Boris Cherny
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
At that point, I was running maybe five, 10 quads in parallel, and my coding was prompting quad to write code.
Now it's actually leveled up, I think, again to the next wave of abstraction where I don't prompt quad anymore.
I have loops that are running.
They're the ones that are prompting quad and kind of figuring out what to do.
My job is to write loops.
And this is this kind of next transition that I think we're going to see in the next few months and maybe through the rest of the year.
We partner with a number of the organizations that power some of the world's most critical code to put the model into their hands to allow them to look at how they can use models like this to bring down risk and protect everyone.
And by giving these software developers advanced tools before anyone else, it gives all of us a collective head start.
It allows us to find things that we couldn't find before, and it helps us fix these things much more quickly.
For a developer who tirelessly maintains software, a model that can help them discover vulnerabilities in their own code and fix them before they can be exploited, that is an invaluable tool.
We've spoken to officials across the U.S.
government, and we've offered to work with them and collaborate to assess the risks of these models and to help defend against the risks of these models.
Everything that we do in our lives now depends on software.