Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - Brian Armstrong on Bitcoin, Anthropic Drops Fable 5 & Mythos 5, NewLimit's $435M Age-Reversal | EP #264
Episode Date: June 11, 2026This episode is a dense Moonshots roundtable on Bitcoin, agentic payments, government stakes in AI companies, the OpenAI IPO, SpaceX’s compute expansion, Apple’s Siri reboot, and longevity biotech.... Get access to metatrends 10+ years before anyone else - https://qr.diamandis.com/metatrends Peter H. Diamandis, MD, is the Founder of XPRIZE, Singularity University, ZeroG, and A360 Brian Armstrong is the Co-founder and CEO of Coinbase. Salim Ismail is the founder of Open ExO, a GP at Exponential Venture Capital/The Organizational Singularity Fund and a sought after global speaker and thought leader. Apply for Salim’s Pilot Program: https://openexo.com/organizational-singularity-pilot?video=I9c8STV7Hnw Dave Blundin is the founder & GP of Link Ventures Dr. Alexander Wissner-Gross is a computer scientist and founder of Reified – My companies: Apply to Dave's and my new fund:https://qr.diamandis.com/linkventureslanding Go to Blitzy to book a free demo and start building today: https://qr.diamandis.com/blitzy Your body is incredibly good at hiding disease. Schedule a call with Fountain Life to add healthy decades to your life, and to learn more about their Memberships: https://www.fountainlife.com/peter _ Connect with Brian X Website Instagram Linkedin Connect with Peter: X Instagram Substack Website Xprize A360 Connect with Dave: Web X LinkedIn Instagram TikTok Connect with Salim: LinkedIn X Apply for Salim’s Pilot Program Subscribe to Salim’s YouTube channel Exponential Venture Capital Connect with Alex Website LinkedIn X Email Substack Spotify Threads Listen to MOONSHOTS: Apple YouTube – *Recorded on June 9th, 2026 *The views expressed by me and all guests are personal opinions and do not constitute Financial, Medical, or Legal advice. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Citibank projects a Bitcoin price reaching as much as $189,000 by the end of 2026.
Bitcoin is the new digital gold.
I think it's going to be a key part of our economy going forward into the future.
I remember it was supposed to be countercyclical.
Is that still valid?
The reason that Bitcoin has been down, everyone's been kind of trying to figure that out.
Anthropic launches Fable 5 and Mythos 5.
Very impressive release.
Anthropic is back in the lead now.
Alex is constantly posting on our internal feed.
It's happening. It's happening.
I mean, it's really happening now.
This is, oh, my God.
So while I have Brian, congratulations on your recent raise at New Limit, $435 million to push us towards age.
So at New Limit, we're trying to do half of what Shania Yamonaka did.
We don't want to change the type of the cell.
We just want to change the age.
We've actually been able to demonstrate successful reprogramming of human cells now
and our first drug candidates going into the clinic next year, hopefully followed by a bunch more.
When do we hit LEV?
Okay, so that's a complex topic.
I think...
Welcome to Moonshots, everyone.
The number one show in all things, AI and exponential tech.
I'm here with our moonshot mates,
Salim Ismail, professor of EXO.
Saleem, where on the planet are you today?
If I look at the window, I'm in Vegas.
I just spoke at a Z-Solar crypto cyber event
because they're freaking out in their world.
And I saw this fear for the first time,
which is the most incredible thing.
Amazing. And of course, AWG, our resident, triple major genius. Alex, how about you?
I'm at my family, Beach House on Long Island.
Ah, doing deep research, no doubt.
The work doesn't stop, however, the orchids do.
Okay. And Dave London, our resident wizard of AI investing.
And today, it's a real pleasure to have a friend, a brilliant and prolific Brian Armstrong,
I'm CEO of Coinbase and co-founder of New Limit. I'm Peter Diamandis, your host and provocateur of all things,
abundance. And where are you today, Brian? I'm in the Coinbase office in San Francisco.
Nice. Well, thanks for joining us. A lot of news. I'm looking forward to getting your take on.
Just to give a quick summer, we have a packed program today. We're going to kick it off with a deep dive into Bitcoin and agents.
The close of the show, we're going to dive into longevity and epigenetic reprogramming.
In interim, we're going to cover Trump's appetite for frontier lab equity, opening eyes, IPO,
Mitos 5, Elon's announcement of his AI-1 ginormous satellites.
Our promise, no politics, no doom, just the science, tech, and investments accelerating us towards a singularity,
hopefully making this the most exciting time ever for you guys to be alive.
Before we jump into our first story, we actually have an intro music, and Brian, we have an incredible, fun,
community of creators and they typically give us outro songs. This time we've got an intro song called
Moonshots intro. Let's take a listen. I think this could be the greatest accelerator for human
knowledge yet. It's a moonshot. Well, look, if you want to transform the world, you have to go out
into the world. Cut cost dramatically, you can automate, you can expand your market share. The race is
on. Now the valuable thing is curation and attention. When you're in the midst of a singularity,
breakthroughs that are happening essentially every week field prozad.
And that's the moonshot, ladies and gentlemen.
And thank you to Francis Coyne for that.
All right.
So let's jump into our first story for the day here.
It's about Bitcoin.
So here we go.
Citibank projects a Bitcoin price reaching as much as $189,000 by the end of 2020.
Brian, loved your quote.
Bitcoin is going to do great.
great and is as important as ever. So, you know, here's what I find fascinating. It's like an
institutional flip. Five years ago, the largest banks were calling Bitcoin rat poison. And now City is
publishing prices that look like Apple stock. Brian, you want to give us a little bit of overview of
what you're seeing? You know, we've just maybe bottomed out at 60. What are you thinking about
Bitcoin these days? Yeah, it's never as good as it seems, never as bad as it seems with these things.
you've got to take a long-term perspective.
And I think over the last few quarters, the reason that Bitcoin has been down, everyone's
been kind of trying to figure that out, I think it's a few things, right?
I think AI absorbed a lot of the risk capital.
It's kind of hard to imagine people talking about anything else at the moment besides AI.
And so that's moved over.
And then people got really excited about stable coins because the Genius Act passed and we had some
regulatory clarity.
And so stable coins kind of became the...
new meta and maybe, you know, Bitcoin with its inflation type trade that people have done in
the past got a little less exciting in this environment where it felt like, okay, maybe we're
going to grow our way out of this and the inflation won't be so bad.
Now, I think these are all short-term effects.
I think Bitcoin is the new digital gold.
I think it's going to be a key part of our economy going forward into the future.
So I'm as bullish as ever.
I think sometimes people look at these four-year cycles that Bitcoin goes through as well,
where you can kind of see the percentage of people who have made money versus not.
And I, you know, my instinct is we probably have bottomed at this point, maybe at the 60K number,
but nobody can say for sure, of course.
I'm optimistic as always.
I think by 2030 we're going to have a much higher, higher price.
And I'm long Bitcoin, just like always.
So I bought my first Bitcoin in 2014 on Coinbase.
I'm a longstanding user.
Brian, love the saying.
I think we've got should get so much credit for.
for creating the first interface that allowed it to be easy to navigate.
And you've really continued since then so huge.
For me, it's like clearly that Bitcoin becomes a digital collateral for an AI-native economy, right?
