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AI Transforming Surveillance, Drugs, Fusion

Key Points

  • AI‑driven geolocation tools like Boston‑based Goos Spy can instantly pinpoint where a street‑level photo was taken, raising significant privacy concerns and prompting the startup to restrict access to law‑enforcement users only.
  • In drug discovery, Demis Hassabis’s Isomorphic Labs claims AI can shrink the development timeline from years to weeks, with its first AI‑designed compounds already moving into clinical trials.
  • Commonwealth Fusion, a MIT spin‑out, is using AI to predict and control plasma states inside tokamak reactors, aiming to stabilize nuclear‑fusion reactions and bring the technology closer to commercial viability.
  • A Canadian streamer’s claim of building a tabletop fusion device in 36 hours with the help of the AI Claude highlights the need for cautious scrutiny of sensational AI‑related assertions.

Full Transcript

# AI Transforming Surveillance, Drugs, Fusion **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5ako_jF6LQ](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5ako_jF6LQ) **Duration:** 00:03:51 ## Summary - AI‑driven geolocation tools like Boston‑based Goos Spy can instantly pinpoint where a street‑level photo was taken, raising significant privacy concerns and prompting the startup to restrict access to law‑enforcement users only. - In drug discovery, Demis Hassabis’s Isomorphic Labs claims AI can shrink the development timeline from years to weeks, with its first AI‑designed compounds already moving into clinical trials. - Commonwealth Fusion, a MIT spin‑out, is using AI to predict and control plasma states inside tokamak reactors, aiming to stabilize nuclear‑fusion reactions and bring the technology closer to commercial viability. - A Canadian streamer’s claim of building a tabletop fusion device in 36 hours with the help of the AI Claude highlights the need for cautious scrutiny of sensational AI‑related assertions. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5ako_jF6LQ&t=0s) **AI in Surveillance and Drug Discovery** - The speaker outlines how AI can instantly geolocate street‑level photos for law‑enforcement applications while also dramatically speeding up pharmaceutical research by using AlphaFold‑based models to design drugs in weeks instead of years. ## Full Transcript
0:00three real use cases of AI that I think 0:02are interesting right now one is in 0:04spying one is in nuclear power and one 0:07is in drugs so we'll start with a spying 0:10first Boston based startup Goos spy had 0:14a public facing website for a while 0:16where you could upload any Street Corner 0:19type photo anything that's at street 0:21level and it would immediately identify 0:23where it was taken in the world this 0:25reminds me of the uh guy known as 0:28rainbolt online who would look at any 0:30photo and immediately geog guess where 0:32it was well AI could do that too and AI 0:36did do that and that's what GEOS spy is 0:38all about and there are obviously 0:41privacy implications here because you 0:42can imagine taking picture of you and 0:44your friends like suddenly like it could 0:45be uploaded everyone would know exactly 0:48where you were Etc geosy closed their 0:51public facing portal after some public 0:53objections and is now marketing the 0:56product only to law 0:58enforcement it will certainly get youed 1:01number two on the drug side deise 1:05hassabis is the 2024 Nobel Prize winner 1:08and has already won a Nobel for AI I 1:11don't I don't know if you know that but 1:12like he won for AI for Alpha fold 2 1:15which is a protune folder he founded a 1:17startup after winning the Nobel and the 1:19startup is called isomorphic labs and 1:22all it does is it focuses on drug 1:24Discovery and what he is saying is that 1:26in his opinion drug Discovery is going 1:29to go from a decade long process to 1:31weeks or months with AI and the first AI 1:33designed drugs from his lab are going 1:36into clinical trials the next couple of 1:38months so if you are wondering like is 1:40AI actually making a practical 1:42difference yeah we're moving to clinical 1:45trials much faster than we used to and 1:47that's going to speed up so that's 1:49really exciting number three on the 1:51nuclear side uh Commonwealth Fusion 1:55which is a little spin out of MIT uh MIT 1:58produces these research driven spin all 2:00the time uh they're working on 2:03stabilizing Plasma in tokumx for nuclear 2:06fusion uh through Ai and so I'll explain 2:09what that is a tokomak is little Hollow 2:11tube it has magnets in it it contains 2:13the plasma the plasma is very hot for 2:15nuclear fusion if the plasma touches the 2:17container it's going to melt it you 2:18don't want it to do that it's also very 2:21unstable and so what they're trying to 2:24do is figure out how to predict future 2:28states of plasma in the nuclear fusion 2:31Reactor with artificial intelligence so 2:33that they can better manage the magnet 2:36power array to contain the plasma and 2:39sustain the reaction for 2:41longer so that's exciting because 2:43nuclear fusion is one of those 2:44Technologies that's been about 20 years 2:46away for the last 60 years uh and so 2:48maybe something like that will actually 2:50help us to get to a point where it's 2:52more commercially viable we'll see 2:55speaking of fusion this is a weird one 2:57uh and it goes to how you have to sort 2:58of be thoughtful about 3:00what you see AI doing online uh there's 3:04a Canadian streamer who claims that he 3:07built nuclear fusion on his kitchen 3:09tabletop talking only to 3:12Claude in 36 3:15hours nobody can figure out if he's 3:17telling the truth or not he streamed the 3:19whole thing but no one can figure out if 3:21what what we saw at the end was actually 3:23nuclear fusion or not so I I think one 3:26of the things that's interesting with AI 3:27is that it does give us these uh 3:30increased capability sets but we also 3:32don't really know where the edges are 3:34because this is all so new and so this 3:36is an example of something where we 3:37aren't sure is it possible because you 3:39use CLA to do this or 3:41not you tell me what are some 3:43interesting use cases of AI that I 3:46haven't heard about yet or haven't 3:47mentioned here yet I'd be curious to 3:48hear more cheers