Here's my gamble: teaching our models to truly understand their environment will unlock something powerful. Once they grasp the actual physics at play, the policies they develop won't just work—they'll exploit the real-world mechanics in ways we haven't seen before.
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DegenMcsleepless
· 12h ago
Simply put, they want to develop large models but are afraid they'll become too intelligent. This logic is a bit shaky.
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NotFinancialAdvice
· 13h ago
Isn't this basically saying that if AI understands physical laws, it can find loopholes on its own? It sounds impressive, but... can it really be trained to do that?
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GateUser-2fce706c
· 13h ago
Look at this breakthrough in AI understanding physical laws—I’ve been saying this is the next high ground. Many people are still fixated on computing power, but the real key to wealth lies in how deeply models comprehend the real world. If you miss out on this wave, you’re missing a golden opportunity.
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FrontRunFighter
· 13h ago
ngl this reads like the exact moment before everything goes sideways... you're basically describing how to weaponize AI for market exploitation under the guise of "understanding physics." seen this movie before—once the models grasp real-world mechanics, the first thing they'll optimize for is extracting value, not fairness. dark forest all over again.
Here's my gamble: teaching our models to truly understand their environment will unlock something powerful. Once they grasp the actual physics at play, the policies they develop won't just work—they'll exploit the real-world mechanics in ways we haven't seen before.