Pages

Sunday, November 19, 2023

Sam Altman in the perfect storm of dollar thieve (1971-) US desperate attacks on the Chinese "bailiff" who challenges US dollar hegemony through superior technology.

Elon Musk's idea with OpenAI was that it would be free. But the board let him down when he left, and OpenAI married* Microsoft.

* Altman seems to honestly have tried to eat the cake while keeping it. And it's understandable as a (difficult) balancing act between development resources and integrity. However, in the background also loomed US hostile competition with China. And US doesn't want to share anything with China because US wants to keep its stolen dollar hegemony so to be able to continue being the world dictator. This is why the Chinese policy towards a multi-polar world order is objected by US, which therefore has to smear China no matter what China is or does!

Update: It seems possible that OpenAI under Altman's "candid" leadership used data from a commercial branch of the Chinese CIA (copying CIA's similar system of VC firms) called D2 to train its AI models, including Chat GPT-4. The group has the most extensive crawling/indexing/scanning capacity in the world, some 10x more than Google's Alphabet. Open AI could thereby get access to vast quantities of data for training after running out of resources of its own. The Chinese government then told the Biden administration, and an NSA investigation allegedly confirmed it. Don't be surprised if the legal mill starts grinding - for Google, which is trying to catch up and satisfying US government.

However, Google - which, btw, has an incredibly hard time "finding" 'peter klevius' despite thousands of pictures and blog posts and world leading science over 20 years on Google's own Blogger - has via Eric Schmidt and others become the dollar embezzler (1971-) "deep state" US perhaps main weapon in US criminal attacks on China. So Google may well have done a dirty coup d'état and arranged for Sam Altman (the guy who created Loopt in 2005, which was a much worse version of Peter Klevius documented* app from 2003 that he unfortunately never got to launch) to be fired - so that Google could then take over him or get a hold on OpenAI. The resignation was announced via Google Meet - in a company sponsored by Microsoft! 

* 2003 I described in detail how the app would work with available technology, for people I trusted, and whom I now have asked them (without having said anything about the technical content of the app since 2003) they easily remeber all the essentials - probably because it was so intuitively simple yet extremely powerful. Peter Klevius came up with the idea when sitting bored on a ferry restaurant and thinking how to have someone to chat with who would somehow synchronize in interest. So the app used GPS to easily target the ferry. The mobil lockscreen would the have a "social" color pattern, showing the interest profile. When passers by saw that it roughly matched themselves, they could go deeper by visiting the app website to get more info and if still interested could "knock" on the phone on the ferry and showing their own profile and asking if it would be ok to meet. And of course this wouldn't have been limitedf to ferry like situations, but truly global (compare e.g. facebook which was created 2004). The idea was immediately obvious for Peter Klevius when he got his first rudimentary "smartphone" with functioning bigger color display and OS.  

Is it really just a coincidence that the Altman story happens almost immediately after the Chinese analog AI chip breakthrough?!


The dollar embezzler (1971-) U.S. is not only a sore loser against China, but a desperate and dangerous one. And it didn't get any better when China now has made the biggest breakthrough in AI technology ever, i.e. as first in the world created a super fast and energy efficient functioning analog chip that uses photons instead of electrons.

Guys like Musk (and others) is our real hope for a better OpenWorld together with a better behaving US, while utilizing the power of Chinese tech and culture.


No comments:

Post a Comment