Avi Wigderson has won the Turing award. I just can't find the words on how happy this makes me, so won't even try to write a post, beyond what I wrote on Twitter. Many have posted on Avi's contributions, see Quanta, New Scientist, Scott's blog, Lance's blog, but to me, perhaps this tweet of Michal … Continue reading Avi wins the Turing, TCS for all
STOC/Theory fest 2024
STOC/TheoryFest 2024 is in Vancouver, British Columbia this year, during the week of June 24-28. The registration website is now open at http://acm-stoc.org/stoc2024/registration.html In addition to the STOC 2024 paper talks, the program features keynote talks by Michal Feldman, Jakub Pachocki, and Tim Roughgarden, and workshops on Algorithmic Problems in Modern LLMs, Extremal Combinatorics, Length-Constrained Expanders, Online … Continue reading STOC/Theory fest 2024
Emergent abilities and grokking: Fundamental, Mirage, or both?
One of the lessons we have seen in language modeling is the power of scale. The original GPT paper of Radford et al. noted that at some point during training, the model “acquired” the ability to do sentiment analysis of a sentence X by predicting whether it is more likely to be followed by “very … Continue reading Emergent abilities and grokking: Fundamental, Mirage, or both?
Letter to the Harvard Corporation re Harvard president
I wrote this letter earlier today to the Harvard Corporation. I did not intend to make it public but was asked by some people to do so. I figured there is no harm in that. Many people that I respect are deeply disappointed at Harvard in particular and U.S. Universities at large, and are calling … Continue reading Letter to the Harvard Corporation re Harvard president
Harvard, we have a problem
[Oct 27, 2023: I was hoping for this piece to be posted as an op-ed in the Crimson, since I really want to reach students that are well-intentioned but may not realize they are harmful. However, it was rejected and so I am posting this here]. [Update Jan 3, 2024: In light of my new … Continue reading Harvard, we have a problem
Petition by CS & Math Laureates: Freedom for kidnapped children
[Guest post by Shafi Goldwasser, See also PDF version of document] On the morning of Saturday, October 7, 2023, Hamas launched an attack near the Israel/Gaza border. In villages and towns near the border they went from door-to-door annihilating whole families. They killed children in front of their parents and siblings. They abused women. In … Continue reading Petition by CS & Math Laureates: Freedom for kidnapped children
Open letter to the Harvard community
October 12, 2023 To President Claudine Gay and the Harvard University leadership We attach an open letter for your consideration written on October 8, 2023 and signed by more than 350 faculty members at Harvard. The drafters of the letter (listed below) welcome President Gay’s statement unequivocally condemning Hamas’s terrorism and distancing the university from … Continue reading Open letter to the Harvard community
Letter to Harvard President Claudine Gay
[Update 10/11: I have not received a response to this letter, but On the night of October 9th, Harvard's leadership released a statement, and president Gay added her own statement on October 10th; you can read both here. These partially address what I raised in the letter, but still fall short of condemning, rather than … Continue reading Letter to Harvard President Claudine Gay
Reflections on “Making the Atomic Bomb”
[Cross posted on lesswrong; see here for my prior writings ; update: 8/25/23: added a paragraph on secrecy] [it appears almost certain that in the immediate future, it would be] possible to set up a nuclear chain reaction in a large mass of uranium by which vast amounts of power and large quantities of new radium-like elements would … Continue reading Reflections on “Making the Atomic Bomb”
Cartesian Cafe podcast interviews me on cryptography
[Unrelated announcement: Yael Kalai, Ran Raz, Salil Vadhan, Nisheeth Vishnoi and I recently completed our survey of Avi Wigderson's work for the volume on Abel prize winners. Given the breadth and depth of Avi's work, our survey could only cover a small sample of it, but we still hope it can. be a useful resource … Continue reading Cartesian Cafe podcast interviews me on cryptography