8 comments

  • siliconc0w 40 minutes ago
    A few things:

    0) big companies already are very comfortable using contracts to trust other people with their data. Maybe if they're inflexible on the 30-day requirement for fable some orgs will opt out but by-and-large it's already happening and it's not a blocker.

    1) Cost will be a blocker. The level of token spend is untenable and the pareto curve is flattening. Most orgs are going to default to either using a distilled model from China or a distilled model from the model companies (e.g, Sonnet 5). It'd behoove Claude/OpenAI to offer a model router before another vendor wins that area.

    2) Karp is selling his book. No one knows or cares what an 'ontology' is. From what I can tell, company's product is a tool that helps governments bomb people.

  • mips_avatar 38 minutes ago
    The problem is nobody can build a real business on models they don't control. Cursor focused on making a great AI coding experience but they didn't control Claude and got destroyed once Anthropic started explicitly training Claude to be better at using Claude code. And then there's the cost front, a good model is soon going to be served at 90+% margin, meaning the model makers have a ton of flexibility in how they choose to subsidize their first party products. Cursor had to eat the full API price of Claude while Anthropic could sell Claude Code at a massive subsidy. If you're an AI product then the model product synthesis is your product, and you don't get any of that from a proprietary closed model.
  • ashleyn 43 minutes ago
    Is there active research in improving the density of models i.e. higher performance at lower parameter counts? Is this something that's even theoretically possible to do with the architecture?

    I feel like I can have a much better model for how I can expect the cost of LLMs to change over the next few years. "Build more datacenters" reeks of "just one more lane bro" and because of Jevons paradox I'm skeptical it will bring costs down. Could ASICs and custom processors (ala Groq) move the needle here at all if the model density can't be improved?

  • ckemere 44 minutes ago
    Voice of American *capitalists* used to the idea of investing capital to generate rent. Maybe AI can rebalance the market of capital and individual labor.
    • leetrout 33 minutes ago
      I can't decide if in my life span we did anything beyond the internet to actually make life better as a primary driver of economic growth. it feels like _everything_ is just rent seeking now.

      I surprised myself by reading some content without knowing where it came from and it had a position that owning more than one home is hoarding. It dug into the relationship of landlords and buildings providing apartment homes vs single family homes. I'm not going into the whole property is theft part of it but it really struck a chord with me. I have a personal friend who constantly goes on about how great renting properties is and how much money his family makes and it really smacked me in the face how it really shouldn't "be this way".

      anyways... we feel this rent seeking everyday with the death-by-a-thousand-papaer-cuts that is SaaS and subscription revenue.

      i'm getting tired as i get older and i'm not sure how to make the most of the next ~half of my career and life.

  • AndrewDucker 9 minutes ago
    Archive is giving a 500 error. Anyone got another paywall bypass?
  • lazide 49 minutes ago
    All I can say is, ‘fuck these people’.

    No one is actually this stupid.

    • mingus88 37 minutes ago
      You’re right. These are not stupid people. They are likely very out of touch, but they are not stupid. They know exactly what they are doing and they are good at it.

      Often times, a stupid take is useful to manipulate people or change the discourse. We argue about how dumb the take is and get distracted about what really matters.

      It’s the same strategy that causes working people to fight each other and ignore the real enemy.