Vincent Ginis
@vincentginis.bsky.social
Associate professor @VUBrussel // Visiting scholar @Harvard.edu
// Previously @jongeacademie.bsky.social // ♡ physics, math, AI, open science // Step 1: Find the pattern. Step 2: Follow the pattern. Step 3: Realize the pattern is following you.
// Previously @jongeacademie.bsky.social // ♡ physics, math, AI, open science // Step 1: Find the pattern. Step 2: Follow the pattern. Step 3: Realize the pattern is following you.
Large Language Diffusion Models
February 18, 2025 at 12:37 PM
Large Language Diffusion Models
Toen Don’t look up uitkwam bedacht ik hoe de metafoor tot vervelens toe misbruikt zou worden in opiniestukken. Ik keek neer op mijn toekomstige zelf.
Is er nog íémand bekommerd om de gevaren van AI? www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20250...
Is er nog íémand bekommerd om de gevaren van AI? www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20250...
Is er nog íémand bekommerd om de gevaren van AI?
Op de AI-veiligheidconferentie was niemand bezig met de gevaren van AI. Alles was pr en machtsstrijd. Het doet Vincent Ginis denken aan de film Don’t look up.
www.standaard.be
February 16, 2025 at 4:05 PM
Toen Don’t look up uitkwam bedacht ik hoe de metafoor tot vervelens toe misbruikt zou worden in opiniestukken. Ik keek neer op mijn toekomstige zelf.
Is er nog íémand bekommerd om de gevaren van AI? www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20250...
Is er nog íémand bekommerd om de gevaren van AI? www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20250...
If humanity goes down, let it at least be with poetry—not with 'OpenAI o5 (high),' but with a name the people chose. Something dignified. Something noble.
Like Chatty McChatface.
Like Chatty McChatface.
February 4, 2025 at 1:09 PM
If humanity goes down, let it at least be with poetry—not with 'OpenAI o5 (high),' but with a name the people chose. Something dignified. Something noble.
Like Chatty McChatface.
Like Chatty McChatface.
🤲
Extraordinary. We are stardust.
The asteroid Bennu contain all 5 of the nucleobases that form DNA and RNA on Earth and 14 of the 20 amino acids found in living organisms (though Bennu contains equal amounts of these structures and their right-handed counterparts). www.nature.com/articles/s41...
The asteroid Bennu contain all 5 of the nucleobases that form DNA and RNA on Earth and 14 of the 20 amino acids found in living organisms (though Bennu contains equal amounts of these structures and their right-handed counterparts). www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Abundant ammonia and nitrogen-rich soluble organic matter in samples from asteroid (101955) Bennu - Nature Astronomy
Rocks and dust from the asteroid Bennu contain some of the molecular building blocks of life on Earth, such as amino acids and nucleobases. They also carry ammonia that formed billions of years ago in...
www.nature.com
February 1, 2025 at 5:29 PM
🤲
Reposted by Vincent Ginis
The people who are not particularly surprised by recent developments in AI are by and large saying AGI could be soon. The people confidently saying AGI won’t be soon are the same people who kept being very surprised by advancements over the past years.
January 31, 2025 at 5:30 PM
The people who are not particularly surprised by recent developments in AI are by and large saying AGI could be soon. The people confidently saying AGI won’t be soon are the same people who kept being very surprised by advancements over the past years.
Academics worldwide worked to create questions no state-of-the-art AI could answer in Humanity's Last Exam.
But the real story isn’t just the questions that got in—it’s the ones that didn’t. Crafting problems that truly push AI is getting harder, and that says a lot about where we are.
But the real story isn’t just the questions that got in—it’s the ones that didn’t. Crafting problems that truly push AI is getting harder, and that says a lot about where we are.
Hoe gaan we om met technologie die ons intellectueel voorbijstreeft?
Onderzoekers probeerden vragen te bedenken die AI niet kan beantwoorden. Viel dat even tegen. AI houdt ons een spiegel voor.
www.standaard.be
January 28, 2025 at 10:39 PM
Academics worldwide worked to create questions no state-of-the-art AI could answer in Humanity's Last Exam.
But the real story isn’t just the questions that got in—it’s the ones that didn’t. Crafting problems that truly push AI is getting harder, and that says a lot about where we are.
But the real story isn’t just the questions that got in—it’s the ones that didn’t. Crafting problems that truly push AI is getting harder, and that says a lot about where we are.
It is 2025, and I vaguely remember the time when it was still possible to come up with questions that could baffle state-of-the-art LLMs.
Of course, I’m joking. I don’t really remember.
Of course, I’m joking. I don’t really remember.
When A.I. Passes This Test, Look Out
The creators of a new test called “Humanity’s Last Exam” argue we may soon lose the ability to create tests hard enough for A.I. models.
www.nytimes.com
January 25, 2025 at 4:25 PM
It is 2025, and I vaguely remember the time when it was still possible to come up with questions that could baffle state-of-the-art LLMs.
Of course, I’m joking. I don’t really remember.
Of course, I’m joking. I don’t really remember.