There seems to be a coordinated effort to control the narrative. Grok3's release is pretty important, no matter what you think of it, and initially this story quickly fell off the front page, likely from malicious mass flagging.
One thing that's taken over Reddit and unfortunately has spread to the rest of the internet is people thinking of themselves as online activists, who are saving the world by controlling what people can talk about and steering the conversation in the direction they want it to go. It's becoming harder and harder to have a normal conversation without someone trying to derail it with their own personal crusade.
How? After an enormous investment the latest version of some software is a bit better than the previous versions of some software from it's competitors and will likely be worse than the future versions from it's competitors. There's nothing novel about this.
NVIDIA's CEO Jensen Huang: “Building a massive [supercomputer] factory in the short time that was done, that is superhuman. There's only one person in the world who could do that. What Elon and the xAI team did is singular. Never been done before.”
Largest supercluster in the world created in a small time frame is pretty important. 4 years typically, cut down to 19 days. That's an incredible achievement and I, along with many others, think it's important.
Okay but that's obviously a nonsense claim. Find me a computer on the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TOP500 that was built 4 years after the chips it uses debuted.
> There seems to be a coordinated effort to control the narrative.
Do you have any evidence for this?
Who would want to coordinate such an effort, and how would they manipulate HN users to comment/vote in a certain way?
I think it is far more plausible that some people on here have similar views.
> [people] controlling what people can talk about
That's called 'moderation' and protects communities against trolls and timewasters, no?
> and steering the conversation in the direction they want it to go
That's exactly what conversation is about, I'd say. Of course I want to talk about stuff that I am interested in, and convince others of my arguments. How is this unfortunate?
Is it? It's Yet Another LLM, barely pipping competitors at cherry picked comparisons. DeepSeek R1 was news entirely because of the minuscule resources it was trained on (with an innovative new approach), and this "pretty important" Grok release beats it in chatbox arena by a whole 3%.
We're at the point where this stuff isn't that big of news unless something really jumps ahead. Like all of the new Gemini models and approaches got zero attention on here. Which is fair because it's basically "Company with big money puts out slightly better model".
I'd say Grok 3 is getting exactly the normal attention, but there is a "Leave Britney Alone" contingent who need to run to the defence.
We have no clue how all this is going to play out, what value is captureable and what parts of a lead are likely to stay protected. This race is essentially the collective belief in a generationally big prize and no idea how it unlocks.
The problem with that for a comment section is it reduces ALL comments to gossip and guessing, which makes people feel stupid.
Reddit today feels like it's absolutely overrun by bots. So much of the comment content is so superficial and cookie-cutter I find it hard to believe it's all produced by human beings. A lot of it reads like the output of small cheap LLMs of the sort that would be used for spam bots.
Of course we know X, Facebook, and probably most other social media is also overrun by bots. I don't think you can assume that humans are on the other end anymore.