Wired Overview: Why GPT-5 Fails

Zoë Schiffer: Correct. I like what you say. Yes, basically, if you want to try courting Trump, you’ll buy one of these plans, and maybe you’ll be invited to a beautiful crypto dinner that happened before. Maybe you got something else. However, even the optical components here are suspicious.
Jake Lahut: Yes. In a small project we’ve had in my Illllloop newsletter this week, we’ve got some new data, some new data in the Trump administration lacks law enforcement throughout the tech space, but cryptocurrencies in particular, almost everyone is facing any legal action from the Biden administration, and their enforcement actions are either completely or suspended. In one case, we are looking at the first pardon for one of the companies. So instead of just paying for these things and expecting legislation to win, you can get heat in regulation.
Zoë Schiffer: Correct. So, our third story, I’m really waiting for a story that isn’t frustrating, but now we’ve been heading to Arkansas, and our colleague David Gilbert reports that a group of Americans are building a “white community” that they call returning to the land. The group believes that white and Western cultures are facing extinction due to the influx of immigration and minority groups. According to the founders of the group, the opportunity to enter the community is only open to people of white European descent who share a common view on things like segregation, abortion and gender identity. Back to Land President shared their intellectual inspiration with journalist David, who said part of them was inspired by Balaji Srevenesin, son of venture capitalist and immigrant parent Balaji Srevenesin, and his book The State of the Network, which promoted the idea of a digital-first community with shared value, with the aim of gaining Sovereignty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Natormanty and Native.
Jake Lahut: Look, not only America, but also a long history of a bunch of weird kindness or a totally weird utopia, and a little different because you have racist sovereignty. But seriously, Zoe, what about this legal situation?
Zoë Schiffer: Yes, I mean, that’s the real problem. Thus, the entire premise can be traced back to the Fair Housing Act of 1968, which prevented housing discrimination based on race or religion, but returned to land claiming that the community is more structured like a private member association. So far, local authorities seem to agree. Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin told Wired that his office is not illegal in the community. Surprise, surprise.
Jake Lahut: Yes, like Erlich Bachman from the Silicon Valley incubator, but for white supremacy and racism.
Zoë Schiffer: Exactly. Exactly. OK, take a rest. This is about how the United States built a nuclear reactor on the moon. Cable contributor Becky Ferreira recently reported that NASA is fast tracking a plan to build a nuclear reactor on the moon in 2030 under new instructions from the agency’s interim administrator Sean Duffy.