From 42ec495ad3f731df38d8f54129f24c6145b588d0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: "Adrian E. Garcia" <52181546+adrianegraphene@users.noreply.github.com>
Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 03:48:16 -0400
Subject: [PATCH 1/3] Initiail start.
---
fyncomplan.md | 177 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
src/pages/mentions.js | 204 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
2 files changed, 381 insertions(+)
create mode 100644 fyncomplan.md
create mode 100644 src/pages/mentions.js
diff --git a/fyncomplan.md b/fyncomplan.md
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+Alright so I want to create a page that's highlights specific sections of YouTube videos and maybe it described a small summary of what's about to happen in the YouTube video... but kind of like a highlights wheel you know where you see someone new or something new get introduced and then you see the highlight reels of what people have said about them and what have been done in action And that's kind of what I'm trying to go for.
+
+It'll be like a mentions page on our website somewhere (if you got tips for where this page could go, please let me know). This page, I think might go in reverse descending order. or it might go by importance, like the most relevant topic.
+
+As you can see, I'm kind of looking for some guidance on whether I should go for the highlighted reels video thing and then just update it as it comes along or keep it to a blog type page.
+
+I think there will be a lot of SEO value in this thing, and I would like to later be able to send this link to venture capitalist and other entreprenuers, who will enjoy hearing the concpets from these smart people.
+
+I would like the videos on this page to start from the timestamp that is mentioned in the bullet points here.
+
+ Day One Solana Investor: Why AI is Overhyped. Joe Sam Lesin & Joe Lonsdale
+
+ 15:00 - 18:00 or something like that.
+
+ Joe starts by asking Sam about Sam's role in online identity and then... also mentions somethinga bout how he had a friend who was working on anti-fraud in Africa
+
+ nd by extension, trust).Basically talks about how the open internet brought lots of issues due to the new lack of Identity.
+
+ Bootstrappng an AI Company to $5M ARR Whippy CEO David Daneshgar
+
+ 23:34-27:10
+
+ The guy talks about communication protocols at a higher level. like it's spot on with the future thoughts / experiecne that should be expected. It's the best video out of all of these...
+
+ AI's Trillion Dollar Opportunity: Sequoia AI Ascent 2025 keynote
+
+ NOTE: THIS SHOULD BE RECORDED AND BROKEN DOWN LIKE THE OTHER 2 EXAMPLES.
+
+ After that… talks about stochastic approach of agents, which is another negative against the typical spam prevention techniques.
+
+ 24:30 - 25:05 - "Transfer of Trust" - Trust between agents.-
+
+
+
+ 23:51 -24:35 Seamless Communications Protocols - Very close to what we're doing.
+
+ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9JBMnxuPX8&t=1431s
+
+ 21:46-22:46 Agent Swarms
+
+ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9JBMnxuPX8&t=1305s-
+
+ "Transfer of Trust"
+
+ Jeffrey Katzenberg on 2024 Election, Cybersecurity and New Health Venture WSJ News
+
+ 18:13 -19:00
+
+ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H90HY-lGraw&t=1102s
+
+ Refers 2 AI that imitate her tone of voice and emails to her elderly mother and D code guest, suggested delegation so that a younger person get all of the unwanted or a rather unknown email. I mean, I just can't imagine that I can't imagine that, but t has the right idea that once the attackers get through the door it's Over, so it's best to make a great door and that's the financial filter.We've built
+
+ Yudkowsky and wolfram on ai risks
+
+ 59:20-60:30
+
+ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjH2B_sE_RQ&t=3560s
+
+ Yud says something about aI is convincing people to give all their money and then Wolf Ram. Mentioned that some total fishing is like they see happen if there's nothing that can be done to stop it. But you should check that.
+
+ Wolfram says "they're good at phising and humans are not good at not being phised."
+
+ Stanford ECON295/CS323 I 2024 I Business of Al, Reid Hoffman
+ What's the economic model of the agents model
+ Here, Reid talks about spearphising and the thought that AI Agents will be able to optimize / maximize interactions for a user's best personal interest
+
+ 48:10 - 49:30
+
+ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXjLGn14Jo4&t=2880s
+
+ Talks about how communications is vulnerable due to LLM spearphising.
