Christian Koeppl

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Christian Koeppl

Christian Koeppl

@ChristianKoeppl

Agency in the age of AI. Philosophy × Tech × Business. Author, Agents Without Agency (in progress)

Zürich, Switzerland Katılım Şubat 2026
43 Takip Edilen37 Takipçiler
Mustafa
Mustafa@oprydai·
i often think about this…
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Henry Shevlin
Henry Shevlin@dioscuri·
@SperglerAcolyte I’m sure sex robots will be great but I really need a proper wife who can talk to me while I’m gaming and tell me about her favourite new K-dramas and Shein hauls
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Christian Koeppl
Christian Koeppl@ChristianKoeppl·
@BetterCallMedhi Fair but also. SpaceX let the Genie out of the bottle. Mimicking was enough to disperse technology and iterate and improve it. Its enough to see it possible to imitate it. Generally love that we have two players now. The more the merrier. Ad astra. Finally!
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Mehdi (e/λ)
Mehdi (e/λ)@BetterCallMedhi·
vous vous rappelez quand je vous disais que le monopole de SpaceX serait bien plus fragile qu'il n'y paraît pendant que tout le monde s'extasiait sur l'IPO ? dans un silence assourdissant la Chine vient de récupérer le premier étage de sa fusée long march 10b dès son vol inaugural et attention à la prouesse, ils n'ont pas copié SpaceX là où falcon 9 se pose sur ses pattes par poussée inversée, le long march 10b redescend en vol contrôlé puis se fait capturer en pleine mer par un système de câbles tendus, un crochet du lanceur accroche les filins qui absorbent l'énergie cinétique et le verrouillent sur une plateforme flottante (une première mondiale )sans train d'atterrissage donc moins de masse morte & plus de charge utile et personne au monde SpaceX compris n'avait jamais réussi une récupération orbitale dès le premier vol cependant pour moi le vrai génie est ailleurs, la réutilisation c'est le seul levier qui effondre le coût du lancement et le coût du lancement c'est le verrou qui commande toute l'économie spatiale (j’en ai déjà très largement parlé ici) les constellations, internet en orbite basse, l'observation de la terre, l'agriculture de précision, la navigation, la fabrication en orbite (zone de microgravité) , l'énergie solaire spatiale et le programme lunaire habité visé pour 2030, au fond sachez quils ont construit bien plus qu'une fusée, ils ont posé la rampe d'accès à une dizaine d'industries à 1000 milliards pendant que l'occident mesurait l'espace à la valorisation boursière d'une seule boîte, la Chine jouait la partie à 30 ans ENCORE UNE FOIS avec une verticale patiente et holistique, c'est toute la différence entre parier sur un seul champion et bâtir la capacité d'une civilisation
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Christian Koeppl
Christian Koeppl@ChristianKoeppl·
HIC SVNT DRACONES what a time to be alive
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CitizenX
CitizenX@CitizenX·
CASH IS KING, BUT PASSPORT IS QUEEN. Buffet likes cash because of its optionality. That's also what passports give: optionality. In an increasingly authoritarian world, mobility is liquidity. So if you are a wealthy individual, it's time to build your passport portfolio.
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Christian Koeppl
Christian Koeppl@ChristianKoeppl·
@PromptLLM No just in self denial which is marginally better. And Fable is correct btw. playing back Kahneman system 1 and 2. Humans majority is conscious while its the other way around. Conscious reasoning is too energy intensive. Its not a bad thing whats bad is the denial.
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Prompter
Prompter@PromptLLM·
Fable 5 thinks we are idiots
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Noah Smith 🐇🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼
The middle class actually isn't falling behind, they're getting ahead. But everyone thinks they're falling behind because they're constantly interacting with super-rich people online, and seeing rich people's lifestyles on Instagram.
Noah Smith 🐇🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼 tweet media
Renzo™@fwrenzo1

The "Middle Class" was a 50-year fluke designed to prevent a communist revolution during the Cold War. Now that the threat is gone, the elites are systematically dismantling it. You aren't "falling behind"; you’re being pushed back into the peasantry.

