Ted Mielczarek

@tedmielczarek
707 Followers
300 Following
7.4K Posts

> The hyperscalers have already outspent the most famous US megaprojects

https://x.com/finmoorhouse/status/2044933442236776794/photo/1

this looks sustainable, datacenters are a one-time cost... right?!?

Some good news.
“A vaccine during pregnancy which protects newborns against nasty chest infections (RSV) is cutting hospital admissions of babies by more than 80%, UK health officials say.”
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4g84nxwz8wo
Pregnancy vaccine reduces baby hospital admissions for RSV by 80%

A study confirms the vaccine gives excellent protection for babies against life-threatening chest infections.

BBC News

A few notes about the massive hype surrounding Claude Mythos:

The old hype strategy of 'we made a thing and it's too dangerous to release' has been done since GPT-2. Anyone who still falls for it should not be trusted to have sensible opinions on any subject.

Even their public (cherry picked to look impressive) numbers for the cost per vulnerability are high. The problem with static analysis of any kind is that the false positive rates are high. Dynamic analysis can be sound but not complete, static analysis can be complete but not sound. That's the tradeoff. Coverity is free for open source projects and finds large numbers of things that might be bugs, including a lot that really are. Very few projects have the resources to triage all of these. If the money spent on Mythos had been invested in triaging the reports from existing tools, it would have done a lot more good for the ecosystem.

I recently received a 'comprehensive code audit' on one of my projects from an Anthropic user. Of the top ten bugs it reported, only one was important to fix (and should have been caught in code review, but was 15-year-old code from back when I was the only contributor and so there was no code review). Of the rest, a small number were technically bugs but were almost impossible to trigger (even deliberately). Half were false positives and two were not bugs and came with proposed 'fixes' that would have introduced performance regressions on performance-critical paths. But all of them looked plausible. And, unless you understood the environment in which the code runs and the things for which it's optimised very well, I can well imaging you'd just deploy those 'fixes' and wonder why performance was worse. Possibly Mythos is orders of magnitude better, but I doubt it.

This mirrors what we've seen with the public Mythos disclosures. One, for example, was complaining about a missing bounds check, yet every caller of the function did the bounds check and so introducing it just cost performance and didn't fix a bug. And, once again, remember that this is from the cherry-picked list that Anthropic chose to make their tool look good.

I don't doubt that LLMs can find some bugs other tools don't find, but that isn't new in the industry. Coverity, when it launched, found a lot of bugs nothing else found. When fuzzing became cheap and easy, it found a load of bugs. Valgrind and address sanitiser both caused spikes in bug discovery when they were released and deployed for the first time.

The one thing where Mythos is better than existing static analysers is that it can (if you burn enough money) generate test cases that trigger the bug. This is possible and cheaper with guided fuzzing but no one does it because burning 10% of the money that Mythos would cost is too expensive for most projects.

The source code for Claude Code was leaked a couple of weeks ago. It is staggeringly bad. I have never seen such low-quality code in production before. It contained things I'd have failed a first-year undergrad for writing. And, apparently, most of this is written with Claude Code itself.

But the most relevant part is that it contained three critical command-injection vulnerabilities.

These are the kind of things that static analysis should be catching. And, apparently at least one of the following is true:

  • Mythos didn't catch them.
  • Mythos doesn't work well enough for Anthropic to bother using it on their own code.
  • Mythos did catch them but the false-positive rate is so high that no one was able to find the important bugs in the flood of useless ones.

TL;DR: If you're willing to spend half as much money Mythos costs to operate, you can probably do a lot better with existing tools.

Anthropic Claude Code Leak Reveals Critical Command Injection Vulnerabilities

Anthropic's Claude Code CLI contains three critical command injection vulnerabilities that allow attackers to execute arbitrary code and exfiltrate cloud credentials via environment variables, file paths, and authentication helpers. These flaws bypass the tool's internal sandbox and are particularly dangerous in CI/CD environments where trust dialogs are disabled.

BeyondMachines

The one straightforward and extremely well-documented fact about kid's safety on the internet:

The *overwhelming* majority of child sexual predators, in the high 90s percent-wise, are right in your community. They're not on the Internet. They're at your church, your school, your kid's clubs, your sports activities, and -- sadly -- your family gatherings.

Whatever else age verification is, it's not got anything to do with protecting children.

If politicians gave a shit about children, the schools would feature:

- HVAC systems that cleaned viruses out of the air
- at least two child psychologists on staff
- age-appropriate lessons to help children identify abuse
- funding for well-paid staff in numbers sufficient for a buddy system to reduce the chances of abuse
- arts education and after-school clubs to provide third spaces for kids
- massive, safe playgrounds
- protected biking and walking infrastructure from the school to residential neighborhoods

Instead we get “parents’ rights”, funding cuts, book bans, and car-centric infrastructure that kills pedestrians and bikers.

If social media is bad for kids, THEY NEED ALTERNATIVES.

the apple watch activity rings are like “what if sisyphus’s rock had a cool app, with like, animations and stuff”
This video is one long string of flag-based jokes. It's hilarious and it doesn't let up for the entire minute and a half: https://www.tnktok.com/@softglowonlyinyour/video/7628196421749034253
TikTok by @softglowonlyinyour

fxTikTok - Embed with s/i/n
Standing outside the house yelling "I AM AN AI COMPANY NOW" and waiting for pallet loads of dollar bills to fall from the sky
Age verification is a deliberate attack on system sovereignty, both for individuals and countries. There’s no “age verifcation”, there is only “identity verification that includes age”, and the system doing that verification is not just a privacy-invasive user tracking system but a remotely controlled off switch for anyone of any age.
This is NOT a formal job posting, just testing waters. I have a year of post-doc money. Esp. int'd in formal methods + applied cogsci + diagramming. If you do work tied to my research, reach out (see my page). Must have US work auth, sorry. Please feel free to share/boost!