Monday, January 06, 2025
6: AI Agents
The returns from startup investing depend far more on which companies you fund than on how good the terms are. I often (probably more often than not) agree to invest in startups without asking what the valuation cap will be. https://t.co/9PvVzCDAct
— Paul Graham (@paulg) January 6, 2025
That 100K was a 1.5B harvest about 8 years later.
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) January 7, 2025
Evergreen financial advice… pic.twitter.com/By5D51f6A5
— Douglas A. Boneparth (@dougboneparth) January 7, 2025
Trump pardoning the insurrectionists who attacked our Capitol four years ago would be a betrayal of the American people.
— Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) January 6, 2025
Many of the rioters were convicted of assaulting police and other serious crimes — including by Trump-appointed judges. They must be held accountable. https://t.co/muxhvhdoZB
Has any large firm clearly articulated what they imagine their organization will look like in the future when they have integrated AI?
— Ethan Mollick (@emollick) January 6, 2025
Employees are noticing the lack of clarity, and they want to know what happens to them. Saying "you will be more efficient" is not reassuring.
US has teams building frontier models (OpenAI, Anthropic, etc.)
— Tanishq Mathew Abraham, Ph.D. (@iScienceLuvr) January 6, 2025
Europe has teams building frontier models (Mistral, DeepMind, etc.)
China has teams building frontier models (DeepSeek, Alibaba, etc.)
What about India?? Why is India so behind on building SOTA foundation models?
One wedding cost is like 10 o3 models.
— rohan anil (@_arohan_) January 6, 2025
For anyone doubting the severity and depravity of the mass gang rapes of little girls in Britain, go to the source material and read the court transcripts. I did.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) January 5, 2025
It is worse than you could possibly imagine. pic.twitter.com/OeK2uVxJ93
This is wild.
— Min Choi (@minchoi) January 6, 2025
Browser Use AI Agent can do your work for you.
7 wild demos:
1. Reads your CV, finds matching jobs, and applies online... all on its own 🤯 pic.twitter.com/4rjnIAYWdr
Justin Trudeau officially resigned!
— Patrick Bet-David (@patrickbetdavid) January 6, 2025
Strong leadership in US filters out weak leaders around the world.
I can only imagine what’ll happen after January 20th.
pic.twitter.com/tS6mdDapEK
6: Ukraine
The Incredible, World-Altering ‘Black Swan’ Events That Could Upend Life in 2025 15 futurists, foreign policy analysts and other prognosticators provide some explosive potential scenarios for the new year.
Antony Blinken: ‘China has been trying to have it both ways’ The outgoing US secretary of state on putting pressure on Beijing over Ukraine, the ‘road map’ for Syria — and why America must co-operate in order to lead ........ “We faced the worst economic crisis arguably since the Great Depression. We faced the worst public health crisis in at least 100 years. We had strong divisions at home, a challenge to our democracy, and we had very fraught relations with our closest allies and partners.” ......... Back in 2021, he says, adversaries believed the US was in “inexorable decline”. Since then, big investments at home, including in infrastructure and the domestic chip industry, in addition to intense work with allies, have changed the landscape. “We’re now operating from a position of strength.” ........ Blinken, 62, is a Francophile who speaks fluent French from his teenage years living in Paris. ........ “Iran is not in much of a position to pick a fight with anyone . . . That had real repercussions for Syria in a positive way.” ......... four Indo-Pacific countries — Japan, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea — were invited to attend Nato summits during the Biden administration and that the transatlantic alliance now criticises China, which was previously unimaginable. He recalls how former Japanese prime minister Fumio Kishida warned that “Ukraine [today] might be east Asia tomorrow”, in a veiled reference to China. .......... I ask why Nippon Steel’s $15bn acquisition of US Steel has faced such opposition in the administration as a security threat, even though Japan is the most important US ally in Asia. ......... The presence of North Korean soldiers fighting with Russians against Ukraine has further underscored how conflicts in one region have implications for nations in other parts of the world. Giving another example, Blinken stresses that Chinese groups are still providing Russia with critical materiel to help it rebuild its defence industry base. .......... “This is . . . powerful evidence to Europeans that the biggest threat to their security . . . is unfortunately being driven in part by the contributions of countries that are halfway around the world in the Indo-Pacific.” ......... “China is hearing a chorus of concern from many countries” who along with the US have imposed sanctions on Chinese entities aiding the Russian war effort. ....... Blinken defends the decision to withdraw when the US did, however, saying that its adversaries wanted Washington to remain “bogged down” in Afghanistan. ........ I am also curious how he views the situation in Gaza compared to Xinjiang, where the Chinese government has detained more than 1mn Uyghurs in a persecution campaign. In his 2021 Senate confirmation hearing, he said China was committing “genocide” against the Uyghurs. Could the same conclusion not be drawn for the tens of thousands of innocent civilians in Gaza? Blinken simply says “No”. ........... he says the US has a “responsibility” to talk to Beijing despite big differences. ............ I am curious if he thinks the engagement helped reduce the odds of a conflict with China over Taiwan? “Yes,” he says emphatically. “Certainly [of an] accidental [conflict] and possibly even deliberate.” ...........