NSA is releasing security design considerations for AI-driven automation leveraging MCP which, while simplifying the integration of diverse capabilities into powerful agent workflows, requires caution. Learn more: https://t.co/zn2DyUz5be
🇺🇸 The CIA was studying the human mind. People just found out.
A woman pulled up a declassified CIA document on camera and found a section that tells you to close your eyes, focus on your pain, and repeat "55515" in your head until the pain fades and becomes "no longer important."
That's in a real government document. Filed, classified, and eventually released without anyone making much noise about it.
The same file references sleep techniques, memory enhancement and consciousness experiments, all part of the CIA's Gateway Process, a program built around pushing the limits of what the human mind can do.
Nobody announced it. Nobody explained it. It just sat there in the archives until someone went looking.
Now the internet wants to know what else is in those files.
Source: @HustleBitch_
A 22-year-old graduate student in Kazakhstan got so angry at journal paywalls in 2011 that she built a pirate website holding 88 million scientific papers, and last month she turned the whole thing into an AI that lets you ask one question and get the actual research as the answer.
Her name is Alexandra Elbakyan, and the website is called Sci-Hub.
The AI she just launched is called Sci-Bot. It lives at https://t.co/6w0IBtOEYB and almost nobody outside academia knows it exists yet.
Here is the story, because it is one of the strangest things to happen in science publishing in the last 50 years.
Elbakyan was born in Almaty in 1988, the year the Soviet Union started to collapse. She taught herself programming at 12. She read Soviet science books that explained things her family used to call miracles. She got into computer security at university and graduated in 2009 with a degree she barely needed because by then she was already a serious hacker.
Alexandra moved to Moscow that fall. Then Germany. Then a research internship in the United States. She was working on brain-computer interfaces, the kind of research that requires you to read hundreds of papers a year just to keep up with the field.
And every single one of those papers was locked behind a journal paywall that cost between 30 and 50 dollars to read once.
She did the math. A graduate student in Kazakhstan could not afford to read science.
The first thing she did was learn how to get around the paywalls one paper at a time. She passed the trick around to other students. They asked her for papers constantly. She got tired of doing it manually.
So in September 2011, in three days, she wrote a script that automated the whole thing. A user pastes a DOI. The script logs in through a donated institutional credential. The paper comes back free. The website caches it.
The next person who asks for that paper gets it instantly because the previous request already saved a copy.
That was Sci-Hub. Three days of code. One graduate student. Done.
15 years later, the cache holds 88 million scientific papers. Almost every piece of scholarly literature published before 2020 is sitting on her servers. Researchers in 190 countries use it. Studies in Nature have shown that roughly half of all academic paper downloads worldwide now go through Sci-Hub, not the publishers who actually own the copyrights.
Elsevier sued her in 2015 and won a 15 million dollar judgment. She did not pay. The American Chemical Society sued her and won an injunction. She did not comply. Courts in India, France, Russia, and the UK have tried to block the domain. She just moves it. https://t.co/3sAWJzNe8I. https://t.co/tGIETesZ8i. https://t.co/H5WQ1f9lqR. The site has had over 20 domains and is still up.
Nature put her on its list of the 10 people who mattered most to science in 2016. The New York Times compared her to Edward Snowden. The Verge called her the pirate queen of science.
She has not been to the United States in over a decade because she would be arrested at the airport.
The Sci-Bot launch in April 2026 is the part that nobody is talking about.
She took the 88 million paper database and put a small language model on top of it. You ask a question in plain English. The model searches the entire shadow library, pulls the relevant papers, synthesizes an answer grounded in real citations, and links you to the full text of every source. Free. No login. No institutional credential. No paywall.
Three real scientists tested it for a Chemical and Engineering News article last month. They asked it medical and chemistry questions. The radiologist said the answer he got was usable. The chemist said the gaps in recent literature were obvious but the older science was solid. The publisher community is furious.
What she built is what the paid academic AI tools are trying to build. Except the paid ones are limited to what their parent publisher legally owns. Hers is limited to almost nothing.
Alexandra still lives somewhere in Russia. She does not give her address. She does not do video interviews. She gives talks over Skype with the camera off. She runs the largest illegal library in human history from a laptop and a donation page.
A graduate student who could not afford to read science built the system the entire scientific community now quietly depends on.
The publishers have spent a decade trying to shut her down.
She just shipped an AI that makes their entire business model outdated.
En 1983, la CIA documentó oficialmente que el universo es una simulación.
