Jay Mehta

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Jay Mehta

Jay Mehta

@thisisjaymehta

Make softwares great again! @NeuralQuarkCo https://t.co/qHsU2wQKbu

Gujarat, India Tham gia Ekim 2017
343 Đang theo dõi330 Người theo dõi
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Jay Mehta
Jay Mehta@thisisjaymehta·
Made an app for iOS that let you limit your internet speed. It is useful in testing how your own app will work on low speed networks. Or if you just want to limit your speed while roaming or on mobile data etc. Let me know what you think: apps.apple.com/us/app/interne…
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Shruthi Iyer 🪷
Shruthi Iyer 🪷@Avacado_Op·
Telegram is absolutely useless app nothing good comes out of it.
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Jay Mehta
Jay Mehta@thisisjaymehta·
@EndWokeness Because every front page is busy being racist to Indians while Pakistanis destroy your country from inside out. 😂
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End Wokeness
End Wokeness@EndWokeness·
We now know that 250,000 white girls have been raped in the UK by Muslim migrants & politicians enabled it. How is this not on every front page?
End Wokeness tweet mediaEnd Wokeness tweet mediaEnd Wokeness tweet mediaEnd Wokeness tweet media
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Bhargav Mahajan
Bhargav Mahajan@BhargavLearns·
During my JEE era, Telegram actually saved my ass more than any app. I actually spent lakhs on offline coaching, even took PW online batches, but I still remember that the Telegram free lectures were a lifesaver for me. After hearing that Telegram is banned in India, I am actually worried about the students who depend on Telegram for their daily study. Telegram have definitely played a role in saving the lives of those who can't afford education in India.
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Jay Mehta
Jay Mehta@thisisjaymehta·
@Aarush0O @Malay4Product @durov Telegram is mostly used for Evil here and very less for Good. It's a platform issue that they are not securing their platform.
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Malay Krishna
Malay Krishna@Malay4Product·
So, Telegram dragged the Indian government to the Delhi High Court today, angry that its app got switched off for the whole country. Ever since the NEET exam this year got cancelled, Telegram channels have popped up with names like PAPER LEAKED NEET, Re-NEET 2026 and Private Mafia. They told students, pay us and we will give you the real paper before the exam. The price ran from a few thousand rupees to several lakhs. Most of it was a lie. They were not leaking anything. They were just scaring kids into paying. In Ahmedabad, police caught one gang running eight such channels. In a single month, those channels had contacted around 1,000 numbers and moved about 1.5 crore rupees through fake bank accounts. The government tried cleaning it up one channel at a time. They kept pulling pages down. New ones kept popping up. So on June 16 they went big. They used a law called Section 69A and blocked Telegram across all of India until June 22, covering exam day. Google and Apple even removed the app from their stores. They added one more order. Telegram had to switch off the edit button for old messages until June 30 because cheaters were posting a plain message before the exam, then editing it afterwards to make it look like they had predicted the paper. In moments of panic and fear, a few students ended up ignoring the 'edited' tag and getting scammed. Telegram was furious. It rushed to the Delhi High Court. The hearing happened today before a vacation judge, Justice Tejas Karia, who agreed to hear it fast because the exam is only days away. Telegram's lawyer, Madhav Khosla, made his case. You have punished 150 million Indians to catch a few crooks. Most of them are students and teachers using the app to study. That is far too harsh. He said Telegram had already removed over 900 illegal NEET links and hundreds of channels, and was even using AI tools to find more. Telegram's founder Pavel Durov said the same thing online. He even accused Reliance of blocking Telegram for users outside India. A telecom official hit back that this was fake news. Then the government spoke. This was not about a few stray messages, they said. It was a full fraud business running on the platform, preying on frightened children. They had asked Telegram to act again and again, and it still did not do enough. They pointed out that Vietnam, Iraq, Kenya, Algeria and Jordan have also blocked apps during exams or police cases, and that India's ban was actually smaller, one app, for just a few days. So here is where things stand as of now. The ban ends on its own on June 22. The edit block stays till June 30. The judge is holding the case. And now the court has to answer one big question, can the government switch off an entire app for everyone, or should it only be allowed to remove the bad parts? Whatever it decides will shape how India treats every app we use, for years to come. :)
Bar and Bench@barandbench

#Breaking Telegram moves the Delhi High Court against the Central government's decision to temporarily ban the platform before NEET exams. HC agrees to hear the matter urgently today.

