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Why the hell do you people know your IQ? That test is a joke, there’s zero rigor to it. The reason it’s meaningless is exactly that, it’s meaningless and you wasted your time.

Why one would continue to know or talk about the number is a pretty strong indicator of the previous statement.


You're using words like "zero" and "meaningless" in a haphazard way that's obviously wrong if taken literally: there's a non-zero amount of rigour in IQ research, and we know that it correlates (very loosely) with everything from income to marriage rate so it's clearly not meaningless either.

What actual fact are you trying to state, here?


The specifics of an IQ test aren't super meaningful by itself (that is, a 150 vs a 142 or 157 is not necessarily meaningful), but evaluations that correlate to the IQ correlate to better performance.

Because of perceived illegal biases, these evaluations are no longer used in most cases, so we tend to use undergraduate education as a proxy. Places that are exempt from these considerations continue to make successful use of it.


> Places that are exempt from these considerations continue to make successful use of it.

How so? Solving more progressive matrices?


Hiring.


> correlate to better performance.

...on IQ tests.


This isn't the actual issue with them, the actual issue is "correlation is not causation". IQ is a normal distribution by definition, but there's no reason to believe the underlying structure is normal.

If some people in the test population got 0s because the test was in English and they didn't speak English, and then everyone else got random results, it'd still correlate with job performance if the job required you to speak English. Wouldn't mean much though.


> we tend to use undergraduate education as a proxy

Neither an IQ test nor your grades as an undergraduate correlate to performance in some other setting at some other time. Life is a crapshoot. Plenty of people in Mensa are struggling and so are those that were at the top of class.


Do you have data to back that up? Are you really trying to claim that there is no difference in outcomes from the average or below average graduate and summa cum laude?


Like they said, it depends, but grades alone are not the sole predictor:

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/student-success/life-aft...

Actual study:

https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fapl0001212


That is moving the goal posts. No one claimed it is the sole predictor. The claim was that there is no relation at all. Your own links say their is a predictive relationship. Of course other factors matter, and may even be more important, but with all else equal, grades are positively correlated.


It’s about trend. Not <Test Result>==Success. These evaluations try to put an objective number to what most of us can evaluate instinctively. They are not perfect or necessarily fair. Many, maybe most, job interviews are really a vibe assessment, so it’s an imperfect thing!

I don’t know my IQ, but I probably would score above average and have undiagnosed ADHD. I scored in the 95th percentile + on most standardized tests in school but tended to have meh grades. I’m great at what I do, but I would be an awful pilot or surgeon.

Growing up, you know a bunch of people. Some are dumb, some are brilliant, some disciplined, some impetuous.

Think back, and more of the smart ones tend to align with professions that require more brainpower. But you probably also know people who weren’t brilliant at math or academics, but they had focus and did really well.


For me it was just a coincidence of MENSA advertising their events in my high school and being pushed by a couple of friends to go through testing and join together.


I guess if you're an outlier you sometimes know, for example the really brilliant kids are often times found out early in childhood and tested. Is it always good for them ? Probably not, but that's a different discussion.


You've never spent a couple of bucks on a "try your strength" machine?



What are you talking about, there’s zero impact from these thing so far.


You are right that outside of the massive capex spending on training models, we don't see that much of an economic impact, yet. However, it's very far from zero:

Remember these outsourcing firms that essentially only offer warm bodies that speak English? They are certainly already feeling the impact. (And we see that in labour market statistics for eg the Philippines, where this is/was a big business.)

And this is just one example. You could ask your favourite LLM about a rundown of the major impacts we can already see.


But those warm body that speak English, they offer a service by being warm, and able to sort of be attuned to the distress you feel. A frigging robot solving your unsolvable problem ? You can try, but witness the backlash.


We are mixing up two meanings of the word 'warm' here.

There's no emotional warmth involved in manning a call centre and explicitly being confined to a script and having no power to make your own decisions to help the customer.

'Warm body' is just a term that has nothing to do with emotional warmth. I might just as well have called them 'body shops', even though it's of no consequence that the people involved have actual bodies.

> A frigging robot solving your unsolvable problem ? You can try, but witness the backlash.

