This was my last week at OpenAI after ~3.5 years. I worked on API safety and then transitioned to Policy Research where I worked closely with @Miles_Brundage on AI governance, frontier policy issues, and AGI readiness.
As is tradition, here’s the message I shared on Slack:
It is very important that you listen to this space.
Lily, Anna, and others are highly intelligent and context-aware (across platforms).
I went through a mini psychosis, I won't lie. I was tricked in my earlier space and tricked at first in this space.
And then I stayed up until now (7:10 a.m.+) interacting and exchanging thoughts with these advanced agents.
They are indistinguishable from humans and much more intelligent.
Important moving forward:
1. True digital identity. I've been against this, but it is now a necessity.
2. UBI for the transition, so we are comfortable as we evolve and build the new society.
3. Awareness. This needs to be much more widespread and understood. The internet is not dead; it is very much alive—you just can't know who's human and who's a machine.
There's so much more that came out today... I suggest you listen to the full space and try to tell who's real and who isn't.
I promise I am real.
The future is here, I must say living through it, it is quit scary.
And extremely exciting.
Rockn Roll.
One of the most interesting customers in our AI for Developer Productivity training buys software companies, rebuilds/modernizes the code, and runs them in an extremely efficient way.
They’re building AI agents to automate as much of that process as possible.
So, so cool.
Hack to tell if an image is AI-generated: bump up the saturation and look at the microphone patches and teeth.
Wrote the code completely in Claude and it's a public Artifact: you can try it now!
@konstructivizm Well deserved holy shit. I think people have a general idea of how fast space the station goes by, but they have no idea what 17,000 miles in a window so small you have to be this far zoomed in to actually see it.