Poplicola

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Poplicola

@selectsand

old books and movies new tech and policy

加入时间 Haziran 2025
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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
@mattyglesias Was just talking about him the other day. "Ehrlich and Borlaug," AI on screen
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eigenrobot
eigenrobot@eigenrobot·
hot speculation rn: 1. J20 is a F35 clone 2. china made radars systems using J20 to test 3. radars could detect J20 4. PLA inferred they could therefore detect F35 5. problem: J20 is a shitty clone with a dump truck ass 6. probably J20 just sucks and the radars just suck
Taiwan Military@TaiwanMilitary

Reportedly, Yang was probed after 🇨🇳’s JY-series anti-stealth radars sold to 🇻🇪 & 🇮🇷 proved ineffective. 🇨🇳 had used the J-20 as a test target & falsely told Xi the radars could detect 🇺🇸 F-35 & F-22 stealth jets. This raised doubts about the J-20’s claimed stealth capabilities.

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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
@TrueSlazac Everybody wants to protect small family farmers but nobody wants to look out for my small family chemical processing operation.
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Slazac 🇪🇺 🇺🇦 🇹🇼 🌐
The one thing uniting stupid people both on the left and on the right is their irrational hatred of international trade
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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
Yeah not saying everything goes back perfectly but it's a dynamic system. The middle east was commanding significant producer surplus since the market clearing rate was high enough for other players with much more expensive oil. FT or Economist had a graphic a few years back that included what price per barrel kept different countries solvent. Venezuela was already sliding off the cliff but Russia was still just barely profitable at that time. So maybe we frack a little more and Norway gets a bit more out of the North Sea. Everybody's talking about elasticity of demand but I want to know about elasticity of supply over different time horizons.
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tukars
tukars@tukarsdev·
@selectsand @ChrisO_wiki It doesn't matter as oil prices will be permanently structurally higher. Doesn't matter if all refineries come back tommorow, there's now a risk premium of using the strait, and no where else can drill for oil as cheap as the middle east. In short: buy leveraged oil
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ChrisO_wiki
ChrisO_wiki@ChrisO_wiki·
1/ The world is facing a 'ticking time bomb' from its supply of oil, according to a briefing note from JP Morgan. Physical scarcity of oil is about to unfold across the globe, spreading sequentially through April from east to west, causing major economic disruption worldwide. ⬇️
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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
@bouguereau_stan @NathanpmYoung Importantly, Ronson's point was that the mob's thirst for vengeance over petty transgressions was unslakable, so that the punishment would never fit the crime, no matter how much warning people supposedly had nobody really deserved online mobs.
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Nathan 🔎
Nathan 🔎@NathanpmYoung·
I deleted this. I thought it was bad behaviour and an interesting example but I don’t think she deserves 300k views. I might blank names in future.
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Andrew Leyden
Andrew Leyden@PenguinSix·
People entering security checkpoint at 3:00pm at BWI reported they arrived to line up at 9:00am. The line triple loops the length of the airport outside and passengers report it snakes around inside for another 2 hours.
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Tom Bibby
Tom Bibby@tombibbys·
Dean Ball in 1805.
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Dean W. Ball@deanwball