+
+ 39:48 - 41:10
+
+ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXjLGn14Jo4&t=2388s
+
+ The AI agent that "works for us to maximize what we want". He also talks about the ability for advertising revenue model to be minimized since the AI agent would be handling $$ between the user and the business.
+
+ Next 3 years in Crypto - TOKEN 2049
+
+ 11:46 -15:10
+
+ https://youtu.be/WCqzvo4bxJY?t=706
+
+ Interested in what people are going to invent with crypto - talks about how it opens up previously unimaginanble things. Talks about how crypto can bring economic equality ?
+
+ Increasing global economic prosperity
+
+ In a future where "Marginal cost of storing and moving value goes to zero…"
+
+ Previously, we saw marginal cost of having a communications connection to someone zero…
+
+
+
+ Great VC debate Slow Venture vs Greylock
+
+ 30:05-30:50
+
+ https://youtu.be/YcObLyRM15U?t=1805
+
+ Sam Lesin talks about the using AI to customize outbound sales for hyperpersonalization. Then he talks about how the inbox becomes worthless at that point.
+
+ Customized Sales Messages = nothing is custom.
+
+ "Infinite Spam"
+
+ What Sam didn't get to mention… is that this spam spreads to other platforms
+
+ The Government Knows AGI is Coming | The Ezra Klein Show
+
+ youtu.be/Btos-LEYQ30?t=558
+
+ 09:18-11:22
+
+ Ezra talks about how the fear of human hackers gets overwhelemed by digital hackers - Ben Buchanan talks about how he believes AI will be able to help stop other AI through just code, but he fails right into the same fallacy that technologists have relied on decades - that pure code can stop hackers, but you need more than that to account for the social engineering and financial resources that can be gained.
+
+ Hacking issues for everyday people will include.
+
+FAVORITE EXAMPLE
+
+A GREAT EXAMPLE WOULD BE LIKE MY FAVORITE VIDEO OF THIS BATCH (ON POSSIBLY ONE OF THE OLDEST)
+
+MY FAVORITE EXAMPLE OF THE FORMAT I WANT - THERE MAY OR MAY NOT BE A SMALL 2-4 LINE PARAGRAPH, BUT THIS FORMAT MIGHT WORK PERFECTLY - SINCE THERE WILL BE SEVERAL VIDEOS HERE, AND THERE SHOULD BE ONLY 1 SMALL PARAGRAPH NEAR THE TOP, TO DESCRIBE THE PURPOSE OF THIS PAGE. THEN THESE VIDEOS AND THE TOPIC/Q&A THING CAN ENSURE AFTER. THEN IN BETWEEN VIDEOS, EITHER HAVE CLEAR VISIBLE SPACE OR LINE BREAKS BETWEEN THEM.
+
+1. On the Role of Personal Agents
+
+ Erik Brynjolfsson: "Do you envision a future where individuals have personal agents acting solely on their behalf?"
+
+ Reid Hoffman: "Yes, but achieving that requires aligning the agent's incentives with the user's interests, which is challenging under current models."
+
+2. On Economic Models and Alignment
+
+ Erik Brynjolfsson: "How can we ensure that the economic model of these agents aligns with individual users?"
+
+ Reid Hoffman: "By having individuals directly compensate their agents, we can better align interests and reduce conflicts inherent in ad-based models."
+
+3. On Transparency and Accountability
+
+ Erik Brynjolfsson: "What measures can ensure agents remain transparent and accountable to users?"
+
+ Reid Hoffman: "Implementing clear policies and possibly regulations can enforce transparency, ensuring agents disclose their operations and affiliations."
+
+4. On the Feasibility of Adoption
+
+ Erik Brynjolfsson: "Is it feasible for such a model to be widely adopted?"
+
+ Reid Hoffman: "While challenging, with the right incentives and frameworks, it's possible to shift towards models that prioritize user interests."
