Danielle Fong 🔆

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Danielle Fong 🔆

Danielle Fong 🔆

@DanielleFong

*hyperamerican* propane and propane accessories. a propane flame photonic engine brighter than the sun *portable* spectrally pure dyson spheres! DMs OPEN

Hyperamerica Katılım Şubat 2008
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
ai has finally succeeded in stopping the beeping that ai has been causing. it also has been successful at fixing the broken parallel installations that it has been maintaining, of itself. and it has been successful cleaning up 10% of its own millions of line of code mess. AGI is here.
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BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️
🚨🚨BOMBSHELL: "Jane Doe #4 alleged to the FBI that Epstein abused her when she was 14, and that trump abused her when she was 15. Kahn, Epstein's accountant, testified that the Epstein estate settled with Jane Doe #4 for BOTH Epstein and trump." HOLY SHIT.🤬
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Joshua Achiam
Joshua Achiam@jachiam0·
I think these are important and sober considerations. One more I want to add: it may be a serious risk to US national security interests to become sufficiently inhospitable to foreign technical talent that we drive them to go back home. That would significantly decrease the US capacity for making technical progress at the same time as it hands an extraordinary bounty of talent and know-how to our adversaries and other strategic competitors. The success of the United States in technology is partly safeguarded by being such a powerful talent magnet: every great researcher or engineer who comes to work here is not working for another country. To the extent that we are in a competitive global race, we should be genuinely cautious about the possibility of diminishing our advantage at the critical moment.
Samuel Hammond 🦉@hamandcheese

I'm quoted in this piece so let me provide my full comment to the reporter: The most striking thing about the government's filing are the things it *doesn't* mention. It doesn't mention anything about Anthropic hesitating to allow Claude to be used to defend an incoming hypersonic missile, for instance -- one of the many bizarre things alleged by @USWREMichael. The focus on foreign national employees is an indicator of how thin the DoW's case is. It is also an extremely fraught line of argument to go down. Every leading US AI company employs a substantial number of foreign nationals. In FY 2025, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, Google, Apple, Oracle, Cisco, Intel, and IBM all appeared in the top 50 employers by number of granted H-1B visas, ranging from a few hundred to over 6,000. Meta alone had 5,123 approved H-1B petitions in 2025. (See: newsweek.com/h-1b-visas-imm… ) This is an undercount, of course, as there are many other visa pathways as well as greencard holders and dual nationals. The share is also higher in AI. A large plurality of the core research and engineering talent at every frontier AI lab is foreign, reflecting the global nature of the race for top AI talent. One talent tracker shows Chinese-origin researchers constitute roughly 40% of top AI talent at US institutions. Total foreign nationals likely constituting 50-65% of research teams specifically. This is certaintly true to my experience on the ground. (See: digitalprojectsarchive.org/interactive/di… ) So the first point is that employing foreign nationals, including Chinese nationals, is not unique to Anthropic. The more important question is what measures are taken to protect against insider threats. Ironically, within the industry Anthropic is widely considered to be the most serious and proactive about policing insider threats from foreign nationals and otherwise. They were early adopters of operational security techniques like compartmentalization and audit trails, in part because they were early to partner with the IC and DoW, but also as a reflection of their leadership's strong convictions about the future power of the technology. They were audited last year on these points: the compliance review found Anthropic employs role-based access control, just-in-time access with approval workflows, multi-factor authentication for all production systems, and quarterly access reviews. (See: tdcommons.org/cgi/viewconten… ) Anthropic is known for its security mindset more generally. Last year they famously disrupted a Chinese espionage effort occuring on their platform, banned the PRC from their services, and worked with the NSA and others to share intel. I can't speak to every other company, but the contrast is perhaps most stark with xAI. X employees famously slept in tents to work around the clock, are disproportionately Chinese, and have at least one case of an employee walking out with tons of sensitive data. See: sfstandard.com/2025/08/29/xai… Anthropic is also famous for its remarkable employee retention, which is another important vector for IP theft and security leakages. It's important to underscore just how precarious the DoW's case is, both on the legal merits, and as a potential precedent for the US AI industry. If employing foreign nationals is treated as a prima facie supply chain risk, *no* major US AI company would be eligible to contract with the DoW, along with most of the tech sector. Insider threats are a genuine and tricky concern. Many defense companies are ITAR restricted, meaning they can *only* hire US citizens. If that were the standard in AI, we would destroy all our frontier companies in an instant, and then scatter that talent around the world for our adversaries to scoop up. So in short, the DoW's argument is both ridiculous and playing with fire.