First of all, your organization absolutely does not represent the views of everyone who wants to "pause" or "stop" AI, so it is false to say that I "misunderstood" your proposal. I was not referring to your specific proposal in any of my tweets. Second, I do not agree with you that any of this is "likely" to "end" civilization, exterminate humanity, etc. etc. I certainly do believe there are major risks, and I have spent years developing and advocating for policies I believe would address some of those risks. There are other risks about which I have substantial uncertainty, and I have been consistently straightforward about this uncertainty. You, on the other hand, seem to have near-certainty about every bad AI outcome, so long as it gets people on your side. This, in my mind, diminishes your credibility. Third, you claim to want an international treaty (enforced by whom?) signed presumably by a broader group of countries than just the U.S. and China (which ones?) that would ban AI development until some future point (how would we define that point?). My observation is that any such treaty would have to involve capital controls and controls on the free movement of people, unless all countries on Earth with the ability to host large-scale data centers (i.e., almost all of them) were signatories. You claim it is merely a compute governance regime you desire, but what happens when the AI researchers and semiconductor designers and manufacturing engineers are given 9-figure offers to move to God-knows-where to work on a new AI or semiconductor venture? Does the government simply allow that flow of money and people to occur? No. So what you *really* want is a regime that controls (optimally stops) the flow of trillions of dollars in good (all advanced AI compute + all semiconductor manufacturing equipment, as long as it is in service of making advanced AI compute, and by the way, how would you tell the difference between a fab making smartphone chips and GPUs? Inspectors in the fabs? Who supplies the inspectors?), all AI researchers, and all investment dollars that could be tied to AI research or to computing power (what about quantum machine learning, by the way? neuromorphic computing? other new paradigms?). It was actually charitable of me to assume that you'd want this to be enforced by e.g. existing export control regimes within a country. But it seems like you are saying, no, we wouldn't have e.g BIS or MOFCOM do this, we'd have a new international body with "democratic control" (a globally elected president of AI? who runs the elections? are their campaigns? who is allowed to donate to said campaigns) staffed with thousands of people, with a budget easily in the billions, with sweeping power to control flows of goods, people and money that fundamentally implicates ancient principles of national sovereignty. And you're doing all this at a time when international institutions of governance and international collaboration in general has been fraying, to say the least. All of this makes me think you are biting off much more than you can chew, to be sure. I don't want to accuse you of desiring authoritarianism, because I truthfully don't know whether you even understand what it is that you are advocating for. It does not seem based on your response to me that you have really thought about what implementation would require here, and so my guess is that your proposal is not malicious or desirous of tyranny, but instead simply naive and incomplete. And by the way, the hand waviness of your policy prescriptions is nothing compared to the hand waviness of your understanding of artificial intelligence, its likely trajectory, and relevant threat models. You don't even seem to feel a need to explain your position (I myself just wrote 5k words explaining my views on existential risk, and have written many thousands on the threat models I take more seriously), indicating to me that you live in a bubble where the hard-nosed and concrete questions do not get asked. You suggest that I am unserious, interested as I am in the "interesting governance challenges" you seem to dismiss in comparison to what you seem sure is your focus on the "big picture." But do you know what my work has produced? Enacted laws. Dozens of policies being executed as we speak by the largest bureaucracy in the history of mankind. Ideas that have shifted the thinking of people whose decisions will matter. Is it everything? No, it is not. My contributions will ultimately be small. But I put my back into what I do, when the logical move for someone like me would have been to go take a cushy job in the industry after I left the government. Do not ever suggest to me that I do not care deeply about what I am doing and do not ever question the intellectual integrity of a person you do not know. At the very least, do not do it to me.

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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
@Gaurab funny how finicky it is to make sand think
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Gaurab Chakrabarti
Gaurab Chakrabarti@Gaurab·
The world's liquid helium depends on 16 plants. Building a new one takes 3 to 6 years. Why? Helium is different from most other gases. When extracted from natural gas, every other component freezes out during cryogenic processing. But above −228°C, the standard industrial method of expanding gas through a valve to cool it makes helium hotter, not colder. So liquefaction at −269°C requires turboexpanders spinning at up to 250,000 rpm. Getting helium to 99.9999% semiconductor grade means concentrating it 1,250 times, then purifying it through 7 stages across a 900-degree temperature range. The final stage uses zirconium alloy cartridges at 700°C to chemically bind impurities below 1 part per billion. The turboexpanders are built by less than five companies worldwide, the zirconium cartridges by even fewer. Lead times for either: 12 to 24 months. The US sold its strategic helium reserve in January 2024. Semiconductor fabs carry about one week of inventory.
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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
There was usually a metal detector but it wasn't a hassle. Also there was a pretty widespread conviction that if you even whispered the word 'bomb' even like as a joke or referring to a bad movie you would be immediately tackled by guards summoned out of nowhere. Airplane! is a surprisingly good time capsule, maybe fewer manpads though youtube.com/watch?v=FCkagY…
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Yosarian2
Yosarian2@YosarianTwo·
"Replacing Biden with Trump changed very little" is maybe the single stupidest thing anyone has ever said about American politics in the history of ever
Jason Kishineff@kishineff

