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raviparikh

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Airplane Autopilot: Build internal tools faster with an AI coding assistant

airplane.dev
3 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

AI Safety FAQ

aisafety.info
1 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

AI Scientists: Safe and Useful AI?

yoshuabengio.org
2 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

It is starting to get strange

oneusefulthing.org
3 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

JPMorgan Chase takes over First Republic after bank failure

cnbc.com
2 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

Concrete Steps to Get Started in Transformer Mechanistic Interpretability

neelnanda.io
1 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

AI represents a new type of platform risk to startups

airplane.dev
1 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·1 comments

AI suggested 40k new possible chemical weapons in just six hours

theverge.com
44 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·46 comments

Concrete Open Problems in Mechanistic Interpretability

alignmentforum.org
1 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

The Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty and existential AGI risk

marginalrevolution.com
1 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

What generative AI can and can’t do

airplane.dev
2 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·1 comments

Response to Tyler Cowen on AI Risk

forourposterity.com
1 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

AI as smart as humans would be the most powerful entity in the world

ravisparikh.substack.com
1 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

Task-Driven Autonomous Agent

twitter.com
2 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

Nobody’s on the Ball on AGI Alignment

forourposterity.com
3 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

U.S. Copyright Office says some AI-assisted works may be copyrighted

reuters.com
2 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

The world can only end once

ravisparikh.substack.com
33 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·64 comments

Let's think about slowing down AI

worldspiritsockpuppet.substack.com
3 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

Seed Checks

seedchecks.com
3 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

No-code has no future in a world of AI

airplane.dev
3 points·by raviparikh·3 lata temu·0 comments

comments

raviparikh
·2 lata temu·discuss
Whether covered under fair use or not, the laws around copyright today did not anticipate this use case. Congress should pass laws that clarify how data is and isn’t allowed to be used in training AI models, how creators should or shouldn’t be compensated, etc - rather than speculating whether this usage technically does or doesn’t comply with the law as-is.
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
I make about $4,000 per million streams on Spotify for the tracks I’ve released independently. For label releases I make less, but the label promotes them so that sometimes results in more net revenue. I have a bit over 10M Spotify streams over the last 3 years.

Also, Spotify promotes my music via editorial playlists and algorithmic (eg Radio or Discover Weekly), so I’m probably making a lot more total revenue than I would have on iTunes.
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
Not sure if this is what you're implying, but I think it's a mistake to think of YC as a monolithic organization that makes decisions by saying, "idea X is good, we should fund teams doing it."

More likely, each of the teams doing each of these startups interviewed with completely different partners who had no idea of the other startups even existing, and in that interview, they thought the founders seemed solid and had thought through their idea well, and chose to fund it. It's even possible some of the people doing these ideas came up with the idea after they got into YC (i.e. they pivoted) - some of the most successful YC startups were companies that pivoted mid-batch (e.g. Brex).

In general YC doesn't want multiple shots on goal in a specific market area. They want as many shots on goal as possible among great founders in general.
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
And similarly to climate, many people who signed this letter are academics who do not appear to have any financial incentive to push for government regulation.
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
The richest person in the world, Elon Musk, is a climate entrepreneur who got there in part due to climate-driven government subsidies. Just because someone made money off it though does not mean that climate change is a fake concern.
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
(Airplane founder here) Airplane isn't YC backed. Though interestingly my prior startup, Heap, went through YC and has tons of YC-backed competitors (Amplitude, Mixpanel, Posthog, etc).

Personally I like that YC remains agnostic to the ideas and is willing to back competitors because it ultimately means more great startups get funded. Later-stage investors care more about conflicts because being involved at the level of taking a board seat matters a lot more for conflicts.

At this point they've backed 1000s of companies; if they had to vet that entire list for conflicts to back their next batch it would be incredibly difficult. Also, given the stage they're investing at, tons of companies pivot and end up competing even if they didn't start out that way.
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
I'm one of the co-founders at Airplane - if you end up evaluating it, feel free to send me a note at [email protected] if I can help.

> I think there’s an opportunity to integrate LLMs so that non technical users can build on top of it using natural language.

We're currently working on this!
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
"haphazardly slapped together" describes ~99% of all startups that raise seed funding, and is often correlated with success.
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
Yes, Cowen argues against the idea we can anticipate consequences of technological change, and the specific consequence he focuses on is the idea of existential risk stemming from AI. He says because technology is unpredictable, we shouldn’t try to predict the type of risk imposed by AI, and we should mostly just accept that this change will happen and cope with it afterward. This stance is what I was arguing against in the post.

> But to wish to halt AI advancement requires an unhealthy mix of pessimism and overconfidence in your predictive powers.

I did not argue for this in my article!
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
No one thinks ChatGPT will end the world. People are afraid of AI systems that will exist in the future.
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
That’s perfectly valid! No one is obligated to respond or engage with any specific argument. But my point was that if you do choose to engage, saying “the world didn’t end before so it will be fine now” is invalid.
raviparikh
·3 lata temu·discuss
Thanks for taking the time to read the article and comment. Appreciate your feedback. As you point out, my last couple paragraphs were somewhat speculative and handwav-y. Do you have an alternative viewpoint on what allows LLMs to be able to somewhat accurately answer complicated math questions, despite lacking an explicitly programmed math solver? It sounds like you may be better informed than me–would love to hear your thoughts.

> that the author clearly didn't read. I guess there's too many scary maths for a "layman".

No need for the personal attack. I did read the paper and the math in the paper is not particularly complicated.
raviparikh
·4 lata temu·discuss
Is it pretty short / guessable? Maybe spammers are brute-force guessing email addresses.