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Jay Mehta
Jay Mehta@thisisjaymehta·
@telegram @fusion89211 The current Indian government is elected by these smartest people. If your app gets banned permanently don't be shocked now.
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Telegram Messenger
Telegram Messenger@telegram·
@fusion89211 Indian people are some of the smartest, kindest people I know. The Indian government on the other hand...
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Telegram Messenger
Telegram Messenger@telegram·
Over 300,000 people die of drowning each year. In order to protect society, it is now illegal to consume or possess water. Your government is also considering banning solid food, as it presents a needless choking hazard. You are not an adult. You are a baby. Eat the baby food.
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Jay Mehta
Jay Mehta@thisisjaymehta·
@ANI Court should give date of next month 😂
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ANI
ANI@ANI·
Telegram moves Delhi High Court against the Central government decision to ban it before the NEET UG re-test. The matter was mentioned before the bench of justice Tajas Karia who agreed to hear it today. Recently, the government took a decision to ban telegram temporarily before the NEET UG Exam on June 21.
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Polymarket
Polymarket@Polymarket·
JUST IN: India’s Wipro is launching a Claude AI center in Bengaluru & plans to train 10,000 employees on Anthropic’s models.
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Tanay Kothari
Tanay Kothari@tankots·
Calling all haters of @WisprFlow - give me your biggest issue with Wispr. Yes I will personally read through each and every comment and have our team right some wrongs.
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Jay Mehta
Jay Mehta@thisisjaymehta·
@durov People in India mostly use Telegram for piracy and scamming. It won't matter even a bit if it gets banned forever.
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Pavel Durov
Pavel Durov@durov·
India’s IT ministry banned Telegram for one week because some users shared leaked exam questions. This punishes 150M+ ordinary Telegram users in India — not the insiders who leaked the exam materials. And the ban hasn't stopped anything. The leaks just moved to other apps.
Internet Freedom Foundation (IFF)@internetfreedom

Statement : Shutting down Telegram is a band aid solution and is a disproportionate answer to exam fraud The Internet Freedom Foundation objects to the directions announced today in the National Testing Agency's press release on action against the Telegram platform. On the NTA's recommendation, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology has, under Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000, restricted access to the whole of Telegram in India until 22 June 2026, and has separately ordered the platform to switch off message-editing for every Indian user until 30 June 2026. This is a blunt, nationwide measure aimed at the conduct of rampant fraud rackets, and on the Government's own admission is constitutionally incompatible. At the outset it is important to note that Section 69A and the Blocking Rules of 2009 framed under it allow the Government to block access to specific “information” on a computer resource. They do not extend to switching off an entire intermediary, still less to ordering a company to redesign its product by removing a feature for a whole country. In Shreya Singhal v Union of India, the Supreme Court upheld Section 69A because it is narrow and hedged with procedural safeguards. Reading it to authorise shutting down a platform that lakhs use is an overbroad restriction by the NTAs own admission. For the message-editing direction the release identifies no source of power at all. If one exists, the order must say so. The release argues against itself A restriction on access has to be the least intrusive measure that achieves its aim as per the constitutional test of proportionality laid down in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) and applied in Anuradha Bhasin v. Union of India (2020). The NTA's own narration shows the block fails its nodal agency, the release says, “has secured the prompt take-down of a substantial number of Telegram channels, groups and bots”, and this targeted work “is the reason the harm caused by these rackets has been contained to the extent it has”. If channel level takedown contained the harm, the case for a blanket block collapses and hence the Government has reached for a heavier tool while conceding that a lighter one was working. The collateral cost sits on the record too as noted in the press release. The block, the NTA accepts, “affects lakhs of citizens who use the Telegram platform for legitimate personal, educational, professional and informational purposes”. The release also says there is "no such paper available outside the secured examination chain" and that “the security of the examination is unaffected by the action taken”. If the exam is secure and no leak exists, what is being suppressed is rumour, and rumour cannot justify closing a platform when specific blocking and criminal prosecution remain available. Students use of Telegram The block of telegram is reactive and ineffective and will punish ordinary users instead of addressing the systemic source of exam leaks. This blocking comes in the final days of NEET preparation, when thousands of students depend on Telegram for study groups, doubt-clearing, and shared resources. Also, it is important to consider that the source of exam papers leak will occur from inside the system, among insiders and across the printing and logistics chain, with the platform being the most downstream channel for distribution. Hence, switching off Telegram, is merely a deflection from the repeated failures that will continue while media attention is directed towards this Telegram ban. Lack of transparency At present only a press release from the NTA has been provided, which recommended the block but the reasoned order of MeitY, the authority that issued it, has not been released. The Anuradha Bhasin decision requires that orders restricting access be published so they can be tested in court. Here the order, and the reasoning of the committee behind it, stay out of view, and we do not know whether Telegram was heard at all. An announcement of a block is no substitute for an order the affected party can challenge. Blunt to enforce and very easy to evade Usually, app-level blocks run through IS-level DNS and IP filtering. They are over inclusive, sweeping in lawful use, yet simple to evade as a determined exam leak racket moves to a VPN or a mirror within minutes while ordinary users lose the service for a week. We ask the Government to: 1) Publish the MeitY Section 69A order and the NTA recommendation behind it, with reasons; 2) State the legal basis for the message editing direction, or withdraw it; 3) Confirm whether Telegram was given a hearing under the Blocking Rules, and place the committee's record before any court that hears a challenge; and 4) Lift the platform-wide restriction and rely on the targeted takedowns the NTA itself credits with containing the harm. We emphasise that the NEET (UG) 2026 re-examination is worth protecting and it concerns the future of lakhs of aspirants. It requires securing the entire process of examination rather than reaching for purported band aid solutions that instead cause more harm. The State cannot switch off a service used by lakhs to answer the wrongdoing of a few, and cannot do it through an order no one affected is allowed to read. On its own facts, the Government has done both. New Delhi, 16 June 2026.

