Sean Chou

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Sean Chou

Sean Chou

@sychou

Co-founder/CEO @ Isomer • Geeking on AI, cli, startups • Ex Founding CTO/COO SAP Fieldglass, Co-founder/CEO Catalytic

Katılım Haziran 2008
531 Takip Edilen1.4K Takipçiler
Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@ArtemXTech This is awesome! The loop and channels are great. I had previously set up an external loop to start Claude code to run through a folder each time to process files as a request but this feels much more robust.
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Artem Zhutov
Artem Zhutov@ArtemXTech·
Claude Code + Obsidian + Channels = your vault from your phone I run Claude Code from my Obsidian vault. 100 skills, extensive memory. The one thing I couldn't do is reach it from my phone. Channels - message from Telegram or Discord, Claude receives it with access to your skills, memory, and vault /loop heartbeats - therapist style check-in every 2 hours, source monitor scans Reddit + YouTube every 8 hours cmux orchestrator - spawn different workspaces, orchestrator manages them all from Discord This gives you a full piece to build your own OpenClaw, with Claude Code Full walkthrough: youtu.be/9G6IPxSXU8s cc @AnthropicAI @obsdmd
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@pk_iv They claimed about 1/3 of YC companies and my feed keep showing how they're one of the top AI companies in use right now. Brutal. But you know it's not just them...
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Paul Klein IV
Paul Klein IV@pk_iv·
If this is legit - it means that every SOC-2 report from their customers will need to be redone (which will take months). Very thankful to be a Vanta customer right now.
Ryan@ohryansbelt

Delve, a YC-backed compliance startup that raised $32 million, has been accused of systematically faking SOC 2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, and GDPR compliance reports for hundreds of clients. According to a detailed Substack investigation by DeepDelver, a leaked Google spreadsheet containing links to hundreds of confidential draft audit reports revealed that Delve generates auditor conclusions before any auditor reviews evidence, uses the same template across 99.8% of reports, and relies on Indian certification mills operating through empty US shells instead of the "US-based CPA firms" they advertise. Here's the breakdown: > 493 out of 494 leaked SOC 2 reports allegedly contain identical boilerplate text, including the same grammatical errors and nonsensical sentences, with only a company name, logo, org chart, and signature swapped in > Auditor conclusions and test procedures are reportedly pre-written in draft reports before clients even provide their company description, which would violate AICPA independence rules requiring auditors to independently design tests and form conclusions > All 259 Type II reports claim zero security incidents, zero personnel changes, zero customer terminations, and zero cyber incidents during the observation period, with identical "unable to test" conclusions across every client > Delve's "US-based auditors" are actually Accorp and Gradient, described as Indian certification mills operating through US shell entities. 99%+ of clients reportedly went through one of these two firms over the past 6 months > The platform allegedly publishes fully populated trust pages claiming vulnerability scanning, pentesting, and data recovery simulations before any compliance work has been done > Delve pre-fabricates board meeting minutes, risk assessments, security incident simulations, and employee evidence that clients can adopt with a single click, according to the author > Most "integrations" are just containers for manual screenshots with no actual API connections. The author describes the platform as a "SOC 2 template pack with a thin SaaS wrapper" > When the leak was exposed, CEO Karun Kaushik emailed clients calling the allegations "falsified claims" from an "AI-generated email" and stated no sensitive data was accessed, while the reports themselves contained private signatures and confidential architecture diagrams > Companies relying on these reports could face criminal liability under HIPAA and fines up to 4% of global revenue under GDPR for compliance violations they believed were resolved > When clients threaten to leave, Delve reportedly pairs them with an external vCISO for manual off-platform work, which the author argues proves their own platform can't deliver real compliance > Delve's sales price dropped from $15,000 to $6,000 with ISO 27001 and a penetration test thrown in when a client mentioned considering a competitor

