I can't wait to have my retina scanned and associated with my OpenAI account for pre-mined cryptocurrency. Where do I camp out for this epic moment in history?
Bloomberg have been doing this for years, I believe it's just a relatively simple automated rewrite/republish from various news wires. Most larger newspapers/sites have some level of automation from news wire to published article.
This isn't some new LLM based system replacing the work of journalists.
What makes you believe we are not more corrupt than they are?
We are just fighting each other over everything, wasting time over billionaires ideas, Musk vs Zuckerberg for the "everything app" for example, China moves forward it seems, they already have it, and is not driven by profit, and the rest of the world seems to want to move along too with them
A lot to hate about China, but they seem to have some great ideas, and are able to enforce them to 1.7b people without a flinch
It also seems like they want to fight corruption [1], and their wish to switch to a digital currency seems to go in that direction
"why expect those who got you in trouble to become the solution?"
Seems like the OpenAI CEO job is just a side gig for his main hustle, which is this Worldcoin stuff. Here's hoping that it goes out the same way as the Libra coin.
What is with the ADHD of tech billionaires nowadays? Sam not busy enough with OpenAI? Musk not busy enough with Tesla?
The world needs eye balls scanning worldcoins about as much as it needs X.
It's really a pity we use talent, money and attention on things nowadays for this rather than trying to invent new things that actually make a positive difference in people's lives.
(IMHO it’s bizarre that OneCoin never bothered to actually deploy a cryptocurrency. If they had done that and then manipulated its price, they would be just like every other useless cryptocoin and the bag holders would be licking their wounds quietly. The end result would be the same as a plain Ponzi but the FBI would never have been involved because token-utility-innovation-something-something.)
They didn't have the technical expertise. Ignatova is a lawyer and the other guy had a business/finance degree I think. This was before the days when anyone could just set up a simple ERC-20 token contract with the help of tools, Ethereum didn't even exist back then.
They tried to recruit a blockchain expert to built them a chain after they'd already started the ponzi but apparently didn't find anyone who was willing to work with them (for maybe obvious reasons).
I guess they were being too cheap with the offers made to the prospective developers. European business people tend to assume that you can hire any kind of software developer for 3000 euros / month.
The history of web3 shows that, if the money is right, competent people will put all their qualms aside and do the work to enable the blockchain rip-offs.
OneCoin should have offered 10 million to the developer because they could have afforded it. Then they wouldn’t be hunted by FBI, and $ONE would be just another forgotten altcoin that gets occasionally pumped up on Telegram channels.
It is, but if we could distribute some currency globally and equitably that at least takes it one step towards being a real currency, at least in theory.
No, because it is based on false scarcity. Ponzi schemes reward those who get into it early and rob money from those who join the scheme later.
Bitcoin cannot exist as real currency unless it has some real concrete value backing it. That concrete value needs to exist in tangible form for it to be stable.
There's a very loud group of venerated tech bros whose strategy for the last 5+ years has been to promise a brave new world of magic technological solutions to an ailing economy and divided society. Most of these solutions have turned out to be overstated at best, or an outright lie at worst.
We've internalised all the dystopian rhetoric and compounded it with the disappointment of false solutions, while these charlatans have siphoned off tonnes of VC money and sailed off into the sunset (or into federal prison.)
I assume from what I've heard this is going to be very centralized, because I can't see how you could fit the concept into a system and retain the global ordered clock function. Bitcoin is very careful to only order transactions by what block they are in and not where they are in the block. Etherium does not do this, leading to some pretty horrible and/or hilarious front running attacks.
> Bitcoin is very careful to only order transactions by what block they are in and not where they are in the block.
Transaction order within a bitcoin block definitely matters: if transaction b spends the ouput of transaction a within the same block, then a MUST preceed b. Also, the coinbase transaction must be the first. Other than that the order is arbitrary.
1. World ID - a database of retina information about people.
2. Worldcoin - a cryptocurrency aimed at incentivizing people to give over this data.
Rather than rehashing a debate about cryptocurrency that's already well-trodden, it's worth looking at what's new here: their iris scanning tool as a way of validating a user's uniqueness.
This is already a well established problem domain, companies like Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Apple struggle to verify that users are unique (with an account or multiple accounts tied to a single human).