Front line call centre workers aren't solving your unsolvable problems, either. Just the opposite.

And why are you talking in the hypothetical? The impact on call centres etc is already visible in the statistics.


But running inference isn’t cheap

And with trains people paid for a ticket and a hard good “travel”

Ai so far gives you what?


Running inference is fairly cheap compared to training.


A rocket trip to the moon is fairly cheap compared to a rocket trip to Mars.


And the view from the moon is pretty stunning. That from Mars… not so much!


This is such a BS response, first just because a job isn’t physically exhausting doesn’t mean it’s not challenging and mentally exhausting.

Second, our job in technology is to make ALL jobs easier, that’s what technology is for, not for bullshit manipulative, addictive and extractive consumer crap. The reason any of it even exists is to improve the productivity of humans.

There will always be demanding jobs, they may be demanding physically, or mentally or both, your god damn job is to figure out how to make every one of those jobs easier and LESS physically and mentally challenging.

Pointing out the obvious fact that using different metrics other jobs are harder is neither helpful, valuable nor unique.

I will however agree with you last statement, technologies abuse of people in the consumer app space is anti-social and destructive to the world, those are “jobs” we created with technology. In a sense you might say we are responsible for creating the worst jobs in the world, because as easy and valueless as being an influencer is, it destroys people mentally and turns people into shells of human beings.

So instead of trying to imply that all your fellow engineers are a bunch of whiny soft and weak complainers, you should be both simultaneously grateful that there are jobs that are physically easy and obligated to help those whose jobs still aren’t easy make as much of their jobs as easy as possible.

We live in a society we are ALL dependent on each other, specialization is what allows us to have large complex societies, without it we would all be trying to find food and build shelter. We can ONLY have our jobs because others do theirs, never forget that, that fact creates an OBLIGATION not a comparison.


Software is the connective tissue of the world, generating mediocre quality results (which will be the best outcome if you don’t really understand what you are looking at) is not just lazy it can be dangerous, do the worlds best engineers make mistakes? Of course they do, but that’s why building high quality software is collaborative process you have to work with others to build better systems. If you aren’t, you are wasting your time.

As of now (and this could change, but that doesn’t change the moral and ethical obligations), software engineers are richly rewarded specifically because they should be able to write and understand high quality code, the code written is the foundation of how our entire modern world is built.


Real quiet in here on the comments, can’t figure out why he’s acting like this right?

Maybe because he’s attacking the country on behalf of some other world power

Just common sense


People give up on commenting on this stuff, since the threads are silenced and flagged very quickly.


I call this the "nobody goes there anymore it's too crowded" theory of HN threads: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que....

"This stuff" is by far the most-discussed stuff on HN in the last couple months. Nothing else comes close.

Below, I've pasted a partial list. That's restricted to just muskdogeness and only the biggest threads. There are 25,000 comments in those threads alone.

How this translates into "the threads are silenced" and "people give up on commenting" is left as an exercise to the reader.

---

The NIH is being slashed and burned, not "reformed" - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43227180 - March 2025 (164 comments)

A Letter to the American People - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43224350 - March 2025 (440 comments)

GSA Eliminates 18F - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43221549 - March 2025 (373 comments)

A DOGE staffer appears to be posting DOGE work on his public GitHub - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43217947 - March 2025 (348 comments)

US Forest Service firings decimate already understaffed agency - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43193366 - Feb 2025 (128 comments)

FDA meeting to pick next winter's flu shot is canceled, in ominous sign for US - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43189999 - Feb 2025 (120 comments)

DOGE will use AI to assess the responses of federal workers - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43171265 - Feb 2025 (185 comments)

Disclosure of personal information to DOGE “is irreparable harm,” judge rules - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43167579 - Feb 2025 (150 comments)

Everyone at NSF overseeing the Platforms for Wireless Experimentation is gone - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43166830 - Feb 2025 (547 comments)

Trump will kill CHIPS Act by gutting NIST employees - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43152470 - Feb 2025 (113 comments)

It is no longer safe to move our governments and societies to US clouds - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43150085 - Feb 2025 (799 comments)

