I keep thinking about this:
We taught AI to sound human, and now humans have to learn how to work with AI.
What do you think is worth learning now?
https://t.co/0PlEziu1Pb
Inspired by @ii_posts
I keep thinking about this:
We taught AI to sound human, and now humans have to learn how to work with AI.
What do you think is worth learning now?
https://t.co/0PlEziu1Pb
Inspired by @ii_posts
The problem with intelligent agents is not that they might think for us. It is that they may start (and already are) acting for us. We are about to discover that intelligence was never the hard part. The hard part is authority.
https://t.co/bcABFopSRA
There’s a small philosophical joke baked into a lot of “Web3” talk: we celebrate unstoppable applications, then ship them through the most stoppable infrastructure we’ve ever built.
https://t.co/E0Ysv6Pc50
AI doesn’t magically replace expertise—it multiplies it. The real leverage comes when deep knowledge meets powerful tools. If you want to understand why AI rewards experts more than amateurs:
https://t.co/CbyaWrroqx
The moment intelligence can call tools, inspect systems, retrieve memory, draft actions, and change the world on your behalf, the center of gravity moves. The question is no longer just how smart the model is. The question is: who owns the runtime?
https://t.co/qluvoRYnXJ
Agents can generate tools from the internet (incl. patents) with no provenance. So what do you do—publish, patent, or stay quiet? My bet: radical openness + MCP marketplaces where agents pay-per-use (ACP/AP2) for verified tools vs reinventing them.
https://t.co/Edd7JiqdNg
@BobKaiser3@Support Me too. The quality of this app must be the worst of any app I am using. Often I can not click to open a thread either. It is updated several times a week sometimes but they can not even fix the most basic stuff. Strange when it is run by such a tech wiz as @elonmusk