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Christian Koeppl
Christian Koeppl@ChristianKoeppl·
The happiest (wo)men in history is a name you never heard
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Jostein Hauge
Jostein Hauge@haugejostein·
The biggest myth of economic history is that rich countries developed by embracing free trade. The truth is that rich countries relied heavily on state intervention. Then, they told the rest of the world to embrace free trade, kicking away the ladder they had climbed up. We are now witnessing, once again, rich countries turning to state intervention and protectionism. In fact, they are actively dismantling the ideology of free trade they pushed onto the rest of the world. Why? The answer is simple: they now need protectionism again to compete with countries that “accidentally” caught up.
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Christian Koeppl
Christian Koeppl@ChristianKoeppl·
@ruima Very rich coming from him. A) they probably use LLMs to drive efficiency B) they take customers data and sell it back to them LMAO 🤣 but nice try Alex 🫶🏻🤗🙌🏻
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Rui Ma
Rui Ma@ruima·
So basically Alex Karp’s argument is that frontier AI labs profit three times: (1) they charge you for tokens, (2) they get access to your IP and business know-how, and (3) they eventually commoditize your competitive advantage. Instead, he says enterprises should pay Palantir to deploy open models and keep their own alpha LOL I did not expect him to suddenly become an ally for open source even though it is of course very self-interested
Ricardo@Ric_RTP

Palantir's CEO just exposed Sam Altman and Dario Amodei for robbing every Fortune 500 company. Within two minutes, Alex Karp took the entire frontier AI industry apart on national television. His exact words: "Every single enterprise in this country, these people are LIVID. They are paying for tokens that create no value. These people are stealing the weights and alpha of my business." He literally said the entire frontier AI business model is intellectual property extraction dressed up as a subscription. Then he also destroyed the pricing model with a single question that Silicon Valley still refuses to answer: "If it was so valuable, let's say I can make you $1 billion tomorrow. Wouldn't I say I'll make you $1 billion and I want 30 percent? Why are they charging for tokens if it's so valuable?" That question breaks the industry. If OpenAI and Anthropic's models truly delivered the productivity gains the labs claim, they would take equity or a share of the profit they generate. They would not sell access by the million tokens. Token pricing is itself the CONFESSION that the product cannot produce reliable value at scale. If it did, they would price for the value. But they price for the compute because that is what they are actually selling. Karp went even further... He called the entire arrangement "a wealth tax that does not help the poor. It just punishes." American businesses are transferring the alpha of their operations, meaning the workflows, the customer data, the strategy memos, the internal models that make them competitive, directly into the training pipelines of a handful of Silicon Valley labs. Once those labs retrain, the customer's own edge becomes the next enterprise product sold back to their competitors. And the part the AI industry does not want anyone thinking about: Every enterprise running its confidential documents, its customer conversations, and its financial models through a frontier model is potentially teaching that model HOW to replace them. The vendor collects the token fee AND the compounding intelligence about that customer's business. That is the mechanism. And that is why Karp used the word "stealing." He claims this is why every executive he meets is furious in private and silent in public. Nobody wants to be the CEO who called out the labs and then discovered their next competitor was built on their own leaked workflows. The entire AI industry has been priced for perfection on one assumption: That frontier labs produce durable, defensible value that justifies infinite compute spend. But Karp just told us that the customers do not believe that assumption anymore. They believe they are being taxed without benefit, watched without consent, and copied without recourse. The moment enterprises stop believing, the whole valuation stack shakes.

