All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - Joe Tsai on US-China Rivalry, AI's Future, Owning the Nets/Liberty, Caitlin Clark's Major Impact
Episode Date: October 8, 2025(0:00) Introducing Joe Tsai (0:49) Owning the Nets and Liberty, Caitlin Clark’s impact on the WNBA, does the NBA need fixing? (6:07) Alibaba origins, China’s pullback on capitalism (10:10) US vs C...hina rivalry: the AI race, are we destined for conflict, and what can the US learn from China? (19:46) AI application in large businesses (21:52) Managing corporate culture at Alibaba’s scale, Nets predictions (23:17) AI adoption, job anxiety, and AGI views in China Thanks to our partners for making this happen! Solana - Solana is the high performance network powering internet capital markets, payments, and crypto applications. Connect with investors, crypto founders, and entrepreneurs at Solana’s global flagship event during Abu Dhabi Finance Week & F1: https://solana.com/breakpoint OKX - The new way to build your crypto portfolio and use it in daily life. We call it the new money app. https://www.okx.com/ Google Cloud - The next generation of unicorns is building on Google Cloud's industry-leading, fully integrated AI stack: infrastructure, platform, models, agents, and data. https://cloud.google.com/ IREN - IREN AI Cloud, powered by NVIDIA GPUs, provides the scale, performance, and reliability to accelerate your AI journey. https://iren.com/ Oracle - Step into the future of enterprise productivity at Oracle AI Experience Live. https://www.oracle.com/artificial-intelligence/data-ai-events/ Circle - The America-based company behind USDC — a fully-reserved, enterprise-grade stablecoin at the core of the emerging internet financial system. https://www.circle.com/ BVNK - Building stablecoin-powered financial infrastructure that helps businesses send, store, and spend value instantly, anywhere in the world. https://www.bvnk.com/ Polymarket - https://www.polymarket.com/ Follow Joe Tsai: https://x.com/joetsai1999 Follow the besties: https://x.com/chamath https://x.com/Jason https://x.com/DavidSacks https://x.com/friedberg Follow on X: https://x.com/theallinpod Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theallinpod Follow on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theallinpod Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/allinpod Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://x.com/yung_spielburg
Transcript
Discussion (0)
For people who don't know who he is, please give us an introduction to Joe Stapp.
He's the owner of the Nets, and he's now chairman of Alibaba.
We like innovation from the bottom up.
Ali Baba just dropped their secret weapon.
Quinn 2.5 max.
Alibaba surged 14.5% overnight, beat estimates on nearly every metric.
A massive rally alone is he adding about $100 billion to the stock's value.
You have to have a growth mindset when you compete.
Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Joe Tsai.
Hey.
My man, good to see you.
Good to see you.
Joe, nice to you.
How are you?
How are you?
Good to see you.
David.
How are you?
The Brooklyn Nets.
Brooklyn Nets.
And the New York Liberty.
And the New York Liberty, exactly.
It's not easy running a team, is it?
It's not easy at all.
Not easy at all.
Because a basketball, any professional team is both a business and also it's an institution.
You need to keep the fan base happy.
So there's sort of this church and state element.
It's almost like running a news organization.
Yeah, there it is.
Can we maybe start with the WMBA and we can shift to business and we can shift to basketball?
But I think Caitlin Kark is out for the season and there's just been a lot of controversy and
attention that the WMBA is getting. What is it done right? What is it done wrong? Has the league been
doing enough to protect her as a as a star in the face of the league? It's been a almost a microcosm
for just a social discussion. Do you want to just talk about that as what you see?
Clayton Clark definitely had an effect on the WNBA. All the metrics went up. So this was last
season, right, when she first came into the league from college. And we've seen all of our metrics from
viewership ticket sales sponsorship everything went up on like almost 4x 4x 4x 4x right I
mean that's incredible that's incredible so so the so the economic impact that she's
made to the league is is extraordinary undeniable but because of who she is you
know she's a little bit of a different kind of play you know she is she's a
point guard she's she's a smaller player the knock on her
was she going to be able to withstand
on the physicality of the league?
And she's proven that she's able to do that.
Unfortunately, there's been,
I think it's always good to have rivalries, right?