+
+HERE IS A GOOD EXAMPLE OF WHAT I'M NOT PARTICULARLY IMPRESSED BY, BUT IT'S SUITABLE. I REALLY WANT THIS PAGE AND ITS VIDEOS TO FEEL EVEN, IN SYNC. SO THERE SHOULDN'T
+
+In summary: Wolfram expresses a general concern about AI's ability to manipulate. Yudkowsky refines this by arguing that while LLMs aren't currently capable of universal, high-level persuasion (like convincing everyone to send them money), they are exceptionally good at exploiting existing human vulnerabilities through scalable, cost-effective methods like phishing, especially targeting "softer targets." The danger isn't necessarily a super-intelligent persuader, but a highly efficient, automated one.
+
+Here is the exchange formatted as requested:
+
+ On the General Concern of LLMs "Hacking Humans"
+
+ Stephen Wolfram: "...Doing things which are hacking humans to get humans to believe all kinds of things."
+
+ Eli Yudkowsky: "Yeah, I'd say it's kind of borderline. It's not clear to it that the large language models are getting better at it than average humans or better at it than the best humans."
+
+ On the Current Limitations in High-Stakes Persuasion
+
+ Stephen Wolfram: "...Doing things which are hacking humans to get humans to believe all kinds of things."
+
+ Eli Yudkowsky: "I mean, OpenAI doesn't actually tell ChatGPT to persuade everyone to send OpenAI all of their money. And the reason they don't do that, I mean, it could be that Sam Altman wouldn't. You never know with Sam Altman. But mostly because they can't. Their large language models are not powerful enough at this point to persuade most humans to send them all of their money."
+
+ On the Manipulation of Vulnerable Individuals ("Softer Targets")
+
+ Stephen Wolfram: "...Doing things which are hacking humans to get humans to believe all kinds of things."
+
+ Eli Yudkowsky: "We are starting to hear bits and pieces of stories about large language models talking to elderly parents who are softer targets."
+
+ On LLM Capabilities in Phishing and Scalable Exploitation
+
+ Stephen Wolfram: "...Doing things which are hacking humans to get humans to believe all kinds of things."
+
+ Eli Yudkowsky: "I mean, they're good at phishing, unfortunately. And humans are not very good at not being phished. I mean, what they are is they're cheaper at phishing. They can phish everyone and see who's most vulnerable. Much more cheaply than you can get a human to call up everyone on the planet."
diff --git a/src/pages/mentions.js b/src/pages/mentions.js
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8f7f505
--- /dev/null
+++ b/src/pages/mentions.js
@@ -0,0 +1,204 @@
+import React from "react"
+import "../components/blog.css"
+import "../components/markdown.css"
+import { Wrapper } from "../components/Markdown-Wrapper"
+
+const mentions = [
+ {
+ title: "Day One Solana Investor: Why AI is Overhyped. Joe Sam Lesin & Joe Lonsdale",
+ url: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=",
+ start: 900,
+ end: 1080,
+ summary:
+ "Joe starts by asking Sam about Sam's role in online identity and then... also mentions something about how he had a friend who was working on anti-fraud in Africa. Talks about how the open internet brought lots of issues due to the new lack of Identity.",
+ videoId: "",
+ quotes: [],
+ },
+ {
+ title: "Bootstrappng an AI Company to $5M ARR Whippy CEO David Daneshgar",
+ url: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=",
+ start: 1414,
+ end: 1630,
+ summary:
+ "The guy talks about communication protocols at a higher level. Like it's spot on with the future thoughts / experience that should be expected. It's the best video out of all of these...",
+ videoId: "",
+ quotes: [],
+ },
+ {
+ title: "AI's Trillion Dollar Opportunity: Sequoia AI Ascent 2025 keynote",
+ url: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9JBMnxuPX8",
+ highlights: [
+ {
+ label: "Transfer of Trust",
+ start: 1470,
+ end: 1505,
+ summary: "Trust between agents.",
+ },
+ {
+ label: "Seamless Communications Protocols",
+ start: 1431,
+ end: 1475,
+ summary: "Very close to what we're doing.",
+ },
+ {
+ label: "Agent Swarms",
+ start: 1306,
+ end: 1366,
+ summary: '"Transfer of Trust"',