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KASKAIDE-1
KASKAIDE-1@kaskaide1·
India conducted Tests of a New Exoatmospheric Anti-Ballistic missile interceptor. Maybe a Kill Vehicle??? Meanwhile PAKISTAN ( We will intercept 1000km & Medium Range BM with HQ-9B ) Cause it's written on it's Brochure.
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🕷️KaliCharan
🕷️KaliCharan@_Kalicharan_·
Elon Musk becomes world's first Trillionaire in the history of mankind. His net worth exceeds GDP of 174 countries & could buy Pakistan twice. And just look at the difference between Elon Musk and Larry Page.
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Shahab
Shahab@hashurtag·
Dear Pakistan, do not forget to make it clear to the Iranians that the Indians MUST NOT be allowed into Chabahar again. Position yourselves or the Chinese (or both) to take control of it.
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Jay Mehta
Jay Mehta@thisisjaymehta·
@CherieDamour_ First decide if your forefathers were Egyptians or Indians?
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Shashi Tharoor
Shashi Tharoor@ShashiTharoor·
Deeply shocking to read this official US statement, which contains absolutely no expression of regret or condolence for the loss of innocent Indian lives. How can a “friend” and strategic partner be so deeply insensitive? Why couldn’t a non-compliant commercial vessel have been stopped using other, non-lethal means? Is it not possible to disable a ship's propulsion or steering without firing missiles targeted to kill civilian crew members? Practically every merchant ship navigating these crucial waters has Indian crew on board. Are they all considered fair game for US missiles now? This approach is unacceptable and I hope @DrSJaishankar had said so to @marcorubio.
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Hemant Mohapatra
Hemant Mohapatra@MohapatraHemant·
To train a GPT class 1T model from scratch - including failed runs, data acq+clean+rlhf, post-training, team/people will likely req $250M of compute on an aggressive 3-4mo schedule (i.e. more reserved GPUs), $500-600M all-in IF you do a dense one. MoE + fp8 will cut costs by 1/10th depending on how many active params you have. If you want SOTA however, the budgets go significantly higher on test-time compute, post-training RL, and data/synthetic generations..and v. high on talent. Maybe $2-4B all-in. After that comes serving the model. The talent is key to get to SOTA/beat it - and then you have to ensure this is useful enough to have inference vol over time - for which the capital will come if there is usage / TAM. So this is not as much about raising $50-60B, or raising it all at once as the OP says - we are investors in mistral, sarvam, reflection and anthropic - and they all scaled capital over time as models got adoption, but the early bottleneck is more on talent + GPUs at that scale where you can do interesting things.
Mohandas Pai@TVMohandasPai

Stop making loose comments. A foundational model needs 50/60b $ Huge hyper cloud capacity with hundreds of billion $

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