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Three Observations - Sam Altman

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Our mission is to ensure that AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) benefits all of humanity. 

Systems that start to point to AGI* are coming into view, and so we think it’s important to understand the moment we are in. AGI is a weakly defined term, but generally speaking we mean it to be a system that can tackle increasingly complex problems, at human level, in many fields.

People are tool-builders with an inherent drive to understand and create, which leads to the world getting better for all of us. Each new generation builds upon the discoveries of the generations before to create even more capable tools—electricity, the transistor, the computer, the internet, and soon AGI.

Over time, in fits and starts, the steady march of human innovation has brought previously unimaginable levels of prosperity and improvements to almost every aspect of people’s lives.

In some sense, AGI is just another tool in this ever-taller scaffolding of human progress we are building together. In another sense, it is the beginning of something for which it’s hard not to say “this time it’s different”; the economic growth in front of us looks astonishing, and we can now imagine a world where we cure all diseases, have much more time to enjoy with our families, and can fully realize our creative potential.

In a decade, perhaps everyone on earth will be capable of accomplishing more than the most impactful person can today.

We continue to see rapid progress with AI development. Here are three observations about the economics of AI:

1. The intelligence of an AI model roughly equals the log of the resources used to train and run it. These resources are chiefly training compute, data, and inference compute. It appears that you can spend arbitrary amounts of money and get continuous and predictable gains; the scaling laws that predict this are accurate over many orders of magnitude.

2. The cost to use a given level of AI falls about 10x every 12 months, and lower prices lead to much more use. You can see this in the token cost from GPT-4 in early 2023 to GPT-4o in mid-2024, where the price per token dropped about 150x in that time period. Moore’s law changed the world at 2x every 18 months; this is unbelievably stronger. 

3. The socioeconomic value of linearly increasing intelligence is super-exponential in nature. A consequence of this is that we see no reason for exponentially increasing investment to stop in the near future.

If these three observations continue to hold true, the impacts on society will be significant.

We are now starting to roll out AI agents, which will eventually feel like virtual co-workers.

Let’s imagine the case of a software engineering agent, which is an agent that we expect to be particularly important. Imagine that this agent will eventually be capable of doing most things a software engineer at a top company with a few years of experience could do, for tasks up to a couple of days long. It will not have the biggest new ideas, it will require lots of human supervision and direction, and it will be great at some things but surprisingly bad at others.

Still, imagine it as a real-but-relatively-junior virtual coworker. Now imagine 1,000 of them. Or 1 million of them. Now imagine such agents in every field of knowledge work.

In some ways, AI may turn out to be like the transistor economically—a big scientific discovery that scales well and that seeps into almost every corner of the economy. We don’t think much about transistors, or transistor companies, and the gains are very widely distributed. But we do expect our computers, TVs, cars, toys, and more to perform miracles.

The world will not change all at once; it never does. Life will go on mostly the same in the short run, and people in 2025 will mostly spend their time in the same way they did in 2024. We will still fall in love, create families, get in fights online, hike in nature, etc.

But the future will be coming at us in a way that is impossible to ignore, and the long-term changes to our society and economy will be huge. We will find new things to do, new ways to be useful to each other, and new ways to compete, but they may not look very much like the jobs of today. 

Agency, willfulness, and determination will likely be extremely valuable. Correctly deciding what to do and figuring out how to navigate an ever-changing world will have huge value; resilience and adaptability will be helpful skills to cultivate. AGI will be the biggest lever ever on human willfulness, and enable individual people to have more impact than ever before, not less.

We expect the impact of AGI to be uneven. Although some industries will change very little, scientific progress will likely be much faster than it is today; this impact of AGI may surpass everything else.

The price of many goods will eventually fall dramatically (right now, the cost of intelligence and the cost of energy constrain a lot of things), and the price of luxury goods and a few inherently limited resources like land may rise even more dramatically.

Technically speaking, the road in front of us looks fairly clear. But public policy and collective opinion on how we should integrate AGI into society matter a lot; one of our reasons for launching products early and often is to give society and the technology time to co-evolve.

AI will seep into all areas of the economy and society; we will expect everything to be smart. Many of us expect to need to give people more control over the technology than we have historically, including open-sourcing more, and accept that there is a balance between safety and individual empowerment that will require trade-offs.

While we never want to be reckless and there will likely be some major decisions and limitations related to AGI safety that will be unpopular, directionally, as we get closer to achieving AGI, we believe that trending more towards individual empowerment is important; the other likely path we can see is AI being used by authoritarian governments to control their population through mass surveillance and loss of autonomy.

