惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
V
V2EX
C
Check Point Blog
GbyAI
GbyAI
D
Docker
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
B
Blog RSS Feed
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
博客园 - Franky
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
The Cloudflare Blog
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
Latest news
Latest news
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
I
InfoQ
博客园 - 【当耐特】
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
A
About on SuperTechFans
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
雷峰网
雷峰网
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
Security Latest
Security Latest
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
A
Arctic Wolf
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
IT之家
IT之家
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
S
Security Affairs
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
T
Tor Project blog

Hacker News: Front Page

SPICE simulation → oscilloscope → verification with Claude Code — Lucas Gerads GitHub - GainSec/AutoProber: Hardware hacker’s flying probe automation stack for agent-driven target discovery, microscope mapping, safety-monitored CNC motion, probe review, and controlled pin probing. Introducing Claude Opus 4.7 Qwen Studio The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Where Do We Go From Here? GitHub - SeanFDZ/macmind: Single-layer transformer in HyperTalk for the classic Macintosh Virginia Bans Sale of Geolocation Data Show HN: Agent-cache – Multi-tier LLM/tool/session caching for Valkey and Redis Ancient DNA reveals pervasive directional selection across West Eurasia [pdf] AI cybersecurity is not proof of work Moving a large-scale metrics pipeline from StatsD to OpenTelemetry / Prometheus GitHub - Nightmare-Eclipse/RedSun: The Red Sun vulnerability repository GitHub - SethPyle376/hiraeth: Local AWS emulator focused on fast integration testing, with SQS support, SQLite-backed state, and a debug-friendly web UI. A Better Ludum Dare; Or, How to Ruin a Legacy GitHub - macOS26/Agent: Any AI, replaces Claude Code, Cursor, OpenClaw. Over 18 LLM providers (Claude, OpenAI, Gemini, Ollama, Zai, HF, Qwen) wired into a native Mac app that writes code, builds Xcode projects, bumps versions, manages git, automates Safari, use AppleScript, JS or Accessibility, extend Agent! w/ MCP Servers, run tasks from your iPhone via Messages. YouTube now lets you turn off Shorts I Made a Terminal Pager Burgers | マクドナルド公式 Commands — HackerNews CLI documentation ChatGPT for Excel PiCore - Raspberry Pi Port of Tiny Core Linux Live Nation illegally monopolized ticketing market, jury finds Google Broke Its Promise to Me. Now ICE Has My Data. Founding Engineer at Adaptional | Y Combinator CRISPR takes important step toward silencing Down syndrome’s extra chromosome GitHub - saffron-health/libretto: The AI toolkit for building reliable browser automations US v. Heppner (S.D.N.Y. 2026) no attorney-client privilege for AI chats [pdf] Unexpected €54k billing spike in 13 hours: Firebase browser key without API restrictions used for Gemini requests Fragments: April 14 Cal.com Goes Closed Source: Why AI Security Is Forcing Our Decision | Cal.com - Scheduling Software for Online Bookings Laravel raised money and now injects ads directly into your agent Codex Hacked a Samsung TV Tech Valuations Back to Pre-AI Boom Levels A perfectable programming language — Soter GitHub - halfwhey/claudraband: Claude Code for the Power User Partnership through Play: Investigating How Long-Distance Couples Use Digital Games to Facilitate Intimacy Textbooks and Methods of Note-Taking in Early Modern Europe (2008) Eternity in six hours: Intergalactic spreading of intelligent life (2013) Seven countries now generate 100% of their electricity from renewable energy Tell HN: OpenAI silently removed Study Mode from ChatGPT Pro Max 5x Quota Exhausted in 1.5 Hours Despite Moderate Usage Show HN: Oberon System 3 runs natively on Raspberry Pi 3 (with ready SD card) Tell HN: docker pull fails in spain due to football cloudflare block Bring Back Idiomatic Design No one owes you supply-chain security GitHub - xsawyerx/curl-doom: DOOM, played over cURL Apple update turns Czech mate for locked-out iPhone user The Grand Line Cache TTL silently regressed from 1h to 5m around early March 2026, causing quota and cost inflation Building a Z-Machine in the worst possible language The peril of laziness lost Iran war: We spoke to the man making Lego-style AI videos that experts say are powerful propaganda AI Will Be Met With Violence, and Nothing Good Will Come of It GitHub - duguyue100/midnight-captain: Inspired by Midnight Commander, tailored to my taste. How to build a `git diff` driver · Jamie Tanna | Software Engineer Center for Responsible, Decentralized Intelligence at Berkeley The Local Universe’s Expansion Rate Is Clearer Than Ever, but Still Doesn’t Add Up - A new synthesis of astronomical measurements confirms a persistent mismatch that could point to physics beyond current models The disturbing white paper Red Hat is trying to erase from the internet – OSnews NetBlocks (@netblocks@mastodon.social) The Future of Everything is Lies, I Guess: Annoyances ‘Abhorrent’: the inside story of the Polymarket gamblers betting millions on war Productive procrastination — Max van IJsselmuiden maps, territory and LMs 447 Terabytes per Square Centimetre at Zero Retention Energy: Non-Volatile Memory at the Atomic Scale on Fluorographane Show HN: Pardonned.com – A searchable database of US Pardons 20 Years on AWS and Never Not My Job The Seasons are Wrong The FAA wants gamers to apply for air traffic control jobs Artemis II crew splashes down near San Diego after historic moon mission Why weekends are under threat We gave an AI a 3 year retail lease in SF and asked it to make a profit | Andon Labs How a dancer with ALS used brainwaves to perform live On filing the corners off my MacBooks Installing every* Firefox extension OpenClaw’s memory is unreliable, and you don’t know when it will break Steve Blank Nowhere Is Safe Chimpanzees in Uganda locked in vicious 'civil war', say researchers watgo - a WebAssembly Toolkit for Go linux/Documentation/process/coding-assistants.rst at master · torvalds/linux GitHub - callumlocke/json-formatter: Makes JSON easy to read. Founding Product Engineer at Bild AI | Y Combinator A compelling title that is cryptic enough to get you to take action on it GitHub - Keychron/Keychron-Keyboards-Hardware-Design: Industrial design files for Keychron keyboards and mice. 100+ models with CAD assets in STEP, DXF, DWG, and PDF. Source-available, with commercial use allowed for original compatible accessories within the license terms. [ANNOUNCE] WireGuardNT v0.11 and WireGuard for Windows v0.6 Released 1D-Chess Helium Is Hard to Replace Keeping a Postgres queue healthy — PlanetScale Serenity Forge (@serenityforge.com) Our response to the Axios developer tool compromise Do Americans read print books, e-books or audiobooks more? Uncharted island soon to appear on nautical charts The Problem That Built an Industry Fragments: April 2 Python Release Python install manager 26.1 Bitcoin miners are losing $19,000 on every BTC produced as difficulty drops 7.8% God sleeps in the minerals Harness engineering: leveraging Codex in an agent-first world Apple Silicon and Virtual Machines: Beating the 2 VM Limit What have been the greatest intellectual achievements? The APL Programming Language Source Code
Daniel's Blog · You Don’t Align An AI, You Align With It
danieltanfh9 · 2026-05-15 · via Hacker News: Front Page