@Garywaldman No. Replacing Biden with Trump changed very little, and likewise replacing Trump with another establishment Democrat won't change the system.

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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
@slatestarcodex @tombibbys Wait but what's the rebuttal you're tired of giving for China is scary? (oblig. self deprecating xkcd as a semi expensive signal that I'm really not trying to conflict theory you, just genuinely curious about your views, sorry this is all remedial.)
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Scott Alexander
Scott Alexander@slatestarcodex·
I think adding this level of memes and personal insults to the discourse is a mistake, that insulting/alienating potentially-friendly independents is a mistake, and that it's always good to get get clarifying questions. The people ending slavery in Britain did have to deal with questions like these; if they hadn't been able to come up with a specific plan that got buy-in, slavery wouldn't have ended. Also, I grade on a curve and anyone who asks question other than "Won't a unilateral pause make China win?" gets an A+.
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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
Tech coverage shouldn't be exclusively puff pieces or hit pieces, because when you have a top down policy to only do one or the other you lose your objectivity and start exaggerating on thin evidence to lean into a certain narrative. It's no rebuttal that "well the other extreme would also be bad." Just don't lean into one of the extremes! For reporting on the sector a key question should be, is the reporting accurate, is it fair? For Andruil, omissions about the heatwave seem like malpractice, it's not clear why those exaggerations were considered fit to print. And again this does not mean "don't write criticisms of tech," there are many interesting broken things in that space! Just when you make "hit pieces" your beat, and then lie or manipulate readers, it discredits the genuine stories you would write. This isn't a plea on tech's behalf it's for you, because I want a strong trusted reliable media. You should care as much or more about your objectivity and credibility as your subjects do, because it's your reputation you are staking. I do not want a media that genuinely has another breakthrough All the King's Men moment but nobody bothers to listen because you lied in the last three years of coverage. You need to keep some of your reputational powder dry instead of leaping at the first opportunity to omit key context or distort quotes for a few clicks in the short term. h/t @mattyglesias @KelseyTuoc and @patio11 for shining light on the NYT's internal editorial direction here
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Hunter📈🌈📊
Hunter📈🌈📊@StatisticUrban·
I'll be honest you guys, I'm not really sure how much of a future WV has.
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Boyuan (Nemo) Chen
Boyuan (Nemo) Chen@boyuan_chen·
Linearly separable under default sampling settings, sure. But prompt it with 'write casually, use fragments, misspell stuff' and that boundary probably collapses fast. The hard part of detection was never clean ChatGPT output, it's the edited/prompted text that sits right on the decision boundary.
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Liquidity Goblin
Liquidity Goblin@liquiditygoblin·
In an effort to try stop seeing so much slop I've been trying to train my own AI detection model. Found something incredibly interesting. for the most part LLM generated text and human written text are linearly separable.
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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
@Scholars_Stage moreover there is not a population size too small for large scale industrial warfare until you get very small. our current buffer post the 20th century population expansion is enormous. we can have enduring wars on surprisingly staggering scales with like eight digit populations
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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
@Scholars_Stage the endurance of intense historical conflicts like the 30 years war is kinda shocking
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Poplicola
Poplicola@selectsand·
@lymanstoneky all these headlines are full of weasel words, "considering" "preparing" "discussing" might happen but don't update too much on this stuff, the incentives are junk
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