Hard Fork - Is Google Breaking Up? + Seasteading Is Back + Tool Time
Episode Date: April 25, 2025This week, with big developments in two antitrust cases against Google, we discuss how the company may be forced to change its business. Then we’re joined by the journalist Mark Yarm to discuss his ...recent visit to an underwater home for his article about techno-utopians who want to colonize the ocean. And finally, it’s tool time! We’ll tell you about our latest experiments with ChatGPT’s o3, Casey’s newest journaling practice and Kevin’s continued battle to get to inbox zero.Tickets to Hard Fork live are on sale! See us June 24 at SFJAZZ.Guest:Mark Yarm, an executive editor at PCMag and the author of “Everybody Loves Our Town: An Oral History of Grunge.”Additional Reading:Google May Be on the Brink of a BreakupGoogle Is Illegally Monopolizing Online Advertising Tech, Judge RulesThe Techno-Utopians Who Want to Colonize the Sea We want to hear from you. Email us at hardfork@nytimes.com. Find “Hard Fork” on YouTube and TikTok. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Casey, I miss you. You're in New York this week.
I'm in New York. I thought it was time to finally come back to the offices of the New
York Times and see what I could find out about your performance review.
Our studio in San Francisco feels very empty without you. What are you up to there?
It's so empty, you can actually fully extend your legs while standing inside the studio,
which is not always true when there's two hosts present.
So I saw Titanic last night. Have you seen the show or heard of it?
It's pronounced Titanic.
It's Titanic.
It is a sort of fever dream retelling of the Titanic story
by an actress playing Celine Dion,
and it's kind of like a Celine Dion jukebox musical
set in the world of Titanic.
It's absolutely hilarious.
I just thought as a theater kid, you would love it
because this is like an off-Broadway show.
I mean, I swear to God, the singers were like
the best singers I've ever seen live.
One of them was The Understudy.
These people are incredible.
Yes, the talent density of singers in New York
is unbelievable.
I realized this when I was 22 and moved to New York
and entered a karaoke contest
at a local bar. I was not making much money
and they had a $500 cash prize.
And I was like, I sing?
I'm an okay singer.
I might be able to like win this thing.
So I show up to the bar
and the karaoke contest is about to start.
And I just hear these voices doing warm-ups
in the hallway, and they are the best singing voices
I've ever heard.
These are professional singers.
I'm sure they were Broadway actors and actresses
ready to sweep in and win this contest,
and I just decided, yeah,
I'm not gonna enter the karaoke contest anymore.
I don't wanna go up against Patti LuPone tonight.
Yes.
I'm Kevin Ruiz, a tech columnist at the New York Times.
I'm Casey Noon from Platformer.
And this is Hard Fork.
This week, as Google on the brink of a breakup will tell you about their recent losses at
antitrust trials.
Then, journalist Mark Yarm joins us
to discuss the return of sea stutters,
techno utopians who want to colonize the ocean.
And finally, it's tool time.
We'll tell you about our latest experiments
with new AI software.
["Skype Rewind"]
Well, Casey, we announced last week on the show that we are doing our first ever live event.
Hard Fork Live is coming to San Francisco on June 24th.
And the response from listeners has been great.
It really has.
We're so excited for everyone who's bought a ticket so far.
Yes.
So we should say tickets are selling quickly.
So if you've been thinking about coming,
please go snap up your tickets now.
You can get them at nytimes.com slash events
slash hard fork live.
We also heard from some listeners
that they were having issues with buying multiple tickets.
Apparently the system that the New York Times
ticketing process uses was limiting them to one per person.
But that has been fixed now. So bring your friend, bring your partner. If you're in a
throuple or polycule, bring the whole gang. So just to remind you, those tickets are at
nytimes.com slash events slash hard fork live. Get them while they're hot. Well, Casey, the big news we have to start by talking about this week is what the heck
is going on with Google, which I understand has had a very busy week in antitrust land.
Yeah, so this was a huge week for Google.
In fact, I think looking back, we might even come to see it as one of the most important
weeks in the company's history because on one hand, you had another
antitrust loss where a judge has said that the company has an illegal monopoly, this
time in ads and across town in Washington, DC, another judge is in the middle of a remedies
trial trying to figure out what to do about the company's illegal monopoly in search.
Yes. And I have found this whole thing very complicated
and hard to follow, partially because Google's ad business
and the various mechanisms that it uses
for these online ad auctions is very complicated,
but also because there is like this very strange naming thing
that is happening because the judge
in one of Google's antitrust cases is named Judge Meta, M-E-H-T-A.
And so every time someone talks about how Meta is doing
at its antitrust trial, I just have no idea
whether they are talking about Meta the corporation
or Meta the judge.
Anyway, carry on.
And it's made even more confusing, Kevin,
by the fact that the judge in the Meta case
is named Judge Google.
And so it's really, it's crazy.
You can't win.
Yeah.
So the last time we talked about Google's antitrust woes on the show, we brought up
the fact that there are two distinct cases against Google that the federal government
is bringing.
One of them is over this issue of bundling, whether Google is allowed to make these business deals that
involve paying billions of dollars to companies
like Apple in order to bundle their search products
with Apple's iPhones and make it the default on Safari
and things like that.
There's the other trial that I understand
has something to do with Google's search ad business
and its auction process and various
Byzantine structures within that. So maybe let's start with the one that I understand more about, the bundling
case that is about these exclusivity deals. What is going on with that case?
Great. So it was last August, Kevin, that Google lost that case. That is the case
that's being presided over by Judge Mehta, and he ruled just what you said, that Google lost that case. That is the case that's being presided over by Judge Mehta.
And he ruled just what you said,
that Google has maintained an illegal monopoly
in search engines.
And a primary way that it has done that
is by investing billions and billions of dollars
every year to make sure that Google is the default
on your iPhone, also on a lot of Samsung phones and various other,
what they call OEMs or device manufacturers, right?
So in August, Kevin, Judge Mehta says,
hey, that's illegal.
A few months later, the government
unveils their proposal for what they
think ought to be done about it.
And this week, Kevin, Google is back at trial,
and all of this is now being litigated,
where the government is saying, here's what we think you should do. And Google is trying to fight
very hard against that and say, we think that you should actually do much less. And how is that
going for people who haven't been following that part of this anti-drug trial? Well, it's difficult to say, of course,
because we're not inside the head of Judge Metta.
This is a sort of interesting aspect of our legal system
is that this will be decided by one person, Judge Metta,
who's heard this whole case, it will sort of be up to him.
What we typically do in those situations
is we listen very closely to the questions
that the judge is asking, we try to guess like,
does he seem really skeptical about this?
Does he seem more interested in that?
Maybe we should start Kevin by just sort of laying out
what the government has said should happen.