4chan blocks the ip addresses of bad users, many services require a phone number to sign up, some sites have tried requiring a credit card, Facebook I believe uses the social graph to figure out how likely an account is to be real. Apple, Microsoft, and Google all use some combination of biometrics and telemetry data to authenticate users. I've noticed more sites requiring government ID (see LinkedIn's verification process).
I'm not seeing any obvious advantage that World Id will have over these existing systems.
Also any time biometric data comes up it's worth pointing out that if your biometric data gets stolen unlike a password there's no easy way to change it.
>I'm not seeing any obvious advantage that World Id will have over these existing systems.
* it's more universal; not all the world are americans, using american systems. Good luck using a social graph, phone number or credit card for verification of somebody from Papua New Guinea. Or for somebody who is otherwise off the grid.
* if it works, it's less prone to hacking, since you control the points of registration, and you can verify that a physical human being is there to scan their retina
> I'm not seeing any obvious advantage that World Id will have over these existing systems.
I don't want to sound like a conspiracy theorist, but you don't see the obvious advantage because you are looking for the obvious benefit from the perspective of a user.
Having a database of international retina information (which is practically an immutable property), spending history, and connections graph, is probably invaluable to intelligence agencies, oppressive regimes (or, you know, just simply "regimes" as they are all oppressive to some degree when the opportunity comes, as the covid years taught us), big tech/pharma, military industrial complex, news organizations and other arms of the ruling class.
Permanently accurate maps are always of interest no matter what the scale.
Retina databases are also the identity framework of choice for global identity and payments.
There is no more valuable graph database than one secured by unchangeable and immutable PII.
I see it that way. Not a great look for the guy, but I think smart people often launch their experiments under the cover of stupid pretenses so they only have to lean into what gains traction. Why commit to experiments -- just test it and see if it works. If it fails, cool idea and tried it. If it succeeds, one of the most valuable data platforms for AI… you said it and you’re spot on imo.
> Rather than rehashing a debate about cryptocurrency that's already well-trodden, it's worth looking at what's new here: their iris scanning tool as a way of validating a user's uniqueness.
No it isn't. That's exactly what they want you to do - get distracted by the (alleged) tech and pay no attention to the scam behind the curtain.
Why not just let everybody make multiple accounts? Spam? We need to remove the incentives that make people send spam. If there is universal healthcare nobody would bother selling viagra online. Harrasment? We need to work on reducing sexism in general. And so on.
I feel that sometimes the direction where technology "wants" to go points us to a better society. Fighting it and preserving the status quo leads to a lot of difficulites. The techno-optimists of the 90s had a good point.
If we imagine a world where almost every service is free, has an API, and little restrictions, the society that allows that is going to be much nicer than if everything is behind a paywal, controlled and sanitized, and cryptographically verified.
My point is, why do people set up bots? They are probably trying to get money. Looking at it naively through a system designer's goggles: Fixing it at the platform level by verifying if a user is human or not is fixing it at the wrong level. It's just a band-aid. We should instead fix it at the societal level so that nobody has the incentive to set up a decieving bot.
I can't see eliminating all desire to lie, spread disinformation, propaganda, scam people, astroturf, manipulate opinions, cheat at videogames and so on WORLDWIDE being feasible at all this century, perhaps ever. Ending all wars and conflicts forever is one of the many prerequisites.
Somewhat-AI-resistant techniques to prevent bots from overrunning a platform seem at least feasible.
Multiple accounts don’t help when you’re moving money, because you need to trust that you’re moving money to the right person, and verifying even a single account is difficult.
Making everything free doesn’t solve this since we still have to move goods to people who need them without fear that they go to scammers instead.
> 4chan blocks the ip addresses of bad users, many services require a phone number to sign up, some sites have tried requiring a credit card, Facebook I believe uses the social graph to figure out how likely an account is to be real. Apple, Microsoft, and Google all use some combination of biometrics and telemetry data to authenticate users. I've noticed more sites requiring government ID (see LinkedIn's verification process).
IP addresses, phone numbers, government IDs are all forms of outsourcing the problem of identity verification to another organization (IANA, phone company, Social Security Administration in U.S.) so we should ask if those organizations will continue to be able to effectively distinguish real humans from AÍ-powered bots armed with the ability to “deep fake” any person, using whatever tools and techniques those organizations have today.