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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@yazins This is the state of software today. If you break a brand promise, even if it's just perceived, someone is bound to vibe code an open source competitor within a few days.
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yazin
yazin@yazins·
Introducing: OpenGranola 🔥 I built an open source meeting copilot for macOS. It transcribes both sides of your call on-device, searches your own notes in real time, and hands you talking points right when the conversation needs them. No audio leaves your Mac. Point it at a folder of markdown files, pick any LLM through OpenRouter (Claude, GPT-4o, Gemini, Llama), and it just works. It's invisible to screen share too — nobody knows you have it. The whole thing is open source. Link below
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@appenz @meetgranola This is so sad. I just set up my claw with muesli to sync up my Granola notes and it was so awesome.
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Guido Appenzeller
Guido Appenzeller@appenz·
Sorry to see Granola @meetgranola going closed. They encrypted their local db, no local and no cloud API. In a world where notes are managed by agents, the app now has zero value. Any recommendations for good alternatives? What are you switching to?
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
I don't know who needs to hear this but if your OpenClaw is misbehaving in Slack by not replying in threads, this is the setting you're looking for. Took a hilarious week of watching our team ask, cajole, tease, and berate my claw before I finally figured this out. Lol.
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Guido Appenzeller
Guido Appenzeller@appenz·
@BehEvans @meetgranola I am looking for a very narrow tool that transcribes my meetings and does nothing else. For workflows, markdown and a folder based file system to me seems like the only viable solution for now.
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@nixcraft Many are in a bubble where all the people they know understand app design, even if intuitively. But if you interact in the normal world, you quickly realize coding is not the only limiting factor.
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@yugacohler Ethereum is a great example of trying to be all things to all people, doing nothing particularly well, and allows others to siphon value from it. So many great ideas, so much fun vibes, and truly the OG. But yeah, maybe more Mosaic than Netacape even...
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yuga.eth 🛡
yuga.eth 🛡@yugacohler·
Ethereum is on a trajectory to become the Netscape of crypto. Historically foundational with its invention of the EVM, as Netscape did with JavaScript/SSL. Unfortunately destined for irrelevance due to an inability to focus on what matters. Just as Netscape wasted time on a rewrite from version 4 to 6 at a time when Microsoft was absolutely killing them, the EF insists on focusing on cypherpunk values at a pivotal time when the institutions are finally coming onchain - often to other networks. An EF determined to win would focus on how to make Ethereum the best chain for finance. That’s not what it’s doing today.
Ethereum Foundation@ethereumfndn

Today, the Foundation’s Board released the EF Mandate. This document, which was first intended for EF members, reaffirms the promise of Ethereum, and the role of EF within this ecosystem.

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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
Interesting and glad you're having this convo. Back in the RPA days we used to think RPA bots would ossify systems because they were so fragile and inflexible. However, now, with agents that can reason and update their own prompts (with proper precautions of course -- I'm not crazy), this points to a design approach rather than an absolute showstopper. Either that, or a reason to use databases instead of SaaS SoRs.
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Jason ✨👾SaaStr.Ai✨ Lemkin
We would never switch our CRM now. Why not? All our AI Agents are plugged into it, and tuned, and trained. Switching a CRM would be hard enough. Switching out 10+ AI Agents, finding new ones, retraining them, etc? Mission Friggin’ Impossible
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@CoveredGeekly I've been waiting for this for so long! Actually...long enough that now I'm worried about it coming...
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CoveredGeekly
CoveredGeekly@CoveredGeekly·
Every 'Firefly' star confirmed to be involved in the upcoming announcement this Sunday (so far) • Nathan Fillion • Gina Torres • Morena Baccarin • Sean Maher • Summer Glau • Jewel Staite • Adam Baldwin • Alan Tudyk
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@walls_jason1 @paulhsu This is the real AI revolution right here. Disrupting tech bros and the SF AI house party.
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Jason Walls
Jason Walls@walls_jason1·
Yesterday Mark Cuban reposted my work, DM'd me, and told me to keep telling my story. So here it is. I'm a Master Electrician. IBEW Local 369. 15 years pulling wire in Kentucky. Zero coding background. I didn't go to Stanford. I went to trade school. Every week I'd show up to a home where someone just bought a Tesla or a Rivian. And every time, someone had already told them they needed a $3,000-$5,000 panel upgrade to install a charger. 70% of the time? They didn't need it. The math is in the NEC — Section 220.82. Load calculations. But nobody was doing them for homeowners. Electricians upsell. Dealers don't know. And the homeowner just pays. I got angry enough to build something about it. I found @claudeai. No coding experience. I just started talking to it like I'd explain a job to an apprentice. "Here's how load calcs work. Here's the NEC code. Now help me build a tool that does this." 6 months later — @ChargeRight is live. Real software. Stripe payments. PDF reports. NEC 220.82 calculations automated. $12.99 instead of a $500 truck roll. I'm still pulling wire. I still take service calls. I wake up at 5:05 AM for work. But something shifted. Yesterday @vivilinsv published my story as Claude Builder Spotlight #1. Mark Cuban saw it. The Claude community showed up. And for the first time, I felt like this thing I built in my kitchen might actually matter. I'm not a tech founder. I'm a dad who wants to coach little league and be home for dinner. I just happened to build something that helps people. If you're in the trades and thinking about using AI — do it. The barrier isn't technical skill. It's believing you're allowed to try. EVchargeright.com
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@Anubhavhing Cloudflare -- the arms dealer of web crawling. Brilliant.
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Anubhav
Anubhav@Anubhavhing·
Crawling an entire website used to take: A Python script. Playwright or Selenium. Proxy rotation. Rate limiting logic. Error handling. 3 hours of debugging why page 47 returned a 403. Now it's one API call. Every web scraping startup that raised millions to solve this problem just became a single endpoint. Every freelancer charging $500 to "extract website data" just lost their entire business model to a /crawl command. HTML. Markdown. JSON. Pick your format. No scripts. No browser. No headache. The entire web scraping industry just got reduced to one line of code. Someone is going to use this to clone every competitor's website by Friday. 💀
Cloudflare Developers@CloudflareDev

