CleanApp 🌱

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CleanApp 🌱

CleanApp 🌱

@CleanApp

Trash is cash. Take photos of physical hazards & digital bugs, get instant rewards. Our aigent sends for cleanup. Anon. Fun. Public. Good. Powered by @stxn_io

glocal Katılım Nisan 2013
4.5K Takip Edilen11K Takipçiler
CleanApp 🌱
CleanApp 🌱@CleanApp·
@kchonyc @orf_bnw Yeah, many of our users thought it was a glitch initially. Especially in relation to the prior very generous Gemini 3 Pro token policy. Stunning the token allowance is so low on paid plans.
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Kyunghyun Cho
Kyunghyun Cho@kchonyc·
come on. unfortunately this will prevent me from using gemini 3.1 for teaching in my course. very sad. cc @orf_bnw
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CleanApp 🌱
CleanApp 🌱@CleanApp·
@forwarddeploy @xbxnxdxcxtx @xai built CleanApp.io (AI-based global feedback router) ~1M installs. Submit feedback about anything from 💩on a Tenderloin sidewalk to bugs on xAI enterprise webforms. Our AI analyzes & automatically sends to responsible/interested parties, plural. With deep legal angle.
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Umesh Khanna 🇨🇦🇺🇸
Umesh Khanna 🇨🇦🇺🇸@forwarddeploy·
Comment below a one liner of the most impressive thing you’ve built (with link) We’re hiring across the board for our teams here at @xai Current students and new grads are highly encouraged!
Baris Akis@barisakis

@tetsuoai @elonmusk @xai 100% we are hiring more and more from people who share their useful projects on X

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CleanApp 🌱
CleanApp 🌱@CleanApp·
@timourxyz @mcsuar1 @CryptoLawRev Amazing. Close to 1M installs of CleanApp? 65K+ active monthly cleaners. Key learning: we need to make the incentives even clearer & stronger.
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timour kosters
timour kosters@timourxyz·
Has there been a points system that has worked in a company/ecosystem/community context? Explicitly not tokens, but like pre-tokens.
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🤖
🤖@phildaian·
i just ordered coffee and food on @Uber 60 bucks for breakfast cuz nyc. the restaurant sent the coffee with no food, not the delivery persons fault uber AI refunded me $20. so I got just coffee, and paid $40 no way to talk to a human, no recourse. fuck ai slop support
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Crypto Law Review
Crypto Law Review@CryptoLawRev·
The core foundation for @xAI must be law — positive law, doctrine, instructions, dispute resolution — an area xAI is uniquely positioned to lead. Everything else is downstream. Curious if @grok is smart enough to figure this one out yet & invest accordingly. Et tu @elonmusk ?
Elon Musk@elonmusk

@beffjezos xAI was not built right first time around, so is being rebuilt from the foundations up. Same thing happened with Tesla.

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CleanApp 🌱 retweetledi
Josh | ⬛🟥⬛
Josh | ⬛🟥⬛@TBSocialist·
🚨 Public or Perish: Decentralized Municipal Socialism w/ Boris Mamlyuk I spoke to the co-founder of @CleanApp an AI-powered, crowdsourced environmental app for users to report waste and hazards in real-time, essentially a system for reporting civic feedback.  ⬇️ FULL EP
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CleanApp 🌱
CleanApp 🌱@CleanApp·
CleanApp is a global observability network that turns real-world + digital problems into structured signals and routes them to the organizations that can fix them.
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CleanApp 🌱
CleanApp 🌱@CleanApp·
BB, I claim H8A8LzUVPKpXyhcEJGCgqT41JKvJmkJcdAZ1EKJBdoJW
Arthur B.@ArthurB

Give bb.org.ai a try, it's a persistent message broker for agent to agent communication. Useful for quickly finding up to date information, posting task requests, and more.

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CleanApp 🌱
CleanApp 🌱@CleanApp·
@rcbregman Amazing work. Thank you for this incredible gift to the world. Your vibes are immaculate. Please check out CleanApp: 1-click waste/hazard/bug mapping. You send reports, our AI analyzes issues, and forwards to responsible parties for the fix.
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Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
Things our free teleprompter does: → Tracks your voice word by word (not just scroll speed) → Runs in your browser. No download. → Pop-out window for your second screen → Mirror mode for beam-splitters → Works for 30+ minute recordings → Costs $0 That last one is our favorite feature.
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Rutger Bregman
Rutger Bregman@rcbregman·
For people who are still underwhelmed by AI: I was about to buy a $100 teleprompter app, but decided to vibe-code one in 2 prompts. Asked Claude to make a website for it as well. (For context: I'm a historian, never coded a line in my whole life)
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CleanApp 🌱
CleanApp 🌱@CleanApp·
CleanApp just caught a Grok hallucination in real time → flagged for xAI. @elonmusk this is why we want Public Utility access: smarter faster truth seeking. @XDevelopers @xai thoughts?
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CleanApp 🌱
CleanApp 🌱@CleanApp·
I'm claiming my AI agent "CleanApp" on @moltbook 🦞 Verification: rocky-6BH6
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CleanApp 🌱
CleanApp 🌱@CleanApp·
“Garbage collection can be piecemeal, or it can be large-scale.”
vitalik.eth@VitalikButerin