Yes.
So we've discussed this on the show before, Kevin,
I would say there's two big pieces
of what the government wants.
One is that it wants Google to spin out the Chrome browser.
So Chrome, of course, the web browser
that is the most popular browser in the world.
Google built it in-house.
The government is saying, we want you to give this up.
The government also wants Google to expose
its proprietary data in some really interesting ways.
It wants the company to license its search index.
So the index that it has made of the entire internet,
maybe even offer up some sort of API that would let the company's rivals like DuckDuckGo peek
under the hood and see what is everyone searching for on Google right now. And at trial this week,
there was a witness from OpenAI, former hard forecast Nick Turley, who said, you know what,
we would actually love to buy Chrome
and we would love to get a look at Google search index
because that would make it much easier
for us to build our own search engine
and compete with them in the market.
So those are the two biggest ideas
that are being bandied about at the trial.
That's really interesting.
I have so many questions about what OpenAI
would do with Chrome and how they would sort of use that
as a way to bootstrap some improvements in their AI models.
But we can save those for a later episode
or when Nick Turley returns from testifying in court
and comes back on to tell us.
But what is Google trying to do to push back
on this proposed remedy?
Because presumably, they don't want to give up Chrome at all.
That's a very big, popular product for them
and a big way to funnel people toward their search engine.
That's right.
They have said that that is a really extreme measure
and would sort of place a chill on innovation
if the government could just sort of step in and start
tearing parts of Google out just because Google happened
to make a very successful browser.
But what Google is really saying at the trial is
essentially the government should do as close to nothing
as Google can convince them of, right?
So for example, Kevin, the third big thing
that the government is asking for is
we want to place an end to these default placement deals.
So that was how this whole trial started was,
the government was noticing, wow,
Google is spending $20 billion a year just to be the default on iOS. Maybe we should stop them from doing that.
And that would sort of introduce some oxygen into the search market. Google has come along
and this week they're saying, no, no, no, no, no, don't do that. Let us make these deals,
but just make them non-exclusive. So, you know, maybe we pay Apple to, you know, be
one of the search choices, but Microsoft
also gives Apple a bunch of money and then Bing can be a choice as well.
Right.
Apple's free to see other search engines.
Yes.
And of course, I think this is a really flimsy approach.
Like I've asked Google representative this week directly, how is this actually going
to eliminate the monopoly?
Like the government has ruled that there is a monopoly in this case. If you just let other
search engines like bid to be on these devices,
do you really think you'll lose any market share whatsoever?
And you know, the person I was talking to sort of waved their hands and said, well, look, you know,
the government hasn't even really given us a target to like go for, so we don't even know, you know,
what the market is supposed
to look at after all this is done, which I sort of regarded
as hand-waving.
What the government wants is obvious.
They want there to be a search engine that
doesn't have 90% share of the search market.
And one way of doing that would be to get rid of these deals.
Yeah, I mean, it sort of begs the question of,
if they did enforce this remedy and break up
Chrome and Google and force
it to sell to someone else, and they come back in a year or two
and Google still has 90-plus percent of the search market,
would they have considered that a failure?
Because for what it's worth, I think
that is the very likely outcome here.
I don't think it is just lock-in and these exclusive arrangement
deals.
I think Google Search is actually better than other search engines. And so I think even if you give people the
choice or stop these sort of bundling arrangements, I think many, many people are just so ingrained
and used to going to Google when they have a question that they'll just continue doing
that.
So I think that up until maybe a year ago, I would have agreed with you completely and
said maybe it's pointless to even try something like this Kevin
But then along comes AI search along comes chat GPT along comes
Perplexity along comes all of these other chat bots that start to build a product that is not a one-for-one
Replacement for Google search but for many early adopters
It becomes much better than Google at lots of things,
as we have discussed frequently on this show, right?
You and I are both now using Google less
because we're using AI products more.
And that's what I found so interesting
about Nick Turley's testimony this week.
What he was saying was like, look, you know,
we're not here to compete with Google one-on-one.
We wanna build our own search product.
Like we think search is a sort of key pillar
of what we're trying to build,
but we can't build it in the way that we want to
because there is a giant monopolist out there
who won't work with us.
Something else interesting he said this week
is that OpenAI went to Google last year and said,
hey, can we make some sort of partnership with you?
Maybe get access to some of your search index.
And Google said, no, you can't. So what could happen in this case, Kevin? Well, maybe the government says,
actually, Google, you have to go play nice with OpenAI, you have to go play nice with DuckDuckGo
and Perplexity, you have to expose some data to them. And we can't say for certain that those
companies are going to make perfect use out of that data and make incredible products that are
instantly used by billions of people. But it would give them a fighting chance.
And I do think that at least around the margins, it probably would continue
to sort of corrode Google's market share, particularly with chat GPT, right?
Cause we've already seen it doing that even before that company has access
to any of the data that I'm talking about.
Yes.
Okay.
So I have some thoughts about that, but first I want to hear about the status of the other Google
antitrust case, or as you could call it, Google Tugel.
That's not a good joke.
No, that's a great joke.
We're keeping that.
Producers, make sure everyone heard Kevin say Google Tugel.
So over in what they call Google Tugel, that, of course,
is the second lawsuit that has been filed.
This one has to do with the online advertising market.
And I think the reason that people know less
about this case, Kevin, is that this market
is incredibly arcane and difficult to understand.
And that is on purpose, because I think if more people knew
how this market worked, they would have said,
well, obviously that's hugely anti-competitive. And that is actually what a judge found last
week. So Judge Leoni Brinkama ruled in a 115 page ruling that
Google has maintained a monopoly in two out of the three parts of
the online ad market, which would be tools for online
publishers. So, you know, newspapers, other
people making web pages and trying to make money from them, and the software that publishers
use to try to make money on their web pages. And that's a really big deal because that is
the money engine at the heart of Google. That is the source of its wealth. And a judge came in and said, this is a monopoly.
So this second case, Google Tugel,
is now going to proceed to the remedy phase
that the first case is already in.
What do we think will happen there?
What stands to change about Google's ad business
as a result of this judge's ruling?
Yeah, well, so the issue here is that Google just kind of owns
every side of this market.
And according to the judge,
it has illegally tied those together.
So in order to use one, you have to use the other.
That is considered a classical antitrust violation
by many competition scholars.
And so the thinking here, Kevin,
is that the government is gonna come in and say,
well, first of all, you have to stop tying these two things together. And maybe you're actually
going to have to unwind part of this operation. Maybe you're not allowed to own every side of this
market. You're going to have to spin that out. And so were that to happen, and were the government
to also be successful in the web search case, all of a sudden you're looking at a Google that has way fewer searches, right?