Ensuring that the benefits of AGI are broadly distributed is critical. The historical impact of technological progress suggests that most of the metrics we care about (health outcomes, economic prosperity, etc.) get better on average and over the long-term, but increasing equality does not seem technologically determined and getting this right may require new ideas.

In particular, it does seem like the balance of power between capital and labor could easily get messed up, and this may require early intervention. We are open to strange-sounding ideas like giving some “compute budget” to enable everyone on Earth to use a lot of AI, but we can also see a lot of ways where just relentlessly driving the cost of intelligence as low as possible has the desired effect.

Anyone in 2035 should be able to marshall the intellectual capacity equivalent to everyone in 2025; everyone should have access to unlimited genius to direct however they can imagine. There is a great deal of talent right now without the resources to fully express itself, and if we change that, the resulting creative output of the world will lead to tremendous benefits for us all.


Thanks especially to Josh Achiam, Boaz Barak and Aleksander Madry for reviewing drafts of this.

*By using the term AGI here, we aim to communicate clearly, and we do not intend to alter or interpret the definitions and processes that define our relationship with Microsoft. We fully expect to be partnered with Microsoft for the long term. This footnote seems silly, but on the other hand we know some journalists will try to get clicks by writing something silly so here we are pre-empting the silliness…

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samuel
1 hour ago
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Agency is what we need to be teaching kids
Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Minister says B.C. aluminum smelter confident it will find non-U.S. aluminum buyers

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A ship is sen docked at an industrial facility.

The operators of the B.C. Works aluminum smelter in the province's north are confident it will find non-U. S. markets for its product, the minister co-ordinating British Columbia's response to tariff threats from the United States said Monday.

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dreadhead
2 hours ago
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Vancouver Island, Canada
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The ABA supports the rule of law

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acdha
5 hours ago
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👏
Washington, DC
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Google Calendar removed events like Pride and BHM because its holiday list wasn’t ‘sustainable’ | The Verge

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Some Google Calendar users are angrily calling the company out after noticing that certain events like Pride month are no longer highlighted by default. Black History Month, Indigenous People Month, Jewish Heritage, Holocaust Remembrance Day, and Hispanic Heritage have also been removed, according to a Google product expert.

One user called the move “shameful” and said that the platform is being used to “capitulate to fascism.” Over the last few years, there have been comments and media reports complaining about the presence of the notes, but now they’re gone.

Google confirmed it’s made changes to the default Calendar events, but with a different explanation about when and why. Here’s Google’s explanation of what’s going on, provided by spokesperson Madison Cushman Veld:

For over a decade we’ve worked with <a href="http://timeanddate.com" rel="nofollow">timeanddate.com</a> to show public holidays and national observances in Google Calendar. Some years ago, the Calendar team started manually adding a broader set of cultural moments in a wide number of countries around the world. We got feedback that some other events and countries were missing — and maintaining hundreds of moments manually and consistently globally wasn’t scalable or sustainable. So in mid-2024 we returned to showing only public holidays and national observances from <a href="http://timeanddate.com" rel="nofollow">timeanddate.com</a> globally, while allowing users to manually add other important moments.

<a href="http://Timeanddate.com" rel="nofollow">Timeanddate.com</a> didn’t reply to requests for comment.

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acdha
5 hours ago
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Come to mock the multi-trillion dollar company saying not one of their 183k employees can run a calendar.

Stay to laugh at what that would imply about their massive AI investment if Gemini can’t even answer a question like “when is Pride?”
Washington, DC
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Dragonsweeper is my favorite game of 2025 (so far)

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While writing a wide-ranging history of Windows Minesweeper for Boss Fight Books in 2023, I ended up playing many variations of Microsoft's beloved original game. Those include versions with hexagonal tiles, versions with weird board shapes, and versions that extend Minesweeper into four dimensions or more, to name just a few.

Almost all these variants messed a little too much with the careful balance of simplicity, readability, reasoning, and luck that made the original Minesweeper so addictive. None of them became games I return to day after day.

But then I stumbled onto Dragonsweeper, a free browser-based game that indie developer Daniel Benmergui released unceremoniously on itch.io last month. In the weeks since I discovered it, the game has become my latest puzzle obsession, filling in a worrying proportion of my spare moments with its addictive, simple RPG-tinged take on the Minesweeper formula.

Exploresweeper

Like Minesweeper before it, Dragonsweeper is a game about deducing hidden information based on the limited information you can already see on the grid. But the numbers you reveal in Dragonsweeper don't simply tell you the number of threats on adjacent squares. Instead, the "numbers are sum of monster power," as the game's cryptic "Monsternomicon" explains. So a revealed square with a "14" could suggest two 7-power devils nearby or two 5-power slimes and a 4-power ogre, or even seven 2-power bats in a particularly weird randomized arrangement.