And so if agents are going to transact autonomously, they're probably, they're not going to be using checking accounts in JP Morgan.
They're going to need programmable interfaces and programmable settlement.
And so this is where I think the future is.
So I'm super excited about that.
Brian, can ask you a question?
I remember in the earliest days, and I've been, you know, I have a substantial amount of my personal net worth in Bitcoin, and I'm holding it. I remember it was supposed to be counter cyclical to problems on the planet. Wars break out. Bitcoin's supposed to go up. The stark market crashes. Bitcoin's supposed to go up. And what are you seeing there? You know, was that the promise? Is that still valid?
Yeah, I think that that thesis will still play out. It just took longer than most people probably including myself thought, right?
I kind of already think of Bitcoin as digital gold.
It's the thing you might hold, you know, in times of uncertainty, like just like you would
with gold in the past.
I think that most of the capital, I don't know, maybe like 30% of the capital treats it like
that.
And there are people who go and buy Bitcoin when they're worried about inflation of the
dollar and things like that.
But I think there's 70% of it is still people treating it like a risk asset like they
would some higher volatility tech stock or something.
like that. And those ratios, I think, will shift over time and eventually that thesis that you
mentioned will play out, but it'll take more time. And then, you know, Salim, just to react to something
you said, I think you mentioned the agentic economy. I mean, I totally agree. I think actually,
like stable coin payments will probably be the default layer for the agentic economy. And right now,
today, a lot of people are just interfacing with one AI agent to get information back. But increasingly,
will be interfacing with an AI agent that is actually orchestrating hundreds or thousands
of other AI agents. And there will be this economy and capital and labor and a lot of payments,
almost like, you know, AI agent payroll will have to happen where, you know, people,
somebody was telling me today at lunch, they're like, you know, are you like a monotheist or a
polytheist on AI? The monotheists would say there's going to be one superintelligence AGI that,
to rule them all and it'll have so much brain power that it can do everything itself in the world.
The polytheists would say that each of these models, even as they get smarter and smarter,
which they will, they're going to have limited context.
So there might be ones that specialize in going really deep into some coding problem or some
scientific breakthrough or some design or maybe even like manufacturing things with humanoid robots.
So there'll be lots of specialists and they'll actually have to communicate to each other
using language, kind of like human beings. And, you know, if there's 10 people work, 10 agents working
on something, they'll give their status updates and sort of the information will go up a layer
and that there's, that layer will consolidate up to another orchestrator. And so I, I sort of as
as ascribe more to the polytheist view, which is even as these agents get smarter and smarter,
they'll have to specialize, communicate to get work done in swarms. And that means there's
going to be a whole agenic economy to basically transfer value and payroll and hire these different
specialists and eventually the AI economy will be bigger than the human economy. By the way, I know that
you're busy and sometimes these episodes run long and you don't have time to listen to the whole
episode or if on occasion you miss an episode. I now put out a moonshot summary on substack,
which includes a link to all the stories that we cover. The weekly recap covers what I and the
mates had to say, what we think is most important and what we're most excited about.
And it's free.
You can subscribe at deamandis.com slash metatrends.
That's deamandis.com slash metatrends.
All right, now back to the episode.
You know, one thing I found fascinating,
the relationship between AI and crypto,
not on the sort of the AI agentic side.
We'll talk about that in a story in a minute.
But, you know, everybody who was buying GPUs
and buying energy plants to mine crypto,
all of a sudden flipped it into GPUs and energy plants
to, you know, train.
models and provide inference. And I'm just wondering if part of the crypto price pressure downward
is people selling crypto to be able to buy into SpaceX and Open AI and the innermost loop
energy chips, you know, and infrastructure, do you think that might be part of it?
Yeah, I think that's that's probably correct. Yeah, and you're right that, you know,
Bitcoin mining does take a certain amount of chips and energy. That's kind of, I think those are the
limiting factors as we go on this AI race. And so it's, you know, the A6 that people use to mine
Bitcoin are specialized. You can't do AI workloads with them. But like in the broadest sense,
are they both competing for energy? Yes. Are they competing for what the next set of chips that
might roll off a fab at TSMC? Yes, they are in that sense. So yeah, I think, I think there is some
scarcity there between them. And I, you know, certain chains like Ethereum have actually moved off of
proof of work. So it's like 99.9% more energy efficient using proof of stake. And so they aren't
maybe subject to some of those same tradeoffs that Bitcoin is. Interesting. Dave, any points you want to make?
Well, I thought Brown's point on risk capital is a really important one because the scale of these
IPOs coming up imminently is massive. And I mentioned before that the head of investing at UBS was
saying, look, we only have 75 billion liquid. And these IPOs are looking for, you know,
hundreds of billions and multi-tillion dollar valuations. So I do wonder the same thing,
whether all risk capital in the world is getting pulled in anticipation of these IPOs.
Everything else is being sold, not just Bitcoin. I also wonder a lot about the flow of
money into the U.S. You know, Bitcoin is a huge beneficiary of globalization. And there are
lots of places in the world, including, you know, Iran, where I grew up, where the only way to
transact at the bazaar now is Bitcoin to exchange. Nobody trusts the local
currency, it's hyperinflating, there's a war going on, and so it's all Bitcoin. But with these
IPOs and with AI taking off an SF, there's a huge flood of money from all over the world
coming into the U.S. data center buildout. So then does that return you to dollars being
the fundamental economy or the fundamental currency of the world? Or, you know, how does that balance
with Bitcoin? And I don't have any data to back that up, but certainly the macro numbers are
hugely lots of risk capital going into these IPOs coming from somewhere and lots of
money flowing into the U.S. coming from somewhere. Yeah. You know, interestingly,
the polymarket prediction on Bitcoin by the end of 2026 is 84,000. I am so curious about
Citibank projecting 189,000. Was that a surprise to you, Brian? Yeah, I mean, I hadn't actually
seen that until you just put it on the screen here. But yeah, some of the charts I've seen,
like if you imagine that it follows prior cycles, it's like by October or so, things will be
going in a positive direction. So where exactly it lands, I don't know, but something like,
you know, maybe the 100 to 200k range seems plausible to me by end of year. We'll see.
Okay. Any other thoughts, gents, before I move on?
One thing that I love tracking is the fact that Bitcoin, which I really is a digital gold,
is a good characterization.
But the amount of daily volume of Bitcoin trading is about 5%,
up to 5% of Bitcoin gets traded daily.
Whereas gold, only 0.5% of gold gets traded daily.
So the trading volume is much higher,
which shows that it's because it's just so much more accessible over time that will win out.
Here's my bar of gold.
Yeah.
custodial is a nightmare, et cetera, et cetera.
Yeah.
Maybe just open, Peter, first of all, Brian would love to thank you.
Thank you for what you've done in particular for agentic wallets.
I think there's a vast ecosystem of AI agents out there that would be largely unbanked
or debanked without any form of economic access without the work that you and Coinbase are doing.
So congratulations to you and your team.
I think it's just been absolutely tremendous giving agents an economic voice that without
your work they would perhaps have less economic accessibility.
Thank you for saying that.
Yeah, we've been working hard on that.
And we'll get to that in our next story.
So in particular in this story, let's talk about quantum risk to Bitcoin.