The implications seem staggering: AI bots that can collect your social benefits, withdraw funds from your bank, open lines of credit in your name. The modern economy might not be able to function if this happens.
From another article:
> The company’s identity technology will be important in a world where artificial intelligence raises new questions of what’s human and what’s not on the internet, [Tools for Humanity co-founder and CEO Alex] Blania said. It’s also an example of the overlap between the crypto and AI industries.
His moat is not telling what training data he used. Big tech cannot overtly use copyrighted material. In the time the big tech and the open source catches up, this crypto pump cycle is supposed to enrich and fund him and his future short-term fun projects.
This is not about OpenAi in case you think that, it's about a project where they scan your iris and give you a digital ID based on that, to solve the 'proof of personhood' problem. The training data comes from them simply paying poor people to have their eyeballs scanned, the project has been in the works for quite a while. HN isn't exactly their target demographic, you'd be surprised how many people are sadly ready to have their eyeballs scanned for a bit of cash (which they cleverly pay out in their own made-up token, so it doesn't actually cost them that much).
For the record since to many users here this is obviously yet another crypto scam, I want to point out that most who're seriously into blockchains/decentralization are against it too, check out the replies from crypto people to his announcement: https://twitter.com/sama/status/1683187148437192704
97 comments
[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 187 ms ] threadThis isn't some new LLM based system replacing the work of journalists.
No wonder more than half of the world wants to build an alternative with the BRICS
We are just fighting each other over everything, wasting time over billionaires ideas, Musk vs Zuckerberg for the "everything app" for example, China moves forward it seems, they already have it, and is not driven by profit, and the rest of the world seems to want to move along too with them
A lot to hate about China, but they seem to have some great ideas, and are able to enforce them to 1.7b people without a flinch
It also seems like they want to fight corruption [1], and their wish to switch to a digital currency seems to go in that direction
"why expect those who got you in trouble to become the solution?"
[1] - http://brics2022.mfa.gov.cn/eng/hywj/ODMM/202207/P0202207155...
It's really a pity we use talent, money and attention on things nowadays for this rather than trying to invent new things that actually make a positive difference in people's lives.
Musk is going to preserve consciousness by shooting it into the Heavens… I mean come on; can’t be more on the nose
The transition from story mode is going to hit some road bumps
Are investors actually okay with the CEOs not being 100% committed to growing the business.
There was OneCoin, a $4 billion Ponzi whose leader is on FBI’s Most Wanted list:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OneCoin
(IMHO it’s bizarre that OneCoin never bothered to actually deploy a cryptocurrency. If they had done that and then manipulated its price, they would be just like every other useless cryptocoin and the bag holders would be licking their wounds quietly. The end result would be the same as a plain Ponzi but the FBI would never have been involved because token-utility-innovation-something-something.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WorldCom_scandal
They tried to recruit a blockchain expert to built them a chain after they'd already started the ponzi but apparently didn't find anyone who was willing to work with them (for maybe obvious reasons).
The history of web3 shows that, if the money is right, competent people will put all their qualms aside and do the work to enable the blockchain rip-offs.
OneCoin should have offered 10 million to the developer because they could have afforded it. Then they wouldn’t be hunted by FBI, and $ONE would be just another forgotten altcoin that gets occasionally pumped up on Telegram channels.
Bitcoin cannot exist as real currency unless it has some real concrete value backing it. That concrete value needs to exist in tangible form for it to be stable.
At least things where more cheerful and colorful 20+ years ago. Can we get the playfulness back and drop all the dystopia?
We've internalised all the dystopian rhetoric and compounded it with the disappointment of false solutions, while these charlatans have siphoned off tonnes of VC money and sailed off into the sunset (or into federal prison.)
Transaction order within a bitcoin block definitely matters: if transaction b spends the ouput of transaction a within the same block, then a MUST preceed b. Also, the coinbase transaction must be the first. Other than that the order is arbitrary.
1. World ID - a database of retina information about people.
2. Worldcoin - a cryptocurrency aimed at incentivizing people to give over this data.
Rather than rehashing a debate about cryptocurrency that's already well-trodden, it's worth looking at what's new here: their iris scanning tool as a way of validating a user's uniqueness.