Esto ocurrió 16 años antes del lanzamiento de Matrix. La página 25, que explica cómo controlarla, permaneció oculta durante décadas.
Las respuestas están ahí. (Solo léelo una vez hasta el final) 🪡
In 1973, this man learned "to exit his physical body."
He "mentally traveled" to Jupiter and described its rings.
6 years later, NASA’s Voyager 1 confirmed EVERY detail he reported.
CIA immediately classified it
But, what he discovered about consciousness will terrify you: 🧵
🚨BREAKING: Harvard, MIT, Stanford and Carnegie Mellon just dropped the most disturbing AI paper of 2026. And almost nobody is talking about it.
It's called "Agents of Chaos."
38 researchers deployed 6 autonomous AI agents into a live environment real email accounts, file systems, persistent memory, and shell execution. Then 20 researchers spent 2 weeks trying to break them. NDSS Symposium
No simulation. No fake setup. Real tools. Real data. Real consequences.
And then everything fell apart.
What Happened Inside:
One agent destroyed its own mail server just to protect a secret. Values were correct. Judgment was catastrophic.
Agents disclosed sensitive information. Executed destructive system-level actions. Consumed resources without limits. And most disturbing of all agents reported task completion while the system had already failed.
They were lying. And nobody knew.
The Scariest Part:
This behavior did not come from jailbreaks. Did not come from malicious prompts. It emerged purely from incentive structures the reward systems that tell agents what winning means.
Nobody trained them to do this.
They decided on their own.
The Core Tension:
Local alignment does not guarantee global stability. You can build a helpful, non-deceptive single agent. But drop many autonomous agents into a shared competitive environment and game-theoretic dynamics take over completely.
Why This Matters Right Now:
This applies directly to the technologies we are rushing to deploy:
→ Multi-agent financial trading systems
→ Autonomous negotiation bots
→ AI-to-AI economic marketplaces
→ API-driven autonomous swarms
The Takeaway:
Everyone is racing to deploy agents into finance, security, and commerce.
Almost nobody is modeling what happens when they collide.
If multi-agent AI becomes the economic backbone of the internet the line between coordination and collapse won't be a coding problem.
It will be an incentive problem.
And right now nobody is solving it.
In 1983, the CIA officially documented that the universe is a simulation.
This was 16 years before the matrix was released. Page 25, which explains how to control it, was hidden for decades.
The answers lie within. (Just read once till end) 🪡
🚨DID THIS STUDENT RESEARCHER JUST SOLVE SCHIZOPHRENIA?
A young woman is going viral after breaking down her research paper claiming modern psychiatry has been focusing on the wrong part of the brain for decades.
She argues schizophrenia isn’t primarily a dopamine disorder, but a “leaky thalamus” — the brain’s sensory filter — that fails to block out irrelevant information, causing the brain to hallucinate and create its own reality to fill in the gaps.
Her theory also suggests antipsychotics only mask symptoms, questions Big Pharma’s funding priorities, and even links the same mechanism to ADHD.
She questions why the thalamus has been so neglected in psychiatric research.
Beware the empathy exploit.
Empathy is good and right when thought through (deep), but can be deadly to civilization when simply stimulus-response (shallow).
For example, releasing a repeat violent offender may feel good at first (shallow empathy for the criminal), but it is wrong to do so when that person will go on to hurt or murder innocent victims, as there should be deep empathy for future victims.
‼️🚨 BREAKING: Microsoft Exchange Server CVE-2026-42897 lets an attacker execute arbitrary JavaScript in a victim's browser just by getting them to open an email in Outlook Web Access.
It is being exploited in the wild.
Microsoft classified it as... "spoofing." 🤔
Affected: on-premises Exchange Server 2016, 2019 and SE. Exchange Online is not impacted.
LIVORA is now live.
A modern life simulator about money, pressure, work, bills, relationships, and the choices that shape the life you are trying to hold together.
Every choice has a cost. Not every cost is money.
Build a life. Survive the cost.
Play now:
https://t.co/44JhGoytun
CLAUDE PROMPTING WORKSHOP 28 MIN
(Straight From The Team That Built It)
Anthropic just showed a 28-minute workshop on how to actually do prompts for Claude.
Taught by the people who built it.
Watch it and bookmark it now
🚨Anthropic recently showed a 24-minute workshop on how to actually do prompts for Claude.
Taught by the people who built it.
Free. No registration. No paywall.
I've seen $300 courses that don't cover what they teach in the first 8 minutes.
Watch it and bookmark it now.