Destroying those monsters means eating into your avatar Jorge's health total, which is prominently displayed in the bottom-left corner. Jorge's health can safely go down to zero hearts without dying—which feels a bit counter-intuitive at first—and can be restored by using discovered health potions or by leveling up with gold accumulated from downed monsters and items. If you can level up enough without dying, you'll have the health necessary to defeat the titular dragon sitting in the middle of the board and win the game.

<em>Dragonsweeper</em>'s "Monsternomicon" isn't exactly easy to parse at first. Credit: Dragonsweeper

The first few times I played Dragonsweeper, it seemed impossible to make significant progress. I'd defeat a few of the low-ranking monsters revealed at the beginning of the game, use all the level-ups and health potions I could, and then be stuck with no health in a situation where it seemed like I had to guess to continue. The balance between logic and luck seemed completely out of whack.

The game didn't really click for me until I read a comment suggesting that I think of Jorge's hearts as a sort of "exploration budget" to probe the frontiers of unrevealed tiles. Instead of clicking on the monsters you can already see (or deduce directly), it's usually much smarter to click on multiple tiles if and when you can be sure those tiles won't kill Jorge.

So if I see a revealed "14" tile with 10 points of known adjacent monsters, I know I can click the other adjacent tiles and take just four points of damage. In exchange for that health, I gain more board information and more gold and items to continue the cycle of healing and exploration. After literal decades of Minesweeper-honed instincts to never click a potentially dangerous box, Dragonsweeper had to train me that it was OK to trade "danger" for information in this way.

Even death can provide valuable information for future runs. Credit: Dragonsweeper

While most Dragonsweeper monsters end up acting as simple damage sponges, a few have some hidden abilities or patterns that only become apparent after a bit of guess-and-check gameplay. It pays to follow the Monsternomicon's directive to "Observe Monster Patterns When Dead," looking at the fully revealed board to figure out the kinds of locations where certain monsters congregate and exploit that knowledge as you plan your strategy.

Just one more dragon

Variants like Mamono Sweeper and Runestone Keeper have similarly tried adding RPG systems to the basic Minesweeper formula in the past, but they ended up feeling a little too complex and difficult to parse for my tastes. Dragonsweeper adds just enough randomized monster battling and item collecting to stay interesting without becoming unwieldy under the weight of intricate systems.

After a few hours of somewhat obsessive play, I got pretty good at consistently killing the dragon on the original version of Dragonsweeper. Then, late last week, Benmergui posted an update that greatly improved the user interface, modified some monster behaviors, and "adjust[ed] the challenge." The new version requires a little more care and deduction to make early progress, even though the vast majority of boards still seem solvable with careful play.

Even after your first "win," you'll keep coming back to improve on your top score and completion time. Credit: Dragonsweeper

Even after you've notched your first Dragonsweeper "win," there's still reason to keep coming back. The game's background scoring system encourages you to defeat not just the dragon but every single monster on the board, a feat that requires careful planning and a bit of luck in finding early gold piles. The latest update also adds an in-game timer (which is only revealed when you win), encouraging the kind of record-chasing speedruns that high-level Minesweeper is known for (my best Dragonsweeper run so far is just under four minutes, but I'm sure that can be improved).

Even with a number of grand, bid-budget gaming epics in my backlog (and my review plate), Dragonsweeper has become the game I'm eager to return to with practically every spare moment I can find lately. It's a perfect "coffee break" game that requires just enough logic and strategy to focus my higher brain functions while offering enough luck to not be rote. As it happens, that's exactly what I'm looking for from a gaming distraction these days.

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fxer
5 hours ago
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It’s dope, and the update looks to have made it work on mobile too
Bend, Oregon
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Silicon Valley’s delusion machine

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Think About Supporting Garbage Day!

It’s $5 a month or $45 a year and you get Discord access, the coveted weekend issue, and monthly trend reports. What a bargain! Hit the button below to find out more.

The AI Super Bowl — And Everything Else

I was watching the 2022 Super Bowl with family back in Massachusetts when an ad starring Tom Brady came on. Which obviously caused quite a stir. It was for the crypto trading platform FTX and it inspired my mom to finally ask me what cryptocurrency is. I tried my best to explain and even drew out on a napkin a rough approximation of how a blockchain worked. After a beat of silence she just said, “I don’t think I get it, but that’s nice.”

