While there have been many sober warnings about AI and recursive self-improvement, Arianna Huffington argues that it is a ...
People use their bodies—not just their brains—to think. So the MIT Project on Embodied Education brings movement to the ...
Anthropic published an interesting blog post titled "When AI Builds Itself." a couple of days ago, and if you work in financial services and haven't read it, stop what you're doing. The piece ...
Buy: Anthropic exposure via its likely IPO/secondary path (e.g., IPO allocation or liquid proxy like AI-safety/compute beneficiaries). Rationale: Anthropic is pushing “slow/pause” policy while still ...
Recursion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:RXRX) is one of the Best Penny Stocks with Huge Upside Potential. On May 14, Morgan Stanley raised the price target on Recursion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Richard Socher's new $650 million startup wants to build an AI that can research and improve itself indefinitely — and he insists it will actually ship products.
Recursive self-improvement is not a future event. In practical form, it has already begun. The "George Jetson Button" is the approval ritual humans perform while AI systems do more of the actual work.
There was a time in the late 2000s and early 2010s when seeing a “Sign in with Google” option on a new website or service was a sign of relief for me. I didn’t need to create a new username and ...
I was 11 years old when I learned that I talk funny. A new teacher who didn’t share my Boston accent was surprised by the way I said “kindergarten.” She mockingly repeated my pronunciation back to me: ...
Has anyone ever poked fun at the way you talk, how you pronounce a word or phrase? For Philadelphians, it might be “wooder” “caw-fee” “bee-yoo-dee-full” or “jeet?” But all of us have some kind of ...
In “Why Do We Exist?” Hakeem Oluseyi explores how life may have emerged to move energy through matter—and why Earth is the perfect setting. The following is an excerpt from “Why Do We Exist?: The Nine ...