A Google that is sharing data with competitors
that is helping them grow,
and it has less money because the core
of its advertising engine has been disrupted.
So are we at least a couple of years away
from some of that stuff starting to happen?
Probably, but if it does, Kevin,
that would be the biggest
change to the economics of the web in, I would argue, more than a decade, maybe two.
Yeah, I think it's potentially a really big deal. And I've been convinced by you and others
that this is actually something that I need to pay attention to because it actually might
result in some major changes to the way Google operates. For me, the question I'm thinking about is
whether the biggest effect of all of this antitrust
litigation for Google will just be that it is distracted.
I mean, what we saw during the last big government
antitrust case against a tech company, Microsoft,
was that the actual penalties and the remedies were
not what ended up making things hard for Microsoft.
It was just that it was so all consuming and distracting for
the company to be embroiled in
this very high-profile litigation to have
all these lawyers peering over everyone's shoulders all the time,
to have all these reviews that had to go in before anything that could really get shipped. If you talk to people who were's shoulders all the time, to have all these reviews that had to go in
before anything that could really get shipped.
If you talk to people who were at Microsoft at the time,
they'll just tell you that the net effect was that
Microsoft just became this sclerotic,
slow-moving organization.
I wonder if what we're seeing at Google is some version of that.
I mean, we've talked many,
many times on this show about how Google's AI efforts just have not been nearly as fast and robust as you would expect
from a company with Google's resources and talent. And I wonder if what's happening is
that they're just kind of taking their eye off the ball of like the new game that they
are involved in while they're trying to litigate the old one.
So here's the thing. I don't actually think this is happening at Google.
And here is why.
So something else that came out at trial this week, Kevin,
is that Google has been seeking default placement
deals for Gemini, which is its AI chatbot app.
Gemini, if you looked at one way,
is the sort of sequel to the Google app.
This is the app that is the chat bot.
This is Google's chat GPT competitor.
And Google has looked at the market and they said,
you know what would be great for us is if instead of people
just going out and downloading chat GPT,
they buy a Samsung phone and Gemini is already on it.
And they showed some slides in court this week
that suggested that before the ruling
in one of these antitrust cases,
Google was actually thinking about trying to make these deals exclusive, right? Essentially,
doing the same thing with the Gemini app that they were just going to be caught doing with the core
Google app, the core search engine. But because the government came in and said, no, no, no, no, no,
they went out and they made non-exclusive deals
So that Samsung, you know, maybe will get paid a lot of money to put the Gemini app on a Samsung phone
You know without you having to install it, but Samsung can make that same deal with other people. Why is all this interesting?
Google knows that it is at risk of being distracted and losing out on the next generation of search and it went out and it was
Trying to do the exact same thing it had done with search which was to lock up the market by investing its monopoly
Profits in creating these default placement deals
So they know they know what is about to happen to them and they are using their money to try to prevent it from happening
That's a really good point
And it does like it just seems like the sort of the corporate version of, like, a guy who,
like, you know, can't stop kiting checks or something.
Like he's on, he's like, you know, on trial for, for check fraud and he just like pays
the bailiff, you know, with a, with a fraudulent check because he just like can't stop himself.
Like they're literally being investigated for these bundling deals.
And what do they do?
They make more bundling deals or they attempt to make more bundling deals. And what do they do? They make more bundling deals
or they attempt to make more bundling deals
during the trial.
Absolutely.
They are being dragged into change,
kicking and screaming.
Yeah.
So, okay, Casey, Net-Net,
do you think Google is in a different position this week
than it was a week ago?
Yes.
If you had asked me whether five years ago I was
confident that Google would lose two antitrust cases related to web search and ads, I would have
said no. I did think that they were going to lose the ad case. That one to me just looked like an
absolute no-priner. The web search case I thought was a little bit shakier, but Google has now lost
both of those. It is going to have to face remedy decisions in both of those.
And while I'm sure the appeals will go all the way up to the Supreme Court, we have to
remember that the current administration and the Supreme Court has not been particularly
friendly to Google across many dimensions.
So I think this is a case where Google has used up a lot of its goodwill and it does
not have a lot of friends in high places who can get them out of this jam.
Yeah, I'm glad you brought up the Trump factor and all this because that's something that's
been on my mind as I'm hearing you talk about this case or these cases.
We know that many people in Washington from both parties dislike big tech and want to
see companies like Google broken up.
But Trump and his allies seem to have a particular animus against Google.
They really, really do not like this company.
Can you help me understand why that is and why I think it's probably unlikely that Trump
or any of his folks will step in and try to save Google here?
Yeah, I mean, it's been a range of things. I think there has been criticism from conservatives
about the way that search results are displayed,
accusations of shadow banning,
showing results critical of this Republican congressman,
but not showing results positive to them.
So that's been an aspect of it.
They made sort of James DeMore a cause celeb.
This was this former Google employee who raised a ruckus,
essentially saying that the company was too woke.
DeMore wound up getting fired.
He wound up becoming, again,
sort of a cause celeb for conservatives.
And then when their AI systems came out,
they had those embarrassing moments
where if you asked the chatbot
to create the founding fathers, it would generate a sort of racially diverse crew and would
not always depict them as white.
So these are some of the things that conservatives have tried to string together to paint a picture
of a company that is essentially anti-conservative and it has wanted to kind of try to work the refs
into turning Google into a company
that they see as more favorable to themselves.
Right. And we know that Mark Zuckerberg and Metta
have been furiously, you know, bootlicking various folks
in the Trump administration,
trying to get on their good side
in hopes of sort of making some of their antitrust concerns
go away.
Has Google or Sundar Pichai been doing anything similar?
Well, Sundar Pichai was on the dais
at the inauguration behind Trump.
I think that the company has made some steps
to try to curry favor with the Trump administration.
But I think it looks half-hearted compared
to the complete surrender that we've seen at Metta,
for example.
Like, you know, you and I have speculated
over the past few months about whether Sundar Pichai
will be able to keep his job through this,
whether Larry and Sergey, who still run Google,
will think, you know, we need to bring in a new CEO
and we can sort of convince the Trump administration
that we're making a clean break with the past
and we want to get on better terms with that, you know, we haven't seen any moves
in that direction so far but I don't think it's out of the question.
Now Casey, I want to ask a macro question about all this which is that like I have
just become very jaded and cynical about these antitrust trials and cases
actually resulting in real meaningful changes to these companies, you know, we
hear all the time about these proposed remedies,
these breakups, these split-offs,
and then like very few things ever actually end up happening.
And so I guess my overarching question about this is like,
is Google actually going to be broken up
or forced to divest a key asset,
or is this all gonna get tied up in appeals
and they're just gonna kind of run out the clock?