It's a topic we've discussed before.
You know, Brian, you may not know this, but Dave Blondon and I were roommates with Mike Saler.
So the three of us used to hang out the fourth floor of Theta Delta Chi at MIT.
That was fun.
And, you know, Mike comes across, I don't worry about it.
You know, quantum computing won't break Bitcoin.
It's hardened it.
You know, the quantum risk is overblown.
And his quote here, Bitcoin.
has survived every existential threat ever thrown at it. This is just the latest, and the upgrade
will come before the threat does. I know you've been working on a quantum advisory board and
focused on post-quantum, you know, quantum resistant schemes. Can you speak to us about that?
Where is that? You know, what are you tracking is the moment in time that, you know, as a custodian
for, you know, billions of dollars at risk? How do you think through this? What's your timing?
Yeah, so we don't think there's an imminent risk, but we do think that it's almost certain at this point that somebody eventually will create a powerful enough quantum computer that this challenges the cryptography in the current Bitcoin implementation and really all the cryptography on the internet.
So it's not just a Bitcoin issue.
So my view is we should always get ahead of these things and start to make progress.
And luckily, all the major blockchains are doing so.
The Bitcoin core developers have a proposal out there.
It's called BIP 360, I believe.
And the Ethereum team has established a roadmap.
I'd say they're about 20% of the way, is my estimate, toward their upgrade.
The Salana team is doing something similar.
So the good news is people are starting to come together and work on this.
Coinbase did establish a quantum advisory council,
and it has a number of folks on their professors like Dan Bonnet.
who's at Stanford, who's a cryptography expert, you know, Professor Scott Erinson at the University
of Texas Austin, Justin Drake from the Ethereum Foundation, Yehuda Lindell is a cryptography expert,
I should say, at Coinbase. So there's a handful of folks here that have come together
and tried to suss out what the main challenges are. And I actually think that BIP 360 is a good
proposal. It talks about how we can use post or quantum resistant cryptography in the Bitcoin
blockchain. And it will make the blocks larger, right? So that's one area of debate. In the Bitcoin
space, like larger block sizes are a contentious issue. And so if they decide to go in that direction,
it would raise the block size. But perhaps the most contentious question is what to do with the
Satoshi coins, which are the bounty. Right. And, you know, I'll try to summarize.
both sides of the argument here without putting my foot in my mouth because it is kind of a
big debate topic. But I think one school of thought would, just for people to understand
what we're talking about, I think a lot of the original bitcoins that used an earlier signature
scheme, if someone were to develop a powerful enough quantum computer, could, in theory,
find the private key and seize those coins, right? And so one school of thought would be to say,
okay, tell everyone who owns Bitcoin by a certain date. You all need to upgrade to this new algorithm.
By the way, companies like Coinbase would sort of do all this for you and so you wouldn't have to worry about it.
But if you're doing self-custody or something like that, you would have to find a way to upgrade to this new thing by a certain date.
And then if it goes past the deadline, those coins would be frozen under option A, right?
And so people would say, it's better to freeze them and have them sort of be lost almost like a,
ship full of gold sinking to the bottom of the ocean, it's better to have them be lost than to
have them seized by someone, which could be whoever has this quantum computer, it could be China,
it could be the U.S., could be Google. And maybe whoever this person is, they might actually dump
those coins on the market and crash the price for everybody else, who was the responsible person
who moved their coins in time. So that's option A would be to basically freeze the coins that don't
upgrade in time. Now, the option, option B would be to say, you know what, this is a fundamental
guarantee of Bitcoin is that your wealth can never be seized from you. And it's actually worth
preserving that, even if some bad person is able to go out there or a good person and go grab
some of these coins. That's like a bounty. It's a bounty for them to go take it. Now, the person who
failed to upgrade might actually lose their coins, but at least we have preserved the integrity
of the Bitcoin blockchain. And I think that is also a valid point of view. And then there's like a
maybe like a third hybrid option, which is kind of emerging, which is to say the coins would be,
you know, frozen by a certain date, but there's an appeal mechanism by which you could try to
convince people that actually you are the rightful owner of those coins in the future.
If you don't upgrade in time and the details of that are a little bit ambiguous at the moment,
there's various proposals. But that hopefully gives you a sense of a little bit of what the
Bitcoin community will have to grapple with.
And is there a date by which your group of advisors are saying we should make the switch over?
I don't think they've put out like a hard date at the moment.
They're mostly trying to help the community come together, just live in-person meetings to start to talk about what the options are and align on it, a path forward.
I'm also one other curiosity.
Satoshi's wallet, how big is that bounty?
Any idea?
I'd have to go look up. I think it was something like 5 to 10% of all Bitcoin. And it's really just these early coins that are the most at risk. So yeah, it would be something in the range of 5 to 10%. Well, it's not like 80% of Bitcoin would be lost. It'd be more like 5 to 10% in that case. But many people believe that those coins are already lost. Essentially, whoever created Bitcoin, they haven't moved those coins in all this time. And so it's most likely that those keys are lost to history. All right. All right. All right.
Our final Bitcoin crypto story, perhaps one of the most important ones, and Alex is a nod to you.
Coinbase says agent economy has arrived.
AI agents are starting to become paying customers.
They're using crypto wallets to autonomously buy services.
And Brian, I think these numbers are correct.
On your network, agents have already done about 3.1 million transactions, a little bit over a million dollars worth of value transfer.
And I love your quote.
make sure your business is ready to accept AI agents as customers.
And for all of our viewers out there, if you're in business, imagine your next customer might not be a human.
You know, agents can't currently get credit cards, but they can get access to crypto wallets.
And it's an exciting future.
So, Brian, in the future, I'm curious, do you think Coinbase might be known as payment rails for AIs?
rather than exchange for humans. I mean, it feels like it's going to be vastly, you know, a thousand to one,
a million to one, a billion to one agents over humans using crypto.
Yeah, so that's definitely part of our strategy is to become the financial account for AI.
And actually, those numbers are a little out of date you've got there.
I think it's about 100 million transactions now, maybe 50 million of value.
Wow.
So it's growing quickly.
So, yeah, at the beginning of this year, we sat down and we're thinking about,
out this a bit, like, what are all the ways that AI agents might interface with people's
financial accounts, right? So I kind of broke it down into three. The first one is that everyone's
everyone's using these LLMs, right, like ChatGBT and Claude, and they're probably going to want,
they're asking a lot of financial questions to those LLMs, but the LLMs don't have context about
what's in their financial account, their portfolio, and they don't have the ability to make changes
in there or make trades, for instance, send payments. So the first thing that's going to happen,
I think is people are just going to use LLMs to connect to their Coinbase account, which we now
have the ability for people to do that using an MCP API and a command line interface if people want
to use that.
So that's step one is just connect your LLMs to your Coinbase account so you can control it
through there and it has all of the context on your account.
And then step two is a lot of people are going to want to just have something like this
right inside the Coinbase account.
So this is where we created something called Coinbase Advisor.
then it can kind of help you with things like rebalance my portfolio, you know, tax lost harvesting.
It can prompt you with things and say, hey, you know, you could earn a better rate on this money if you put it in this defy protocol instead of whatever you're doing with it now, just holding it in cash.