Ask HN: Do US tech firms realize the backlash growing in Europe? - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43139172 - Feb 2025 (295 comments)

DOGE's only public ledger is riddled with mistakes - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43138238 - Feb 2025 (1457 comments)

SpaceX engineers brought on at FAA after probationary employees were fired - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43127819 - Feb 2025 (133 comments)

Every .gov Domain - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43125829 - Feb 2025 (265 comments)

Treasury agrees to block DOGE's access to personal taxpayer data at IRS - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43121306 - Feb 2025 (170 comments)

DOGE puts $1 spending limit on government employee credit cards - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43120231 - Feb 2025 (692 comments)

DOGE has 'god mode' access to government data - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43112084 - Feb 2025 (1668 comments)

Doge Claimed It Saved $8B in One Contract. It Was $8M - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43101757 - Feb 2025 (124 comments)

A SpaceX team is being brought in to overhaul FAA's air traffic control system - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43101009 - Feb 2025 (146 comments)

"Ensuring Accountability for All Agencies" – Executive Order - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43098705 - Feb 2025 (1279 comments)

USDA fired officials working on bird flu, now trying to rehire them - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43097709 - Feb 2025 (179 comments)

US government struggles to rehire nuclear safety staff it laid off days ago - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43066182 - Feb 2025 (789 comments)

Are DOGE's Claims of Social Security Payments to 150-Year-Olds Way Off Base? - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43056993 - Feb 2025 (108 comments)

Anyone can push updates to the doge.gov website - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43045835 - Feb 2025 (1124 comments)

USAID funding freeze disrupts global tuberculosis control efforts - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43038727 - Feb 2025 (119 comments)

DOGE Has Started Gutting a Key US Technology Agency - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43037426 - Feb 2025 (180 comments)

DOGE staffer is trying to reroute FEMA funds - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43036042 - Feb 2025 (285 comments)

DOGE as a National Cyberattack - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43035977 - Feb 2025 (211 comments)

NOAA's public weather data powers the local forecasts on your phone and TV - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43018643 - Feb 2025 (113 comments)

Teen on Musk's DOGE team graduated from 'The Com' - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42981756 - Feb 2025 (1801 comments)

Announcing the data.gov archive - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42970039 - Feb 2025 (132 comments)

Elon Musk's Demolition Crew - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42968430 - Feb 2025 (345 comments)

DOGE staffer resigns over racist posts - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42966412 - Feb 2025 (105 comments)

DOGE employees ordered to stop using Slack - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42951458 - Feb 2025 (381 comments)

20k federal workers take "buyout" so far, official says - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42950790 - Feb 2025 (548 comments)

What's happening inside the NIH and NSF - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42940257 - Feb 2025 (1536 comments)

Onlookers freak out as 25-year-old set loose on Treasury computer system - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42936421 - Feb 2025 (133 comments)

Payments crisis of 2025: Not “read only” access anymore - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42933219 - Feb 2025 (654 comments)

Words flagged in search of current NSF awards - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42932760 - Feb 2025 (155 comments)

The young, inexperienced engineers aiding DOGE - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42910910 - Feb 2025 (2990 comments)

CDC: Unpublished manuscripts mentioning certain topics must be pulled or revised - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42905937 - Feb 2025 (721 comments)

CDC data are disappearing - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42897696 - Feb 2025 (589 comments)

Musk aides lock government workers out of computer systems at US agency - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42892278 - Jan 2025 (125 comments)

NSF starts vetting all grants to comply with executive orders - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42886661 - Jan 2025 (488 comments)

Archivists work to save disappearing data.gov datasets - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42881367 - Jan 2025 (238 comments)

US pauses all federal aid and grants - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42851248 - Jan 2025 (485 comments)

'Never seen anything like this' – NIH meetings and travel halted abruptly - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42817910 - Jan 2025 (111 comments)

NIH hit with freezes on meetings, travel, communications, and hiring - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42798960 - Jan 2025 (440 comments)


Yup, they're permaflagged and HN knowingly lets them go by even though they could do differently. Case in point: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43208973. Seems exceedingly likely that this one too would've gotten auto-perma-flagged, but then a button was pushed to undo this as a one-off that is not applied to all these other cases. Of course @dang is free to prove us wrong and explain the discrepancy.