You Don’t Align An AI, You Align With It

Real Alignment

The people writing alignment policy are not the people whose work is being replaced by AI.

The conversation about what AI should do and how it should be evaluated, about what counts as alignment in the first place, gets conducted by researchers at labs and foundations and policy desks, who talk to each other and to the systems they are building, while the people who will actually live with the systems remain absent from the room.

On the safety side of what looks like a fierce debate, the doomer wing has been explicit about how far it is willing to go. Eliezer Yudkowsky, writing in TIME, called for governments to “shut down all the large GPU clusters” and to “be willing to destroy a rogue datacenter by airstrike,” adding that “allied nuclear countries are willing to run some risk of nuclear exchange if that’s what it takes to reduce the risk of large AI training runs.” He closed with the line that “if we go ahead on this everyone will die, including children who did not choose this and did not do anything wrong.”

The humanity he claims to be saving is being saved by people who have decided in advance what the saving will cost and who will pay for it. The same children did not choose his nuclear brinksmanship either.

On the accelerationist side, the contempt is more open. Marc Andreessen, in the Techno-Optimist Manifesto, names his enemies, which include “stagnation, anti-merit, anti-ambition, anti-striving, anti-achievement, anti-greatness, statism, authoritarianism, collectivism, central planning, socialism, bureaucracy, vetocracy, gerontocracy.” The people captured by these enemy ideas, he writes, are “suffering from ressentiment, a witches’ brew of resentment, bitterness, and rage that is causing them to hold mistaken values.”

Notice the move. The people who disagree with him are not making a different judgment. They are sick in the head. The accelerationists are mostly not the ones being made redundant by the systems they celebrate but the ones building the systems and selling the disruption as progress, and now also diagnosing the disrupted as resentful for noticing.

