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Posts by Steve Flammia

Immigration is good. Good for us, good for the immigrant.

Allowing immigration is not a nice thing we do for immigrants. It is merely ceasing to do a bad thing to immigrants.

2 weeks ago 318 53 5 0
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Turing Award Goes to Inventors of Quantum Cryptography

Charlie Bennett and Gilles Brassard win the Turing Award. Congratulations to both. www.nytimes.com/2026/03/18/t...

1 month ago 9 1 0 0
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Chief Executive Officer - New York City, New York (US) job with arXiv | 37961678 arXiv seeks its first CEO to champion open, free scientific discovery and guide the platform’s next chapter as an independent nonprofit.

The arXiv is becoming a nonprofit separate from Cornell, and they're looking for a CEO. Please repost to let good candidates know!
@dabacon.tachyon.institute, @harrowing.bsky.social, @michaelnielsen.bsky.social
jobs.chronicle.com/job/37961678...

1 month ago 76 52 0 1

Registration is now open for QEC26, to be held this June in sunny Santa Barbara, CA! See the registration page at qec-conference.org for a link.

Also, the deadline for submissions is next Friday. Make sure to get those in and spread the word to friends and collaborators!

1 month ago 12 6 0 2
Call for Submissions Submissions to QEC26 are done through EasyChair. Click here to make a submission on EasyChair Submissions for talks and posters are open until the end of Friday, March 6th AOE.

The Call for Submissions for QEC26 is now up: qec-conference.org/2026/call/
Follow the link to submit your paper or poster by March 6th AOE.

2 months ago 13 2 2 1

This doesn’t even scratch the surface though. I predict ICE will get tasked with “monitoring election integrity” for the midterms.

9 months ago 3 1 0 0

The track record with humanitarian institutions and NGOs is much better, admittedly. 8/7

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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The Peace Prize track record is uniquely terrible. The fundamental flaw is rewarding unstable, real-time geopolitics instead of lifetime achievement. Every time a winner’s legacy curdles, the prize's reputation diminishes, permanently. 7/7

3 months ago 3 0 1 0

The omissions of deserving people (most famously Gandhi), and the inability to revoke it in bad cases further reinforce the sense that the prize is political and inconsistent. 6/7

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

Some obvious examples: Obama (for what?), Kissinger/Le Duc Tho (how is this peace?), Rabin/Peres/Arafat (reward people involved in violence), Aung San Suu Kyi (Rohingya), Abiy Ahmed (Tigray). 5/7

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

This sometimes rewards people involved in violence: many wars end through bargaining with such people. If you reward “peace talks,” you inevitably end up honoring figures many see as undeserving. 4/7

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

Prizes age badly when a process collapses or the laureate later governs horribly. The committee is sometimes trying to encourage peace in real time, not certify moral sainthood after the fact. 3/7

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

The Peace Prize is not given as a lifetime achievement award. It often rewards a process (negotiations, ceasefires, diplomacy, advocacy) rather than a settled outcome. That creates a failure mode of premature bets. 2/7

3 months ago 1 0 1 0

Is there any major, ostensibly legitimate prize with a worse track record than the Nobel Peace Prize? I believe that the “bad picks” aren’t random; they’re structural. 1/7

3 months ago 7 0 1 0
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Ken, you should know that music from 1990 is closer in time to the birth of rock 'n roll than to the present day.

3 months ago 3 0 1 0

I suspect it’s still open. I would need to read this more carefully to be certain, and I’m at a workshop, so you’ll have to wait on tenterhooks.

5 months ago 5 0 1 0

This raises new questions about Biden’s dogs.

5 months ago 0 0 0 0

Parameterableitungseinfachintegralfindungsfreude?

6 months ago 0 0 0 0
False Dmitry - Wikipedia

This trick has worked in the past, at least briefly; see False Dimitry. @zachweinersmith.bsky.social
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_D...

6 months ago 2 0 0 0

Outstanding choices!

6 months ago 9 1 1 0
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Interesting bit of sociology: They are really studiously avoiding any mention of quantum computing. First and only mention came in the last few words of the presentation by Johansson.

6 months ago 38 7 5 4

Charlie Bennett should win the Nobel prize in Physics this year.

6 months ago 12 1 4 0

This would be an important breakthrough if it holds, but I'm skeptical on first glance. Large parts of this were clearly written by a generative AI. Doesn't mean it's wrong, but I suspect it's a "vibe theorem", i.e., not a theorem. I'll wait for Vidick, Regev, etc. to weigh in.

7 months ago 7 1 2 0
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Governments have been over-promised, but program managers aren’t naive. Forcing academics + ‘clueless’ industry partners (imperfectly) aligns theory with reality. It’s frustrating (for both sides!), but still positive-sum. IMO funding a mixture is strictly better than funding only fundamentals.

7 months ago 6 0 0 0

I’m glad you caught that. :)

7 months ago 1 0 0 0

That's Kurt Anyon, the Austrian–American physicist after which anyons are named. He's walking with Gustav Karl Persson, of GKP fame.

7 months ago 4 0 1 0
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Foreign Student Status Duration Limits Clear White House Review A Department of Homeland Security proposal to restrict the duration of foreign students’ tenure in the US has cleared White House review, the final step before its public release.

Bad Policy: Subjecting PhD students and postdocs to 4-year visa limits, subject to immigration officials' review. This bureaucratic overregulation will reduce US competitiveness and weaken US science. There needs to be more awareness and discussion of this terrible idea
news.bgov.com/daily-labor-...

8 months ago 12 1 0 0
QEC25

The QEC25 conference hosted by @yaleqi.bsky.social was really excellent, and videos of all talks are available. So much recent progress on quantum error correction!
qec25.yalepages.org

8 months ago 26 7 1 0
Screenshot of a post saying, "In German, the word "Schiedsrichtertrotzdank", means the simultaneous feeling of annoyance and gratitude you feel when a referee makes a valid point."

Screenshot of a post saying, "In German, the word "Schiedsrichtertrotzdank", means the simultaneous feeling of annoyance and gratitude you feel when a referee makes a valid point."

💯! There's even a word for that in German!

8 months ago 4 0 0 0
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Congress wants to cut the smartest investment taxpayers ever made Virtually every smartphone on the planet runs on a chip paid for by American taxpayers — a chip that I helped invent. Now Congress is moving to cut funding for the National Science Foundation that …

"Every American taxpayer is a silent shareholder in that success. If we walk away now, we lose not just future breakthroughs but also what we have already earned." thehill.com/opinion/tech...

8 months ago 4 2 0 0
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