This is already a well established problem domain, companies like Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Apple struggle to verify that users are unique (with an account or multiple accounts tied to a single human).
4chan blocks the ip addresses of bad users, many services require a phone number to sign up, some sites have tried requiring a credit card, Facebook I believe uses the social graph to figure out how likely an account is to be real. Apple, Microsoft, and Google all use some combination of biometrics and telemetry data to authenticate users. I've noticed more sites requiring government ID (see LinkedIn's verification process).
I'm not seeing any obvious advantage that World Id will have over these existing systems.
Also any time biometric data comes up it's worth pointing out that if your biometric data gets stolen unlike a password there's no easy way to change it.
* it's more universal; not all the world are americans, using american systems. Good luck using a social graph, phone number or credit card for verification of somebody from Papua New Guinea. Or for somebody who is otherwise off the grid.
* if it works, it's less prone to hacking, since you control the points of registration, and you can verify that a physical human being is there to scan their retina
I don't want to sound like a conspiracy theorist, but you don't see the obvious advantage because you are looking for the obvious benefit from the perspective of a user.
Having a database of international retina information (which is practically an immutable property), spending history, and connections graph, is probably invaluable to intelligence agencies, oppressive regimes (or, you know, just simply "regimes" as they are all oppressive to some degree when the opportunity comes, as the covid years taught us), big tech/pharma, military industrial complex, news organizations and other arms of the ruling class.
Retina databases are also the identity framework of choice for global identity and payments.
There is no more valuable graph database than one secured by unchangeable and immutable PII.
I see it that way. Not a great look for the guy, but I think smart people often launch their experiments under the cover of stupid pretenses so they only have to lean into what gains traction. Why commit to experiments -- just test it and see if it works. If it fails, cool idea and tried it. If it succeeds, one of the most valuable data platforms for AI… you said it and you’re spot on imo.
No it isn't. That's exactly what they want you to do - get distracted by the (alleged) tech and pay no attention to the scam behind the curtain.
I feel that sometimes the direction where technology "wants" to go points us to a better society. Fighting it and preserving the status quo leads to a lot of difficulites. The techno-optimists of the 90s had a good point.
If we imagine a world where almost every service is free, has an API, and little restrictions, the society that allows that is going to be much nicer than if everything is behind a paywal, controlled and sanitized, and cryptographically verified.
Somewhat-AI-resistant techniques to prevent bots from overrunning a platform seem at least feasible.
Making everything free doesn’t solve this since we still have to move goods to people who need them without fear that they go to scammers instead.
If you know of a workable way to achieve that, please do share it!
IP addresses, phone numbers, government IDs are all forms of outsourcing the problem of identity verification to another organization (IANA, phone company, Social Security Administration in U.S.) so we should ask if those organizations will continue to be able to effectively distinguish real humans from AÍ-powered bots armed with the ability to “deep fake” any person, using whatever tools and techniques those organizations have today.
The implications seem staggering: AI bots that can collect your social benefits, withdraw funds from your bank, open lines of credit in your name. The modern economy might not be able to function if this happens.
From another article:
> The company’s identity technology will be important in a world where artificial intelligence raises new questions of what’s human and what’s not on the internet, [Tools for Humanity co-founder and CEO Alex] Blania said. It’s also an example of the overlap between the crypto and AI industries.
https://archive.is/k5j6j
This will be banned in EU instantly.
[1] https://www.coindesk.com/policy/2023/05/24/black-market-for-...
Does anyone remember WorldCom?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MCI_Inc.
Uhuh.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lC5lsemxaJo [The (US) Office - pyramid scheme clip]
(The first comment on that video is “she’s definitely into crypto now” which seems right)
As a sales rep you earn money every time you make a sale.
Signing someone up with an Orb != making another Worldcoin Operator
For the record since to many users here this is obviously yet another crypto scam, I want to point out that most who're seriously into blockchains/decentralization are against it too, check out the replies from crypto people to his announcement: https://twitter.com/sama/status/1683187148437192704
Sam Altman is an investor, not a crypto native.
It has already been a miracle how many world leaders received Altman peddling "his" AI.
This may be a trial balloon for the authoritarians to force this new surveillance tech on their subjects.