You know, she has this rivalry with angelries
that dated back to college.
But some people would like to pit it as a kind of a racial thing
or is it this or that.
I think we need to look past that
and just look at the skills.
set that's being brought into the league now we have so many great college players i mean uh the
the the rookie of the year potential candidate uh is sonia citron have you ever heard of her before she
came into the league i mean no she i think she just broke the record for the highest three point
uh shooting percentage in the league uh so you know you see tremendous amount of talent and i
think uh you you ask what have what have they done right i i i i
I think it's a matter of just a confluence of good things coming into the league.
And what about the NBA?
So you guys did just an enormous...
Just let me...
But the one thing that's really changed, that is prior to the Caitlin Clark season,
your average fan base that watches ESPN, basically, you guys are not watching women's basketball.
Maybe someone followed college, but certainly not the NBA.
But now your average ESPN fan base, they are watching,
the mainstream sports fan base are watching the NBA.
I think she's a phenomenal.
I have an observation about this,
and you and I are old school basketball heads,
you know, watching, having watched the 80s and 90s
and Patrick Ewing and Charles Barkley.
It's more physical.
They're tougher in the WNBA.
And every time LeBron goes up and he gets fouled,
and he's just, oh, and he's flopping all over the place.
How did he do it?
Oh, you know, it's a foul.
It's a foul.
So maybe you could comment on LeBron being like...
We're just generally the NBA product, actually.
Yeah, the NBA product of today.
And then they're so tough and they're throwing each other around.
It's a better game.
The NBA product is great.
I don't think it's fair to compare whether the men's league is less physical than the women's league or one or the other.
I mean, they're both very physical.
I mean, if you are sitting there on the floor, you are watching physicality.
Sure.
And also athleticism, right?
But the game has, you know, the NBA has this committee called the competition committee.
So I got put on the competition committee.
They call me and they say, Joe, you know, wanting to be on the competition committee.
You know, it's about rules, about, you know, like, what does this transition, take foul?
So the committee is every season, they make these tweak changes.
They make changes to the roughing to make the product better.
I mean, when I got the call, I'm like, you want me to do.
sit on the committee with Jason Kidd, Chris Paul, and Coach K, like, what do I know about
basketball that can, you know, really be smarter than then. But what I've seen is, I've said
to ask Silver, the competition committee should be called the product committee, because that is
the product, the fans see it on the floor. If you change, let's say if you change the three-point
line, that is a product decision. It's not competition. Should they? Is it too? I, I, I, I,
I don't think so. I don't think so.
When you watch the Boston Celtics throw up 43s in a game, you think it's a good product?
I think it's a great product because there are 18 different ways you can throw up 43s in a game.
Okay.
Let's transition to Alibaba for a second.
It's an incredible journey, you and Jack Ma and the whole story has, I mean, it's written in books and there's just tremendous lore.
But can you take us back to your mindset?
I mean, I think we've heard, it's well documented, Jack's mindset, but how you got it?
involved, what you were thinking in that moment, the risk you were taking. I was just mesmerized by
Jack's personality. People see the public side of Jack, which is very charismatic. But what I saw was
he was able to instill faith in people. I mean, he had a, when I walked into his apartment,
there were like 12 to 15 sort of very young people. Roughly, you know, students that were just coming
out of college, and Jack was kind of the teacher that's 10 years older, and he's able to communicate,
he's able to paint a very strong vision. That was the part that I really signed on to. His ability
to lead is an amazing ability. And, you know, he's a teacher by training. He taught at Zhou Jiang University,
he taught English, actually. You know, teachers in a way make natural leaders because, A, you have to
communicate well. And B, you can identify talent. I think a lot of teachers love to see their
students and say, oh, this kid is going to do really well. So they write a recommendation. They do
whatever. And also, teachers have enough humility that they're willing, they're very happy if
their students go off and then they come back and become more successful than they are. And in
building a company, you need to be able to accommodate all sorts of people that are smarter than
you are and that's that's really important there was a phase i guess in the maybe the early 2010s
where it was a lot of it felt like tremendous freewheeling capitalism in china where there was just a
just a cambrian explosion of incredible entrepreneurs yourself and jack and all these others pony
and then i think almost starting with the anti-po it things changed a little bit can you walk us
through the dynamics of how that changed and then i think it all kind of leads to you know a lot of
foreign direct investment into the Chinese ecosystem has changed pretty dramatically. Just give
us a sense of what has happened over that arc that you've been in it, working in it, observing
it. Alibaba has been around for 26 years. I would say the first 15 years were, it was a complete
free market kind of way of growth. And we built a lot of business organically. And then we went into a
phase where there was an extreme competition. Everybody wanted to do e-commerce. Why? It's because
if you have traffic online, e-commerce was the best way to monetize your traffic. And today, in
today's market, we have five or six very, very strong competitors, including the parent company
of TikTok, bike dance. They're doing e-commerce. They're not known as an e-commerce company, but they're
one of our fiercest competitors. So there's a, you go through a period of extreme competition,
Then the government felt that this sector has gotten out of line a little bit.