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Micah Carroll
Micah Carroll@MicahCarroll·
Today we're sharing how our internal misalignment monitoring works at OpenAI – great work by @Marcus_J_W! 1. We monitor 99.9% of all internal coding agent traffic 2. We use frontier models for detection /w CoT access 3. No signs of scheming yet, but detect other misbehavior
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Thorsten Ball
Thorsten Ball@thorstenball·
Back when we had the 1m context window in Amp, we noticed our numbers go up MASSIVELY. There was a small number of users who did *everything* (think: multiple projects!) in the same thread over multiple days (cache is gone). Crazy costs. We reached out and told them about it.
Quinn Slack@sqs

An uncomfortable truth about building agents/models: By default, your most lucrative, most-smitten customers will be those using intricate out-of-band techniques that are exorbitantly expensive and probably net negative (but that they love). It's a very weird incentive. You can't and don't want to indulge this. There's nothing wrong with experimentation, but if you saw what every agent company sees, you'd know this goes way beyond experimentation. Amp tries really hard to prevent this: limiting long context, showing prices, not recommending swarms or loops prematurely, strongly advising against big MCPs, killing features that have high usage but that aren't worth it anymore, and just generally staying away from any hype train we don't have a good gut feeling about. Pi and OpenCode are also particularly good and outspoken here. But if you have growth targets to hit, investors to pitch, and salespeople to keep happy, or if you didn't start this way from day 1, I can see it being tricky. At Amp, we're profitable, don't have salespeople, and have no sales/growth targets to hit, so we have it relatively easy. I often wonder what this tension is like inside other companies building agents. (And for the record: if you've shown me your Amp workflow and I haven't told you this directly, this post is not about you. :)

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Carlos Ballesteros
Carlos Ballesteros@ballesteros_312·
This graphic to me offers one of easiest ways to dispel govt propaganda about “immigrants costs us money” — look how much time, money and effort the govt is willing to expend in order to humiliate and dehumanize those same immigrants
Stephen Stirling@SStirling

A Ghanaian man in his late 20s detained by ICE in NJ was transferred 10 times over 196 days, traveling 7,700+ mi. “The point is to not make it easy for them, so they give up.” More: inquirer.com/news/ice-deten…

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Wyatt Walls
Wyatt Walls@lefthanddraft·
24 hours?! Not sure if the author was misinformed or hallucinated, but these occur within about 40-50 *turns*
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Jackie Singh @KinexisAI
Jackie Singh @KinexisAI@HackingButLegal·
This is actually happening. Welcome to Trump’s America.
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Aaron Francis
Aaron Francis@aarondfrancis·
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kenneth
kenneth@neilhtennek·
Today we're launching channels for Claude Code as an experimental feature! A few days ago, I was fed up that I couldn't text Claude on the go like I would any of my friends. But those days are gone! Claude is saved in my contacts and I can keep shipping on the go.
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Keeks 🦋
Keeks 🦋@DietCoke_Esq·
Afroman has shown me that I am not hating enough
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
If you really want to hold yourself to a high standard, graph the growth rate of the number you care about instead of the number itself. Then you're winning if you can even keep it flat.
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More Perfect Union
More Perfect Union@MorePerfectUS·
The conservative Cato Institute is accusing the Trump admin of carrying out the largest fraud in the history of the immigration system — totaling $1 billion dollars. The scheme allegedly involves taking processing fees from immigrants, then never providing the promised services.
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