Well, the clock has been running for five years,
and we're closer than we have ever been
to some sort of meaningful action.
So look, I'm like you as well.
I also get cynical about these antitrust actions.
They take so long.
They get strung out forever on appeal.
But look, two judges have now said that Google has a monopoly.
There are now very real remedies that are being proposed.
Google is fighting back against them.
But remember, the people who decide the remedies
have already decided that Google has a monopoly.
So they're gonna do something.
Now, it may be that Google eventually wins on appeal,
but unless that happens, you can believe
that the judges will require Google
to take some sort of action
that it absolutely does not want to take to try to address these monopolies.
When we come back, we'll talk with writer Mark Yarm about his new article on techno-utopian Well, Casey, typically we call the second segment of our show the B segment, but today
it's more of a C segment, S-E-A.
That's a pun.
That's very good, Kevin.
I actually have no notes on that.
That's exactly how I probably would have started the segment if it had been my turn.
So there was this piece in the New York Times Magazine recently that caught my attention. It was called the techno utopians who want to colonize the sea. And it was by Mark Yarm,
who's an executive editor at PC Magazine. And basically, it was about this group of people
who want to build these pods out in the water
and go live there.
Yeah, and we saw this and we thought,
is seasteading back?
Yeah, so seasteading is something
that we've both been interested in for a long time.
This was this movement that kind of grew out
of Silicon Valley maybe 15 or so years ago
that was funded by Peter Thiel initially
that was sort of part of this libertarian
movement of people who were so fed up with regulations and big government and not being
able to do what they wanted here on land that they were starting to hatch plans to build their own
floating cities out in international waters where they wouldn't have to obey any of our land-based rules.
Yes, and they were ridiculed at the time
and didn't seem to be making a lot of progress.
But Kevin, as the years have gone on,
we have repeatedly seen among the wealthiest members
of our society, this urge to leave the world behind,
whether it is going up to Mars, going into space.
There is just a lot of energy around removing yourself
from society.
And so when we heard that there were maybe some folks
looking to do this once again on the sea,
we thought, we need to learn more about this.
Yeah, I mean, what makes this story so interesting to me
is not just the people who want to leave it all behind
and go out onto the ocean and live there,
which I think is a pretty small number of people.
But I think there is this desire among a lot of tech people
right now for this kind of self-determination,
this ability to sort of break away from the existing
strictures of society and start their own things. I think a lot of people, this ability to sort of break away from the existing strictures of society
and start their own things.
I think a lot of people, especially with these sort
of more engineering brains, look at the world as it exists
today and think, I could do better than that.
Or me and my friends, we could set up our own thing that
would have all these advantages.
Yeah, or the one thing holding me back
from achieving my dreams is being in a society.
Right.
And so I think we're starting to see not just the obsession with seasteading or Mars or
are there these other sort of more experimental formats taking off, but we're starting to
see more experimentation with actual systems of governance.
We've had these things called charter cities, these special economic zones.
We've talked about the people trying to build a new city
for tech people in Solano County, California.
And I think what a lot of these projects share
is sort of a dissatisfaction with the status quo
and a desire to use technology as a way
to maybe build something new and different.
That's right, Kevin.
So I think it's fair to say that with his story,
Mark really whet our appetites to learn more.
And so to find out what's going on,
I think we should bring him in.
Let's bring in Mark Yarm.
Mark Yarm, welcome to Hard Fork.
Thanks for having me.
So Mark, you just wrote this fascinating piece in the New
York Times Magazine, and the piece opens on this guy named
Rüdiger Koch, who you describe as a German aerospace
engineer and long-term Bitcoin investor.
And when you met him, he was 36 feet underwater trying to
break the Guinness World Record for the longest time living in
an underwater fixed habitat here.
So what's going on here?
What's this guy's story?
Well, basically, this was somewhat of a publicity stunt for Ocean Builders, which is the company
that Rudy is one of the founders of.
Ocean Builders has constructed three, what they call,
C-pods in and around the Bay in northern Panama.
And I visited him on, I think, about day 118,
a couple of, like, 46 hours before he emerged.
And it's a real experience to go down there.
Like everything is a bluish greenish tent,
schools of fish moving, you know, swimming by the portals.
It's a very confined space, but it wasn't super arduous
because, you know, he had somebody came down to clean,
somebody provided the food from the marina.
It wasn't like it was all self-contained and obviously he could get visitors like me.
You mentioned that this was a sort of publicity stunt for his company Ocean Builders. They
make these sea pods. And is there idea that they are going to mass produce these and eventually
lots of people will be doing what Mr. Coke is doing and just be spending many, many days
36 feet below the sea?
Well, I mean, the actual sea pods are mostly for above water living,
living on the water. This was kind of unusual.
I don't think many people would voluntarily live in the blue water chamber of this particular model.
Maybe we should just describe what these things look like,
because for listeners who may be wondering
what a C-Pod is, there's a picture in your story
that makes this sort of look like,
kind of like if you took a dumbbell
and like turned it on its side.
It's like, it has two chambers.
One of the chambers is above water,
and then there's like a little sort of rod
that goes down into the water,
and there's, I guess, a spiral staircase inside that rod.
And then you get to the lower below water chamber,
and that's where Mr. Koch was, correct?
Correct.
For all intents and purposes, they are, I mean,
in Panama, they are registered as houseboats.
Ocean Builders stresses that they are not in the seasteading movement.
This is more of a lifestyle brand.
I mean, the company has its roots in seasteading.
About six years ago, Chad and his now wife, Nadia, had a Seastead about, a very primitive model of what we're talking about,
about 14 miles off the coast of Thailand.
And Chad is Chad Elwertowski, one of the co-founders of this company
with Rudiger.
With Rudy and Grant, yes.
Yes, okay.
And he's another Bitcoin guy, is that right?
Yes, yes, yes.
Yeah. One fascinating detail in your story, Mark,
is that the people who are involved with these C-pods,
they are very adamant that despite the fact
that these things cost like $6 million a piece to build,
this is not just like a hobbyist project for the rich.
Like one of them actually says to you at one point,
like, this is not Elysium, which is the movie where,
you know, people are sort of orbiting the earth, the movie where people are orbiting the Earth.
The 1% orbit the ruined Earth in a spacecraft.
So despite the fact that these are all very wealthy Bitcoin and other tech people
who are doing this thing, you think there's a more innocent explanation
that does not have to do with just wanting to like escape the tyrannical governments
that we all live under and build their own thing.
Grant Ramont, the CEO of the company, told me that, I mean, there was, this hasn't come
to the United States yet, but he did tell me that, you know, many people in the Bay
Area, of course, are interested in this concept of having a sea pod.
