Yeah, there's a similar point to be made against the Suits when they assert 
that it's unprofessional to use emojis. I mean, I almost never feel like I 
understand what they mean. But such fuzziness occurs with words anyway. So 
emojis are yet another token; and they will be part of anyone with a large 
vocabulary.

What I thought was more interesting was the relationship between tech and money. My recent 
shallow exploration of frederic jameson was in response to what people tend to call 
"culture war issues", often in a dismissive way. Jameson argues that cultural change 
emerges from economic change (antagonistic modes of production). One might argue that 
cryptocurrency provides things like shadow quantitative easing 
<https://www.compactmag.com/article/money-by-vile-means/>. This challenges sovereign 
currencies. And although the crypto fanbois might claim it also challenges the traditional 
(capitalist) accumulation of wealth, I'd argue it does not.

Sure, some billionaire tool like Musk converts USD to SOL, then some techie (part of the 
"professional-managerial class" (PMC) mode of production) can use AI to design 
a wallet drainer. But such fuzziness at the border of the wealthy class versus the 
non-wealthy PMC members doesn't challenge the wealthy's status. Writ large, anyone in the 
PMC already benefits from things like access to the internet, computers, and the 
knowledge for how to use them. So really wallet drainers are money flow within that 
wealth class, within a mode, not conflict between modes.

That's why the article interests me. But the larger context is: if you're currently on 
the margins of the PMC and you're *not* investing in learning "AI", then you 
(or your children['s children]) are more likely to leave the PMC at some point ... even 
if you're a millionaire.

On 8/1/25 9:30 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
I sort of understand why they do that, beyond self-promotion.
It is a genuine advocacy of pure vibe coding:  In this mode, one doesn't even 
look at the generated code and so it is important to have very rich diagnostics 
and to restate what the user apparently wants.
Every possible tripwire is needed to detect trouble early.  The LLMs are 
trained to use annotations to not only restate the apparent intention, but even 
to print it out when the program runs.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHWFF_pnqDk&ab_channel=Anthropic

It can be removed easily enough with a few prompts.

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam <[email protected]> On Behalf Of glen
Sent: Friday, August 1, 2025 7:21 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [FRIAM] Emojis in the source code

Threat actor uses AI to create a better crypto wallet drainer 
https://getsafety.com/blog-posts/threat-actor-uses-ai-to-create-a-better-crypto-wallet-drainer

Clue that AI wrote this #1: Emojis in the source code Clue that AI
wrote this #2: What's up with all the console.log messages?
Clue that AI wrote this #3: Excessive comments Clue that AI wrote this
#4: The markdown Clue that AI wrote this #5: Calling things "Enhanced"



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¡sıɹƎ ןıɐH ⊥ ɐןןǝdoɹ ǝ uǝןƃ
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