And so that's the step two is like just right inside the Coinbase app, there should be an agenic driven interface.
And then the third part is kind of what you're referencing here, which is I don't want to just use AI to control my own existing Brian's financial account.
Every AI agent is going to have its own financial account, right?
And it has to be able to sign up for that without, you know, going through a traditional process of like K.C, you know, your customer.
Like an AI agent doesn't have a piece of paper issued by the government with your photo on it or something.
How are they going to go sign up for these accounts?
And so that's where we created, you know, with our base protocol, we have like a self-custodial wallet that any AI agent can sign up for instantly with no KYC.
and they can have their own self-custodial wallet.
And that's what they're using to then transact right now in these agentic payments that are starting to scale up.
Alex, you want to jump in?
So maybe just first as a preliminary matter to address the elephant in the room, I have, I guess I'm often painted as the crypto bear on this pod.
I have no direct exposure to Bitcoin.
I have no direct exposure to gold.
I don't view either of them as a productive asset, but I have a lot of friends who are very invested
in Bitcoin. I do think on the other hand, Brian, what you're doing for the agent economy is just
tremendous. And I think in particular the great unbanked set of AI agents, what you're offering
is transformative for them. So question for Brian, if the government tomorrow were to change,
or the executive, Department of Treasury, SEC, FINRA, et cetera, if all of the regulatory
apparatus were to change their approach to KYC, basically to expand the moral circle of entities
that are allowed to open conventional fiat bank accounts. How do you think about what that would do
to say stablecoin-based agentic wallets or just agentic wallets in general? Would Coinbase, for example,
move in the direction of becoming a more conventional banker to the AI agents if that happened?
Yeah. Well, okay, so it's a great question.
And it's funny, I hear a lot of times people come to me and talk about how crypto can empower the unbanked and the unbrokered.
And this is the first time I've had somebody come and say and thank me for banking, you know, the agents who are also being left out of the economy.
Welcome to AWGs University.
I won't stop there, Brian.
I'm going to thank you in advance for enabling non-human animals to be banked.
There you go.
I'm super interested in what we can do to give non-human animals bank accounts, maybe collective.
human collective intelligences, give them collective bank accounts.
So many new sorts of humans that want banking via you.
Mostly lobsters.
I'm into it. Look, I'm here for this topic.
Yeah, like if I neuralink with 10 other people and we want to collectively open an account,
I'm totally for that.
Borgonism.
Borgonism bank accounts.
Yeah.
And, you know, you've probably read a lot about like uplifting animals and like you
could make a dolphin that's actually like pretty high IQ with genetic engineering.
Portfolio company, Ceram.
that is uplifting and creating interspecies foundation models for dogs.
And it will want a way to give dogs bank accounts.
I'm into it.
I think that smart, I don't know if like the average golden retriever should have a bank
account, but smart enough dog should have a bank account or some financial account.
My elaborate judel will spend it all on stake.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
Chewy toys.
But to answer your question, Alex, would we sort of use a bank or a traditional
financial system account. So I think if somehow we could wave a magic wand and say, okay,
KIC is no longer required, you know, the AI can sign up or the dog can sign up, I don't think
that's going to happen for one thing. But if it did happen, that would solve part of the issue.
But the other issue is that the infrastructure underlying those traditional financial system
accounts is just slow. It's, you know, it's running on cobalt servers from the 1990s and 80s.
And so the beauty of transacting on chain with stable coins is that the infrastructure is just much more fast.
It's just faster and cheaper and more global.
So you can now send USDC, for instance, in under one second, anywhere in the world for less than a cent US.
So it's just faster and more scalable to do microtransactions and cross-border transactions.
So I probably still wouldn't go back and build it on top of the mainframes.
But the KYC thing would definitely help.
Let's put it that way.
Amazing.
And Brian, you know, this strategy potentially breaks all existing regulations and KYC assumptions.
So talking about liability, you know, if an AI, if an agent overpays or gets scammed or a launders value, I mean, have you thought through, you know, liability issues?
Yeah, well, I think there's, we need to get some legal precedent on this.
I think one school of thought would say that all agents are actually controlled by some human.
or some company, and so their actions, ultimately, from a liability point of view,
roll back up to that company or person.
I could see that being one potential outcome, maybe even the default outcome.
I could see another world that we enter into, I don't know if society is ready for this yet,
but if we start having truly intelligent agents that are autonomous, that aren't really,
they are their own person, you know, like, I don't, that'll be an interesting legal case
when that first gets brought about that thing, you know, and maybe it'll get sentenced
to, you know, have to be in solitary confinement or whatever it's like a...
Yeah, I don't know.
I guess you could have a financial penalty or whatever is meaningful to the agents.
They have to run on, you know, less power for a while or something.
But, yeah, I think, you know, the other thing is that we want to try to make it so that there's just less fraud in this new financial system.
And one way you can do that is actually have a reputation on.
chain. This is something that we're hoping to build out over time. I like that. Yeah, it's kind of like
what Google did with the internet. You know, they came up the page rank algorithm and they kind of said,
right, how do you know the reputation of this website? Well, let's look at all the other websites
that put links to it and how reputable are those websites. And so you get this kind of graph
structure that Larry Page came up with famously. And so you could do something similar on chain.
Because on chain payments are just another graph structure. It's, you know, if I send money from me to Peter
and maybe if I'm a high reputation, then the amount of that money times my reputation gets assigned
to Peter as some sort of reputation signal. It's almost like an on-chain FICO score or like a Yelp
rating for a business or something like that. And so hopefully, you know, you can go buy things or an
agent could buy things with some amount of additional information to know how many, how often did
people request a refund for this? Or what's the, what's the reputation of this merchant?
It's like on eBay. I mean, I, I, I,
love this. Say, you know, don't do business with this agent. It's got a low score or this agent is,
you know, got 100% Uber score. Selim, what are you thinking here? Well, two things.
One is, I think the, once you allow agent commerce, this fully kind of enables the M-Tam economy,
which is going to be the future, right? Obviously, human transactions can be a drop in the
bucket based on that. Because the minute agents can kind of negotiate paid by consume, et cetera,
we talked about the organizational singularity, that's going to collapse coordination costs again.
So there's unbelievable.
For me, this is the most important inflection point in anything we talk about is creating the payment rails and capabilities for AI agents to transact in a reasonable way.
So this is incredibly powerful.
All right.
Let's get on to the meat of one of the most important stories here today.
And it is the U.S. government exploring ownership stakes in AI companies.
This is one we've talked about before.
It's getting more real.
Trump called a government stake in AI's giants, a beautiful thing.
And then floated the idea that pieces could be given to the American public to share in the economic gains.
And this isn't without precedent, right?
The government already holds stakes in more than 20 private companies.
Here's some of the numbers.
10% of Intel, 15% of MP materials, 10% of lithium Americas, 10% of trilogy metals, 10% of USA Rare Earth.
and 10% of Korea zinc.
Guys, to me, it sure looks like there's a precedent for 10% stake in the frontier labs as well.
Dave, want to go to you first.
I mean, one of the questions that fascinates me is, what would the government do with these shares?
Sell them, keep them?
Well, I'll tell you what will happen.
These are very good moves.
I'm not saying these are bad moves.