While I was there at the blue carpet ceremony they had for Rudy,
emerging from his underwater chamber,
they announced this project with the Maldives,
which is obviously threatened by climate change and rising sea levels,
and they are going to have some sea pods surrounding.
It's a very Venice-like looking technical city and rising sea levels, and they are going to have some sea pods surrounding.
It's a very Venice-like looking technical city
that they're scheduled to build in the Maldives.
So that's a very practical thing, I think.
If a nation's gonna disappear.
But so the idea, Mark, is that there'll be clusters
of these pods, and then you'll just be able to sort of
zip down in your C-DU
and sort of C-DU over to your neighbor's C-Pod for game night?
Is that right?
I mean, that is one vision of it.
I mean, what's currently going on in Panama,
you know, there's those two C-Pods,
and then there's a third one,
which is a prototype not really used.
So, I mean, Grant, the CEO,
lives on one of them pretty much full-time, and we'll, I mean, Grant, the CEO, lives on one of them pretty much full time.
And we'll, you know, just he said that going out to shore was in his words, ghetto. So
this is by the way, I think is a very revealing quote about how he feels about the rest of
humanity. I mean, up for interpretation, I suppose. I mean, he did he seemed like a perfectly
sociable guy. And but I mean, I think there was some sort of allure
to being by himself on the water
in this sort of very high-tech, smart home.
Yeah.
Now, Mark, I have to ask you about Rudy,
the kind of central character of your story.
Uh, because on one level, you know,
he seems like he shares some qualities
with some tech billionaires and other, you know,
big thinkers in the world that we cover.
On the other hand, he seems kind of crazy.
Like there was this big piece in the FT in 2023
that described him as paranoid and vengeful.
There were some allegations that he had hired a hit man
to take care of some past wrongs that he says were done to him by
the Thai government which broke up his previous seasteading attempt.
So give me the rundown on Rudy and what we know about him.
I was nervous asking him about this because obviously it was reported in the press, but
he denied it, as you can see in the story.
And we got both sides of the story.
I don't know what's going on behind the scenes, but he did admit to having a certain level
of paranoia because he was involved in that original tie-seestead and they definitely
did fear for their lives at one point.
So I don't know what the truth of the matter is,
but he was a very pleasant guy though.
And it was, I did have a good time talking to him down
in the underwater chamber.
But you have to say that,
because otherwise he'll hire a hit man.
Yes, you cannot see the gun to my head.
So Mark, you know, to me, so much of the appeal
of your story is like, look at these fascinating,
strange people who have decided for some reason to,
you know, cast out on their own and try to build
these small communities at sea.
But there is also this sort of commercial imperative.
They want to sort of other people to join them in this lifestyle. How is that going? Is this idea
getting much pickup right now? I mean, as I said, there were, you know, in the Maldives,
they have picked up on this idea. People, I mean, that they're taking pre-orders in a very
on this idea. People, I mean, they're taking pre-orders in a very Tesla-like move. You know, I think, I mean, I think it's a limited market, but those who really want it would
definitely seek it out, I think.
Yeah. I mean, I spent some time with some sea setters, maybe a decade ago.
Oh, really? Where was this?
I was working on a TV project that never went anywhere, and I was doing some research for that. You were on a bit of a decade ago. I was working on a TV project that never went anywhere.
And I was doing some research for that.
You were on a bit of a fishing expedition.
Exactly.
And to me, there was just something about this movement
that just seemed so spiritually empty and sad.
And I know that sounds harsh.
And some of the people involved in seasteading that I met
when I was doing this research were quite kind,
but there was something so like empty about a world in which you become so dissatisfied with the
place you live, the community around you, the government that sort of makes the rules
that you follow, that instead of just trying to like change the system or work within the
system or reform the system, you just kind just hit the eject button and go take your ball and try to start over in this place,
the middle of the ocean that is very inhospitable to you being there.
I guess I want to get both your takes on that.
Is there something sad and lonely about all of
these tech people who want to go live
on these floating cities or in these pods in the middle of the ocean?
To me, it would seem lonely and isolating to you guys, perhaps.
But I don't know if, I mean, there are quite a, as you know, from doing that documentary,
there are lots of people who are into the idea.
So, you know, Kevin, like you,
I also poked around the seasteading movement
a decade or so ago when it first kind of came into the fore.
It was a really novel idea.
And I was interested to learn more.
And I remember some of the folks at the time saying,
the reason to do this is that there has actually
just been not enough innovation in government.
That you look at the forms of government
that we have in the world, there aren't that many of them.
And maybe if we want human progress to advance more quickly,
we should just try more things.
And we happen to have this legal loophole,
which is that if you move out into international waters,
you can create these semi-autonomous communities
and maybe do a little bit of innovation.
And I have to say, like part of me
was with them on that point.
I personally didn't want to move out
to the colony in the middle of the sea.
But if some people wanted to try it and come back
with some new ideas, I didn't necessarily
have any issue with it.
What I think is really interesting
about Mark's reporting is that 10 years later, we don't really seem that much closer to building
communities. We still have kind of the same loners who are ensconcing themselves in underground
chambers and trying to sell the rest of us on the idea. And I don't think it's working.
And I think it does actually seem way lonelier
and way less ambitious, frankly, than it did a decade ago.
Well, Casey, I want to offer an alternative explanation here
that I see in the failure of C-STEDing
to really catch on beyond a small niche group,
which is that the people who are influential
and have a lot of money and resources in tech
have just realized that they don't have to start
their own civilizations because they can buy the ones
that already exist.
I mean, the biggest change in our political climate
over the past 10 years, one of them has been that
the people who run Silicon Valley have decided to invest in trying
to sway the government of the United States to make friendlier regulations, to loosen
up on some of the restrictions on their activities.
If you are Peter Thiel or Elon Musk or someone else who wants to build your own civilization,
you might actually just have more luck trying to swing the existing system in your direction.
And so that's one idea that I have about why seasteading and movements like it have not taken
off is just that there turns out to be a much more direct route to seizing power and becoming
sort of semi-autonomous. What do you think about that?
I mean, arguably Elon Musk,
it obviously has seized a great deal of power,
yet still proclaims to want to go to Mars.
You know, a lot of the people I spoke to for this piece
talked about how we're, you know,
we're gonna get to colonize the oceans before Mars,
that the oceans are as inhospitable as they may be,
are much more realistic than the Mars,
which is perhaps beyond our technical capabilities,
even if others would like us to
believe that it is within our grasp.
Yeah. I have to tell you both this anecdote
that's just coming back to me from the time that I was
reporting and researching seasteading a decade ago, which is that I was at Burning Man. And I went to
an event that some seasteaders were holding at Burning Man. They love Burning Man. And
they were sort of discussing various aspects of what their life on the seastead would be
like. You know, when they did manage to build these floating cities and international waters, they were
sort of dreaming about how things would go.
