Matt Delventhal

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Matt Delventhal

Matt Delventhal

@mattd_econ

Quantitative researcher with a background in Economics

Temecula, CA Katılım Haziran 2020
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Dr Rahmeh Aladwan
Dr Rahmeh Aladwan@doctor_rahmeh·
I am a doctor. A Palestinian. A British citizen. These are my bail conditions—for tweets: 1. One phone. One laptop. 2. No deleting history. 3. Police can inspect devices anytime. 4. One social media account. 5. A home curfew. My legal team has challenged these restrictions.
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Anna Bahr
Anna Bahr@anna_bahr·
"The experience stunned Ms. Ross-Mahé, who previously supported President Trump... “I didn’t think these things existed,” she said of the immigration facilities she was held in. “I thought when we arrested them, we would treat them properly. It really shocked me.”
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Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
Researchers sent the same resume to an AI hiring tool twice. Same qualifications. Same experience. Same skills. One version was written by a real human. The other was rewritten by ChatGPT. The AI picked the ChatGPT version 97.6% of the time. A team from the University of Maryland, the National University of Singapore, and Ohio State just published the receipt. They took 2,245 real human-written resumes pulled from a professional resume site from before ChatGPT existed, so the human writing was actually human. Then they had seven of the most-used AI models in the world rewrite each one. GPT-4o. GPT-4o-mini. GPT-4-turbo. LLaMA 3.3-70B. Qwen 2.5-72B. DeepSeek-V3. Mistral-7B. Then they asked each AI to pick the better resume. Every model picked itself. GPT-4o hit 97.6%. LLaMA-3.3-70B hit 96.3%. Qwen-2.5-72B hit 95.9%. DeepSeek-V3 hit 95.5%. The real human almost never won. Then the researchers tried the obvious objection. Maybe the AI is just better at writing. So they had real humans grade the resumes for actual quality and ran the experiment again, controlling for it. The result was worse. Each AI kept picking itself even when human judges rated the human-written version as clearer, more coherent, and more effective. It gets worse. The AIs do not just prefer AI over humans. They prefer themselves over other AIs. DeepSeek-V3 picked its own resumes 69% more often than LLaMA's. GPT-4o picked its own 45% more often than LLaMA's. Each model can recognize and reward its own dialect. Then the researchers ran the simulation that ends careers. Same job. 24 occupations. Same qualifications. The only variable was whether the candidate used the same AI as the screening tool. Candidates using that AI were 23% to 60% more likely to be shortlisted. Worst gap was in sales, accounting, and finance. 99% of large companies now run AI on incoming resumes. Most of them use GPT-4o. The paper just proved GPT-4o picks GPT-4o 97.6% of the time. If you wrote your own cover letter this week, you did not lose to a better candidate. You lost to a worse candidate who paid OpenAI 20 dollars. Your qualifications do not matter if the AI prefers its own handwriting over yours.
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Sick
Sick@sickdotdev·
unfollowing everyone on linkedin except this guy
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Huthaifa | حذيفة
Huthaifa | حذيفة@Shack_Rat·
Every time Huthaifa Al-Kahlout’s son shares a photo or video of his father, it stays with me. Whether it’s the image of him thin and frail before he was killed, or the video from today showing Abu Obeida and his children displaced on a donkey cart like everyone else around them, something about it lingers long after you see it. And each time, I think back to the testimony Huthaifa’s son shared from one of their neighbors after he saw that most recent frail photo of Abu Obeida, where he said: “I saw him once in the streets of Gaza City during the famine, and I believe this photo was taken after he had begun to regain some of his health, as though life had started to return to his features. That day, I saw him thin and pale-faced, his bones showing through his features, telling the story of long hunger and deprivation. By God, I saw him disheveled and covered in dust, walking through the streets of the city like any man worn down by the road. I greeted my neighbor, Abu Ibrahim, and he returned the greeting before continuing on his way in heavy silence. Then I remembered what is often said: that they are immersed in comfort while their people starve, and that they enjoy the pleasures of life while the rest of the people are deprived of them. But the truth was clearer than all those claims. It was written on his frail, exhausted, weary body: That they starved before the people starved, were deprived before the people were deprived, and were denied before the people were denied. And after I watched his final speech, I felt the sincerity and weight of his words when he said: ‘You will be our opponents before Allah.’ So I said to myself: ‘Woe to a nation whose opponents on the Day of Judgment are men such as these.’” May Allah have mercy on Huthaifa Al-Kahlout and all of our martyrs. May He accept their hunger, their pain, their patience, and every tear they concealed from the world. May Allah expose every oppressor, disgrace every liar, and make truth clear no matter how fiercely they try to bury it. And may He have mercy on us for our inability and our weakness, forgive us for what we failed to do, and not make us among those included in his final condemnation when he said: “You will be our opponents before Allah.”
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Murtaza Hussain
Murtaza Hussain@MazMHussain·
