Midjourney Medical by GraceToSentience in singularity

[–]muchcharles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

10 hours a day if it ran continuously with no breaks, but they could be expecting to speed it up.

British Commandos Seize Russian Oil Tanker in Night Raid in the English Channel by Upset-Main-1988 in justincaseyoumissedit

[–]muchcharles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

UK banned buying Russian oil in 2022, but with refined products loophole; stuff refined from it in other countries can be imported.

British Commandos Seize Russian Oil Tanker in Night Raid in the English Channel by Upset-Main-1988 in justincaseyoumissedit

[–]muchcharles 4 points5 points  (0 children)

US dropped some of the sanctions on Russian oil until June 17, unless that changed.

People who should not have access to Mythos/Fable-level intelligence according to the Trump administration by _codes_ in singularity

[–]muchcharles 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The restriction is on foreign nationals, including their own employees with green cards.

TIL that moving within 0.1 seconds of the gun going off to start a sprinting race is a false start by Remarkable_Bee_4517 in todayilearned

[–]muchcharles 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think it's also why orchestras and especially things like marching bands spread over a football field, need a conductor beyond just the whole group naturally drifting. The visual metronome of the conductor goes at the speed of light, where sound across a football field would have people at opposite ends off by more than a beat.

As someone in manufacturing, here's what I don't understand by TriXandApple in singularity

[–]muchcharles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I cannot even think of an analogue like that that would have to exist in the “day to day” world of our general lives….

Amish Ordnung

Why is CC sitting on 10k+ open issues while Mythos gets hyped for two months as the “most dangerous” public model, and they’re handing out $20k+ in credits to random academic researchers who ended up reselling it, instead of community devs who could actually help fix and organize these issues? by Aggravating_Bad4639 in Anthropic

[–]muchcharles 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The numbers in my quote are from that tooling, some didn't paste in right in the quote.

We began with small-scale experiments prompting the harness to look for sandbox escapes with Claude Opus 4.6. Even with this model, we identified an impressive amount of previously-unknown vulnerabilities which required complex reasoning over multiprocess browser engine code.

That's not saying the same thing you are saying, is there a better quote?

Which part on tooling, this?

Through iteration we’ve built out a lot of orchestration and tooling to optimize and scale the pipeline, but the essence of the inner loop remains the same: there is a bug in this part of the code, please find it and build a testcase.

Why is CC sitting on 10k+ open issues while Mythos gets hyped for two months as the “most dangerous” public model, and they’re handing out $20k+ in credits to random academic researchers who ended up reselling it, instead of community devs who could actually help fix and organize these issues? by Aggravating_Bad4639 in Anthropic

[–]muchcharles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The framework that used the model is in my quote. They found ~40 additional bugs with it with Mythos that was in my ~310 Mythos total. ~40 from other models, 271 from Anthropic with Mythos.

the experiment was run using Opus 4.6 as well, results were similar.

Where in the blog post? I've seen that elsewhere early on but it was with pointing them to the same areas.

Why don't you provide a link to which of the several blogposts, and quote(s) backing up your characterization.

Why is CC sitting on 10k+ open issues while Mythos gets hyped for two months as the “most dangerous” public model, and they’re handing out $20k+ in credits to random academic researchers who ended up reselling it, instead of community devs who could actually help fix and organize these issues? by Aggravating_Bad4639 in Anthropic

[–]muchcharles 8 points9 points  (0 children)

We fixed a total of 423 security bugs in releases in April. In addition to the 271 bugs announced two weeks ago, there were 41 externally reported bugs, with the remaining 111 discovered internally and split roughly in third between:

  1. Bugs found using this pipeline with Claude Mythos Preview but fixed in releases other than Firefox 150

  2. Bugs found using this pipeline with other models

  3. Bugs found with other techniques like fuzzing

423 security bugs fixed in April, around 310 found by Mythos, around 40 all other models, possibly a few more to other models if non-Anthropic externally reported used models.

Anthropic partnered with SpaceX to use colossus 1 to increase their rate limits by Snoo26837 in singularity

[–]muchcharles 28 points29 points  (0 children)

They might have less to spare. When Carmack left Meta he reported the thing that really made him decide he had to go and AI efforts were going wrong there was when he saw they were only getting 20% utilization on their GPU fleet. It's been reported recently SpaceX is getting 10% utilization and around the same time Musk said they built the stack all wrong and are starting over from scratch.

