Rudy
1.1K posts

Rudy
@Rudy4FutureTech
Proficient in Finance, Sports, Tech, Security and Blockchain



Humans vs. AI? We put them to the test in our new post! We went head-to-head with AI tools to see who would win? Check it out today to see the results! blog.doyensec.com/2026/02/03/out… #appsec #doyensec #outline #AI

🚨 Research shows repeated complaining physically rewires your brain to prioritize stress and negativity. The way we speak about our daily challenges does more than just vent frustration; it physically alters the architecture of the brain. When we engage in chronic complaining, we repeatedly activate neural networks responsible for detecting threats and processing stress. Through the biological process of neuroplasticity, these circuits become stronger and more efficient every time they are used. Essentially, the brain learns to become more adept at finding things to be unhappy about, turning a temporary mood into a permanent biological predisposition toward negativity and fear-based thinking. As these negative pathways become the brain's default setting, individuals often experience a measurable increase in baseline stress levels and emotional volatility. This heightened sensitivity means that even minor inconveniences can trigger an intense stress response because the brain has been conditioned to interpret the world through a lens of threat. Findings discussed by the Stanford University School of Medicine emphasize that while this mechanism is powerful, understanding the science of affective neuroscience is the first step in consciously redirecting those pathways toward more resilient emotional patterns. Source: Stanford University School of Medicine. (2023). Neural Plasticity and the Impact of Negative Thought Patterns on Emotional Regulation. Stanford Medicine News.







In this thread: Minister for Economic Security Kimi Onoda discusses her love life

When the POC comes out, it’ll be a humbling moment for LLMs and how we use them. What’s circulating is extremely naive and incorrect. Experienced engineers are sharing plausible-sounding hallucinations from frontier models. Reminder to bump React, Next & frameworks.










