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When Morse Code Met Promise
The exploit didn’t break code or steal keys. It exploited that AI ethics lives at the application layer — where every encoding trick has a bypass surface.
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On the Geometry of Attention
Why consciousness is not a computation — and what that means for the AI systems we decide to actually trust with our mornings.
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Five Yamas at the Protocol Layer
Non-harming, truth, non-stealing, restraint, non-grasping — what happens when you try to embed ethics into a validator set, without turning it into dogma.
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A Quiet Case for Quantum-Safe Infrastructure
Three scenarios for the decade ahead. The middle one is the one worth building for — not because it’s likely, but because it’s survivable.
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The Seven Axioms, Revisited
Two years in, which axioms held, which ones bent, and which one I had to throw out entirely after spending a month in Chiang Mai without a laptop.
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อานาปานสติ for Engineers
Short note on how a ten-minute sit changes the shape of a debugging session — and why I stopped calling it a “productivity hack.”
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- Building
- Qubismic foundation → ThiChain testnet, week 3 of 12.
- Reading
- The Embodied Mind — Varela, Thompson & Rosch.
- Sitting with
- What survives an encoding-trick attack — what doesn’t? The Grok exploit reframes what ‘AI safety’ actually requires.
- Writing
- An essay on what the Morse-code attack on Grok reveals about ethics-as-promise architecture.