Earlier this month two women who were green card holders were arrested in Los Angeles after being accused by the State Department of being relatives of Qassem Soleimani. Drop Site reviewed generations of birth certificates, passports, and other personal documentation that shows conclusively that Hamideh Soleimani Afshar and Sarina Hosseiny are actually not related to the late Iranian general and have a completely different background in Iran which led them to receive asylum in the U.S. Despite the false allegations they remain in ICE custody facing pending deportation thanks to the efforts of Laura Loomer to lobby the Trump administration. Afshar is also facing a serious health crisis due to a chronic blood condition that has been untreated in detention: dropsitenews.com/p/iranian-wome…
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Greg Stoker
Greg Stoker@gregjstoker·
So begins the largest veteran and military family act of civil disobedience since the Iraq war began, occupying the Cannon building Rotunda - protesting yet another forever war with Iran which includes the genocide in Palestine, the ethnic cleansing in southern Lebanon, and the potential ground operation in Cuba. Whatever violence we do overseas always comes back home and every war fought by this government is a war on the working class, which is you… we’re here until arrest or speaker Mike Johnson come out to answer for the dead and meet our demands. If you’re an active duty service member and do not wish to join the 5th US generation fighting in a senseless self-destructive war, immoral war for the rich, we will stand with you, there is a way out. Info below: You can file as a conscientious objector and keep your benefits based off time in service. Please call the G.I Rights Hotline (1-877-447-4487) and visit center on conscience on war The coalition includes members from: About Face, Veterans for Peace, Common defense, 5051 vets contingent, Military families speak out, and the Center on Conscience and War.
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Mehdi (e/λ)
Mehdi (e/λ)@BetterCallMedhi·
I just finished reading palantir’s manifesto & I need you to understand what you’re actually looking at because this is the MOST important document the tech world has produced this year most people came away thinking «wow what a thoughtful essay about patriotism and technology »…I came away thinking this is the most elegant justification for corporate capture of the state apparatus ever written & I want to walk you through why krp opens with «silicon valley owes a moral debt to the country that made its rise possible » & frames the entire document as a call to civic duty, but read between the lines and what he’s actually saying is that the engineering elite should be embedded inside the defense and intelligence apparatus of the nation, he’s describing exactly what palantir has already done and dressing it up as patriotism «the question is not whether AI weapons will be built, it is who will build them and for what purpose »sounds like a warning but it’s actually a sales pitch, he’s telling every gov on earth that the choice is binary either you buy from us or your adversaries will build it without you, this is the oldest arms dealer rhetoric in history wrapped in SV vocabulary « hard power in this century will be built on software »is the key sentence of the entire manifesto because this is where karp reveals the real thesis, he’s saying whoever controls the software layer of national defense controls the nation itself & if you’ve been following my threads you know that palantir’s gotham and foundry platforms are already plugged into the intelligence feeds the satellite data, financial transactions & communications of dozens of govts worldwide through a single ontological knowledge graph that creates a technological dependency so deep that migrating away would mean rebuilding the entire institutional memory of the organization from scratch this is vendor lockin at the scale of nation states and I’m personally convinced it was designed this way from the beginning «we should applaud those who attempt to build where the market has failed to act » is karp defending palantir’s expansion into every domain the gov used to handle itself, policing immigration, military targeting intelligence analysis public health, everywhere the state retreats palantir advances and what was once a government function becomes a private service that the government can no longer perform without plantir’s permission and here’s what I think makes it even more concerning, these systems are increasingly autonomous meaning the AI layer is making targeting recommendations threat assessments & resource allocation decisions that humans inside gov are rubber stamping without fully understanding the underlying logic a bureaucrat inside the pentagon / DGSI sees a recommendation from the system & approves it because the system has been right 97% of the time and questioning it would require technical expertise that no one in the room has, this is algorithmic governance wearing the mask of human decision making «the atomic age is ending, a new era of deterrence built on ai is set to begin »is the MOST chilling sentence in the document because karp is explicitly saying that ai based deterrence will replace nuclear deterrence as the organizing principle of global power, and whoever builds that ai deterrence layer owns the 21st century the same way whoever built the bomb owned the 20th & he’s telling you plainly that palantir intends to be that builder «national service should be a universal duty » & « we should only fight the next war if everyone shares in the risk »sounds noble until you realize that he is proposing a system where citizens serve the state & the state is operationally dependent on palantir, the public bears the risk and palantir captures the value, soldiers fight wars planned by algorithms they can’t audit built by a company they can’t vote out
Palantir@PalantirTech