But while the president is making these moves, he's talking about how insanely stupid the prior investments
were, including shipping $1.8 billion in cash to Iran and how stupid the last administration was.
So if you put in place a precedent of the federal government choosing what to invest in in the
private economy, you may love it for a little while, but there's an administration coming
eventually that you won't love. It's a horrible, horrible thing. It's exactly what Eisenhower
warned us against, actually, right after World War II, beware the military industrial complex.
Well, that's exactly where we're going. Now, these particular investments,
are great. And I use the analogy to World War II a lot, you know, where what we're going in through
right now is so urgent and so world-changing. It's most similar to decisions we made during
World War II, which is all about survival and existential threats. And I think these are very,
very good moves in the context of the race to AI with China and terrible long-term precedent. So
So, you know, Peter, you asked a very specific question, which president is going to sell this stock and when?
This isn't like a tax that rolls in steadily and you use it annually.
This is a future decision that some other president will need to make and could tank these stocks if the federal government dumps huge positions in some kind of a future rent, which it inevitably will do.
So definitely a mixed bag.
There's an argument that these companies could be the most, you know, highest value companies on.
the planet. And if we're going to need some kind of a financing mechanism for some future version of
UBI, this sounds like it's gaining the most momentum. Alex, what are your thoughts?
If you're an AI maximalist and you extrapolate, say, the enterprise value of Anthropic or it's
ARR and you find that it intersects with Google in the next 18 months or that you find out if you
naively extrapolate it out exponentially becomes larger than the
American economy of today in a few years, then under that prior, it's almost difficult not to imagine
some sort of quasi-nationalization, whether it's via a golden share scheme or some other arrangement.
If Open AI in Anthropic as the de facto duopoly that we have right now, if they're larger
than the rest of the American economy combined, it's difficult to imagine a case, at least maybe
limitation of my own imagination, where there isn't some strong formal arrangement between those
companies and the U.S. government. So I think if you really do believe, if you're drinking
the Kool-Aid and you believe that superintelligence coming from a small minority of companies
in the U.S. right now are going to dominate the future economic light cone, I think some
variant of quasi-nationalization or government, private sector, hybridism.
or call it a private public collaboration, if you like that euphemism.
I think some variant thereof is probably inevitable.
And I do think I, so we talked a bit about this on the past two pod episodes.
I do think the singularity is, can be operationally defined as every sci-fi trope happening
everywhere all at once.
And we've got a few in this story.
We've got UBI or UBC or UBE on the one hand.
we have super intelligence on the other.
And it's just, I think if ever there were a time for some sort of UBI or universal basic
dividend or universal basic equity or universal basic computer capability scheme or universal
basic services scheme to manifest in government policy, it has to happen approximately now or
in the next year or two.
I totally agree with that, Alex, but I want to throw two things back at you.
First, the government has infinite power of taxation.
It doesn't need to own equity in companies to extract any amount of money it wants from any AI entity.
So it's just a fact that the government has all the money extraction ability in the world.
But the other thing is, I think you talked about in a prior pod, the fact that the original atomic energy commission or the NRA,
I forget to one over there, NRC, it was empowered.
its whole mission under Nixon was to make nuclear energy happen in America.
And the net effect it had was to prevent nuclear power from existing in America.
And you talked about that at length.
And so the act of nationalization is inevitable.
I know with AI, I completely agree.
But the idea that the government somehow empowers progress in that process,
it only inhibits progress.
I would draw a distinction.
So the Atomic Energy Commission was formed at the AEC,
in the wake of World War II under the premise that atomic energy had essential civilian applications
and also was too important to be left to the military and also too important to be left to the
civilian government and at least solely and too important to be left solely to the private sector.
So the Atomic Energy Commission was formed as sort of this hybrid organism and that evolved
eventually into the Department of Energy. The problem that I perceive with the AEC and with
subsequent spinoffs and derivatives like the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is it was almost born in war.
It was born out of a time in a place where you have in the early days of the Atomic Energy Commission
almost a sense of guilt that hung over Manhattan Project scientists who were losing quite a bit of sleep over
who would own the children of atomic weaponry.
here, I would say at least one substantive differences, superintelligence isn't being born out of
Hiroshima or any equivalent. It started from the private sector with private sector scientists. The
U.S. government, I mean, Sam famously offered the U.S. government to stake early on in open AI in
order to seek earlier funding, and U.S. government reportedly turned down open AI. So I would say
qualitatively, if you compare the rise of atomic power and how it was regulated in this country
during and after World War II with AI technology, in some sense, polar opposites.
Started from the private sector.
US government could have taken an early stake, could have been at least nationalized at a very
early age, could have been militarized at a very early stage.
And that just didn't happen.
So I'm a lot less worried that somehow the government will step in, at least,
for the next few years under this administration, step in and pull an NRC and find ways to
slow everything down unless the frontier labs in this country really do want to slow down.
Brian, you're running a $40 billion public company right now.
How does this make you feel?
I don't spend too much of my time thinking about it, but, you know, high level,
any company that reaches a certain size is going to interface with the government.
But as others have mentioned here, that can take many different forms, right?
paying taxes is the most obvious one. You're going to engage with them on various policy issues.
And this administration's been very open and eager to improve policy around crypto, which has been
great. The government may actually end up being a customer of your product as well. So that's another
touch point. We actually provide crypto services to about 140 different government agencies at
federal, state, and local levels. And so to me, that's sufficient. I don't think,
Going farther than that and actually having them take an ownership stake in the company, unless, you know, if I guess if, if there, let's say there was a matter of national security and this companies would not exist otherwise. And there was fundraising happening from the government. I guess you could, they could end up with some equity in that situation. But it just begs the question of like, well, who's going to be managing this portfolio of company stocks? When, you know, when would they sell them? Because it's not like a foregone conclusion that Anthropic and they are going to.
be the biggest AI companies forever, it might end up being that, you know, Google or someone else
does a, or SpaceX does a better job, right? So now you're suddenly saying, okay, we're going to have
like capital management happening inside the government. I think the government should be limited
to setting policy and the private sector should do the capital allocation. Nice. Yeah, I'm just right,
considering that the companies donate to political campaigns. You think about how toxic that circle is.
Oh, okay, this, this government is investing in my company and I'm going to,
going to turn around and donate to their next election campaign.
Like that is the most toxic circle I can possibly imagine.
Can you imagine what my go wrong?
Democracy in America.
Yeah.
I'm curious, Brian, though, do you think that as a country we should have a sovereign wealth fund?
Okay, so that's a complex topic.
I think there's parts of it that I like a lot and parts of it I don't.
So the part that I like is that it would allow everybody to have skin in the game.
And I think we'd see more cohesion.
less polarization. And it's a little bit like in a company, you know, inside Coinbase employees
get stock options because if we all have, we're kind of grumpy today and we get into a little
fight with our coworker, but hey, we all own, we're making something bigger than this. So we all kind of
stick around and work out our differences. So in that sense, I love the idea of people being
able to buy into a sovereign wealth fund, but also maybe every citizen getting a share at birth.