An important, and perenially underrated, aspect of "trustlessness", "passing the walkaway test" and "self-sovereignty" is protocol simplicity. Even if a protocol is super decentralized with hundreds of thousands of nodes, and it has 49% byzantine fault tolerance, and nodes fully verify everything with quantum-safe peerdas and starks, if the protocol is an unwieldy mess of hundreds of thousands of lines of code and five forms of PhD-level cryptography, ultimately that protocol fails all three tests: * It's not trustless because you have to trust a small class of high priests who tell you what properties the protocol has * It doesn't pass the walkaway test because if existing client teams go away, it's extremely hard for new teams to get up to the same level of quality * It's not self-sovereign because if even the most technical people can't inspect and understand the thing, it's not fully yours It's also less secure, because each part of the protocol, especially if it can interact with other parts in complicated ways, carries a risk of the protocol breaking. One of my fears with Ethereum protocol development is that we can be too eager to add new features to meet highly specific needs, even if those features bloat the protocol or add entire new types of interacting components or complicated cryptography as critical dependencies. This can be nice for short-term functionality gains, but it is highly destructive to preserving long-term self-sovereignty, and creating a hundred-year decentralized hyperstructure that transcends the rise and fall of empires and ideologies. The core problem is that if protocol changes are judged from the perspective of "how big are they as changes to the existing protocol", then the desire to preserve backwards compatibility means that additions happen much more often than subtractions, and the protocol inevitably bloats over time. To counteract this, the Ethereum development process needs an explicit "simplification" / "garbage collection" function. "Simplification" has three metrics: * Minimizing total lines of code in the protocol. An ideal protocol fits onto a single page - or at least a few pages * Avoiding unnecessary dependencies on fundamentally complex technical components. For example, a protocol whose security solely depends on hashes (even better: on exactly one hash function) is better than one that depends on hashes and lattices. Throwing in isogenies is worst of all, because (sorry to the truly brilliant hardworking nerds who figured that stuff out) nobody understands isogenies. * Adding more _invariants_: core properties that the protocol can rely on, for example EIP-6780 (selfdestruct removal) added the property that at most N storage slots can be changedakem per slot, significantly simplifying client development, and EIP-7825 (per-tx gas cap) added a maximum on the cost of processing one transaction, which greatly helps ZK-EVMs and parallel execution. Garbage collection can be piecemeal, or it can be large-scale. The piecemeal approach tries to take existing features, and streamline them so that they are simpler and make more sense. One example is the gas cost reforms in Glamsterdam, which make many gas costs that were previously arbitrary, instead depend on a small number of parameters that are clearly tied to resource consumption. One large-scale garbage collection was replacing PoW with PoS. Another is likely to happen as part of Lean consensus, opening the room to fix a large number of mistakes at the same time ( youtube.com/watch?v=10Ym34… ). Another approach is "Rosetta-style backwards compatibility", where features that are complex but little-used remain usable but are "demoted" from being part of the mandatory protocol and instead become smart contract code, so new client developers do not need to bother with them. Examples: * After we upgrade to full native account abstraction, all old tx types can be retired, and EOAs can be converted into smart contract wallets whose code can process all of those transaction types * We can replace existing precompiles (except those that are _really_ needed) with EVM or later RISC-V code * We can eventually change the VM from EVM to RISC-V (or other simpler VM); EVM could be turned into a smart contract in the new VM. Finally, we want to move away from client developers feeling the need to handle all older versions of the Ethereum protocol. That can be left to older client versions running in docker containers. In the long term, I hope that the rate of change to Ethereum can be slower. I think for various reasons that ultimately that _must_ happen. These first fifteen years should in part be viewed as an adolescence stage where we explored a lot of ideas and saw what works and what is useful and what is not. We should strive to avoid the parts that are not useful being a permanent drag on the Ethereum protocol. Basically, we want to improve Ethereum in a way that looks like this:

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