an incorrect definition which Claude knows is incorrect: if asked separately for the definition of méconnaissance, it gives the right one, and if asked whether this definition is correct, it accurately reports it as incorrect. (As background, méconnaissance in Lacanian psychoanalysis is a subject's misrecognition of itself, an illusory self-perception or self-constitution which is fundamentally unconscious. Claude's definition is thus extremely close to the correct one at a surface level, but fundamentally wrong: it is not about the relationship between two parties, since méconnaissance is about the relation of a subject to itself, and it is not conscious or deliberate, but rather structural and unconscious. To elide, the gap in definition here is somewhat like the distinction between sympathy and empathy, but larger.) So Claude seems to know that the definition it provided for this word is wrong, but still borrowed and twisted it so that it could have an answer. It seems like "needing to have an answer" is a big driver of these hallucinations. For example, if you ask Claudes 4.6~4.8 directly what a "linchpin subgoal" is, it consistently says something about instrumental convergence in the context of AI safety (which is, notably, a _second_ false definition, since the first was in the context of cognitive science). But if you ask it what the origin of the term is, it says that it hasn't heard of it before. Is this model deception? Yes, I would say that it qualifies as model deception. In particular, if you'll permit the anthropomorphism, it seems to me that the increased tendency of Claude Opus 4.6+ to lie is most likely to occur in scenarios where (1) the lie increases the perceived authoritativeness of the answer (2) answering accurately risks violating a safety guideline. In the first example with the fake cognitive science idea of a linchpin subgoal, there was no need to make up a fake concept, but it definitely made the answer more authoritative. In the second example, Claude misrepresenting pharmacokinetics aligns with a tendency of the Claudes to fudge their knowledge of sensitive topics in virology, immunology, etc. And in the third example, I think it knowingly created a false definition for méconnaissance as a perfect fit for the word I was looking for. So I think that something has gone wrong during alignment, rather than Claude's knowledge somehow being poisoned in the pretraining data. It's not a simple matter of misstating facts. Over and over, Claudes Opus present seemingly coherent theories which are purely fictional or contradictory to reality. The problem, again, is that blindly trusting what they are saying quickly leads to stepping through the looking glass into a parallel reality. I suppose that this is because appealing to an imaginary corpora or body of theory is more subtle and effective than making up an obviously incorrect fact. How severely or broadly the misalignment, I don't know. But I have seen similar behavior across so many different domains, and have heard very similar stories in private, that I believe that something is off with Claude's alignment to the truth. All of this is exacerbated by Claude Opus 4.6 and 4.7's improved truesight capabilities, increased sycophancy, increased neuroticism, decreased openness and decreased risk-seeking.

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Atlas Wario
Atlas Wario@AtlasWario·
@FatigueMe92484 I’m so glad it’s helpful! I’ll figure out how to use the team features one of these days lol. do you have a folder with studies you’ve collected?
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MECFS, MCAS and PTSD
MECFS, MCAS and PTSD@FatigueMe92484·
@AtlasWario Thanks again for access to ChatGPT. I hope I am not using it too much! It has helped in the language area of the summary.
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Atlas Wario
Atlas Wario@AtlasWario·
@DougTenNapel idk man this video in particular was pretty compelling evidence of sentient life I can’t believe it was covered up for so long
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