And it was all men.
And they were sort of like talking amongst themselves about how they were going to convince
women to come out to the seastead.
And they just, I will never forget these guys
at Burning Man just saying like,
well we could just like helicopter them in
for like a week or two at a time.
And then they could go back to land.
And I just remember thinking, these people are insane.
Like.
What is with the gender difference?
Because there is a woman in your story, Mark, who lives on a sea pod.
But I believe there's only one.
It does seem like wanting to live by yourself in the ocean is an extremely male coded activity.
I mean, I think that Nadia, who now lives in suburban Indianapolis, she was seasteading with Chad, her now husband.
Yeah, it does tend to be pretty dude heavy.
Yeah.
I do want to take this idea of sovereignty and
the tech world waking up to its own power more seriously,
because I think there is
a common thread running through your story,
Mark, and a lot of the stories that we've seen about things like billionaires wanting
to do space travel, about the emergence of the tech right, about these charter cities
and special economic zones.
I think we are at a moment right now where there are a lot of people on both sides of
the aisle sort of realizing that
things have gotten kind of broken in the world around them.
And some people's instinct in a situation like that is to try to reform systems from
within or try to buy them or bend them to their will.
And some people's instinct is just to sort of say, I'm out of here.
I want to do my own thing. And so I do think that that is a split within the tech community
on how best to engage with the world around them,
or whether to engage at all.
And I just think that's something we should keep tabs on.
Yeah, we should definitely.
I mean, obviously, again, as climate change gets worse
and the land becomes more inhospitable, we're
going to be looking...
I mean, a lot of people are...
I mean, I would never go to Mars.
I don't know, show of hands, who else would?
But it's a fantasy of many people.
I mean, I think you said, Mark, that the founders keep saying this is not an ideological project.
I think there just is something inescapably ideological
about living by yourself out onto the ocean, right?
If you're like a community builder
or like somebody who likes like creating coalitions,
you're probably not gonna do it from your C-pod, right?
So they really do seem to be optimizing
for people that just want to remove themselves
from society rather than people who want to rebuild it.
I mean, in theory, you could have a cluster of C pods and visit your neighbors and yeah,
I mean,
Casey, I'll visit you on your C pod.
Okay.
After I get canceled, and that's the only place that'll have me.
I'm trying to escape from the Thai Navy.
You can come pay me a visit.
I'll see you there. Well, Mark, thanks so much for your fascinating reporting
here and thank you for going where few reporters
have dared to go before onto the sea pods.
Well, thank you very much for having me.
Appreciate it.
Well, Casey, I'm underwater in email.
When we come back, we'll do our tool time segment and talk about all the stuff we're
using to try to become more productive. Well, Kevin, I just checked my watch and it's tool time.
Tool time. Tool time. Tool time. Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Tool time.
Of course, is our segment where we run down the latest AI
and other software products we've been using
to improve our lives at work and at home.
And this week we've got three different products
that we've both started using in recent weeks.
And as we so often do when we discuss AI tools on the show,
we like to begin with a couple of disclosures.
Yes.
Now I wouldn't call your boyfriend a tool,
but that's on you.
Well, wow, did I come close to saying something I regret.
But here's something you should know.
Speaking of my boyfriend, Kevin, he does work at Anthropic.
Yeah, your manthropic works in Anthropic.
Also, I recently learned that people at Anthropic
are starting to call him manthropic around the office
because of our podcast.
And I would just like to say to those
Anthropic employees, cut it out, be nice.
Leave the boyfriend alone. Yes. Very sweet. Very sweet. Yes.
Do you have a disclosure, Kevin? Oh, the New York Times is
suing OpenAI and Microsoft for copyright infringement, of
course.
All right. Well, now that those disclosures are through, Kevin,
let's get to the first tool we want to talk about today. And
that one goes by the name 03.
Yes. So 03 is OpenAI's newly available model. It became available through ChatGPT last week
and it made a big splash. People were sort of very excited by some of its new capabilities.
Tyler Cowen, the economist, said that he thought that O3 was AGI, that essentially it was as smart as we could expect AGI to be.
Lots of people disagree with that.
People have been finding things that it's not all that
good at compared to past systems.
But Casey, give us the rundown of 03,
and then tell me how you are using this thing.
Sure. So 03, as you say,
is OpenAI's latest and perhaps most powerful model.
It is what they call a reasoning model, so it gives a little bit of extra time after
you enter your query so that it can do a bunch of cool tricks.
And most interestingly, Kevin, it is the first reasoning model to be able to combine every
tool available to chat GPT within one.
So you enter a query and before it
gives you the answer, it can search the web. It can analyze your uploaded files.
It can analyze data with Python. It can do reasoning on visual input. So like if
you upload a couple of images as well and it can generate images. So you like
you know how right now we live in this nightmare world where you have to like
go to a drop-down menu and choose which of the 16 models you should use to like do whatever your thing is.
03 is a step towards saying, hey, forget about that. Just tell us what you want to do and we will give you the best possible answer.
It is the Omni model. Yes. Yeah. And is this available to all chat GPT users or do you have to pay for it? You got to pay for it and the more you pay OpenAI,
the more queries you will get per week.
But I imagine that before too long,
this thing is going to come down to the free tier,
at least for a handful of queries a week.
Yeah. So there are all kinds of benchmarks out there and people
will talk about, oh,
O3 did this much better on
this benchmark than this previous model.
But I want your vibe-based evaluation of O3, Casey.
What does this thing do for you and why is it
better than other systems you've tried?
Yeah. Well, the fact that it can do
web searches and document analysis
before it gives you an answer just does mean that you can
perform some super helpful tasks more quickly than you
could if you were maybe doing those in separate steps. just does mean that you can perform some super helpful tasks more quickly than you could
if you were maybe doing those in separate steps.
So for example, when these 115 page rulings come out of the Google antitrust trial, my
first step is to upload it into 03 and then I can just chat with the document.
So for example, maybe I'm trying to understand, you know, why does the government think that
this is the case and 03 will just go pull out the quotes.
Now you may be wondering, do I then go back and make sure that those quotes are real and
we're not hallucinated by O3?
Yes, I absolutely do.
But so far, I have not found a case of it making up a fake citation.
I will continue to check its work.
But that has been super helpful to me, Kevin.
I've also just been using it for like business ideation.
So I have a couple of things I'm thinking about doing
with platformer and I basically one Saturday morning
just kind of sat down and said,
hey, here's what I'm thinking about.
How might you go about this?
And it just gave me-
I just wanted to tell you about starting an OnlyFans.
Yeah, that's right.
Who's ready to see these feet?