First, there's too much competition, and then there are some platforms that have exhibited monopolistic behavior.
So then there was a, you know, people may call it a crackdown, whatever.
More regulations came in.
Some of the regulations are very good, actually.
They protected privacy, anti-monopoly type regulation.
And now we kind of are in a new normal where we are, we believe that the regulatory environment is more predictable.
We know what the red lines are, and we know where to go and where not to go.
And it's actually made a better operating environment because of the predictability of it.
On a geopolitical level, it seems to be the rhetoric in the United States, what they keep drilling into Americans,
is to look at China as an existential threat to America,
that we're rivals, that we cannot operate
and lead the world to prosperity.
What do you think?
I don't agree with that view of the world.
I'd be interested in your view, David.
I mean, I don't believe it either.
I mean, I don't know why this has to be the only dialogue we have
is that we are bitter rivals.
I mean, look at it.
this the I think I I could understand why sitting here in America you look at the
rise of China over the last 20 years 25 years China has become strong in terms of
manufacturing that's why it's such an export juggernaut it has become
because of the economic development it's you know China has become a
technology juggernaut as well and the fear is well all that stuff economic strength
and technology strength is going to flow in
to military strength and that becomes kind of a national security issue.
I understand that, I get it.
But I think it's, these are the two largest economies in the world and I think you just need
to take a step back and say, well, yeah, on the one hand, we should compete with China,
right?
That's fine.
The hyperscalers companies compete with the Chinese internet companies globally.
But then on the other hand, there is just so many trouble spots in the world that what,
did President Trump say that he stopped seven wars, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, China didn't start any of them.
China has not started a war in the last how many years, you know, 30 years, 40 years.
I think China was part of the Korean War, maybe the Vietnam War, but that was a long time ago in history.
So in a way, China, you know, if you observe the behavior of the Chinese people and the Chinese state, it's a very peaceful nation.
China cares about its own economic development.
They care about the well-being of its citizens.
And I think there's a lot of friction in the course of competition where China feels that the United States is trying to contain China and stop the rise of China economically.
Just speaking about the welfare of its citizens, you mentioned Bight Dance.
I think there was reported by 10's revenue just passed META's revenue.
I mean, it's a juggernaut.
It's a private company, so I don't know.
You're telling, yeah, yeah, sure.
They actually release it, but one of the core products, TikTok, it's a fundamentally different product here than in China.
And because of that regulation and a focus on the welfare of its citizens, there's like strict rules in terms of the content and the curation and the algorithms.
Whereas here, you know, it's like cat videos and like, you know, all kinds of nonsense.
Although now I notice that TikTok put a stem section inside of TikTok and the American product for whatever reason.
There's a wherewithal that China has to think about its citizenry like that.
And I'm just curious, how do we embrace more of that principle?
Because that sort of gets lost in this U.S. China.
Yeah.
What can we learn from China?
Yeah.
Yeah.
What should we be doing more of that China does?
Well, first, education.
I mean, you have an extremely highly educated population.
And, you know, you talk to every Chinese parent.
They want their kids to take the college entrance exam and get into the best universities.
You know, if they want to send their kids away to school, they want to go to the Ivy League or Stanford or, you know, all that.
So I think the emphasis on education, I think there are some structural.
issues here in the United States, like the teachers union that is getting in the way.