I felt echoes of the 2022 crypto Super Bowl while watching the deluge of ads last night for artificial intelligence from companies like OpenAI, Google, Meta, and Salesforce. The marketing — and the product — is slightly clearer this time around. It doesn’t require a literal diagram to explain how to use a chatbot, but the result was the same: Here is something Silicon Valley has decided you need and you’re going to have to use it. And it can be hard to remember that up until around 2020, Silicon Valley did not typically operate this way.

Most of the big tech companies that are now shoving AI down our throats got as big as they did, not because they sold us a revolutionary new product they dreamed up out of nothing, but because they found, oftentimes, insidious ways to solve a digital infrastructure problem with a private business. Google figured out how to help us find content we were already looking for, Facebook figured out how to help us find people we already knew, Amazon, physical products we already wanted, etc. Yes, these companies would eventually flood the airwaves with ad campaigns, but Google was already a multi-billion-dollar tech company and Chrome had over 100 million active users when they dropped their first Super Bowl commercial, “Parisian Love,” in 2010. That still-very clever ad told a story about someone one falling in love through the mundane Google searches everyone makes every day. Google’s Super Bowl ad last night, “Dream Job,” depicted a dad getting ready for a job interview by talking out loud in his kitchen to an AI voice assistant, something I am very confident no one has done ever. But that doesn’t matter because Silicon Valley believes they are big enough now to create the future, rather than scale up to meet it.

(tfw you’re being normal and casually talking to an AI in your kitchen like it’s a person.)

But this isn’t just about tech companies being out of touch with how actual human beings use their products. If it was, Google could have chosen to advertise how someone uses Gemini with an ad that featured employees at a Vietnamese content farm generating millions of AI images of amputee veterans praying to crab Jesus or something.

This would all be simply annoying and kind of embarrassing if November's election had gone differently. Thanks to apps like TikTok, Shein, Temu, and, most recently, DeepSeek, we know that China has caught up to the US and its tech industry has figured out how to innovate in ways ours can't or won’t. You might not like machine-learning-based short-form video apps or gamified social shopping platforms, but they are genuinely new ways of interacting with the web. And US regulators can’t actually stop the tide from turning — at best, the US will become an island surrounded by a global internet run by Chinese software. But what elevates this from lame to genuinely dangerous is that this delusion that Silicon Valley can now decide how the future should look has infiltrated the highest levels of the US government. And AI is the technology powering this delusion.

As we speak, Elon Musk’s DOGE team is reportedly planning to use xAI to “streamline” federal contracts and OpenAI is talking to the White House about using their AI for nuclear weapon security. And OpenAI, Oracle, and SoftBank are partnering on a new company called Stargate, funded by a massive investment in AI thanks to President Donald Trump. Journalist Maximillian Alvarez recently described the current AI invasion as an attempt to take over “government and ensure we have no more choice in the matter.” And if they succeed, it won’t just be Super Bowl commercials that no long reflect reality. The entire country will be running on Silicon Valley’s delusion machine. And whatever the future of computing is that was supposed to arrive, never will.


The following is a paid ad. If you’re interested in advertising, email me at ryan@garbageday.email and let’s talk. Thanks!

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That's why you should use Incogni instead. They'll remove all your data from over 200 data brokerages and people-search sites automatically, so you can kiss spam goodbye.

Better yet, they're giving our readers 55% off with code DAYDEAL, which you can use by clicking here. Never worry about being tracked on the web again. Here's that link one more time!


Good Song About The Coup

Instagram post by @veryveryvinny


One of the hardest pills to swallow about our current constitutional crisis is that a majority, though slim, of the country voted for it. And, sure, there are a million stories emerging right now about Trumpists realizing that, yes, the leopards will eat their face too. But the managerial class, on both sides of the political spectrum, that truly believed in atomic age neoliberalism is really struggling to make sense of the general glee felt around the country as President Donald Trump destroys the institutions that, well, make America, America. The hope, it seems, is that eventually Trump’s team will sever something in the system that will truly infuriate and activate voters. Never mind that that’s literally not how most coups play out. Boiled frogs and so on.

CBS News partnered with YouGov on a poll out this week showing that the majority of Americans are still all in on Trump. More than half of responders believe Trump is “tough,” “energetic” (lol), and “focused” (lmao). And the majority of those polled approve of what he’s doing, overall. Now, there’s some quibbling over on Bluesky about how serious to take this poll, but I think that’s a lot of cope tbh. Similarly, I saw reports on social media that Trump was booed at the Super Bowl last night, but based on what I’ve read, Taylor Swift got the majority of the boos last night, not the president.