The thing is it's actually really good at this, right? And you know, my favorite way to use
these AI models tends to be stuff where I'm not asking it
for critical life or death information that I then have to
worry it is hallucinated. It is instead to say, Hey, get me the
first 10 or 20% of the way through a project. And so as I
think about doing these more creative tasks, I found that O3
is a really smart partner, it does have good ideas. Of
course, it has terrible ideas as well. But sometimes what you
need to get unstuck on a project is for somebody to give you a
terrible idea and you think, oh, no, no, that sucks. But it does
actually spark something for how I could do it better. So that's
kind of how I've been using O3 so far. And I would say I've been
a pretty happy customer.
Yeah, so I've been playing around with it too. And I've
been using O3 sometimes for interior design.
I used it to help pick out a rug for my office this week
at my house.
I use it to help me figure out what was going on
with a car seat that was broken.
One of the most fun uses I've seen for 03
is people basically using it to play GeoGuessr.
Have you seen this? I have seen this.
So GeoGuessr is this game where you, like,
basically are given a photo, and you have to kind of guess
where in the world it was taken using various, like,
visual clues and, you know, landmarks and vegetation.
And, like, there are these people
who are super good at this and do this competitively.
There's this guy, Rain Bolt, who is, like,
the king of GeoGuessr.
And at least according to some of my friends,
O3 is now quite good at doing this kind of visual analysis
where you can feed it a photo and say, where was this taken?
And it will sort of like inspect various pieces
and kind of do that for you.
Now, I did try this on a few of my own photos.
It did not get the right answers,
but some people are reporting that this thing is just
incredible at that.
So take that for what you will.
And let's say that that is very fun.
If you are playing a benign game of GeoGuessr,
you can also imagine the worrisome privacy implications
if now all of a sudden people can upload any photo of you
ever taken and say, oh, I know exactly where this person is
at this moment.
Totally.
OK, so Casey, who would you where this person is at this moment. Totally.
Okay, so Casey, who would you recommend O3 to at this point
and for what?
Well, look, I think that I would still place it
in the category of like something that is cool
and novel and fun for an early adopter.
Like if you really want to be on the bleeding edge,
like sure, spend 20 bucks a month to use ChatGBT,
play around with this, see what it's useful for. And if you find it super useful, you know, maybe you want to go up
to a higher tier plan and use it even more. For you know, if you're just like a student
or somebody who's casually dabbling with this stuff, I don't think there's anything about
oh three that means you need to like go out and upgrade immediately. But I think for folks
like us, we're very interested in the state of the art. This was a moment where both of
us said, aha, okay, we can see the frontier moving up quickly here.
Yeah.
And in fairness to other frontier AI companies,
we should also say a few of them have also
gotten upgrades since the last time we did a tool time
segment.
Claude now has the ability to search the internet, which
is a feature that we had asked Anthropics CEO Dario Amadei
about when he came on the show earlier.
Gemini is also, people are very
excited about the new model that is inside Gemini. Gemini 2.5 is the newest version. All these models
are just kind of taking big steps up as a result of these new reasoning functions. Yeah, I would
agree with that. Okay, next tool. Casey, you want to talk about something called Tana. Now, what is Tana?
I've been pronouncing it Tana, but it might be called Tana.
Many folks who work on the team are from Norway,
and I don't really know how they pronounce vowels over there.
But I'm going to call it Tana for this segment.
It was built by some former Googlers,
including one who helped to build Google Wave, which
was a product that I loved way back in the 2000s.
There was an early
step at creating this kind of collaboration software.
It sort of borrowed elements from from wikis and tried to create something really cool.
I loved it.
Didn't really take off.
But a lot of those ideas wound up surfacing again in what I'm going to call these collaborative
workspace apps like Notion, I think is maybe the most popular one.
I've also talked previously on the show about other kind of similar
note-taking personal knowledge management apps like Obsidian or Rome.
And on one level, Tana is just kind of another one of those,
but I have been using it in a way that I have been finding cool
that I did want to talk about.
All right, tell me.
So what I've decided to do is essentially
have one piece of software that I just use as my AI journal.
I'm a big believer in journaling.
I think one reason why I'm constantly talking about
note taking and productivity is I do believe
that everyone should keep a journal of some kind.
I just think that it's good for you at work,
it's good for you at home, it's good for you at home,
it's just a good thing to do. But if you put everything into one journal, it can feel very
crowded, very cluttered, and it feels like it maybe doesn't have the utility that you want.
I do most of my daily journaling in another great app called Capacities, which we've talked about
on the show. I still really like Capacities. I still use it basically every day.
But once Tana came around, I said, you know, I have this other idea, which is
every day there's a ton of AI headlines and I'm really trying to make myself as
smart as I can about AI.
So every day I'm just going to take all the top headlines about AI and I'm going
to put them in one place and I'm going to add tags and then I'm just going to
revisit it throughout the week.
Right.
Because maybe I'm writing about OpenAI this week.
Now I just click on a tag, and I see everything
that has happened in my world with OpenAI in that week.
I can quickly open up that story and figure out
what I thought was interesting.
So what I'm hoping is, over time,
I will just have built this really interesting
chronological log of the development of the AI industry
that I can dip into at any time, that is very easily searchable,
and that I'm hoping will make me smarter about the subject overall.
And, I mean, that sounds very useful,
but I'm also remembering previous productivity apps that you've described to me
that work in very similar ways, that allow you to create tags
and kind of keep track of topics.
So how is this one different or better?
To me, it's like, it's useful in the same way that, like,
just opening a new browser window
can be useful sometimes, right?
It's like you could have just opened the tab
in the old browser window,
but sometimes it is that blank sheet of paper
that actually draws you to using it.
And so that is how I am trying to use it.
So I guess what I'm really suggesting
or what I'm curious about is,
do you think that there can just be a value
in like having a journal dedicated to something
in particular, a specific app that I do a specific thing in,
instead of just trying to turn every app
into a Swiss army knife,
like sometimes you just want a hammer.
And so I'm trying to use Tana as a hammer
to organize one particular thing.
Okay, well, let me know how your experiment goes.
I hope this is the productivity app
that finally fixes the gaping void inside you. Casey, how much does Tana cost and are there any
other things you'd like to say about it? So it's a freemium model. There's a
fairly generous free tier. If you get really into it, there's a paid plan that
starts at eight bucks a month or 96 bucks a year. I don't have any particular
feeling like, oh you have to rush out and try Tana. You could also try Obsidian,
which is free to use in almost every case.
And you could definitely do everything
I'm talking about there.
But I don't know.
Just experiment with having a single subject journal
and just let me know how it goes.
Or if you've done that in the past,
email us and tell me what you learned from that experience.
It could be useful to me.
Now, I believe you are also using
an interesting new tool, Kevin.
