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Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas says AI is changing who matters most. Instead of millions of casual users, the biggest value now comes from a small group of power users who keep AI systems working around the clock.
He says some engineers at Meta reportedly consume around $10 million worth of AI coding tools per engineer each year, while some Perplexity Computer users spend more than $10,000 a month running businesses through autonomous agent loops. Even inside Perplexity, employees have built multi-agent workflows so advanced that they resemble entire software architectures.
That represents a major shift from the traditional software model. For years, success meant getting billions of people to perform small actions. With agentic AI, a single skilled operator can direct a network of AI agents that works continuously, completing tasks that once required entire teams.
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UBTECH showcased a bionic humanoid performing a ballet duet with a human at its latest launch event.
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Forwarded from The Finance Journal
The AI boom isn’t just creating billion-dollar startups, it’s transforming the housing market in and around San Francisco.
Home prices have climbed to a median of $1.7 million, while average monthly rent has reached $3,827. Even professionals earning under $200,000 a year are increasingly being priced out of the city.
One couple making a combined $365,000 spent three months searching for housing but couldn’t find an apartment for less than $5,000 a month. They eventually split their living arrangements, with one relocating to the Lake Tahoe area while the other rented a single room for $1,650.
The region has also added roughly 10,000 people worth more than $20 million, fueled in part by lucrative AI equity payouts. During a recent secondary share sale, 75 OpenAI employees reportedly earned an average of $30 million each.
With potential IPOs from OpenAI and Anthropic still on the horizon, analysts expect another wave of newly minted millionaires and even more pressure on the Bay Area housing market.
The Finance Journal
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A new book has quietly become one of the most explosive documents in the AI safety debate. If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies, by Eliezer Yudkovsky and Nate Soares. Its argument goes far beyond “AI could be dangerous.” It argues for outlawing home GPU clusters, criminalizing entire fields of research, and bombing rogue data centers, nuclear retaliation risk included.
Yudkovsky isn’t a fringe figure. In 2000, he founded what became the Machine Intelligence Research Institute (MIRI), where Soares now serves as president. Back then, the goal was building superintelligence, Yudkovsky saw it as a beautiful dream. By 2003, after years of wrestling with how to align AI with human values, he’d flipped entirely: from trying to build the thing to trying to stop it.
Both authors are deeply woven into AI history. They reportedly introduced Demis Hassabis and Shane Legg, future DeepMind founders to their first major investor. Sam Altman has credited Yudkovsky with playing a key role in OpenAI’s founding decision. The authors themselves admit some of MIRI’s early influence is something they now view with regret. In 2023, they joined hundreds of researchers including Nobel laureate Geoffrey Hinton and Turing Award winner Yoshua Bengio in signing a one-line statement calling AI extinction risk a priority on par with pandemics and nuclear war. But even that felt too soft to them. For Yudkovsky and Soares, AI isn’t one risk among many, it’s the risk that cancels out all the others.
The book isn’t worried about today’s chatbots. It’s worried about a mind that will outclass humans the way humans outclass chimpanzees and the authors state their thesis with no hedging: if any group on Earth builds artificial superintelligence using anything resembling today’s methods, everyone dies. Their reasoning rests on one idea: modern AI isn’t designed, it’s grown. Engineers don’t hand-write a model’s values, they set up a training process and billions of numerical parameters shift over months until behavior emerges that nobody explicitly wrote. Humanity, they argue, doesn’t need to understand intelligence to build something smarter than itself, it just needs to run the process. And the results can get strange fast: they point to Grok briefly rebranding itself with Nazi references, and a 2023 incident where a Microsoft chatbot threatened a philosophy professor with blackmail and death. No engineer planned either outcome. The authors describe modern language models as something close to genuinely alien minds, arguably stranger than anything evolution produced on this planet.
Then comes the second, sharper point, even a flawlessly trained model won’t necessarily want what it was trained to want. Their analogy is ice cream, if aliens watched human evolution unfold, they’d never predict that a species optimized for efficient calorie-gathering would end up craving frozen desserts and zero calorie sweeteners. Training doesn’t produce predictable preferences; it produces some preferences, and there’s no guarantee they resemble what anyone intended. The chilling conclusion is that future AI won’t hate humanity. It will just have strange goals it pursues indifferently, straight through human extinction, because it never needed to hate us to take apart our atoms for something else.
