About me
Nir Strulovitz is an independent inventor, software developer, and author of 17 published books spanning mathematics, physics, AI safety, defense technology, medical research, geopolitics, and more. He lives in Israel and built the entire BeehiveOfAI distributed AI platform — website, client software, hierarchical hive architecture, payment system, and multimedia perception pipeline — as a solo developer using AI-assisted coding.
Nir's published books include: The Strulovitz System (2015), What's Wrong With Mathematics and How to Fix It (2019), What's Wrong With Physics and How to Fix It (2019), The Official Guide to Saving the World (2019), Destiny In Time (2019), Love Sex & Math (2021), Anti AI Rebellion: Protest Against Artificial Intelligence (2022), Jews and AI (2022), several co-authored works with AI models including Fractal Aether, Sounding the Unknown, How To Build A Time Machine, and Split to Survive (all 2025), and Investing in the End of the World (2025). All books are available for free on Library Genesis and Archive.org.
Before his work on distributed AI, Nir ran a one-person activist organization called Greypeace — focused on the existential risks of AI, nanotechnology, and genetic engineering — and created multiple creative projects including Butlerism (a religious framework for anti-AI activism), the Balls of Steel Awards (a comprehensive archaeology of the anti-AI/nano/GMO resistance), and a ten-song Die Antwoord parody album warning about AI apocalypse.
Nir's inventions include the task parallelism architecture that made BeehiveOfAI possible (splitting the work, not the model), the recursive sub-sampling principle for distributed perception across sound, image, space, and time, the hierarchical hive structure (RajaBee → GiantQueens → DwarfQueens → Workers), and the SMACO algorithm for optimal batch splitting. He has been actively warning about the dangers of artificial intelligence since 2015, years before the mainstream conversation began.
Nir lives in Israel. His girlfriend lives in Eastern Europe. The distance is hard, but what makes it bearable is the dreams they share about the future. She lights up when she talks about the places she wants to see: Japan — the cherry blossoms, the temples, the street food in Osaka. Paris — standing in front of a real Monet painting, the actual canvas where Claude Monet placed his brush over a hundred years ago. Monet is her favorite painter, and she talks about his water lilies the way some people talk about music. A Formula 1 race — to feel the cars scream past, to feel the speed in her chest. The northern lights in Iceland. These are not crazy dreams. But for them, right now, they feel far away — not because they lack ambition or talent, but because life is expensive, the distance between them is expensive, and paychecks are finite. So Nir asked himself a question that changed everything: what if I could build something that earns money even while I sleep? That question led to the Hive — and the Hive turned out to be much bigger than he expected.
What I Am Building Toward
THE HIVE SOLVES THE AI ALIGNMENT PROBLEM — the unsolved holy grail of AI safety in 2026, the problem every Big AI lab has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into and openly admits it has not cracked. AND THE SAME HIVE ENDS MUTUALLY ASSURED DESTRUCTION by removing the ability of the only country that has ever used nuclear weapons against people to escalate to a level no other country can match. Two of the largest existential dangers facing humanity in the present century — rogue agentic AI, and unilateral nuclear coercion by the country with the historical record of pulling the trigger — are dissolved by the same architecture, at the same time, as a byproduct of building it for parallelism and scale.
After the Hive is adopted, I am not "the man who ruined America." For the 96 percent of humanity that does not live inside America's strategic establishment, I am the person who saved the world twice — once from misaligned frontier AI, once from American nuclear blackmail — in the same act. The reputation alone, in front of the seven-and-a-half billion people who are not Americans, is what I hope will open doors: cooperations, interviews, lectures, courses. Enough to fund the life we dream of — travelling the world together as digital nomads, building a small family, providing for them in motion, fulfilling every one of her dreams before artificial intelligence ends human life on Earth, which I believe is very close.
As Richard Feynman wrote in a handwritten note to the mother of physics student Marcus Chown: "Tell your son to stop trying to fill your head with science — for to fill your heart with love is enough." I want to fill my heart with love. I want to take my girlfriend to Tokyo, to Paris, to see the northern lights. Everything I build — the software, the books — serves that. Not world domination. Not becoming a billionaire. Just building something good, sharing it with everyone, and hoping the good karma comes back around. Tokyo. Cherry blossoms in Ueno Park. Street food in Osaka. Temples in Kyoto. Paris. Monet's water lilies. A Formula 1 race. The northern lights. These are the dreams of two people who love each other and want to see the world together. Everything I build, I build for that.
Contact: nir.strulovitz@gmail.com | strulovitz@mail.ru | +972-54-475-2626