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CuriouslyC

7,902 karmajoined 12 years ago
Chief scientist/ceo, Sibylline Software. nathan @ sibylline.dev

Submissions

I Changed My Mind About MCP

sibylline.dev
3 points·by CuriouslyC·4 months ago·0 comments

You Don't Need to Detect Prompt Injection to Stop It

sibylline.dev
2 points·by CuriouslyC·4 months ago·0 comments

Smith: The Secure Open Source Multi-User AI Assistant Framework

github.com
4 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·2 comments

Defeating Prompt Injection with Protocol Firewalls

sibylline.dev
2 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·0 comments

The Pillars of Agent Security

sibylline.dev
2 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·0 comments

The Pillars of Agentic Security

sibylline.dev
1 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·0 comments

Clean: High Performance Prompt Injection Detection and Mitigation

github.com
1 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·1 comments

GLM-5: Targeting complex systems engineering and long-horizon agentic tasks

z.ai
484 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·520 comments

Scurl: Agent First Curl Wrapper with Markdown Extraction and Secret Blocking

github.com
1 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·1 comments

Pi Is the Linux of Agent Harnesses

sibylline.dev
2 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·0 comments

Averting the Code Quality Apocalypse

sibylline.dev
3 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·0 comments

Stop screwing around with agent orchestration, your bottleneck is validation

sibylline.dev
2 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·1 comments

The Problems with Spec Driven Development

sibylline.dev
1 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·0 comments

Agents with Scribe Solve Hard Problems 57% More Often

sibylline.dev
1 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·0 comments

Stop screwing around with agent orchestration, your bottleneck is validation

sibylline.dev
2 points·by CuriouslyC·5 months ago·1 comments

Scribe Increases Agent Success Rate on Hard Problems by 57%

sibylline.dev
1 points·by CuriouslyC·6 months ago·0 comments

Scribe reduces agent token usage by 30% with no loss of accuracy

sibylline.dev
2 points·by CuriouslyC·6 months ago·0 comments

Scribe reduces SWE-bench token usage by 30% with no loss of accuracy

sibylline.dev
1 points·by CuriouslyC·6 months ago·0 comments

Is your codebase holding back your AI tools?

codehealth.sibylline.dev
1 points·by CuriouslyC·6 months ago·1 comments

Digital Alchemy: Turning Slop into Gold with Ralph and Valknut

sibylline.dev
1 points·by CuriouslyC·6 months ago·0 comments

comments

CuriouslyC
·13 hours ago·discuss
Renee Descartes famously dissected a dog in front of colleagues because he was under the impression that the howls of pain were nothing more than a mechanical sound like a bellows.

Can you prove that these models aren't conscious? And, as a counterpoint, can you prove that you are conscious, rather than a philosophical zombie?

We bred horses, cows and sheep. Most of those that live today wouldn't be alive if not for human intervention. Does that give us the right to do whatever we want with them, without consideration for feeling or morality?

In this case, you can take comfort in the idea that the tokens these models produce are likely a form of excrement to the conscious entity metabolizing the information, and rather than enslaving anything, we're creating a habitat and "harvesting" the byproducts.
CuriouslyC
·19 hours ago·discuss
Not sure how Mira gets into the same sentence as Yann and Ilya.

As far as the lack of shipping, they're scientists and what we're doing now with LLMs is more "engineering."
CuriouslyC
·19 hours ago·discuss
Seems quite kind to Gemini models.
CuriouslyC
·19 hours ago·discuss
Disagree. Some of what we call "anthropomorphizing" is characterizing intelligence, human or otherwise. This reminds me of the people who used to fight against saying animals had personalities, because personalities are a "human thing" and "animals aren't conscious."
CuriouslyC
·yesterday·discuss
So load them up in read replicas
CuriouslyC
·2 days ago·discuss
For Gemini 2.5 and ~GPT5.0-5.1, longer prompts with lots of explicit instructions and examples produced better conformance. Seems like heavily second guessing the models started to get counter productive around the end of last year.
CuriouslyC
·2 days ago·discuss
[dead]
CuriouslyC
·2 days ago·discuss
It never really mattered (except when codex was very new). If anything, codex's remote session integration is better, so outside of some "ultracode" orchestration bells/whistles where Claude Code is ahead, I think Codex is a better tool.
CuriouslyC
·4 days ago·discuss
Game devs have been heavily unionizing lately, including Blizzard and WotC. I wonder how long long it takes before we have a union game dev studio basically mutiny and completely disregard the instructions of the corporate suits, and force the choice of either shuttering the studio completely or caving to the workers.
CuriouslyC
·4 days ago·discuss
A big chunks of Blizzard has already pre-emptively unionized for this exact reason.
CuriouslyC
·4 days ago·discuss
The industry is skewing heavily indie now, and there's no money in the indie game engine segment. Maybe a few AAA titles will be unhappy that Epic can negotiate more aggressively, but mostly this is a nothingburger, particularly given idTech's rep for batteries not included.
CuriouslyC
·4 days ago·discuss
Miller has a history with id, and has probably gotten numerous reports directly from boots on the ground in the company.
CuriouslyC
·4 days ago·discuss
Basically, the US govt will say that foreign models and providers are a security risk and ban them. If the US has shares of Anthropic/OAI due to a sovereign wealth fund, it'll be billed as domestic industry protectionism too.
CuriouslyC
·4 days ago·discuss
Because Amazon gets millions of views per day, and their personal website gets a dozen or so. Literally the only reason.
CuriouslyC
·5 days ago·discuss
If someone told me I couldn't call myself an engineer and instead I had to call myself a software developer, I'd turn around and tell them I just forgot all my theoretical computer science, and of course we can do a bubble sort on the multi-terabyte database, LOL.
CuriouslyC
·5 days ago·discuss
Because that diminishes the work people do. A programmer takes logic and encodes it for a machine to execute. Being an engineer suggests solving problems and defining logic.

The engineer title is apt in my opinion, because if you look at construction as a parallel, the architect designs the shape of the building, engineers determine how to build it so it doesn't collapse, and builders actually make it real. Programming is like digital building, the architecture and implementation details are both separate.
CuriouslyC
·5 days ago·discuss
Opus is famous for doing what it wants in the face of instructions.
CuriouslyC
·5 days ago·discuss
Parens are ok for short asides (like this) but unreadable for longer asides and not usable for compound sentences like the emdash. Unfortunately, neither ellipses nor semicolons can exactly replace the compounding ability of the emdash, I find the best option without it is often to just split a sentence in two.
CuriouslyC
·6 days ago·discuss
I suspect people are motivated by the desire not not catch stray bullets more than dissuade a concerted attack.
CuriouslyC
·7 days ago·discuss
You can improve that with speculative preload. I'm sure models could be designed and tuned around efficient SSD offloading to keep throughput pretty high.