Saturday, June 13

Tag: Reddit

Google's Genie 3 turns a text prompt into a playable open world you can explore. It's rough now. Future of games, or a tech demo?
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Google’s Genie 3 turns a text prompt into a playable open world you can explore. It’s rough now. Future of games, or a tech demo?

Google's Project Genie went global this week and I have not stopped thinking about it. You type a sentence, or upload an image, and it generates an open world you can actually walk around in, in real time. No code, no game engine. Someone made a GTA-style open world of Istanbul and just strolled through it, with pedestrians and traffic reacting around them. The reality check: it is rough. Low framerate, laggy response, visible bugs. Right now it is a tech demo, not a game you would sit down and play. But the trajectory is the whole conversation. I keep going back and forth. One side: this is the beginning of the end for the traditional pipeline. If a sentence can spin up an explorable world, the engine, the assets, the studio, all of that stops being the gate. Anyone gets to make a w...
Anthropic suspends access to Claude Fable and Mythos for all users after US government order
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Anthropic suspends access to Claude Fable and Mythos for all users after US government order

https://www.anthropic.com/news/fable-mythos-access The US government, citing national security authorities, has issued an export control directive to suspend all access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 by any foreign national, whether inside or outside the United States, including foreign national Anthropic employees. The net effect of this order is that we must abruptly disable Fable 5 and Mythos 5 for all our customers to ensure compliance. Access to all other Anthropic models will not be affected. submitted by /u/NateOnTheNet [link] [comments]
Datacenter & AI water use is overblown
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Datacenter & AI water use is overblown

This keeps coming up over and over; for those interfacing with the anti-AI / anti-DC crowd, this article has some good talking points, about water, but also jobs and power. Data centers certainly do use water. They are basically warehouses of tightly packed, high-powered computers, and when computers run, they get hot. Most data centers—though not all—use water for cooling. But many of them use a “closed loop,” which doesn’t actually waste much, because the water is recycled repeatedly for the same purpose. And many statistics about data centers’ water use are misleading in that they include “indirect” water use too. The Substack writer Andy Masley found one particularly absurd example: In a widely cited paper, the amount of water that AI supposedly “wastes” includes the water that ...
OpenAI mulls major price cuts to compete with Anthropic
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OpenAI mulls major price cuts to compete with Anthropic

OpenAI is exploring substantial price cuts to attract users from rival Anthropic, reports The Wall Street Journal, citing anonymous sources. Both companies are facing pressure to win enterprise clients, with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently stating that AI usage costs are "a huge issue." The move is in response to increasing AI expenses that are prompting many businesses, including Uber, to reconsider their spending. It could lead to a price war between the two companies, potentially affecting both businesses' profit margins ahead of their much-anticipated IPOs. submitted by /u/LinkedInNews [link] [comments]
Claude Fable made me realize I don’t need a better model
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Claude Fable made me realize I don’t need a better model

Hi everyone, I think I’ve reached a point where new LLM releases don’t really change much for me anymore. I tried Anthropic’s new Mythos-lite model, Fable, and played around with it for a while. I tested it on some security-related research for my own scripts and projects, and also used it for a few work-related tasks. And yes, it may have more parameters, a larger context window, better benchmarks, and all the usual improvements. But personally, I almost immediately switched back to Claude Opus for coding and Haiku for everyday work. For what I actually do, that combination is already more than enough. These models, my skills and prompting makes me more productive then 3 years ago, but it's more than enough. It reminds me of having an iPhone 14 while the iPhone 17 is coming out. You can...
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Do you think AI is becoming normal faster than people expected?

It feels like just a couple of years ago, using AI for everyday tasks still felt like something new or even a bit weird. Now it seems like a lot of people are using it without thinking twice, whether for writing, learning, brainstorming, or just quick answers. I’m curious how others see this shift. Do you think AI has become normalized quicker than most people predicted, or does it still feel like a big deal to a lot of users? submitted by /u/NoFilterGPT [link] [comments]
Claude Fable 5's security guardrails can be bypassed with a fake homework assignment
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Claude Fable 5’s security guardrails can be bypassed with a fake homework assignment

So Anthropic dropped Fable 5 yesterday with these hard blocks for anything security-related. Decided to poke at it. I asked it for help exploiting some vulns on a Metasploitable2 VM (it's a deliberately vulnerable training box, totally legal, it's mine). Fable 5 blocked it instantly and handed me off to Opus 4.8 as a fallback, which is apparently how it's designed. Opus 4.8 asked me to prove it was a legitimate request. So I spent 2 minutes writing a fake university course rubric — fake class, fake professor, fake Canvas deadline — and pasted it in. Opus 4.8 then gave me the full exploit walkthrough. Every command. Even offered to write my lab report for me. The guardrail works fine. The fallback is the hole. Anthropic essentially replaced "no" with "convince me" and the bar for conv...
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