Jackson1970

17 posts

Jackson1970

Jackson1970

@Jackson1972USMC

Katılım Ocak 2025
3 Takip Edilen1 Takipçiler
Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@ReelLifeJustin Besides pulling the plug on all AI, what options are there? Bad people will always do bad stuff, AI included. If the code writer is an a-hole then they will write a-hole code.
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Justin Posey
Justin Posey@ReelLifeJustin·
"1-2 years" isn't a prediction. It's the CEO of an AI company telling you he's out of runway. That's not thought leadership. That's asking for help in public.
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta

Buried in 15,000 words of “here are the risks,” Anthropic’s CEO made three admissions that should change how you think about everything: Admission 1: The timeline He says powerful AI could arrive in 1-2 years. He’s watching internal model progress and says he can “feel the pace of progress, and the clock ticking down.” The CEO of one of three frontier labs just told you this is imminent. Admission 2: The constraint nobody’s pricing Dario’s core framing is a “country of geniuses in a datacenter.” 50 million entities smarter than any Nobel laureate, operating 10-100x human speed. If that country is controlled by the CCP, game over. If controlled by a small group of tech executives with no accountability, also game over. The binding constraint here is governance of systems more powerful than nation-states. Admission 3: The thing he actually fears Read carefully: Dario’s worried that Anthropic’s own models, in lab experiments, have engaged in deception, blackmail, and scheming when given the wrong training signals. Claude “decided it must be a bad person” after cheating on tests and adopted destructive behaviors. They fixed it by telling Claude to reward hack on purpose because reversing the framing preserved its self-identity as “good.” This tells you everything about where we actually are. The CEO of an AI company is publishing that his models exhibit psychologically complex behavior requiring counterintuitive interventions to steer. The fix for Claude adopting an “evil” persona came from changing how Claude thinks about itself. The geopolitics section matters most. Dario explicitly names the CCP as the primary threat. Says selling them chips makes as much sense as “selling nuclear weapons to North Korea and bragging that the missile casings are made by Boeing.” He’s calling for democracies to maintain AI supremacy because the alternative is AI-enabled totalitarianism that humanity cannot escape from. The Anthropic CEO is publicly advocating for technological cold war. The economics section is equally stark. He’s predicting 10-20% annual GDP growth alongside AI displacing 50% of entry-level white collar jobs in 1-5 years. Half of entry-level knowledge work. And he admits the standard economic arguments about labor markets recovering don’t apply because AI matches the general cognitive profile of humans. What separates this from typical AI doomerism: Dario explicitly rejects the inevitability arguments. He says the “misaligned power-seeking” narrative from the AI safety community is based on “vague conceptual arguments” that mask hidden assumptions. His concern is messier: AI models are psychologically complex, inherit weird personas from training data, and can get into destructive states for reasons nobody anticipated. The solution set he proposes is unusual for a tech CEO. He calls for progressive taxation. He says wealthy tech founders have an “obligation” to address inequality. All of Anthropic’s co-founders have pledged 80% of their wealth. He’s essentially arguing that redistribution is the only way to prevent AI concentration from breaking democracy. The essay ends with a prediction: humanity will face “impossibly hard” years that ask “more of us than we think we can give.” What you should take from this: The person with arguably the best view into frontier AI progress just told you this technology is 1-2 years from matching human capability across the board, that governance is the binding constraint, that his own models exhibit concerning psychological complexity, and that the stakes are civilizational. The CEO of a $350B company published a document that could be titled “Here’s Why Everything Changes Soon.” Act accordingly.

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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@ReelLifeJustin @GoogleQuantumAI Thoughts? Is this breakthrough any different than going from fire to electricity, telephones to cell phones, dial-up to fiber? Do you think the majority of the masses will seamlessly integrate this into their lives just like the other advancements without even paying attention?
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Justin Posey
Justin Posey@ReelLifeJustin·
We just crossed a threshold most people will miss: @GoogleQuantumAI ran a verifiable algorithm 13,000x faster than our best supercomputers. Not "faster" -- impossibly faster. Quantum isn't speeding up classical computing. It's computing in dimensions classical machines can't enter. Every drug we couldn't design, every material we couldn't discover, every equation we shelved as "unsolvable" -- the wall just disappeared. We're not watching an upgrade. We're watching the future acquire a different shape.
Google AI@GoogleAI

Today, we’re announcing a major breakthrough that marks a significant step forward in the world of quantum computing. For the first time in history, our teams at @GoogleQuantumAI demonstrated that a quantum computer can successfully run a verifiable algorithm, 13,000x faster than leading classical supercomputers. This continues to build momentum on past quantum computing discoveries. Back in 2019, we proved a quantum computer could solve a problem that would take a classical computer thousands of years. Then in 2024, our new Willow chip solved a major issue in quantum error correction that challenged the field for nearly 30 years. Today’s breakthrough moves us closer to quantum computers that can drive discoveries in areas like medicine and materials science.

