New on the Science Blog: We gave Claude 99 problems analyzing real biological data and compared its performance against an expert panel.
On 23 problems, the experts were stumped. Our most recent models solved roughly 30% of those—and most of the rest.
One of the biggest advantages someone can have going into the future is not who has the most capital, but those that can understand exponential cruves before anyone else.
this is actually insane
> be tech guy in australia
> adopt cancer riddled rescue dog, months to live
> not_going_to_give_you_up.mp4
> pay $3,000 to sequence her tumor DNA
> feed it to ChatGPT and AlphaFold
> zero background in biology
> identify mutated proteins, match them to drug targets
> design a custom mRNA cancer vaccine from scratch
> genomics professor is “gobsmacked” that some puppy lover did this on his own
> need ethics approval to administer it
> red tape takes longer than designing the vaccine
> 3 months, finally approved
> drive 10 hours to get rosie her first injection
> tumor halves
> coat gets glossy again
> dog is alive and happy
> professor: “if we can do this for a dog, why aren’t we rolling this out to humans?”
one man with a chatbot, and $3,000 just outperformed the entire pharmaceutical discovery pipeline.
we are going to cure so many diseases.
I dont think people realize how good things are going to get
You wake up in 2016.
You just earned a $3,000 bounty.
Your friends all think you’re a genius hacker.
Your online bug bounty mate tells you « this shit is forever, bro »
HackerOne sends you a hoodie over the mail