It's bad. I believe them not to use it for training, but t means relevant data can and will be exfiltrated by US agencies or through court orders (see NY Times vs. OpenAI, where only traffic without any rentention was safe).
That's not how it works. They don't need revenue, they need addicts.
Specifically they need businesses that fired people and adapted their business to the products, so when the unsubsidized costs hit the businesses are forced to eat the true costs.
Yes they can't afford to give the products for free, but what is essentially happening with AI services is economic dumping, keep costs artificially low to get people to fire everybody, and then Jack the rates once they have Monopoly control
But the only companies firing people (and certainly not everybody) are either the companies with an AI or the investment and finance firms that stand to profit from AI. I smell hype. And no company is firing everybody because of A.I.
I agree. They need addicts, but they are high on their own supply and everyone else can see the danger in getting hooked.
That's a big problem for all of the AI companies. Most people don't find the technology compelling, accurate, or ethical enough to pay for a subscription.
Why wouldn't Anthropic just wait until people start subscribing, do some kind of marketing push, or obtain some kind of other sustainable revenue stream, before they go IPO? I wonder if they see the writing on the wall with all of this and want to cash out as quickly as possible?
The Team plan is ~125 USD / month / user. Big enterprises like Uber are paying upwards of $1500 USD / month / user. Anthropic can raise their revenue a lot more by selling to big enterprises than they can by selling more team plan seats.
how on earth a password reset API would take both email address and account id as parameters? The chat bot is fine. I bet it's the API written by AI the issue
The problem is that it's testing claims (or some people would prefer calling them "truths") without much context.
Take just one random example:
`Hostels in Kota, Rajasthan commonly use caged ceiling fans as a preventive measure against student suicides`
While `Hostels in Kota, Rajasthan commonly use caged ceiling fans` may be a verifiable facts (though I doubt if there are any statistics for verification but let's say there are), `a preventive measure against student suicides` is a claim that no one can prove that. It can just a believe at most.
Arh. Did Biden stole Thump 2nd term? Truth or fact or claim?
It's not about the tech, it's about the pool of users that use Cursor, by acquiring Cursor you get a bunch of users + subscribed and already paying pool of people instead of just rebuilding something from scratch and convincing people to change their tools with a new one
Is it about the users or the data the users generate. Pretty easy to see the day devs are replaced by the data they themselves generated. Companies are only going to get one chance to grad this data. Similar to the internet cutoff.
yeah. I have the same pain. But for your case, don’t start as a marketplace. Start as a concierge service on one route, one parcel category, and one trust model. If you can’t force the first 20 successful matches manually, the market is still too under-specified. my 2cents
It's been shockingly bad for me - for another example when asked to make a new python script building off an existing one; for some cursed reason the model choose to .read() the py files, use 100 of lines of regex to try to patch the changes in, and exec'd everything at the end...
Hate that about Claude Code. I have been adding permissions for it to do everything that makes sense to add when it comes to editing files, but way too often it will generate 20-30 line bash snippets using sed to do the edits instead, and then the whole permission system breaks down. It means I have to babysit it all the time to make sure no random permission prompts pop up.
I generally think codex is doing well until I come in with my Opus sweep to clean it up. Claude just codes closer to the way my brain works. codex is great at finding numerical stability issues though and increasingly I like that it waits for an explicit push to start working. But talking to Claude Code the way I learned to talk to codex seems to work also so I think a lot of it is just learning curve (for me).
Is it good or bad? 30 days is a long time for anything bad to happen
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