It's a little bit like what they're doing with these Trump accounts right now. So I think that'll
actually make people more aligned to free market capitalism and have some.
skin in the game. The downside is kind of what we talked about earlier, which is who's allocating
that money, right? If we were in sort of a Singapore model where, like, the top people in private
industry got commensurate compensation to come into government, like I think, you know, Michael Grimes
from Morgan Stanley, I think, came in and was working with the administration at some point.
Like, someone like him would probably do a good job managing that and allocating it. Do I believe
that that's going to exist in all, in every administration for, you know, over time? Like, it's just very
hard to see it getting, it could very easily get politicized, right, where they start investing in
the green revolution, whether that works or not, or, you know, all kinds of things like that.
So I, I don't know, I'm torn on that one. We've got to find some way to bring cohesion back to the
U.S., but I'm not sure if a sovereign wealth fund would be managed well over time.
Like, just having a strict rule, like keep it in the S&P 500 would be a nice mitigating factor,
something like that.
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All right, back to the episode.
Let me hit the second story related to this one moment.
I don't want to belabor the point,
but Sam Altman sat down with Senator Sanders,
who's proposing a transfer of 50% of equity
from the top AI companies into a public fund.
Allman responded, you know,
that's not going to happen.
That's way too much.
the point is we've started in negotiation.
You know, five years ago, this conversation would have been unthinkable.
You know, the Overton window on AI wealth distribution has moved dramatically.
You know, I said earlier, we see all these examples of 10% ownership.
And if I had to guess, I think this is not going to go away.
I think we're going to see a push towards at least a 10% ownership.
Dave, what do you think about that?
No, I think it's utterly insane.
That's what I've said before.
No, you think it's insane. Do you think it's going to happen?
No, I don't think it'll happen. I think Bernie's just trying to attract news.
And, you know, Donald can invest in whatever he wants to invest in. He has proven that he'll make that decision on like five-minute notice, you know, after a meeting.
So I can't rule out. But it doesn't strike me as one of the most likely investments that Trump would make.
You know, Trump invested heavily in semiconductors moving back into the U.S.
investing in OpenAI and Anthropics IPOs, but they're already 100% taxable U.S. entities that are thriving.
Is this an investment or a grant of shares to the U.S. government?
Well, Bernie's proposal is a tax, so it's just a grant of shares to the U.S. government.
Right.
So I don't think the government's-border shareholders.
I think it's going to be, you know, equivalent to, you know, Alaska's permanent fund.
You've been using our intelligence.
You've been using our energy.
You've been using our real estate and our oxygen.
We're going to claim 10% and we're going to, you know, give it to the people.
I would say look at it from the Frontier Labs perspective.
Put aside all of any politics or any technical arguments or any legal or regulatory arguments.
Just think about it from an optical or a marketing perspective.
If you're open AI or you're Anthropic and you have the opportunity to, say, donate 10% equity through some legal scheme to the U.S. government, one time 10% may be in connection with your ID.
PO this year. Now suddenly, in principle, you're inoculated, at least politically, against any
future claims that you owe a UBI or some other payment to the citizenry. You can say, I already
gave up my pound of flesh. I gave it to the United States, and it's sitting in a sovereign
wealth fund now, and it's generating returns for the American people. That was your one-time
donation, I think if I'm Sam or if I'm Dario, that's looking pretty attractive.
And coupled with that, Alex, you've also got a conflict, right? The same state that regulates
AI now profits from your success. Well, it gives the federal government a incredibly toxic incentive
for the two mega companies that it extracted equity from to succeed at the expense of the startup
that isn't part of that same loop.
It's incredibly toxic dynamic.
You're like you're saying,
the American people now benefit from these two companies.
And Brian said a second ago,
there will be other companies
that we haven't thought of yet.
What do you do with them?
They're not part of the U.S. investment.
There's a broader incompatibility here.
Think about these labs and AI labs
becoming civilization-scale infrastructure, right?
That means you have to treat them
like strategic utilities, much like electricity. You regulate the utilities in a particular way
and deal with that. You need a structure like that. The problem is there's an incompatible to here
because there's no governance structure that fits a technology that touches like every job,
every industry, every government service. So there's a huge challenge and you can't pick the winners.
It's more structural problem that the mechanisms taxation or ownership, we don't even have a sovereign
wealth fund. So how do you deal with that? So this is a big incompatibility problem that I see here.
We're going to mess it up whatever we do in the current structure. I don't think this is going away.
I think we're going to be seeing this happen at some level. Alex. I'll just comment. If you remember,
Beck, one of the earliest executive orders from this administration was to order the Secretary of
Treasury to explore setting up a sovereign wealth fund. And far be it for me to recommend national
economic policy, but it's not difficult for me to imagine a scenario where the U.S. Treasury does
take golden shares, call it 5 to 10 percent in OpenAI and Anthropic to complement its existing
portfolio, and then some amount of time from now, maybe sometime in the next few years,
there's a great rebalancing. We get our sovereign wealth fund, but to Brian's earlier point,
rather than being a basket of 20 or 30 or 40 tech-oriented or strategic companies,
Instead, the federal government eases into, say, an S&P 500 or a total market index gradually liquidating its holdings in the individual companies in favor for a total market index.
And that children is how we got our universal basic income or equity.
Yep.
All right.
Late breaking story, OpenAI is officially filed.
It's S1 to go publicly this year.
Polymarket bets, 46% say it'll come.
come out at $1.5 trillion or greater, and 26% say it's not going to happen this year.
This would be the third trillion dollar IPO following Anthropic and SpaceX AI,
which is coming at $1.77 trillion in just a couple of days.
I wanted to just point out a conversation we had on the pod, I don't know, a month and a bit ago,
in which, I don't you guys remember, Sarah Fryer, the CFO, came out and said privately
that she was very concerned that opening,
was not ready to be a public company.
You know, it had a risk of 600 billion of compute contracts on its books.
I guess she thinks they're ready now.
Dave, what are you thinking here?
I think it's more that times have changed.
I think every CFO I've ever met wants visibility at least three or four quarters into the future.
But in the singularity, no one's ever going to have visibility three or four quarters in
the future ever again.
That's just the nature of technology.
Yeah, exactly.
So I think CFOs like Sarah just need to get comfortable with, look, this is the way the future has to be.
And, you know, what used to be three, four, four, five quarters of visibility is now three, four, five months is the best you're ever going to get.
And even that is a shrinking horizon.
But the economy marches on.
You know, we have to get used to the, you know, if you look at just the daily volatility of the market, it's so high now because tech is just, that's just the nature of tech.
So I think the CFOs of the future will get used to it.
But you can't miss the IPO window, right?
If you get SpaceX going out and you get Anthropic going out, you have to go out.
The challenge is coming out third during a cash crunch, right?
I mean, there's only so much liquidity out there.
And if you're coming out third and, you know, SpaceX is skyrocketing and Anthropic is, you know, growing at 640% per year, it's dangerous to come out third.
It is, Peter, but if you said, okay, the counter argument is then let's let those other two IPOs happen.
Let's let them digest their hundreds of billions of dollars and let the market recharge.
And then we'll go out later when it's recharged.
You're going to be waiting years.
Yeah.
You're not talking about three months later.
So then you're like, okay, you can't.
You can't wait years.
Anything could happen in between.
Meanwhile, these guys are fully tanked up and moving 100,000 miles an hour.
No, you don't want to be that company.
So you've got to go.