Introducing the new /crawl endpoint - one API call and an entire site crawled. No scripts. No browser management. Just the content in HTML, Markdown, or JSON.

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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@ryancarson From AI workers to AI founders. I have it queued to try!
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@Rob1Ham I've been thinking a lot about this for years and it's a strange mental space to be -- where humans are more reliable because we are fearful of consequences.
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@ai_for_success Companies keep trying to rethink the browser but it seems people are ready to rethink the web.
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AshutoshShrivastava
AshutoshShrivastava@ai_for_success·
Disappeared like it never existed. It was supposed to be the Chrome killer 😂
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Retro Coast
Retro Coast@RetroCoast·
If you know what this is you lived in the best days #DnD
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StarPlatinum
StarPlatinum@StarPlatinum_·
ChatGPT is being sued for acting like a lawyer 🚨 A new lawsuit claims AI convinced a woman to fire her real lawyer and then generated fake legal filings that cost an insurance company $300,000. Here’s what’s happening: The case was filed on March 5, 2026 in a U.S. federal court in Chicago. The plaintiff: Nippon Life Insurance Company of America They a had a disability insurance claim against Nippon Life. The case had already been resolved. But she wanted to reopen it. So she asked ChatGPT for advice. - The AI Advice According to the lawsuit, ChatGPT told her she didn’t need her real lawyer. It allegedly encouraged her to fire the licensed attorney handling the case. Then it began generating legal documents for her. - The Fake Filings ChatGPT produced dozens of court filings. But many of them contained serious problems: - fake legal citations - references to court cases that never existed - judges that were completely fictional - legal arguments with no basis in law The complaint describes them as “an avalanche of nonsense paperwork.” - The Financial Damage Even though the filings had no legal merit, Nippon Life still had to respond to them. That forced the company to spend more than $300,000 in legal fees. All responding to documents allegedly generated by AI. - The Lawsuit Against OpenAI Now Nippon Life is suing OpenAI directly. They are demanding: - $300,000 in compensatory damages - $10 million in punitive damages If AI gives legal advice, who is responsible when things go wrong? The user or the company that built the AI?
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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@brankopetric00 Welcome to corporate America. Some components are awesome and amazing. Others are meh. Most are good enough. None seem to want to work together.
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Branko
Branko@brankopetric00·
The AWS Console is what happens when 13 different teams are told to build a UI but nobody's allowed to talk to each other. Every service feels like it was designed in a different timeline.
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Josh Kale
Josh Kale@JoshKale·
Okay wow Anthropic just figured out how to weaponize the billions in enterprise commitments it has locked up This new marketplace lets companies route their existing Anthropic budget to third-party tools like GitLab, Lovable, Snowflake, Replit, etc... One contract. Many products. Zero new procurement headaches. This could turn into a pretty big moat that has nothing to do with model quality
Claude@claudeai

Introducing the Claude Marketplace, a way for enterprises to simplify their procurement of AI tools. Now in limited preview.

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Sean Chou
Sean Chou@sychou·
@AzFlin I've never understood the bragging about the number of agents one has...
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AzFlin 🌎
AzFlin 🌎@AzFlin·
You 👏 Do 👏 Not 👏 Need 👏 Multi-Agent 👏 Orchestration 👏 Systems 👏
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