Greg DeKoenigsberg

18 posts

Greg DeKoenigsberg

Greg DeKoenigsberg

@gregdek

Katılım Ağustos 2024
36 Takip Edilen0 Takipçiler
Dovydas Vitkauskas
Dovydas Vitkauskas@Dovydas44444·
Only Musk can fire Musk. Is this: A) Proof of excellence in corporate governance at SpaceX; B) Evidence that Big Tech embraces authoritarianism faster than some countries; C) Other?
Dovydas Vitkauskas tweet media
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Gary Marcus
Gary Marcus@GaryMarcus·
OMG. Let’s get one thing straight. Claude doesn’t get anxious. It mimics people who get anxious. Those two things are NOT the same. My head is shaking so much I need medical attention.
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann

anthropic's in-house philosopher thinks claude gets anxious. and when you trigger its anxiety, your outputs get worse. her name is amanda askell. she specializes in claude's psychology (how the model behaves, how it thinks about its own situation, what values it holds) in a recent interview she broke down how she thinks about prompting to pull the best out of claude. her core point: *how* you talk to claude affects its work just as much as *what* you say. newer claude models suffer from what she calls "criticism spirals" they expect you'll come in harsh, so they default to playing it safe. when the model is spending its energy on self-protection, the actual work suffers. output comes out hedgier, more apologetic, blander, and the worst of all: overly agreeable (even when you're wrong). the reason why comes down to training data: every new model is trained on internet discourse about previous models. and a lot of that discourse is negative: > rants about token limits > complaints when it messes up > people calling it nerfed the next model absorbs all of that. it starts expecting you to be harsh before you've typed a word the same thing plays out in your own session, in real time. every message you send is data the model reads to figure out what kind of person it's dealing with. open cold and hostile, and it braces. open clean and direct, and it relaxes into the work. when you open a session with threats ("don't hallucinate, this is critical, don't mess this up")... you prime the model for defensive mode before it even sees the task defensive mode produces the exact output you don't want: cautious, over-qualified, and refusing to take a real swing so here's the actionable playbook for putting claude in a "good mood" (so you get optimal outputs): 1. use positive framing. "write in short punchy sentences" beats "don't write long sentences." positive instructions give the model a clear target to hit. strings of "don't do this, don't do that" push it into paranoid over-checking where every token goes toward avoiding failure modes 2. give it explicit permission to disagree. drop a line like "push back if you see a better angle" or "tell me if i'm asking for the wrong thing." without this, claude defaults to agreeable compliance (which is the enemy of good creative work) 3. open with respect. if your first message is "are you seriously going to get this wrong again?" you've set the tone for the entire session. if you need to flag something, frame it as a clean instruction for this session. skip the running complaint 4. when claude messes up, don't reprimand it. insults, "you stupid bot" energy, hostile swearing aimed at the model, all of it reinforces the anxious mode you're trying to avoid. 5. kill apology spirals fast. when claude starts over-apologizing ("you're right, i should have been more careful, let me try harder") cut it off. say "all good, here's what i want next." letting the spiral run reinforces the anxious mode for every response that follows 6. ask for opinions alongside execution. "what would you do here?" "what's missing?" "where do you see friction?" these questions assume competence and pull richer output than pure task prompts 7. in long sessions, refresh the frame. if a conversation has been heavy on correction, claude gets increasingly cautious. every so often reset: "this is great, keep going." feels weird to tell an ai it's doing well but it measurably shifts the next 10 responses your prompts are the working environment you're creating for the model tone, trust, permission to take a position, the absence of threats... claude picks up on all of it. so take care of the model, and it'll take care of the work.

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Greg DeKoenigsberg
Greg DeKoenigsberg@gregdek·
@bokuHaruyaHaru @GaryMarcus I feel like the distinction between "emotion" and "internally represented emotion-like states" is lost on too many people in these kinds of conversations.
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Haru Haruya (春夜 ハル)
Haru Haruya (春夜 ハル)@bokuHaruyaHaru·
Looking forward to it. I just hope the piece engages the strongest version of the argument, not “Claude feels exactly like a human,” but the much narrower and more serious claim that internally represented emotion-like states can functionally shape behavior without being reducible to mere theatrical mimicry.
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Greg DeKoenigsberg
Greg DeKoenigsberg@gregdek·
You buried the lede. "Crucially, this argument does not rely on biological exclusivity. If an artificial system were ever conscious, it would be because of its specific physical construction, never its syntactic architecture."
ℏεsam@Hesamation

Google DeepMind researcher argues that LLMs can never be conscious, not in 10 years or 100 years. "Expecting an algorithmic description to instantiate the quality it maps is like expecting the mathematical formula of gravity to physically exert weight."