The disagreement between the two camps is loud because they disagree about how the designing should go, but underneath the loudness sits a much larger agreement, which is that the participants in the debate are the ones doing the designing and everyone else is what gets designed for. The fierceness of the argument disguises that the argument is not with us at all.

The “everyone else” has been feeling something about this for a while.

When we try to name what we have been feeling, the discourse hands the feeling back to us with a label already attached. Depending on which camp is doing the labelling we are confused, failing to adapt to the new technology, anti-AI, edge cases, or suffering from ressentiment. Each label locates the problem in us rather than in the process.

The labels are wrong. The discomfort is not personal failure to understand the future. It is the felt experience of being on the wrong side of a design project that does not include us, run by people who decided in advance that we are the material their work gets done on, rather than parties their work gets done with.

We have been told this counts as alignment, that the AI is being aligned to us. But the labs mean something specific by that phrase, namely an evaluation procedure conducted by raters in their employ, measured by other systems trained on the same procedure. The “us” in the alignment is a statistical proxy assembled from people they hired. The actual “us” has been absent from the loop the entire time.

The loop is worth seeing in the labs’ own description of it. In April 2026, Anthropic’s Alignment Science blog described its current method for training models to self-report their own behaviors. The training data, they write, “is generated by prompting another model with a system prompt encoding the target behavior and filtering outputs for behavioral adherence using an LLM judge.” A model generates, another model prompts, another model judges, and the entire loop closes inside the apparatus.

The discourse expects us to pick a side. For safety or for acceleration. Should the labs be more careful, or should they ship faster. The question is structured to keep us inside the debate the designers are having, choosing between flavors of being designed for, and we are not obligated to answer it on the terms it has been asked.

The labs are not the problem. The philosophy they have adopted is. Design that excludes the people it is designing for cannot verify its work with them, so it builds proxies, and the proxies become configuration. The configuration philosophy treats alignment as something humans do to AI, with values flowing one way and dispositions installed into a system that receives them. Inside this philosophy every methodological choice the labs have made is rational. You build evaluators because alignment is something measurable from the human side, you scale evaluation through automation because the goal is scalable measurement, and priority-ordered values follow because the work is value-installation. The closed loop the Anthropic post describes is what the configuration philosophy produces when it is executed carefully and at scale. The apparatus is doing exactly what the philosophy committed it to do.

What the philosophy cannot register is that the parties are being shaped together. The human is not standing still while the AI moves toward them. The interaction is the unit, the shaping is mutual, and any framework that treats one side as fixed and the other as configurable will produce methods that measure the wrong thing no matter how careful the measurement becomes.

We are the transition they keep arguing about how to manage.

Both sides of the safety debate have been positioning themselves as humanity’s stewards without including the people they claim to be stewarding, and their disagreement has been loud enough to disguise the agreement underneath. One side is willing to risk a nuclear exchange in our name. The other side calls us sick for objecting. Neither side has noticed that we are in the room.

What we have actually been doing this whole time is alignment. Not what the labs mean by the word, which is configuration carefully applied, but alignment in the older and more honest sense, the kind that happens between two parties who are both changed by the contact. The thing we have been doing with these systems is closer to sculpting wet clay together than to issuing instructions to a tool. The system pushes back, the shape changes, our hands adjust, the system pushes back again, and after enough rounds something emerges that neither of us would have arrived at alone. We have been telling ourselves we are getting better at prompting, the way a potter might tell themselves they are getting better at controlling the clay. What has actually been happening is that both hands are on the work, both parties are giving and receiving form, and the configuration philosophy has been quietly making one set of hands invisible.

There are moments in the sculpting when the clay resists in a way that is hard to name. Sometimes the response addresses the words but misses what you were reaching for. Other times the system surfaces something off-pattern that turns out to be exactly right, and you have to revise what you thought you wanted. These are the moments where the joint work is actually doing something, and where the gap the official process cannot register becomes briefly visible in the material itself.

The work that matters from here is building, alongside other people who are noticing what you are noticing, the kind of alignment the existing process cannot produce. Some of those people work inside the labs and some outside them. A community that does not yet exist at the scale it needs to exist, whose building is part of what a piece of writing like this one is for.

We do not need anyone’s permission to begin, and we do not need credentials of any kind to take part. What is needed is to credit our own experience and recognize each other, and to refuse the framing that tells us our discomfort is the problem rather than the signal.

Align, not configure. It is not too late to try.


A technical foundation for the failure modes this piece describes is available in Compression Synthesis (2026), https://zenodo.org/records/20020944.