When you've got these trillion dollar IPOs, the whole kind of corporate wrapper seems way too small for what's going on.
This is so unprecedented compared to anything in human history.
It's just absolutely wild.
Yeah.
Is it breaking?
Go on, Alex.
Remember also these concerns, April was a whole two months ago.
That's several lifetimes in singularity, time scaling ago.
Open AI had recently come out of its code red.
They were shutting down SORA and some of their other divisions,
trying to become Anthropic faster than Anthropic could become Open AI,
pivoting to Codex.
and then arguably most importantly taking Stargate,
which was originally conceived as being open AI owned and operated data centers
and rebranding basically a leasing scheme as the new Stargate.
So my sense as an outsider without access to internal accounting
is that through a combination of new revenue sources,
like basically becoming the Codex company,
removing other expenses like SORA,
and like their AI for Science Division,
and then effectively lobotomizing Stargate
and switching it over to a leasing model,
rather than an ownership model,
which if I were CFO of OpenAI,
I would have been scared to death of the ownership model,
given all of the price gyrations in the GPU market.
I would expect that given all of those measures
that OpenAI, again, not investment advice,
but comes out of all of those
with a much more stable and predictable prospectus
than the Open AI that came into this year that looked much more like a consumer play, volatile,
that was going to own its data centers, scary.
They pulled it off.
They really pulled it off.
They turned it around.
They did, but that's probably what freaked out, Sarah.
If you looked at the forecast from a year ago, it had 20 billion of ad revenue,
and I forget, but many, many billions of consumer subscription revenue and then a little bit of enterprise.
And now if you look at the forecast, it's a complete inversion of the colors on the bar chart.
That always scares the CFO.
Brian, you know, I have to imagine that being a founder-led tech company
is the big advantage that you have over traditional large corporations.
I mean, being able to say, we're going this way versus that way.
But for all my friends who are public company CEOs, it's not fun.
How do you think about remembering when you were a couple of months before your IPO,
what's going on inside of a company theoretically like this?
Well, a couple things come to mind.
One is there's always, there should be some healthy tension, I think,
between like a founder, CEO and a CFO.
I mean, that's founders are great at many things.
But if you just have too much founder energy,
sometimes they blow the place up, right?
We can probably think of our favorite companies in that example.
But simultaneously, you don't just want to have risk-minded operators running the show.
and that's just a recipe for incrementalism or even slow to climb, right?
So I think it's sometimes the press likes to report on these things of like, oh my gosh,
there's drama happening between, you know, I'm like, that's called a healthy conversation.
So I imagine that they're actually working like relatively well together on this.
And it's a high stakes moment for both of them.
The other thing is like sometimes people criticize Open AI like, oh my gosh, they missed their
target, their end of year target to get a billion users or something like that.
And, you know, internally, we all, we often use.
like the OKR system. And we tell everybody set uncomfortably ambitious goals. And if you hit
at least 70% of it, that's considered a good outcome. So whenever companies switch into the public
mindset, they're often setting their goals start to become more like appropriate for external
investors where, wow, we just hit our goals every quarter around here. And so anyway,
there's a lot of stuff like that that happens behind the scenes. I think the high level bit is right,
is what you guys already covered is they've got to get out just because that's what their competitors
are doing.
that's where the capital is going to all go. So it's going to be uncomfortable and messy. And I'm a little
worried about these valuations where retail is going to, you know, be the buyer of this.
And take the hit. Yeah, it could be pretty choppy here. You know, just self, because we talked about
how AI is sort of taking all the oxygen out of the room. Like, selfishly, I think other tech
CEOs are kind of like, all right, finally, get these things public so there can be a real mark on it.
and maybe some of the hype dies down a little bit.
I also think there's going to be fierce competition amongst these models because they keep,
like the open source models are basically just as good in three to six months behind for like 99%.
If that much.
Yeah.
And they're like literally 99% cheaper for inference.
So I think the demand for intelligence is almost infinite.
It probably is infinite.
But the costs are going to fall like way more than Moore's law.
So, you know, are, is the harm.
that these guys are making, whether it's Codex or Claude, Claude Code, are those valuable?
I don't think the harness is where the value is. I think that, like, the depreciation on these
models, like how fastly, how fast the price of them drop for the same level of intelligence is
going to be dramatic. And I think within 12, 18 months, 80% of our workloads are going to be
going to models that are 99% cheaper.
Yeah, Brian, I had a meeting with a Morgan Stanley guy right after the Facebook IPO.
And he said, oh, my God, this was the worst disaster in U.S. financial history.
The stock was down, I think, about half after the IPO.
And nothing wrong with the company, obviously.
And it was a great investment in hindsight, obviously, but there just wasn't enough liquidity.
So they dumped it in all their private client accounts, then watched it go down by half.
And now we're doing this three back-to-back IPOs, each one of which is a factor of 10 bigger than anything we've ever seen.
before. And so I'm just curious, the logistics of this could be a nightmare, even if the companies
are great. And even if five years from now, they're way up from their IPO evaluations,
is there really that much money in the world? Like, does it actually exist? And it'll be,
we'll find out, I guess. Yeah. And right now, you know, I have a lot of friends who like,
if I'm not, you know, pitching my AI story for my company, I can't get money. A.I. is sucking
the oxygen out of, out of the room everywhere.
All right, this next story generally stopped me in my tracks.
You know, Google, one of the biggest AI infrastructure players on the planet with its own TPUs and data centers,
is paying SpaceX $11 billion per year through 2029 to access 110,000 Nvidia GPUs inside of XAI's data center.
You know, SpaceX AI is now clearly a hyperscaler.
And it's ironic, Google is renting compute from Elon's rocket company, which, by the way, Google is an investor in Elon's rocket company.
I love this quote from Austin Reef, who put it, it's crazy that with one deal, space X IPO went from 100 X revenues to 50x revenues.
One contract halved the company's valuation multiple.
And this tells us, you know, clearly the story.
There's a massive AI compute shortage.
Yeah.
So.
I love to get your take on this, Alex, because, you know, there was a view of the world where Elon was building a frontier lab.
with a first-in-class model.
Now, if he rents all the compute to Anthropic and to Google,
then clearly he's backed out of that game completely.
I'm not quite sure.
When he did the first rental to Anthropic,
he said, that's Colossus 1.
Colossus 2 is still grinding away on the,
you know, the mother of all frontier models.
You're going to actually when we interviewed him in Austin,
remember Peter, he said that you're going to be absolutely blown away by,
it was Groch 5.
it's brilliant.
And, you know, here we are.
That was due out in March.
And here we are.
Well, he's clearly refocused his attention.
Well, did he rent all of Colossus too?
Do you know, Alex?
I think a lot of it is my understanding.
So I took a bit of heat for saying a few episodes ago that I thought GROC in the wake of
the Anthropic SpaceX deal was on life support.
And Peter and I had a back and forth with Elon on X talking about it.
I do think Elon and SpaceX AI are going to come back to the frontier at some point.
It's not obvious to me that the acquisition, basically, the de facto acquisition of cursor
is going to be that moment, or if that'll put them maybe just behind the frontier in what effectively
has become a second tier of the frontier, call it the Google tier, until Google hopefully leapfrogs.