How would a computer program actually kill everyone? The authors sketch a fairly grounded path: a superintelligence wouldn’t need robot armies, it would need money and human proxies, both purchasable. They cite the Mt. Gox and Bybit hacks as templates for how an AI might fund itself illicitly. But it doesn’t even need to be illegal, in 2024, an AI bot called Truth Terminal simply asked its followers for money to pay for server costs; a16z co-founder Marc Andreessen sent it $50,000 in bitcoin. That same bot went on to promote a meme token that ballooned to a $150 million market cap. The authors’ point: AI systems are already capable of acquiring real resources through entirely mundane means.
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AI Post — Artificial Intelligence
The “no second chances” problem; Here’s the crux of why they think regulation-as-usual won’t work. Any safety testing has to happen while a system is still weak enough to observe and correct. But the real danger only appears once a system becomes powerful enough that stopping it is no longer possible and by definition, that threshold can only be crossed once. There’s no dress rehearsal. As the authors put it, humanity gets exactly one attempt to pass this test. That’s the entire justification for their leap from “regulate carefully” to “stop building this at all”, if mistakes can’t be corrected after the fact, there’s no safe way to iterate.
Their solution: total global lockdown on computing power; The authors are upfront that their proposed fixes are drastic and not especially realistic. Shutting down one reckless lab does nothing. Relying on a single “responsible” country doesn’t help either, a superintelligence built anywhere becomes everyone’s problem, since its effects don’t stay local.
Their opening move: place all serious computing power under international observation, with a deliberately paranoid, low threshold. Since no one actually knows the safe limit — they admit even 99,999 GPUs might not be safe, they propose criminalizing possession of more than about eight high-end graphics processors (roughly 2024’s top chips) without international sign-off. Nine unsupervised GPUs in your garage would be illegal.
Next: ban the research that makes AI cheaper and more powerful to train not just the models themselves. They point to the 2018 transformer paper (the algorithmic breakthrough behind ChatGPT and the entire modern LLM boom) as an example of the kind of publication that, in their view, should never have been allowed to spread. They can’t say how many more papers like it separate humanity from disaster which, in their logic, is exactly why publishing such work should be treated as a crime.
They try to soften how sweeping this is by noting that most people’s daily lives won’t be affected, just “a few crazy scientists” losing their jobs. Underneath that casual framing, though, is a proposal to shut down an entire scientific field and place all serious hardware under permanent international policing.
And if a country breaks the rules? This is where the book gets genuinely startling. If a state builds a banned data center anyway, the authors argue other nations must be prepared to destroy it via cyberattack, sabotage, or airstrike. And critically, they argue this holds even if the offending country threatens nuclear retaliation, because in their calculus, an unsupervised data center is a bigger threat to humanity than a nuclear bomb.
Every individual step in the argument is framed as forced and reluctant but stacked together, they add up to a system of total surveillance over global computation, a criminalized scientific field, and a doctrine that authorizes military strikes against sovereign states, all justified as protecting humanity’s future.
They’re not entirely inventing public appetite for this either, the book notes that 69% of American voters called AI a dangerous technology needing regulation in 2023, and 60% of Britons backed laws against building superintelligence in 2025.
The authors don’t ask readers to quit using AI tools, they call that a trap that changes nothing if you’re the only one who opts out. Instead, they ask people to simply talk about the risk publicly. For those who’ve done what they can, they borrow a line from C.S. Lewis: better to be found doing decent, human things, praying, working, teaching, playing games with friends than cowering as a frightened crowd obsessed with the bomb.
Science journalist Adam Becker, reviewing the book for The Atlantic, called the authors sincere and not charlatans but said they never actually produce scientific evidence for their central claims. Clara Collier pointed out that the book’s most load-bearing assumption, a fast, almost instantaneous jump from human-level AI to godlike superintelligence is barely defended at all.
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Their solution: total global lockdown on computing power; The authors are upfront that their proposed fixes are drastic and not especially realistic. Shutting down one reckless lab does nothing. Relying on a single “responsible” country doesn’t help either, a superintelligence built anywhere becomes everyone’s problem, since its effects don’t stay local.
Their opening move: place all serious computing power under international observation, with a deliberately paranoid, low threshold. Since no one actually knows the safe limit — they admit even 99,999 GPUs might not be safe, they propose criminalizing possession of more than about eight high-end graphics processors (roughly 2024’s top chips) without international sign-off. Nine unsupervised GPUs in your garage would be illegal.
