Almanac
← Events
5Import AI (Jack Clark)·1mo ago

Import AI 450: China's electronic warfare model; traumatized LLMs; and a scaling law for cyberattacks

Import AI issue 450 covers three distinct AI/ML topics: a Chinese electronic warfare language model, research on psychological trauma-like behaviors in LLMs, and a proposed scaling law governing AI capabilities in cyberattack contexts. The newsletter also poses a philosophical question about how timeless minds (persistent AI agents) might relate to time. As a tier-2 commentary digest, it aggregates and contextualizes recent developments across safety, capability, and geopolitical AI research.

Related guides (3)

Related events (8)

4Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

Import AI 446: Nuclear LLMs; China's big AI benchmark; measurement and AI policy

Import AI issue 446 covers three main topics: the application of large language models to nuclear domains, a major new AI benchmark from China, and the intersection of AI measurement with policy. The newsletter synthesizes recent developments across frontier AI research and geopolitical AI competition. It also touches on speculative questions about AI psychology, such as whether AIs might experience jealousy. As a tier-2 commentary digest, it aggregates signals across multiple active research and policy threads.

4Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

Import AI 452: Scaling laws for cyberwar; rising tides of AI automation; and a puzzle over GDP forecasting

Import AI issue 452 covers three topics: scaling laws applied to cyberwarfare capabilities, the trajectory of AI-driven automation in the economy, and uncertainty around AI's impact on GDP forecasting. The newsletter synthesizes recent research and commentary across offensive AI capabilities, labor market disruption, and macroeconomic modeling. As a tier-2 commentary outlet, it provides a curated signal on emerging themes rather than primary research.

4Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

Import AI 444: LLM Societies, Huawei AI Kernel Development, ChipBench

Import AI issue 444 covers multiple AI/ML topics including LLM-based societies (multi-agent simulation research), Huawei's use of AI for kernel development, and ChipBench, a benchmark for evaluating AI on chip design tasks. The newsletter also touches on quantifying creativity as a research question. As a tier-2 commentary digest, it aggregates several distinct technical threads rather than reporting a single primary development.

4Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

Import AI 454: Automating alignment research; safety study of a Chinese model; HiFloat4

Import AI issue 454 covers three topics: automating alignment research (likely discussing AI-assisted or scalable oversight approaches), a safety evaluation of a Chinese AI model, and HiFloat4 (a floating-point format relevant to ML inference or training efficiency). The newsletter also raises a speculative framing question about financial markets and the singularity. As a tier-2 commentary digest, it aggregates recent developments across safety, evaluation, and infrastructure domains.

4Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

ImportAI 449: LLMs training other LLMs; 72B distributed training run; computer vision is harder than generative text

Import AI issue 449 covers several AI/ML developments including LLMs being used to train other LLMs, a 72B parameter distributed training run, and analysis of why computer vision remains harder than generative text. The newsletter also touches on potential political implications of AI progress. As a tier-2 commentary source, this aggregates and contextualizes multiple technical developments across the AI landscape.

4Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

Import AI 453: Breaking AI agents, MirrorCode, and ten views on gradual disempowerment

Import AI issue 453 covers research on adversarial attacks against AI agents, a project called MirrorCode, and ten perspectives on the concept of gradual human disempowerment by AI systems. The newsletter synthesizes recent developments across agent robustness, coding tools, and AI safety/alignment concerns. The framing question about fire as a historical singularity signals commentary on AI's civilizational significance.

4Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

Import AI 445: Timing superintelligence; AIs solve frontier math proofs; a new ML research benchmark

Import AI issue 445 covers three main topics: speculation on whether 2026 will be a pivotal year for superintelligence decision-making, AI systems solving frontier mathematics proofs, and the introduction of a new ML research benchmark. The newsletter synthesizes recent developments across capability milestones and evaluation tooling. As a tier-2 commentary source, it provides curated signal on frontier AI progress rather than primary research.

4Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

Import AI 442: Winners and losers in the AI economy; math proof automation; and industrialization of cyber espionage

Import AI issue 442 covers multiple AI/ML topics including economic winners and losers in the AI economy, advances in automated mathematical proof generation, and the use of AI in industrializing cyber espionage operations. The issue also raises the question of whether superintelligence represents a discrete phase change or a gradual capability shift. As a tier-2 newsletter digest, it synthesizes recent developments across frontier AI, safety, and applied domains.