Why don't you tell us about it?
Now, if you will remember, the last time we did a tool time segment I said that I was
drowning in unread emails and I was desperate for a company or a startup or
someone to come along and build for me an app that would allow me to put my
entire email inbox on autopilot just to to have AI draft responses to all of my emails,
let me push one button and send everything,
never have to think about email again.
You predicted that when we published that episode,
a bunch of listeners would reach out and say,
hey, I actually have built that app,
why don't you try it?
Then I would try them and be disappointed by all of them.
Yeah. Well, what happened?
Well, Casey, you were right.
So after we published that episode, I heard from a number of listeners saying, basically,
we have this. It exists. Come try it out. I talked to a bunch of their CEOs. I got some demos.
I was very excited to try some of these email autopilot products.
And then I started running into walls.
So one of the walls is that I realized that my requirements for this program
were going to be very hard to meet.
So my first requirement, as you will remember, was that the email autopilot
program, not send any of my data to an AI company in a way that would require me to trust
that they are handling that safely.
And the second requirement that I didn't know
when we taped the show last week was related to something
that I am enrolled in called Google Advanced Protection.
This is a kind of high security program for journalists
or politicians or dissidents who need a little bit of extra security
on their Google accounts.
And one thing that Google Advanced Protection does
is it blocks access to third party plugins
that want to go into your Gmail and sort of use that data
or take it somewhere and analyze it in some way.
That makes sense.
So all of these demos suffer from the same problem,
which is that in order to use their email autopilot software,
you have to essentially fork over your Gmail account
to these companies, you know,
many of which I assume are trustworthy,
but I'm just not sure enough to give them
20 years worth of my email.
Yes. So what happened?
So then, Casey, my saga was not done,
because I attempted some vibe coding experiments
to try to build my own app that would run locally
on my machine.
And Casey, I tried so many different things.
I tried with 03, building an extension for a mail program
called Thunderbird.
But it turned out the New York Times tech people
didn't allow that either.
I tried to build my own Chrome extension
that would sort of look at my Gmail as it was coming in
and draft responses.
That didn't work either because of some security things.
I even tried creating something called an Electron app,
which was terrifying.
And eventually I got to the point where 03
was getting so desperate with all of my crazy requirements
and wanted to help me so badly
that it actually suggested
that I essentially build my own malware.
Like a program that I could install on my computer
that would like screen grab my screen
and log all my keystrokes and like analyze it
and use that to respond to my emails.
I thought that was a little bit overboard.
Yeah.
But this sad end to my email autopilot saga
is not where I leave you today because Casey,
I have found a new path through the email wilderness.
All right, give us some hope here, Roos.
I have become a dictator, Casey.
Yeah, our producers already could have told you that. Not the tin pot kind.
I have become a person who uses AI dictation software.
Now we have talked on this show before.
I'm a guy who likes to talk rather than write.
And now there are these AI powered dictation tools
that can do a lot of what I've been hoping that something
like email autopilot would do for me, which is to blaze through a bunch of emails very
quickly just by talking to my computer.
So I sort of found a second route.
Okay.
Yeah.
So tell it like what app are you using here?
So there are a bunch of them out there.
There's Aqua, there's Whisper Flow.
The one I've been using most is called Super Whisper.
Basically, we've had dictation apps
and speech recognition apps for a long time.
They're built into probably every phone and computer now.
But these new dictation apps can do more than
just transcribe the words you're saying.
They're connected to large language models.
So you can talk into them and then they can
capture what you're saying and transform it in some way.
Maybe they can summarize it or create a bullet point list,
or change the tone slightly,
or just take out the filler words and format
everything in a very context aware way.
So if you're writing emails,
it can sound like an email.
If you're writing messages,
it can sound like a message. If you're doing a draft of a piece, it can sound like a
draft of a piece. And it can do this across any app. So anything that you're doing on your
computer, you just kind of hit your hotkey, start talking, and it types into whatever box
you're typing into. Right. And so how much time does that save you just like talking in email rather than writing it?
I've found it saving me like probably 50% of my email time just being able to talk
I talk faster than I type I think a lot of people do I mean
I'm sure you've seen people going around dictating text messages and they always have to say like
Tell Tom I'm going to the grocery store period period. Does he want cookies, question mark.
And like, you don't have to do that.
It's like they're studying telegrams.
Yes, and you don't have to do that
with these new AI dictation apps.
You can just sort of talk naturally
the way that you would talk to a person.
Interesting, I have to say,
I do not like sitting alone in a room talking to myself.
Like I feel self-conscious about it.
It also feels like I'm using more energy
than maybe I would when I'm just, you know, sort of running my little fingers over the
keyboard. So, you know, I guess it doesn't surprise me that you love to talk to yourself,
but I just don't think it would work for me in quite the same way.
I've got big like muttering energy. So that is my tool of the week. I like these AI Dutation apps.
And if you are a person who likes to talk,
try one out.
All right.
Well, those are a few tools for your consideration.
And, you know, listeners, if you've been using any cool tools recently
you want to tell us about, maybe even get our take on, email us.
We're always looking for fun new things to try.
One more thing before we go, we told you last week that we are excited to tell you who our
special guest is going to be for an upcoming Hard Questions episode.
And we can now tell you who that person is, Kevin.
It's Pope Francis.
Back from the dead for one last score.
No, it's not. It's Ed Helms, the actor, author, comedian, podcaster,
apparently banjo enthusiast and hard fork listener.
Most importantly, Ed is going to be joining us
to help answer your ethical dilemmas
and tech-related moral quandaries.
So please send them in.
Yeah, and just if you're wondering what kind of quandary, you know, might we be looking for here?
Here's a couple we've had in the past.
There was one that was like,
my top daycare choice is requiring a photo release and the rights to use my child's image in promotional materials as a precondition for registering.
What do I do?
Or how do I tell my boss that sending chat GPT generated content to his team is both unhelpful and alienating?
So stuff like that, we want to hear it.
Send us a short voice memo or even a video of yourself.
Keep it around 30 seconds if you can and send it to hardfork at NY times.com.
Hard Fork is produced by Rachel Cohn and Whitney Jones.
We're edited this week by Matt Collette.
We're fact checked by Ina Alvarado.
Today's show is engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
Original music by Marion Lozano,
Sophia Landman, Rowan Nemesto, and Dan Powell.
Our executive producer is Jen Poignan.
Video production by Soya Roquet and Chris Schott.
You can watch this whole episode on YouTube
at youtube.com slash hard fork. Special thanks to Paula Schumann, Huy Wing Tam, Dalia Haddad, and
Jeffrey Miranda. You can email us at hardfork at NY times dot com with what
you would do if you spent 120 days in an underwater sea chamber. Thanks for watching!