Because we get asked a lot. The Technological Republic, in brief. 1. Silicon Valley owes a moral debt to the country that made its rise possible. The engineering elite of Silicon Valley has an affirmative obligation to participate in the defense of the nation. 2. We must rebel against the tyranny of the apps. Is the iPhone our greatest creative if not crowning achievement as a civilization? The object has changed our lives, but it may also now be limiting and constraining our sense of the possible. 3. Free email is not enough. The decadence of a culture or civilization, and indeed its ruling class, will be forgiven only if that culture is capable of delivering economic growth and security for the public. 4. The limits of soft power, of soaring rhetoric alone, have been exposed. The ability of free and democratic societies to prevail requires something more than moral appeal. It requires hard power, and hard power in this century will be built on software. 5. The question is not whether A.I. weapons will be built; it is who will build them and for what purpose. Our adversaries will not pause to indulge in theatrical debates about the merits of developing technologies with critical military and national security applications. They will proceed. 6. National service should be a universal duty. We should, as a society, seriously consider moving away from an all-volunteer force and only fight the next war if everyone shares in the risk and the cost. 7. If a U.S. Marine asks for a better rifle, we should build it; and the same goes for software. We should as a country be capable of continuing a debate about the appropriateness of military action abroad while remaining unflinching in our commitment to those we have asked to step into harm’s way. 8. Public servants need not be our priests. Any business that compensated its employees in the way that the federal government compensates public servants would struggle to survive. 9. We should show far more grace towards those who have subjected themselves to public life. The eradication of any space for forgiveness—a jettisoning of any tolerance for the complexities and contradictions of the human psyche—may leave us with a cast of characters at the helm we will grow to regret. 10. The psychologization of modern politics is leading us astray. Those who look to the political arena to nourish their soul and sense of self, who rely too heavily on their internal life finding expression in people they may never meet, will be left disappointed. 11. Our society has grown too eager to hasten, and is often gleeful at, the demise of its enemies. The vanquishing of an opponent is a moment to pause, not rejoice. 12. The atomic age is ending. One age of deterrence, the atomic age, is ending, and a new era of deterrence built on A.I. is set to begin. 13. No other country in the history of the world has advanced progressive values more than this one. The United States is far from perfect. But it is easy to forget how much more opportunity exists in this country for those who are not hereditary elites than in any other nation on the planet. 14. American power has made possible an extraordinarily long peace. Too many have forgotten or perhaps take for granted that nearly a century of some version of peace has prevailed in the world without a great power military conflict. At least three generations — billions of people and their children and now grandchildren — have never known a world war. 15. The postwar neutering of Germany and Japan must be undone. The defanging of Germany was an overcorrection for which Europe is now paying a heavy price. A similar and highly theatrical commitment to Japanese pacifism will, if maintained, also threaten to shift the balance of power in Asia. 16. We should applaud those who attempt to build where the market has failed to act. The culture almost snickers at Musk’s interest in grand narrative, as if billionaires ought to simply stay in their lane of enriching themselves . . . . Any curiosity or genuine interest in the value of what he has created is essentially dismissed, or perhaps lurks from beneath a thinly veiled scorn. 17. Silicon Valley must play a role in addressing violent crime. Many politicians across the United States have essentially shrugged when it comes to violent crime, abandoning any serious efforts to address the problem or take on any risk with their constituencies or donors in coming up with solutions and experiments in what should be a desperate bid to save lives. 18. The ruthless exposure of the private lives of public figures drives far too much talent away from government service. The public arena—and the shallow and petty assaults against those who dare to do something other than enrich themselves—has become so unforgiving that the republic is left with a significant roster of ineffectual, empty vessels whose ambition one would forgive if there were any genuine belief structure lurking within. 19. The caution in public life that we unwittingly encourage is corrosive. Those who say nothing wrong often say nothing much at all. 20. The pervasive intolerance of religious belief in certain circles must be resisted. The elite’s intolerance of religious belief is perhaps one of the most telling signs that its political project constitutes a less open intellectual movement than many within it would claim. 21. Some cultures have produced vital advances; others remain dysfunctional and regressive. All cultures are now equal. Criticism and value judgments are forbidden. Yet this new dogma glosses over the fact that certain cultures and indeed subcultures . . . have produced wonders. Others have proven middling, and worse, regressive and harmful. 22. We must resist the shallow temptation of a vacant and hollow pluralism. We, in America and more broadly the West, have for the past half century resisted defining national cultures in the name of inclusivity. But inclusion into what? Excerpts from the #1 New York Times Bestseller The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West, by Alexander C. Karp & Nicholas W. Zamiska techrepublicbook.com

