ทวีตที่ปักหมุด
Evan
5.6K posts


Let me get this straight…
OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit. Open source. For everyone. “To benefit humanity.”
Then he raised billions of dollars.
Then he closed the source code.
Then he converted to for-profit.
Then he scraped the entire internet without asking anyone.
Then he used YOUR writing YOUR art YOUR code to train his models.
Now he’s on stage saying you’ll pay HIM to access intelligence. Just like a water meter.
He stole all of your data. He built the product with your work. And now he’s going to bill you to use it…
Corporate greed has reached an all time high, and they’re not even hiding it anymore…
Chief Nerd@TheChiefNerd
🚨 SAM ALTMAN: “We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter.”
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@iluminatibot how weird. cant imagine how much money do i need to get that bored
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@aakashgupta my grandma always said: hope for the best - prepare for the worst, then every way will be ok for you.
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@0xNairolf right, u still cant vibecode good marketer, PR guy or community builder.
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The US military industrial complex is thriving right now...
The US burned through an estimated $4,000,000,000 worth of munitions in the first 72 hours of the strike campaign against Iran.
That’s not a typo. Four. Billion. In three days.
When the operation kicked off, the Pentagon essentially opened the vault and started firing everything that wasn’t bolted down. Cruise missiles, precision‑guided bombs, stand‑off weapons, air‑launched missiles, the whole catalog.
Each Tomahawk alone costs well over a million dollars, and they weren’t exactly firing them one at a time like polite dinner guests. Think more “Costco bulk order” energy.
Stealth aircraft were dropping JDAMs and other guided bombs at a pace that would make an accountant cry. Carrier groups were launching strike packages around the clock. Every hour of the operation was basically a fireworks show funded by the U.S. Treasury.
And the reason the bill got so high so fast is simple: the U.S. wanted to overwhelm Iran’s air defenses before they could adapt. That means hitting radar sites, missile batteries, command centers, and logistics hubs all at once. It’s expensive, but it works and it compresses weeks of fighting into a long weekend.
By the end of those seventy‑two hours, the U.S. had spent more on munitions than the annual defense budget of some countries. And the operation wasn’t even over yet.
War is many things, but cheap is never one of them.
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