Conciseness Manifesto — LessWrong
AI

Conciseness Manifesto — LessWrong

How do you feel about conciseness and educational resources? I’m in two minds, on the one hand I am often as someone learning battling jargon defined by jargon – I see a word, I want to know what it means so I can keep reading. I don’t want to read a chain of three wikipedia […]

An Open Letter From Writers to Publishers ‹ Literary Hub
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An Open Letter From Writers to Publishers ‹ Literary Hub

To Penguin Random House, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, Hachette Book Group, Macmillan, and all other publishers of America: We are standing on a precipice. At its simplest level, our job as artists is to respond to the human experience. But the art we make is a commodity, and our world wants things quickly, cheaply, and

Conciseness Manifesto — LessWrong
AI

The Most Famous Lunchtime Question in the History of the World — LessWrong

I have an Enthusiastic Layperson’s Moderate Obsession (yes, it’s an ELMO) with what may be the most consequential lunchtime question in scientific history. In 1950, physicist Enrico Fermi was having lunch with colleagues at Los Alamos when the conversation turned to UFOs and the possibility of extraterrestrial life. They were discussing the vast number of

Solving `Passport Application` with Haskell
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Solving `Passport Application` with Haskell

There’s a trend at the moment of solving online games with programming, let’s do one from the UK called Passport Application, which is developed by “His Majesty’s Passport Office” or HMPO. It’s a cultural phenomenon in the UK: despite being quite expensive (about £100 just to start) for the standard online version (a masterpiece of

Authors call on publishers to limit their use of AI
Tech News

Authors call on publishers to limit their use of AI

An open letter from authors including Lauren Groff, Lev Grossman, R.F. Kuang, Dennis Lehane, and Geoffrey Maguire calls on book publishers to pledge to limit their use of AI tools, for example by committing to only hire human audiobook narrators. The letter argues that authors’ work has been “stolen” by AI companies: “Rather than paying

OpenAI Loses 4 Key Researchers to Meta
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OpenAI Loses 4 Key Researchers to Meta

Four OpenAI researchers are leaving the company to go to Meta, two sources confirm to WIRED. Shengjia Zhao, Shuchao Bi, Jiahui Yu, and Hongyu Ren have joined Meta’s superintelligence team. Their OpenAI Slack profiles have been deactivated. The Information first reported on the departures. It’s the latest in a series of aggressive moves by Mark

Meta reportedly hires four more researchers from OpenAI
Tech News

Meta reportedly hires four more researchers from OpenAI

Looks like Meta isn’t done poaching talent from OpenAI. Earlier this week, TechCrunch reported that Meta had hired influential OpenAI researcher Trapit Bansal, and according to The Wall Street Journal, it also hired three other researchers from the company. Now The Information is reporting four more Meta hires from OpenAI: Researchers Shengjia Zhao, Jiahui Yu,

Week in Review:  Meta’s AI recruiting blitz
Tech News

Week in Review:  Meta’s AI recruiting blitz

Welcome back to Week in Review! Lots of news for you this week — Travis Kalanick is possibly returning to the world of self-driving vehicles, CoreWeave’s CEO is now worth $10 billion, Apple users aren’t happy with how the company is promoting its new “F1” movie, and much more.  Quick note that we will be

Vitalik Buterin has reservations about Sam Altman’s World project
Tech News

Vitalik Buterin has reservations about Sam Altman’s World project

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin is arguing that the digital identification approach being promoted by Sam Altman’s World project has real privacy risks. Previously known as Worldcoin, World was created under Altman and Alex Blania’s Tools for Humanity. The organization says it can help distinguish between AI agents and human beings by scanning users’ eyeballs and

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