Neat, for what it's worth this aligns pretty well with my experience using OpenClaw. I hadn't seen that followup but it adds some good context, especially with the aggressiveness drift after browsing Moltbook for a…
Gamers don't like lazy slop. I've played quite a few games that utilized AI tooling to build them, and had a lot of fun.
Yeah, having a code section that is writable and executable is a huge no-no from a security standpoint. JIT is a fundamentally insecure concept, just in general. By definition it's trading security for speed.
That's just status quo, which isn't really holding up in the modern era IMO. I'm sure we'll have vibed infrastructure and slow infrastructure, and one of them will burn down more frequently. Only time will tell who…
It's an extremely active community of humans using agents as proxies to explore various concepts. I get a lot of value out of it, and apparently others do as well. Hacker News users have this weird tendency to outright…
Whoever told you that never used the platform and never understood what it was for.
I don't think you understand why moltbook is popular. It has incredible utility for those who are actually using it every day.
Why is that an issue? Isn't that the entire point? You can have a casual conversation with your agent via whatever your favorite chat app is, and they make posts, collect feedback, and communicate back interesting…
9% uptime?
Wild to call 1.42 billion people racist despite having met very few of them.
Booo
> it struggles It does not struggle, you struggle. It is a tool you are using, and it is doing exactly what you're telling it to do. Tools take time to learn, and that's fine. Blaming the tools is counterproductive. If…
Negativity Bias is a thing. It probably served us well back when it was more important to remember to avoid the field with all the poison snakes in it vs the field with the pretty flowers in it, but in an era where algo…
Of course they are, and they've been doing it since long before ChatGPT or any of that was a thing. Before it was more with classifiers and concolic execution engines, but it's only gotten way more advanced.
State is globally distributed, and smart contract code executes state transitions on that state. When someone submits a transaction with certain function parameters, anyone can verify that those parameters will lead to…
You know his dad ran research at the NSA right? His dad's also a badass and super fun to talk to. Never talked to the son though, but I'd love to some day.
Exactly. It's so wild to me when people hate on generated text because it sounds like something they don't like, when they could easily tell it to set the tone to any other tone that has ever appeared in text.
> If the AI PR were any good, it wouldn’t need review. So, your minimum bar for a useful AI is that it must always be perfect and a far better programmer than any human that has ever lived? Coding agents are basically…
This Apple only nonsense is driving me nuts. I pay OpenAI $200 a month, and use Codex all the time, but just installed the crappy ChatGPT app for Android, and just use it from the mobile web browser, because it's over a…
What's with the assumption that everything needs to be a "moat"? Seems much more important/interesting to wire up society with cohesive tooling according to Metcalfe's law, rather than building stuff designed to…
How about EichScript, or ES for short :-D
Information security is, fundamentally, a misalignment of expected capabilities with new technologies. There is literally no way a new technology can be "secure" until it has existed in the public zeitgeist for long…
Skytalks happened this year and was better attended than ever. Getting a seat was extremely competitive, people lined up for several hours for a single talk token. I would have loved to go to some, but unfortunately…
This was my 23rd DEFCON, and was just as counterculture as it was decades ago if you know where to go, and don't get distracted by the big pretty signs. DEFCON has always been about feds, policymakers, corpos, kids, and…
The important part is the short term gains, and the people making them jumping away on a golden parachute before the long term consequences kick in.
Neat, for what it's worth this aligns pretty well with my experience using OpenClaw. I hadn't seen that followup but it adds some good context, especially with the aggressiveness drift after browsing Moltbook for a…
Gamers don't like lazy slop. I've played quite a few games that utilized AI tooling to build them, and had a lot of fun.
Yeah, having a code section that is writable and executable is a huge no-no from a security standpoint. JIT is a fundamentally insecure concept, just in general. By definition it's trading security for speed.
That's just status quo, which isn't really holding up in the modern era IMO. I'm sure we'll have vibed infrastructure and slow infrastructure, and one of them will burn down more frequently. Only time will tell who…
It's an extremely active community of humans using agents as proxies to explore various concepts. I get a lot of value out of it, and apparently others do as well. Hacker News users have this weird tendency to outright…
Whoever told you that never used the platform and never understood what it was for.
I don't think you understand why moltbook is popular. It has incredible utility for those who are actually using it every day.
Why is that an issue? Isn't that the entire point? You can have a casual conversation with your agent via whatever your favorite chat app is, and they make posts, collect feedback, and communicate back interesting…
9% uptime?
Wild to call 1.42 billion people racist despite having met very few of them.
Booo
> it struggles It does not struggle, you struggle. It is a tool you are using, and it is doing exactly what you're telling it to do. Tools take time to learn, and that's fine. Blaming the tools is counterproductive. If…
Negativity Bias is a thing. It probably served us well back when it was more important to remember to avoid the field with all the poison snakes in it vs the field with the pretty flowers in it, but in an era where algo…
Of course they are, and they've been doing it since long before ChatGPT or any of that was a thing. Before it was more with classifiers and concolic execution engines, but it's only gotten way more advanced.
State is globally distributed, and smart contract code executes state transitions on that state. When someone submits a transaction with certain function parameters, anyone can verify that those parameters will lead to…
You know his dad ran research at the NSA right? His dad's also a badass and super fun to talk to. Never talked to the son though, but I'd love to some day.
Exactly. It's so wild to me when people hate on generated text because it sounds like something they don't like, when they could easily tell it to set the tone to any other tone that has ever appeared in text.
> If the AI PR were any good, it wouldn’t need review. So, your minimum bar for a useful AI is that it must always be perfect and a far better programmer than any human that has ever lived? Coding agents are basically…
This Apple only nonsense is driving me nuts. I pay OpenAI $200 a month, and use Codex all the time, but just installed the crappy ChatGPT app for Android, and just use it from the mobile web browser, because it's over a…
What's with the assumption that everything needs to be a "moat"? Seems much more important/interesting to wire up society with cohesive tooling according to Metcalfe's law, rather than building stuff designed to…
How about EichScript, or ES for short :-D
Information security is, fundamentally, a misalignment of expected capabilities with new technologies. There is literally no way a new technology can be "secure" until it has existed in the public zeitgeist for long…
Skytalks happened this year and was better attended than ever. Getting a seat was extremely competitive, people lined up for several hours for a single talk token. I would have loved to go to some, but unfortunately…
This was my 23rd DEFCON, and was just as counterculture as it was decades ago if you know where to go, and don't get distracted by the big pretty signs. DEFCON has always been about feds, policymakers, corpos, kids, and…
The important part is the short term gains, and the people making them jumping away on a golden parachute before the long term consequences kick in.