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Ricardo
Ricardo@Ric_RTP·
Palantir's CEO just exposed Sam Altman and Dario Amodei for robbing every Fortune 500 company. Within two minutes, Alex Karp took the entire frontier AI industry apart on national television. His exact words: "Every single enterprise in this country, these people are LIVID. They are paying for tokens that create no value. These people are stealing the weights and alpha of my business." He literally said the entire frontier AI business model is intellectual property extraction dressed up as a subscription. Then he also destroyed the pricing model with a single question that Silicon Valley still refuses to answer: "If it was so valuable, let's say I can make you $1 billion tomorrow. Wouldn't I say I'll make you $1 billion and I want 30 percent? Why are they charging for tokens if it's so valuable?" That question breaks the industry. If OpenAI and Anthropic's models truly delivered the productivity gains the labs claim, they would take equity or a share of the profit they generate. They would not sell access by the million tokens. Token pricing is itself the CONFESSION that the product cannot produce reliable value at scale. If it did, they would price for the value. But they price for the compute because that is what they are actually selling. Karp went even further... He called the entire arrangement "a wealth tax that does not help the poor. It just punishes." American businesses are transferring the alpha of their operations, meaning the workflows, the customer data, the strategy memos, the internal models that make them competitive, directly into the training pipelines of a handful of Silicon Valley labs. Once those labs retrain, the customer's own edge becomes the next enterprise product sold back to their competitors. And the part the AI industry does not want anyone thinking about: Every enterprise running its confidential documents, its customer conversations, and its financial models through a frontier model is potentially teaching that model HOW to replace them. The vendor collects the token fee AND the compounding intelligence about that customer's business. That is the mechanism. And that is why Karp used the word "stealing." He claims this is why every executive he meets is furious in private and silent in public. Nobody wants to be the CEO who called out the labs and then discovered their next competitor was built on their own leaked workflows. The entire AI industry has been priced for perfection on one assumption: That frontier labs produce durable, defensible value that justifies infinite compute spend. But Karp just told us that the customers do not believe that assumption anymore. They believe they are being taxed without benefit, watched without consent, and copied without recourse. The moment enterprises stop believing, the whole valuation stack shakes.
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Krzysztof Szczawinski 🇵🇱
Krzysztof Szczawinski 🇵🇱@Kristof_Poland·
Atlas Shrugged made simple: 1. Society runs on a small number of highly capable producers – industrialists, inventors, engineers – whose work everyone depends on but takes for granted. 2. The system starts rewarding need over achievement: the more capable you are, the more you’re expected to sacrifice for those who aren’t. 3. Success gets treated like a debt – taxed, regulated, resented – until the most capable start asking why they bother trying at all. 4. One by one, led by a man named John Galt, they simply withdraw – walking away rather than keep propping up a system that punishes them for producing. 5. Without them, the whole structure collapses, revealing that the “automatic” prosperity everyone assumed was actually being generated by specific, irreplaceable people. 6. Atlas is the Titan from Greek myth, condemned to carry the sky on his shoulders forever – Rand’s stand-in for the producer class, holding up civilization while getting blamed for it. 7. “Shrugged” is the whole argument in one word: Atlas doesn’t fight, doesn’t protest – he just quietly sets the weight down. Nobody realized the sky was being held up by anyone in particular, until the day it isn’t. You don’t want us? We just go…🤷🏻‍♂️
Krzysztof Szczawinski 🇵🇱 tweet media
Krzysztof Szczawinski 🇵🇱@Kristof_Poland

The Road to Serfdom made simple: 1. Plan the whole economy: someone must decide what gets made and who gets what, since people don’t naturally agree on one set of priorities. 2. These decisions are too big and detailed for normal democratic debate, so power shifts to a smaller group who can just act – technocrats. 3. Fixed laws everyone can rely on get replaced by case-by-case rulings, because a plan needs flexibility, not predictability. 4. Dissent becomes a problem to manage, not an opinion to vote on – the plan can’t work if people are free to ignore it. 5. Enforcing all that selects for people most willing to be ruthless – Hayek’s “worst get on top” – i.e. negative moral selection. 6. Since economics touches everything (your job, home, speech), controlling the economy ends up controlling your whole life. That’s the "serfdom."

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Christian Koeppl retweetledi
The Shift Journal
The Shift Journal@TheShiftJournal·
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Latest in Cosmos
Latest in Cosmos@latestincosmos·
Any fool can know. The point is to understand. — Albert Einstein
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Christian Koeppl
Christian Koeppl@ChristianKoeppl·
@Kekius_Sage Clearly they have a key function in human society given how relative common the trait is. Innovators early adopters risk takers.
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@Kekius_Sage·
People with ADHD often have a hyper curious mind. A 2026 study of 521 adults shows that ADHD traits like hyperactivity and impulsivity lead to higher curiosity and more exploration.
Kekius Maximus tweet mediaKekius Maximus tweet media
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Christian Koeppl
Christian Koeppl@ChristianKoeppl·
@pmarca He has a point though and that’s not nihilistic just acknowledge statistical reality. There is human agency and then there is very very much that’s not under our “control”. In fact control as commonly understood is a bit of an illusion in complex systems.
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Dante
Dante@dante321321321·
@pmarca Mark🙂 The original rise of complex societies (the first 4) happened *only* because they *so happened* to be on nice, fertile bodies of water. It had nothing to do with "intelligence" or "brain power". And we're talking about the beginning of complex societies here !
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Dylan O'Sullivan
Dylan O'Sullivan@DylanoA4·
— Charles Bukowski, 1992
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