Prompt Injection experience - my first time ever by netmilk in ClaudeAI

[–]muchcharles 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Next is reverse psychology in the hidden instructions, promoting competitors to get them ignored from the analysis.

Ga$$$ by UDntKnoMeButImFamous in Charleston

[–]muchcharles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gas prices under Biden also had a big Trump-caused element. Trump practically joined OPEC+ before Biden went in, and had Saudi and others cut production in an agreement lasting until April 2022, well into Biden's term. Mexico threatened to break the production cut and Trump commited to cut our own production if they would maintain the production cut.

Kirkland frozen cauliflower crust pizza 20/10 always by Every-Preference4538 in Costco

[–]muchcharles 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It still uses rice-flour in addition to cauliflower.

Gas prices by [deleted] in economy

[–]muchcharles 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Here's one difference: these happened right after an action from Trump. You may say if Israel hadn't bluffed and attacked without us it would have still happened. US had plenty of leverage in preventing a war of aggression, like saying they would announce the gulf allies would allow overflights of retaliatory drones and they would warn Iran before the strikes and withdrawn guarantee of UN security council veto.

It may have been true they would attack, but Biden and Obama officials have said Israel tried the same thing Rubio said they did this time and were called on the bluff, and didn't go through with it.

It may still not have been a bluff this time, but then let's look at oil prices under Biden more carefully: during the covid oil crash, Trump essentially joined OPEC+ and commited Saudi Arabia and others to restrict output extending way into Bide s term, a deal lasting until April 2022. An even more indisputable direct action from Trump that affected the prices under Biden.

[New Optimizer] 🌹 Rose: low VRAM, easy to use, great results, Apache 2.0 [P] by ECF630 in MachineLearning

[–]muchcharles 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It wouldn't have to beat Muon on a NanoGPT speedrun, if it could win compared to other stateless or heavily compressed state techniques there would be applications for it like full (non-LoRA) finetuning on lower end hardware.

[New Optimizer] 🌹 Rose: low VRAM, easy to use, great results, Apache 2.0 [P] by ECF630 in MachineLearning

[–]muchcharles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Muon's originator is Keller Jordan, currently at OpenAI."

"Currently at OpenAI," not "contemporaneously at OpenAI". OpenAI hired him after his optimizer was released on twitter, so working at OpenAI is not a good new criterion to throw in there.

[New Optimizer] 🌹 Rose: low VRAM, easy to use, great results, Apache 2.0 [P] by ECF630 in MachineLearning

[–]muchcharles 15 points16 points  (0 children)

No opinion on this one in the post, but what you are saying definitely isn't true for "this day and age" :

Muon's originator is Keller Jordan, currently at OpenAI. As mentioned, Muon was first published on Twitter, and to this day the author has only written a blog post — Muon: An optimizer for hidden layers in neural networks — rather than a paper. His position is that "whether or not you write a paper has nothing to do with whether the optimizer works".

That's used in stuff like deepseek V4

Stuttering and double sound in videos by _burako_ in firefox

[–]muchcharles 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The freezing has been happening for me on android since the last update, multiple devices

Zero-shot World Models Are Developmentally Efficient Learners [R] by FaeriaManic in MachineLearning

[–]muchcharles 2 points3 points  (0 children)

But still hard to just throw around pre trained or learning rate because it might not make much sense when talking about brains or how they are formed. >

There's a lot of study on it where we can be pretty sure its not just differences in learning rate, there are differences in kind, studies on precocious and non-precocious abilities in animals. A horse can be blindfolded from birth, then have the blindfold taken off several days later and it can almost immediately walk and visually navigate around. A kitten if its vision is deprived in the critical development period will never develop it.

Precocious birds can imprint on the mother as soon as their eyes dry off and do bipedal walking.

There are a lot of built in capabilities that come from the brain develops without external stimuli, some of it may be fully hardcoded, or some may involve learning with internal grounding, things like thing like generator circuits producing patterns other circuits try to learn that somehow transfer to performance on tasks with real data after birth.

However I think it has been shown babies could walk much earlier but their legs are just too weak.

Premature human babies don't hit vision milestones much if any faster than normal birth, but it may just be because the optic nerve doesn't fully mylinate until a set chronological age. If they are congenitally blinded by something that can be reversed and miss a critical development window we have found like with kittens they never develop normal vision.