Browse Comments — LLM coded
Close reading of the corpus at each pipeline stage: raw → clean → relevant → coded.
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Incredible progress, especially on agentic systems. Building production GenAI platforms in regulated environments taught me that capability is only half the problem. The harder challenge is governance around what agents actually do: authorization, grounding, audit trails, and the ability to intervene mid-execution. The SynthID adoption is also quietly the most important announcement here. Provenance becoming a cross-industry standard before widespread harm occurs is genuinely rare in tech history. The foothills of the singularity is a striking framing, and what gives me confidence is that the people building at the frontier are treating safety as foundational, not an afterthought.
The next phase of AI strategy and implementation will be discerning where to use AI and where to go back to pure programming to drive automation. Not using AI to solve all use cases will help with the environmental footprint.
Rebecca Human AI Trust Leader Thank you for always adding value apologies I am just seeing now.
Matthew Kilkenny Well, it looks well to me as if Universities are being surpassed by their predecessor. Looking forward to learn more about Ethical AI Now.
It’s striking how much the concerns of the Church, AI designers, builders, and users share common roots and deep, overlapping worries. Why, then, is there such a strong push today to frame this extraordinary human creation as dangerous? In many faith traditions, we’re reminded that God placed humanity as stewards and vicegerents on Earth, granting us the profound right to pioneer bold innovations and unique creativity. That gift should be guided by wisdom, not paralyzed by fear. #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #FaithAndTech #Ethics #Innovation #HumanCreativity #Stewardship #ResponsibleAI #TechEthics
This is one of the most important conversations in AI today because it moves beyond "What can AI do now?" to "What happens if AI begins accelerating its own development?" Recursive self-improvement remains speculative, but the pace of progress in autonomous coding, research assistance, and long-horizon task completion is raising legitimate questions about governance and preparedness. The challenge is balancing two realities at once: the enormous potential for breakthroughs in science, medicine, and productivity, and the need for robust oversight, transparency, and international coordination as capabilities advance. From my experience, AI4Laymans.com and Rohvaa.com helped me understand that meaningful AI literacy isn't just about learning how to use today's tools it is also about developing the critical thinking needed to engage thoughtfully with the societal and ethical questions that increasingly powerful AI systems will bring.
Shawn Bullock, which is why I keep saying, Science and Philosophy can only take us so far: they always eventually collapse into the sacred discipline of Theology. That is THE singularity, and that is a whole new ballgame for an LLM: it cannot go there; WE created it, and now we try to align it with the human soul. The Popes open letter to the world gives us all a roadmap to take very seriously.