But there are no teachers unions in China, so.
David, what's your, David, I'm curious looking at this, not in any official capacity,
but kind of the same question, Chimoth and I are sort of probing about here.
What is your take on America and China succeeding together?
And are we destined to be in conflict with this country forever, or is there a path forward
with our incredible, amazing, dynamic President Trump?
Well, I think, you know, Professor Mearsheimer explained it at all at some of the last year
that the U.S. and China are in a high-tech competition.
They're in a security competition, economic competition.
And the reason is because China's become rich and powerful.
And the United States does not tolerate pure competitors.
We want to be the number one country.
you want to be the most powerful country.
The balance of power is, to some degree, a zero-sum game.
Economics are not, but power is.
And the history of the United States is we want to be number one
and we don't like having pure competitors.
And, I mean, that's the bottom line.
Now, I mean, there are good reasons for this.
We live in an anarchic world, meaning there's no higher authority.
If you get in trouble in the global system, you can't call 911.
And so countries privileged their survival over all their considerations,
and the way to survive in the international system
is to be powerful.
And you measure your power based on the gap
between you and the next most powerful country.
And I think that 20 years ago,
China wasn't seen as a threat
because it wasn't rich and powerful,
but now it is.
And I think that's what's led to a much more hawkish environment
in Washington.
And I can't disagree with all of it
because I think it's very important
that the United States win the AI race.
We don't want China, for example,
to dominate an AI or any,
chips. We want the U.S. Americans. We want the United States be the most powerful country. Now,
if I were Chinese, I would want China be the most powerful country. And I don't have any resentment
towards Chinese people who want their country to the most powerful country. So there's no
animosity in saying this. But I want the U.S. to be the most powerful country. And, you know,
in my little part of the world, that means winning the AI race. Can I respond to that?
Yeah. Yeah. I think it's really important.
You know, you as a patriotic American, you want America to win.
But I think when it comes to AI, there's no such thing as winning the race.
I think it's a long marathon.
And, you know, you could just see by these model companies, every week there's a model that's leading,
but then the next week another model overtakes them, right?
And the other thing is it's AI is one of those, we haven't figured out what is the business model,
is but in our business in e-commerce we have a marketplace model with network dynamics but i'm not sure
if the development of models has those uh network effects that means winner take all right so i don't
think AI is a winner take all uh field i think what uh my definition of winning uh you know is not
who comes up with the strongest AI model but
But who can adopt it faster?
And I think people here in the United States, a lot of resources should go into adoption and
diffusion of the technology as opposed to just plowing, you know, I mean, literally each of
the hyperscalular companies in each of them is investing something like $80 billion a year.
But, you know, I think if you look at China, a couple things are going on.
Now, number one, China has a spouse open source.
And second, a lot of the companies, including ourselves, have launched models that are smaller.
You know, not the trillion parameter models, but, you know, we have a model that's 1.7 billion parameters,
another that's 4, another that's 8 billion, for, like, mobile devices and laptops.
So with these types of development, I think it's more conducive to,
faster adoption. You want AI to proliferate. So now, you know, you look at China,
you know, I'm not saying China technologically is winning in the model war, but in terms of
the actual application and also people benefiting from AI, it is made a lot of development.
I've seen a survey of Chinese firms last year, only 8% are using AI. We're using AI. We're
using AI in their business, now that number is approaching half, 50%.
So the adoption rate has been fairly fast.
And I think that the two countries, AI is such an important element of life.
It's almost like air.
Right.
And why would any one country say we have sole claim to air?
We should, there's so many things that AI can do that that could, you know,
in medicine, in biology, that, you know, we, I think there's a lot of room for cooperation.
Joe, one of the key questions that everybody asks when we talk about AI and whether you spin
your own models, which you do, which you've done a good job, and some people just take them
off the shelf, is that actual net impact in the operations of the business, does it change the
number of people you hire? At what level does it change it? Does it change the efficiency? Does it
change the way you think about certain jobs.
What's the practical application that it's doing for you guys on the ground inside of Alibaba?
Yeah.
It's definitely made our operations more efficient, so we actually don't have to hire as many people.
I'm still on this sort of mission to write our quarterly earnings release with AI and maybe
just put.