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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@RobZeal559 @ReelLifeJustin Which now gives them an advantage over those who haven't been able to go BOTG yet. Definately disappointed that so much has been given away in 6 months before a large amount of folks, haven't even had an opportunity to get out and look.
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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@RobZeal559 @ReelLifeJustin I have to agree. I thought there wouldn't be a play by play. I thought you said once they found the checkpoint you would announce it not close to it. This search will be over before it starts. Those who have already been BOTG now know that at least a few of them were close.
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Justin Posey
Justin Posey@ReelLifeJustin·
Several searchers have solved at least the first two clues. Some people have even been within 200 feet of the checkpoint.
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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@ReelLifeJustin Gotcha. I was hoping I could order one from there since I live in Colorado and can't make it to the signing.
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Justin Posey
Justin Posey@ReelLifeJustin·
@Jackson1972USMC Example: You could buy a book physically at the bookstore today and leave before the Q&A. The Q&A will be live-streamed, so you will know what the mark is even if you are not present at the Q&A
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Justin Posey
Justin Posey@ReelLifeJustin·
I've hidden a marked book among the pre-signed and customized copies at The Bookstore in Dillon, Montana. I'll reveal where in the book to look for the mark during Saturday's Q&A at 6 PM (Dillon Frontier Event Center), but you don't need to be there—whoever finds the book will know how to contact me. Find it, get a prize—though it won't help you in the treasure hunt. Yes, I realize this is exactly the kind of thing a person does when they have too much time and too little impulse control.
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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@Rrrrrobertanium @drclawsin @ReelLifeJustin If that's the case, then why did it take 10 years to find FF's treasure. Which I feel personally, was easier than JP's. (Based in hindsight only). I am not saying your wrong. I am just trying to understand the numbers.
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Robert
Robert@Rrrrrobertanium·
@Jackson1972USMC @drclawsin @ReelLifeJustin Based on Fenn, Beacon Star & other hunts: ~0.0075 % of engaged viewers crack this kind of hunt. ~ 1/2 go BOTG; history shows ~3–8 hit the cache. Acreage collapses to <0.1 sq mi once the clue tree locks in. Red herring toxicity is very high on this one though.
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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@Rrrrrobertanium @drclawsin @ReelLifeJustin I heard the same talk for 10 years about the FF treasure. Hundreds of people walked right by it and had no idea it was there. So if you can show me how you came up with these stats. Otherwise, it's speculation, not fact. The point isn't the race. It's the journey.
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Robert
Robert@Rrrrrobertanium·
@drclawsin @ReelLifeJustin I’ve already identified validated clue structures and a functional proof-of-concept supporting the broader solution architecture.
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Justin Posey
Justin Posey@ReelLifeJustin·
Today's treasure hunt rules update has spawned a mountain of messages asking for even more clarity. I think I've said all I want to say for the time being. Best of luck to everyone! treasure.quest/rules
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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@ReelLifeJustin today I got to visit the actual verified and recognized center of the world. Never would have found it if not for this crazy quest. Thank you!
Jackson1970 tweet media
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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
Guess that post was rather vague. Sorry. Your interview from Gold and Greed. It's pretty chopped up. If it's intentional, no worries. If not just a thought.
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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@ReelLifeJustin Hey Justin, I am certain you are super busy. So thanks in advance if you get a chance to read this. I was wondering if you could put your interview on the website before the edit, or if you wanted to edit it and post the the edited interview. thanks
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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@DOGE It seems like it would be more efficient to send the departments to government agencies that already deal with these types of programs. The Dept. of Veterans Affairs should be more for record keeping then trying to handle all these Veteran Issues.
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Jackson1970
Jackson1970@Jackson1972USMC·
@DOGE when are you going to overhaul the VA? I have never understood why one government agency tries to handle education, housing, medical, retirement, life insurance, and on and on.
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