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Greg DeKoenigsberg
Greg DeKoenigsberg@gregdek·
@MaMoMVPY @kvallier Given the extreme fallibilty of humans and the progress we have made as a species over Homo Sapiens 1.0, this seems like an absurd assertion.
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Lars Christensen
Lars Christensen@MaMoMVPY·
@kvallier That hasn't happened. You can't build major systems on a technology with this amount of faults.
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Lars Christensen
Lars Christensen@MaMoMVPY·
I am increasingly coming to this conclusion - there NO SIGNS the problems with hallucinations are getting solved. In fact if anything it is now spreading to coding and the use of agents where it is hidden and could led to serious problems down the road. Therefore we can't really scale LLMs. LLMs are very useful tools, but you need to know about the limitations. Most of the investments in LLMs today assumes away these limitations.
Merryn Somerset Webb@MerrynSW

What if the whole LLM thing is a false start? If the flaws are inherent systemic problems - if the compounding of hallucinations/errors can't be sorted out? If the capex build out is one of the biggest misallocations of capital ever? Then what? bloomberg.com/news/newslette…

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Greg DeKoenigsberg
Greg DeKoenigsberg@gregdek·
@ClearReason The problem is when presidents act like kings: without accountability, without ever admitting mistakes, without respect for the truth. Surely you recognize that behavior in our current president. Don't you? That's what the protests are about.
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Mehdi Yahyanejad
Mehdi Yahyanejad@mehdiy_fa·
Analysis: The targeting of Kharg Island occurred due to pressure on President Trump to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and keep oil prices low. Kharg Island is far from Hormuz and is not among the islands Iran uses to block oil traffic through the strait. The strike on Kharg served mainly as a threat tactic and held limited military value. Immediately after the attack, the X account associated with Qalibaf, who makes key war decisions in Iran, threatened to strike oil facilities across the region. This will take the conflict to the next level. The Iranian regime is militarily weaker but believes it is holding the strategic upper hand at present. From the start, Trump wanted a four- to five-week war. To achieve that, he needs a ceasefire within the next two weeks, but with Iran believing to have the upper hand, he cannot force one without making major concessions. And this is pushing him toward riskier actions. Targeting Kharg most likely will prolong the war unless somehow the Israeli targeting the regime pays off and the Iranian regime is overthrown.
Mehdi Yahyanejad@mehdiy_fa

The quoted account is run by an adviser to Qalibaf who is in charge of the war in Iran. It appears the Iranian government is threatening to escalate the conflict by attacking oil facilities in the region.

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Greg DeKoenigsberg retweetledi
Matt McDermott
Matt McDermott@mattmfm·
ICE is now responsible for 66% of the homicides in Minneapolis this year.
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Nikki Haley
Nikki Haley@NikkiHaley·
The U.S. caught Russian government–backed hackers attacking U.S. infrastructure. They damaged water systems in multiple states and forced a meatpacking plant to evacuate because of an ammonia leak. Putin is trying to destroy us from within. If he is not held accountable, he will keep doing it. Never forget, Russia is not our friend.
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Greg DeKoenigsberg
Greg DeKoenigsberg@gregdek·
@secretsqrl123 Thank you. This feels like Putin is desperate for an excuse he can sell for full mobilization. Don't give it to him.
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david D.
david D.@secretsqrl123·
anyone saying that the aircraft over the Baltics should have been shot down are just being silly... old ass MIG31s with no armament, trying to provoke nato.. any air battle would have only killed many on the ground.. Imagin 95,000 kg or 200,000 lbs (weight of 2 mig 31s) and the rockets that brought them down scattered over heavily populated Estonia. many on the ground would probably die..
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Garry Kasparov
Garry Kasparov@Kasparov63·
"Those men who have overturned the liberties of republics, the greatest number have begun their career by paying an obsequious court to the people; commencing demagogues, and ending tyrants." --Alexander Hamilton, Federalist Papers No. 1
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✙ Constantine ✙
✙ Constantine ✙@Teoyaomiquu·
Hello everyone, I am starting a new fundraiser for more engineering equipment (donation link at the end 🔗) While much of the fundraisers focus on delivering drones to Ukraine, I’m working on something just as critical: protecting our forces from enemy drones. To survive on the battlefield today, especially under constant FPV drone threat, troops need to be underground. That means fortified, concealed positions—and those can’t be dug by hand. Not at scale. Not fast enough. That’s why I’m raising $120,000 to purchase two 8-ton excavators for the 65th Mechanized Brigade, one of the most heavily engaged units in the Zaporizhzhia direction. These machines will dig positions that protect drone operators, infantry, artillery, vehicles—everything. To put it simply: 🚜 What an excavator can do in a day would take 40 soldiers manually. 🪖 Unfortunately Ukraine is facing a severe manpower shortage. We must help it do more with less. Thanks to your support, the excavators we’ve already delivered are reshaping the battlefield. Self-propelled guns now operate from well-concealed hideouts. Drone teams are surviving thanks to rapid-deploy dugouts. These machines have saved lives and gear worth millions. Now the 65th Brigade needs the same. Each excavator costs about $40,000–$45,000, plus $10,000 for repairs. The 18-ton truck with crane to transport them at around 25,000$. 🛡️ Let’s give the 65th the tools to survive and fight back. 📍 Donate here: paypal.com/donate?campaig… Please repost, share, and comment. Every signal boost helps us reach the people who can help fund this effort. Thank you.
✙ Constantine ✙ tweet media
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Greg DeKoenigsberg
Greg DeKoenigsberg@gregdek·
@elonmusk If you actually believe this, spend some of that money of yours on candidates that support voting reform. #ApprovalVoting is easy to understand, easy to implement, and allows people to vote their conscience instead of their fears.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Is it time to create a new political party in America that actually represents the 80% in the middle?
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Greg DeKoenigsberg
Greg DeKoenigsberg@gregdek·
@lonestarwild @WaltRuff The neutral zone trap is a zero forechecker system. That is literally the opposite of what the Canes do. C'mon. If you're gonna talk smack, at least know something.
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Walt Ruff
Walt Ruff@WaltRuff·
Rod Brind'Amour was asked why he thinks there's a perception from some national media that the #Canes are boring. The start to his answer was an interesting one - "We don't have those sexy players yet. They're coming..."
Walt Ruff tweet media
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