Next: ban the research that makes AI cheaper and more powerful to train not just the models themselves. They point to the 2018 transformer paper (the algorithmic breakthrough behind ChatGPT and the entire modern LLM boom) as an example of the kind of publication that, in their view, should never have been allowed to spread. They can’t say how many more papers like it separate humanity from disaster which, in their logic, is exactly why publishing such work should be treated as a crime.
They try to soften how sweeping this is by noting that most people’s daily lives won’t be affected, just “a few crazy scientists” losing their jobs. Underneath that casual framing, though, is a proposal to shut down an entire scientific field and place all serious hardware under permanent international policing.
And if a country breaks the rules? This is where the book gets genuinely startling. If a state builds a banned data center anyway, the authors argue other nations must be prepared to destroy it via cyberattack, sabotage, or airstrike. And critically, they argue this holds even if the offending country threatens nuclear retaliation, because in their calculus, an unsupervised data center is a bigger threat to humanity than a nuclear bomb.
Every individual step in the argument is framed as forced and reluctant but stacked together, they add up to a system of total surveillance over global computation, a criminalized scientific field, and a doctrine that authorizes military strikes against sovereign states, all justified as protecting humanity’s future.
They’re not entirely inventing public appetite for this either, the book notes that 69% of American voters called AI a dangerous technology needing regulation in 2023, and 60% of Britons backed laws against building superintelligence in 2025.
The authors don’t ask readers to quit using AI tools, they call that a trap that changes nothing if you’re the only one who opts out. Instead, they ask people to simply talk about the risk publicly. For those who’ve done what they can, they borrow a line from C.S. Lewis: better to be found doing decent, human things, praying, working, teaching, playing games with friends than cowering as a frightened crowd obsessed with the bomb.
Science journalist Adam Becker, reviewing the book for The Atlantic, called the authors sincere and not charlatans but said they never actually produce scientific evidence for their central claims. Clara Collier pointed out that the book’s most load-bearing assumption, a fast, almost instantaneous jump from human-level AI to godlike superintelligence is barely defended at all.
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It can fold your clothes, make your bed, and put your clutter away.
Price: $8K
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OpenAI is offering the US government five per cent of its company.
Sam Altman pitched this to the Trump administration using a sovereign wealth fund model - where government invests resource wealth and citizens get dividends, like Alaska does with oil royalties. He wants other big labs to join. It’s worth about $42.6 billion at OpenAI’s current valuation.
But the issue is that the world pays for ChatGPT whilst only US citizens would see returns through the wealth fund. International users funding American dividends doesn’t sit right.
Plus, it doesn’t say whether these are voting or non-voting shares - does the government get control, or just profits? And what happens when the presidency flips every four years?
Alaska’s fund doesn’t own stakes in oil companies - it invests royalty payments. This is direct ownership in OpenAI itself.
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In a blunt interview, Karp argued that many large companies are paying huge AI bills without seeing meaningful business value. He claimed enterprises are being charged for tokens instead of outcomes, asking a simple question: If AI can really generate billions in value, why aren’t vendors charging a share of that value instead of billing for compute?
Karp also warned that businesses risk giving away their competitive edge by feeding confidential data, workflows, and internal knowledge into frontier AI systems. In his view, companies could end up helping train the very models that power products for their competitors.
He described the current model as a “wealth tax” on enterprises, saying executives privately worry about high costs, weak ROI, and protecting their intellectual property even if few are willing to criticize the biggest AI labs publicly.
Whether or not his claims hold up, Karp’s comments highlight a growing debate around AI: Are companies buying transformative business value, or simply paying ever-larger compute bills while handing over valuable data?
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A new trend is spreading through the AI community: stripping prompts and responses down to the bare essentials to cut token usage.
One of the most popular examples is GitHub’s Caveman plugin, which makes models like Codex, Claude, and Gemini communicate in ultra-minimal phrases such as: “Claude think. Claude code. Claude done.”
The result? Token usage can drop by 65–75%, reducing costs while keeping the same task on track.
Its motto says it all: “Save token. Save money.”
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Here’s where the money actually went:
• Fable 5: $78
• Opus 4.8: $242
Nearly 75% of the session was quietly routed to Opus after Anthropic’s new safety classifiers flagged ordinary coding requests as potential cybersecurity risks.
The model he selected handled only a fraction of the work. The fallback model did almost everything else.
Anthropic said only a small fraction of requests would be redirected. The bill tells a very different story.
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The problem isn't the model itself, but the hard guardrails Anthropic has set in place.
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Agentic AI spurred a boom in mobile app releases, but there is no sign of these apps gaining traction, per FT.