Meaning have a model ready.
Yeah.
put yeah and and also put the AI on the on the analyst conference call see if people can
you know tell the difference but anyway then then they'll get rid of everybody in the finance
department but uh the most the biggest impact AI has made is with our uh we incorporate
AI into all of our consumer facing apps so we're in e-commerce we're in maps uh we have a food
food delivery business and once you can infuse AI the consumer have a massively better
experience and that generate more user base for us so so we're seeing the impact from the sort of
the the uplift on the on the revenue side is the workforce then naturally a tritting as more and
more of the workload is yeah we haven't you know announced any layoffs because of AI but i think
Like, you know, I keep asking our engineering leads about how much of the code is written
by AI today.
I think the answer I get is all over the map, depending on which department you ask, but
I think it's maybe 30% at this point.
Already.
Yeah.
Already.
I'm doing kind of a weighted average of different, yeah.
Alibaba is an enormous business.
It's in so many countries around.
the world. How do you build a culture? How do you manage like just the insanity of having so many
employees, so many needs, so many issues? How do you deal with it? Focus. So I came into the chair,
you know, I was sort of kind of phasing out. I was focused on the Brooklyn Nets. Then about a
year and a half ago, I came back into the chairmanship of the company. The first thing I said is
we can't talk about our company as being in six different businesses. It's just too confusing.
We're in two businesses, e-commerce and cloud computing with an AI element in it.
Those are our two businesses, core business, and so having that focus was absolutely crucial
to get our people, our teams to focus and execute.
Maybe end with just forecast for the season?
The whole league or just the Brooklyn Nets?
Maybe just the Nets.
Well, I have to say, we're not.
We're in a rebuilding year.
You have a lot of picks.
We spent all of our picks.
We have five first round draft picks this past summer.
We have one pick in 2026, and we hope to get a good pick.
So you can predict what kind of strategy we will use for the season.
But we have a very young team.
We were talking to Dara on the last panel on how China is a bit different
and how it looks at autonomy, self-driving.
There are tests going on there,
but they want to also make sure
that there is tranquility and peace in the country
and people don't lose those jobs,
those driver jobs.
And so what's the climate in China?
What do the Chinese working class think
when they see self-driving cars
and they see tens of millions of people employed as drivers?
There have been protests already in Wuhan,
and protests in China are a very rare thing,
based on what I know, I could be wrong.
I have a superficial knowledge, obviously.
You have a deep knowledge.
What can you tell us a little bit about how, you know,
the government and the people of China think of this incredible revolution
and the impact on jobs?
I think the government is all in, embracing it.
And in fact, the government just a few weeks ago launched a kind of a AI plus policy.
and they say in 2030, which is five years from now,
they want to see 90% penetration of AI agents and devices
and things like that in society.
That's what the government has publicly officially said.
Just an all-in.
Just all-in.
There's really not a lot of talk about people, AI, replacing human jobs.
Maybe there's isolated incidents.
But in general, there is an anxiety about jobs.
China graduates about 10 million college graduates every year.
And today, if you look at the youth unemployment rate,
which is age between 16 and 24, including graduates,
it's 18%.
It's actually quite high.
So there's a lot of anxiety about that.
It partly is because the economy,
is even though the overall conditions of the Chinese economy is pretty good in terms of
infrastructure, access to energy, and all those things.
But there is still a malaise right now because China has gone through the last four or five
years of a property slum.
Everybody's average home prices are down like 30%.
So there's a very negative wealth effect, and that's still
lingering. Just quickly, is there any fear of AGI in China? You know what I mean by that?
That out of control superintelligence? Is that a fear or is that just an American thing?
I, we, people in government don't talk about it too much because they believe that they could
control it better, maybe better than in a society here in the U.S. But there's some, but there's
some lingering fears, but, you know, I was just listening to Demis about, you know,
he's predicting five to ten years, but if he's saying five to ten years, I think AGI is probably
20 years from now. And it's because the emphasis is on the word general. You have to be able
to, your AI has to be able to generalize and apply principles.
to scenarios that you've never seen before, right?
Joe, thank you very, very much.
It's great to see you.
Thank you.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you very much.
Thank you, brother.
