My Paradigms of Intelligence team and I just published a pioneering new paper on how reasoning models like OpenAI’s o-series, DeepSeek-R1 and QwQ achieve their remarkable performance. 🧵
Read the full paper on arXiv:
https://t.co/0qLjFfKVlv
For the first time, we can converse with computers about our intents.
@serensandikci and @hyperseref (co-founders of @indexnetwork_) shared their vision for the first intent graph for social coordination.
It works like this:
► People express intents in natural language ("find: others learning modular arithmetic, founders who like jazz, investors exploring ZK")
► Intents are stored privately (and contextually)
► AI agents ("context brokers") recommend mutual matches, in the "fastest" routes
► Agents stake financial claims on predictions – correct matches get rewarded, wrong ones lose stake
The theory is contextual integrity in a noisy web. A middleware layer for social intent fulfillment. A private discovery engine for finding your people.
They’re looking for community ecosystem partners and hiring AI and full-stack engineers to bring Index to life. Curious interns also welcome.
Say hello: [email protected].
Louder for the people in the group chat. Such an eye opening read by @nayafia exploring the emerging phenomenon of antimemetics. Released by the Dark Forest Collective on @metalabel_ https://t.co/2sugr89D8W
@spencerc99 Always so impressed and inspired by the ways your projects showcase how tech can deliver on connection, care and community. Novelty in the service of producing and/or surfacing kindredness.
@sariazout@ystrickler@DialecticPod Had this exact excerpt as a screenshot, but hadn't opened podcast magic until just now. What a magical experience to watch it work! 🪄
This is the Creative Century
We’re now 25 years into the 21st century — 25% through.
What will define it?
The internet? Cell phones? AI? Sure.
But there’s another one: creativity.
Few ideas have reshaped our world more this century than creativity.
We think of it as an eternal ideal that’s been with us forever. That’s not the case.
The word “creativity” entered the dictionary in 1966. Yes, 1966.
The concept was first developed in the 1940s by Defense Department researchers trying to identify independent thinkers for leadership.
At the same time, social scientists and advertising executives were searching for a postwar ideal: a way to motivate and fulfill people in a newly consumer-driven America.
Their solution? A democratic form of genius that everyone could aspire to: creativity.
Schools were remade in this image. So were businesses. Entirely new ways of thinking.
Eighty years later, creativity shapes everything — from how we work to who we want to become. Kids today don’t want to be astronauts — they want to be creators. And unlike astronauts, they can actually become one.
For all the power of creativity today, there’s one flaw: the current model is built around individuals.
There are no structures to help creative people become something bigger than themselves.
That’s the gap that Metalabel exists to fill. A new operating system that helps creative people cooperate rather than just compete. Release projects together. Share credit, earnings, and purpose.
The forces reshaping the 21st century are creative ones. Imagination, reinvention, and self-expression are the hallmarks of our time.
Even more than our technologies or our fears, creativity is the force that defines us.
so thrilled to share that after 18 months in private beta, @wwwsublimeapp opens its doors to everyone today (!!)
save one idea
discover 100 more
it all starts with a single save
come play
sublime (dot) app
Ghost context (h/t @Skelt) is the shared reference point we don't know about
You see several of your favourite books on somebody's bookshelf - instant connection
But we usually don't get that opportunity
How can we surface ghost context better?
(besides stickers on laptops)
@austinrobey_ Had this bookmarked, but forgot you shared. Just listened to this podcast interview and found myself using @subvertworld as a lens throughout. Better than that, someone called him Seth GOATin in the comments. https://t.co/alOdafbuTS