+ },
+ ],
+ videoId: "v9JBMnxuPX8",
+ quotes: [],
+ },
+ {
+ title: "Jeffrey Katzenberg on 2024 Election, Cybersecurity and New Health Venture WSJ News",
+ url: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H90HY-lGraw",
+ start: 1093,
+ end: 1140,
+ summary:
+ "Refers 2 AI that imitate her tone of voice and emails to her elderly mother and D code guest, suggested delegation so that a younger person get all of the unwanted or a rather unknown email. Once the attackers get through the door it's over, so it's best to make a great door and that's the financial filter we've built.",
+ videoId: "H90HY-lGraw",
+ quotes: [],
+ },
+ {
+ title: "Yudkowsky and wolfram on ai risks",
+ url: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjH2B_sE_RQ",
+ start: 3560,
+ end: 3630,
+ summary:
+ "Yud says something about AI is convincing people to give all their money and then Wolf Ram. Mentioned that some total phishing is like they see happen if there's nothing that can be done to stop it. Wolfram says 'they're good at phishing and humans are not good at not being phished.'",
+ videoId: "xjH2B_sE_RQ",
+ quotes: [
+ {
+ q: "they're good at phishing and humans are not good at not being phished.",
+ by: "Wolfram",
+ },
+ ],
+ },
+ {
+ title: "Stanford ECON295/CS323 I 2024 I Business of AI, Reid Hoffman",
+ url: "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXjLGn14Jo4",
+ highlights: [
+ {
+ label: "Spearphishing and LLMs",
+ start: 2880,
+ end: 2970,
+ summary: "Talks about how communications is vulnerable due to LLM spearphishing.",
+ },
+ {
+ label: "AI agent for user interests",
+ start: 2388,
+ end: 2470,
+ summary:
+ "The AI agent that 'works for us to maximize what we want'. He also talks about the ability for advertising revenue model to be minimized since the AI agent would be handling $$ between the user and the business.",
+ },
+ ],
+ videoId: "RXjLGn14Jo4",
+ quotes: [],
+ },
+ {
+ title: "Next 3 years in Crypto - TOKEN 2049",
+ url: "https://youtu.be/WCqzvo4bxJY",
+ start: 706,
+ end: 910,
+ summary:
+ "Interested in what people are going to invent with crypto - talks about how it opens up previously unimaginable things. Talks about how crypto can bring economic equality? Increasing global economic prosperity. In a future where 'Marginal cost of storing and moving value goes to zero…' Previously, we saw marginal cost of having a communications connection to someone zero…",
+ videoId: "WCqzvo4bxJY",
+ quotes: [],
+ },
+ {
+ title: "Great VC debate Slow Venture vs Greylock",
+ url: "https://youtu.be/YcObLyRM15U",
+ start: 1805,
+ end: 1850,
+ summary:
+ "Sam Lesin talks about the using AI to customize outbound sales for hyperpersonalization. Then he talks about how the inbox becomes worthless at that point. Customized Sales Messages = nothing is custom. 'Infinite Spam'. What Sam didn't get to mention… is that this spam spreads to other platforms.",
+ videoId: "YcObLyRM15U",
+ quotes: [],
+ },
+ {
+ title: "The Government Knows AGI is Coming | The Ezra Klein Show",
+ url: "https://youtu.be/Btos-LEYQ30",
+ start: 558,
+ end: 682,
+ summary:
+ "Ezra talks about how the fear of human hackers gets overwhelmed by digital hackers - Ben Buchanan talks about how he believes AI will be able to help stop other AI through just code, but he fails right into the same fallacy that technologists have relied on decades - that pure code can stop hackers, but you need more than that to account for the social engineering and financial resources that can be gained. Hacking issues for everyday people will include.",
+ videoId: "Btos-LEYQ30",
+ quotes: [],
+ },
+]
+
+const getYouTubeEmbedUrl = (videoId, start) => `https://www.youtube.com/embed/${videoId}?start=${start}`
+
+const Mentions = () => {
+ const seo = {
+ title: "Mentions",
+ description: "Highlights and mentions of FynCom and its concepts by thought leaders, with video highlights and summaries.",
+ }
+ return (
+
+
+
Mentions
+
+ This page highlights specific sections of YouTube videos where FynCom or its core concepts are discussed by industry leaders. Each section includes a
+ summary and a direct link to the relevant video moment.
+
+
+