Here’s the thing, though. None of this actually matters. All kinds of stupid, awful, ugly shit is popular. That doesn’t mean we have to accept it as inevitable. And, most importantly, it doesn’t make it above the law. Hopefully, someone can forward this email to Democratic Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. Might help him brainstorm some better ideas for wrestling back some power in 2026.


The Bluesky Coalition Did Not Last Very Long

—by Adam Bumas

As Democratic Party leaders like Jeffries and Chuck Schumer continue the outward messaging that they’re just little birthday boys, there’s been a pretty wide desire for more direct political organizing that can effectively resist the subversion of the federal government. So far there’s been a few successes, but over the weekend, we saw a big failure on Bluesky of sorts.

On Saturday, journalist and Western Kabuki host Juniper tried to build an Axis of Posting with Will Stancil, the longtime Twitter warrior and wannabe establishment Democrat. Juniper called for Stancil to “heal the divide between the far left and liberals online,” and create a united front of political messaging on the internet. Stancil was initially positive about the idea, but in less than an hour Stancil had started getting into it with Juniper’s followers, and once the replies and quote-tweets got four or five deep, the idea of the coalition had completely been forgotten.

There’s a lesson here! Both Juniper and Stancil clearly agree on quite a lot about politics. It would definitely be good for both to agree on simple and succinct messaging that’s easy to internalize for people who aren’t posting about politics all day. But there are probably better places to figure that out than on the Misinterpreting Your Post App.


Talk Tuah, Leaked

An unreleased episode of Haliey Welch’s podcast, Talk Tuah, leaked last week. In the episode, Welch starts crying at one point, as the co-host of the episode, FaZe Media CEO Ricky Banks, tried to explain what happened with the disastrous launch of the $HAWK coin back in December. Welch has not made any public comments since the coin was pumped and dumped at the end of the year. Welch and her team are now facing a class action lawsuit over the coin.

The TL;DR of what happened, according to Welch in the leaked episode, is that a “friend of a friend” was running $HAWK and though things felt “a little weird” as it was launching, she was unaware of how much of a rug pull it would end up becoming. She also said that she was only interested in doing a memecoin because she wanted to donate half of the money to her animal rescue charity Paws Across America.

Reading between the lines here a bit, it seems fairly clear that Welch fell for all the standard crypto BS uninitiated investors get told at the outset of these kinds of projects. The tell here is Welch’s mention of how she was told the project would be “positive” and “community-based” which is the same kind of multilevel marketing speak I’ve heard at countless crypto events over the years.

Look, here’s a good rule. If a 30-something man with flavored-vape vocal fry dressed like a professional snowboarder tells you that crypto is good a way to make friends, you need to run as fast as possible in the opposite direction. You are a mark.


Reddit Is Obsessed With The New York Times Beans

—By Adam Bumas

The New York Times Cooking app is popular enough it’s had its share of viral moments over the years — most infamously, Alison Roman’s shallot pasta back in 2020. More recently, r/NYTCooking has become a hub for this beautiful little outgrowth of the social web.

For the past month or so, users on the subreddit have been making and posting pictures of this recipe for “Creamy, Spicy Tomato Beans and Greens”. The subreddit was so overwhelmed by posts about the beans (here are some of the highlights) that, on request from the community, the mods started a Beans Megathread. And today, the Times’ official Reddit account will be hosting an AMA with Alexa Weibel, who created the recipe.

Congratulations to everyone involved, and especially to the top commenter on the beans recipe, who says “Loved it! I substituted everything with a Taco Bell burrito supreme. It was a hit!”


Crucial Updates From The Philly Police Scanner Last Night

You can — and should — click the link above and read the whole thread. It rips. Go birds (unless they’re playing against New England).


Did you know Garbage Day has a merch store?

You can check it out here!



P.S. here’s a hidden stoat.

***Any typos in this email are on purpose actually***

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tante
9 hours ago
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"current AI invasion as an attempt to take over “government and ensure we have no more choice in the matter.” And if they succeed, it won’t just be Super Bowl commercials that no long reflect reality. The entire country will be running on Silicon Valley’s delusion machine. And whatever the future of computing is that was supposed to arrive, never will."
Berlin/Germany
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Air Canada had no idea these passengers were on its flights and cancelled their tickets home

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Composite photos of various airline passengers in various settings.

Go Public heard from six people on four different flights who had their return tickets cancelled after Air Canada incorrectly deemed them “no-shows” on earlier flights, requiring them to buy new tickets home. An expert on boarding methods for plane passengers says the issue is a safety concern.

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dreadhead
10 hours ago
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Vancouver Island, Canada
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