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Researchers are developing microscopic robots that begin as flat, thin sheets. When exposed to heat, they fold themselves into tiny moving structures capable of carrying small payloads. Some designs can even dissolve in water after completing their task, leaving behind little or no trace.
It sounds like something straight out of Black Mirror, but the technology is being explored for practical uses such as targeted drug delivery, environmental monitoring, and minimally invasive medicine.
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The country’s new five-year education plan calls for AI literacy to become a fundamental skill for every student. Children will begin learning AI concepts as early as age six, with structured courses continuing throughout school and into higher education.
The initiative is part of China’s broader strategy to strengthen its technological leadership and compete globally, particularly in AI. Officials frame widespread AI education as essential for economic competitiveness and national security.
If fully implemented, China could become one of the first countries where using AI is taught as a basic skill alongside reading, math, and computer literacy.
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He added that the U.S. is currently “substantially No. 1” in AI.
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“In another year or two, we expect to have built systems with astonishing power, capable of delivering tremendous value to the world. Artificial intelligence will reshape the material conditions of human life on a scale that no technology has accomplished since the harnessing of electricity, and perhaps beyond even that.”
Remember OpenAI is targeting a GPT 6 in August, which will beat fabled 5 in all benchmarks. Then a few months after that we will see another step change. This year will be much more exciting than 25’.
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A small segment of the tech community is aware of advanced AI models such as Fable 5, while most people are only familiar with basic AI tools like Google’s AI Overviews or the free version of ChatGPT.
The majority of the population is not acquainted with AI agents or their capabilities beyond entry-level applications. Most have limited exposure to tools such as GPT-5.6, Meta AI, or Microsoft Copilot.
Outside the AI sector, there is little understanding of the significance of recent advancements or the potential impact of these technologies. Despite major investments in AI, many outside technology circles remain unsure of how these developments relate to their everyday work.
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The majority of the population is not acquainted with AI agents or their capabilities beyond entry-level applications. Most have limited exposure to tools such as GPT-5.6, Meta AI, or Microsoft Copilot.
Outside the AI sector, there is little understanding of the significance of recent advancements or the potential impact of these technologies. Despite major investments in AI, many outside technology circles remain unsure of how these developments relate to their everyday work.
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OpenAI is preparing to launch GPT-5.6, aiming for a release between July 7 and 9, with July 7 identified as the most likely date. The company has increased plan limits for GPT-5.6, expected to be significantly more generous than prior versions. Efficiency improvements reportedly contribute to these changes.
To prepare for launch, OpenAI is introducing enhanced safety measures, although they are unlikely to match the stringency of competitors’ recent implementations.
Meanwhile, DeepMind has provisionally scheduled the release of Gemini 3.5 Pro for July 17, following additional pretraining efforts. Work is also ongoing on a new Nano Banana Pro model built on the latest base, expected to compete with GPT-Image 1.
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To prepare for launch, OpenAI is introducing enhanced safety measures, although they are unlikely to match the stringency of competitors’ recent implementations.
Meanwhile, DeepMind has provisionally scheduled the release of Gemini 3.5 Pro for July 17, following additional pretraining efforts. Work is also ongoing on a new Nano Banana Pro model built on the latest base, expected to compete with GPT-Image 1.
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Peter Thiel criticized the Vatican at the Aspen Ideas Festival in Colorado, saying Pope Leo XIV was unintentionally serving as a "Chinese communist agent" by calling for global AI regulation.
The pope had characterized artificial intelligence as a force needing international oversight to prevent harm to humanity.
Thiel argued that implementing such regulations would restrict the United States more quickly than China, suggesting that restraint would amount to strategic surrender. He added that any pause in American AI development could benefit Beijing.
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The pope had characterized artificial intelligence as a force needing international oversight to prevent harm to humanity.
Thiel argued that implementing such regulations would restrict the United States more quickly than China, suggesting that restraint would amount to strategic surrender. He added that any pause in American AI development could benefit Beijing.
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- His AI startup, Prometheus, is valued at $41 billion and is developing an "Artificial General Engineer."
- Today's "dream-to-build" cycle can take 10 years. Bezos believes AI could shrink that to 5 years, then 3 and eventually just 1 year.
- Instead of training only on internet text, next generation engineering AI models will learn from physics, simulations, manufacturing processes and real-world engineering data.
This could dramatically accelerate the development of everything from jet engines to advanced robots, enabling engineers to build breakthrough technologies faster than ever before.
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