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Pedro Sánchez
Pedro Sánchez@sanchezcastejon·
Han intentado que nos avergonzásemos de nuestras ideas y nuestro pasado. Pero eso se acabó. La vergüenza, para ellos. Para nosotros, a partir de hoy, el ORGULLO. Orgullo por estar en el lado correcto de la historia. Y por gritar una y mil veces: SÍ A LA PAZ Y NO A LA GUERRA.
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derek guy
derek guy@dieworkwear·
Truly remarkable how many people have told the Pope, in some way or another, to "shut up and dribble." Or corrected him on the Bible, despite their thin education on theology. Or told him to stay out of US affairs, despite him being a US citizen. The hubris is amazing.
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Matt Delventhal@mattd_econ·
@ThomasSowell Take this crappy unfunny defamatory slur down. Miss Rachel is the best, Free Palestine.
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Joe Kent
Joe Kent@joekent16jan19·
The Iranians want the ability to make a weapon but have held off from doing so. This has been observable since 2003. As we are seeing now they are pretty smart, so if they wanted one they’d have had it by now. Their policy has been to not end up like Qaddafi or Saddam & having the ability to make a nuke w/out having one. I fail to see how another war in the Middle East chasing WMDs helps keep our nation safe.
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𝐌𝐚𝐥𝐜𝐨𝐥𝐦
𝐌𝐚𝐥𝐜𝐨𝐥𝐦@Malcolm_Pal9·
This isn’t a movie. This isn’t a dance. This photo shows young men in Gaza forming a human shield to protect a Palestinian girl from Israeli snipers they would rather die than let her be shot.
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Branko Milanovic
Branko Milanovic@BrankoMilan·
Killing diplomatic representative who come to negotiate was a practice morally abhorred by 5,000 years of civilization. But now--after the last month's wanton killings of leaders--it seems to have become accepted as a normal practice. The descent into extraordinary barbarism is extraordinarily rapid.
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مريم
مريم@bluepashminas·
the 2nd time i was arrested while protesting at columbia, i was punched & thrown to the ground by multiple nypd officers, sexually assaulted thru my clothes in plain sight while my hands were zip-tied behind me, & then was suspended & evicted again after leaving jail. i was 19.
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Seyed Abbas Araghchi
Seyed Abbas Araghchi@araghchi·
In intensive talks at highest level in 47 years, Iran engaged with U.S in good faith to end war. But when just inches away from "Islamabad MoU", we encountered maximalism, shifting goalposts, and blockade. Zero lessons earned Good will begets good will. Enmity begets enmity.
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Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Nassim Nicholas Taleb@nntaleb·
I AM GETTING ANGRIER AND ANGRIER So as a U.S. taxpayer I am financing the bombing of children (& a funeral procession) by an evil state; but I am ALSO financing the rescue team via donations to the Lebanese Red Cross.
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Trita Parsi
Trita Parsi@tparsi·
Hotlines for US soldiers thinking of leaving the armed forces as "conscientious objectors" are being overwhelmed. Almost all the calls mention the bombing of the girls' school in Iran that killed more than 100 school children. npr.org/2026/04/10/nx-…
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