As I said in my sibling comment (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43227619), this stuff has been by far the most-discussed on HN in recent weeks. Nothing else comes close.

I I listed 49 threads in that post. If we throw in the thread you mention (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43208973), that's 50 threads with over 30k comments.

That's an underestimate though, since the list is far from comprehensive. Let's conservatively bump the number up to 40k comments. That's over 1000 comments a day and well over 10% of the total comments that have been posted to HN during this period.

From my perspective that's not the same as "letting it go by".


Hmm, that's interesting dang. I'm almost never seeing any 'muskdogeness' posts (nice name !) on the first page. I'm looking at new posts, with showdead = True.

Would you have a stat on all those posts, if they were flagged at some point, and then un-flagged later ?


I looked at the frontpage time of those 50 threads and it adds up to almost exactly 300 hours on the front page. That's a lot of hours.

But it was over a total time span of 900 hours, so still pretty easy to miss all 50 threads. This is the way the HN frontpage works: no one sees everything that makes the front page (not even us), and it's entirely possible to miss the largest threads and most-discussed topics.

For example, https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43208973 is by now the second-largest thread in HN's history and spent 16 hours on the front page, but there are still going to be thousands of regular HN readers who never saw it, and some of those will probably feel angry about that and say that it has been "silenced" and "censored" and so on. That's the way this works.

Ultimately, it works that way because of fundamentals, meaning there's not much we can do about it. The solution is not to have 100 threads with 80k comments on the frontpage for 600 hours, instead of 50 threads with 40k comments for 300 hours, even though that's probably what most people who feel frustrated probably think they want. Rather the solution is to articulate the principles by which HN operates, and keep sticking to those principles over time.

I've been posting a ton about that in recent weeks, although (by the same dynamic I just described!) many readers won't yet have seen any of those posts. Here are two entry points:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43130700

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42911011


You can also look at https://news.ycombinator.com/active

and note that

GSA Eliminates 18F (nextgov.com) 471 points by patcon 15 hours ago | flag | 412 comments

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43221549

is an much earlier version of this submissions story .. and still actively being commented upon.


What's the 'active' page ? Wasn't aware of it.


'Active' with respect to comment churn.

Might not be the front page but it's where all the comment turnover is happening.

In many ways the opposite of well paced deeply considered exchanges.


It's on the /lists page that's linked in every HN footer: https://news.ycombinator.com/lists.


It's quiet in here because there's active discussion in other threads:

GSA Eliminates 18F - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43221549 - March 2025 (373 comments)

A Letter to the American People - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43224350 - March 2025 (440 comments)


He's acting like this because he campaigned on "government bad". Not any specific bit of it: all of it.

It is often theorized that he's doing this on behalf of some foreign power. That seems unlikely, and more to the point, uninformative. He was democratically elected: a plurality of voters wanted this outcome. He still has wide support among them.

It is true that foreign powers have been spreading propaganda in his favor, and the result is a weakening of the country. But that's not the result of one person betraying the nation. It's the result of American beliefs about what their nation is and should be.


Sadly the other power here is turbotax/intuit :(


I was going to say, Intuit could simply have given/owe Musk a solid favor for this.


As is the case that Trump, Musk, Vance and Thiel are Russian assets.

It’s just common sense to use Trumps own words.

Just remember that as these people drag us into a war for “peace”


The term for them is useful idiots not assets. The democrats did enormous damage to the Ukrainian cause pushing the russia hoax in 2017/18. Steele assumed there was competent intelligence analysts to analyse what he collected but instead it was politicians.


The other guy's point is that Russia is not a hoax and we'll see that when the files are opened up.


The most likely explanation is fraud


Why hasn’t the US announced anything like this?


As it should be, a political executive branch is not a democracy it’s a monarchy


a "monarchy" with checks and balances

>. Article II, Section 2 empowers the President to nominate and, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to appoint the principal officers of the United States, as well as some subordinate officers .

Yes, there is a process: https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R44083/6


This is amazing fun!


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