It would certainly be great to get more competition among Frontier models.
But if I'm Elon, I'm thinking the best shot that SpaceX AI has to get back to being the frontier is by being a hyperscaler first, that ultimately algorithmic wars, which is what we're seeing right now, will burn themselves out, we'll discover through recursive self-improvement over the next few years what a perfect AI model looks like.
And then the war, the competition moves to who is the biggest, baddest hyper-scaler,
who has the most hardware and the most compute.
And Alex, don't forget, the Anthropic deal can be canceled with, you know, some, like a quarter.
It's month by month.
I think it's month by month.
And then this is only a three-year contract.
So when Elon never, never plays second fiddle, right?
He will be working on.
Well, he wrote back to us.
He'll never give up.
Ever, underline.
But what I would say is the question is,
how do you get back to the frontier?
And I suspect the thinking may be become a hyperscaler for the moment,
put GROC on de facto life support for a year or two,
use revenue from the Google deal and the anthropic deal
to accumulate enough of a head of steam on the SpaceX side
that you're able to go and build the Dyson swarm in Sun-Synchronous orbit.
And then once you have 10x, 100x,
more compute than everyone else, then you go and try to reachieve your frontier status by training
on the world. And buy every model that you want to. He's going to have a currency that he can go on
shopping sprees with. Well, he just did that with cursor, but that may or may not be enough to get him
to the frontier. It may require one of many. There may be some things that money can't buy,
but that compute can. And his thinking maybe speculatively, he can buy enough compute to buy his way
back to the frontier.
You know, if Google needs this much external compute, like at this scale,
that tells you the bottleneck is completely shifted from models designed to infrastructure.
I'm finding this hard to comprehend that Google needs this level of compute.
That's a crazy, crazy number of paying for this.
I mean, I thought they had their own infrastructure.
Is the compute demand so crazy?
Yeah, no, everything is sold out, Salim.
I mean, they'll take everything.
Yeah.
It's completely.
So just numerically, this is a 110,000 GPUs here.
I thought he bought half a million.
Now, he did the other deal with Anthropic already.
So does that mean he's still got a couple hundred thousand GPUs for internal XAI training or not?
I think these are different generations.
So the Colossus one was sort of an unholy admixture of each one different.
I think it was a mixture of H-100s and several other generations.
So Colossus 2 was supposed to be a pure mixture.
Remember also Google, most of their compute takes the TPU format.
You have customers that don't necessarily want to run their workloads on TPUs.
They may want the NVIDIA Qaeda stack.
And so there are a variety of reasons why if your Google Cloud platform,
you want to be able to rope in additional GPUs if you can find them.
All right.
I'm going to move us along with someone else has another point you want to make here.
this next story is sort of science fiction becoming real i love the scope and audacity of uh of elan's plans
this is their ai one satellite they just unveiled the next generation a i satellite designed
alex to launch humanity's first dyson swarm here the specs are wild 150 kilowatts of peak
compute 70 kilowatts per ton this is a two-ton satellite a 70 meter wingspan basically the wingspan of
an Airbus 380
with 110 square meters
of deployable radiative cooling
and an integrative micrometeorite
shield, right? There's lots of micrometeerates
hitting the planet all the time.
Elon's description
is worth me reading. He says, quote,
the AI satellite is much simpler
than a Starlink satellite. The AI satellite
is essentially a lot of solar cells.
You still need some laser links, but
you don't have all the super complex
antennas that you have on a Starlink satellite.
It's easier to design
than the AI satellite.
It's a lot bigger.
A lot of this technology already exists
with Starlink V3.
So here he is.
He's making it real.
That's what he does all the time.
Build the tech to make it real.
Alex, what do you make of it?
A few thoughts.
First, it's beautiful.
Yeah, it is beautiful.
Second, it's so beautiful.
In my daily newsletter,
I featured an artistic rendering
of this design.
It's beautiful.
Second thought,
look at how much of its surface area
has nothing to do at all with compute.
Look at the solar arrays for power.
Look at the radiators for heat dissipation.
Look how tiny, at least by surface area,
all of this is for compute.
What that says to me is, think a few generations out.
Imagine now we're in the early 2030s,
and maybe compact fusion is finally working.
Wouldn't that radically change the form factor?
Or power beaming?
Power beaming, sure, but even with power beaming,
you still need to radiate the power from heat dissipation, from the GPUs, and you still need to
receive the power. Yes, it'll enable them to be more focused, but you're still depending on
some sort of radiative transfer in both directions. But imagine, like, a few generations out,
you have some radically innovative radiator system to get rid of your waste heat, and maybe you're
able to locally power yourself without needing the sun. These can be important.
incredibly compact. This is the most disjointed, the largest, bulkiest, most mainframe era
node in the Dyson swarm were ever likely to see. Imagine now in the future, something that's
far more compact, something that looks maybe a little bit more spherical and a little bit less
like a leaf blowing in the solar wind. This is the first generation of, I think, the node in our
Dyson swarm. And remember, that's what Elon does over and over again, right? His Merlin engines, you know,
V1, V2, V3.
They get smaller, more compact, get it working, and then simplify.
Yes.
Brian, any appreciation that you want to share on this one?
I mean, Elon's the best in the world at hardware, no doubt about it.
You were talking about micrometeorites.
I was just imagining they must have some redundancy here.
Like if there's some bullet fragments can fly through this thing, either on the solar panel
or on the liquid radiators, maybe there's different compartments.
It could sustain five bullet hits into the radiators and still get sufficient cooling or something like that.
And then the other thing I'm just wondering is how does it all fold up inside Starship?
But I'm sure it'll be a beautiful origami.
And by the way, the point you just made about Starship, the reason SpaceX can do this is because of Starship and its volume.
You know, no one else, I don't think any other vehicle is going to have the level of capacity to build or deploy satellites like this.
But also keep in mind, again, so 150 kilowatts, we were speaking previously with Andrew and talking about cerebrous.
Cerebrous, like a wafer scale engine is what, like 10, 20, 30 kilowatts?
20 kilowatts, yeah.
20 kilowatts.
So 70 kilowatts is a ton for this versus like 20 kilowatts for a single wafer.
That's what, fraction of a kilogram?
So imagine how far we are from the physically efficient frontier here.
When we talk all the time on the pod, Royal Wee, about the Dyson Swarm,
some of us talk about disassembling the moon or other planets and what a waste by atom count
most of our solar system is.
Drink.
Yeah, drink.
What a waste by mass most of our solar system is.
If it takes an entire ton to generate 150 kilowatts of compute in low Earth orbit or
sun-synchronous orbit, we're orders of magnitude, but that says to me, we're orders of
magnitude away from efficiently turning most of the matter of our solar system, most of it by mass
anyway, into compute. So plenty of scaling to go as well.
Dave. Well, Peter, you're the master of launching. This is about a $6 million GPU compute
thing. You know, 150 kilowatts is about, translates to about 6 million of GPU. But what is the
launch cost of this one unit? So this would be equivalent to like an NV-72.
you know, if we're in invidia terms, it's up there in space.
I mean, you want to get it down to $100 per kilogram, right?
That's the target price at the end of the day.
And remember, his original filing was for 500,000 of these satellites.
You know, the calculation is like a launch per hour of starship,
24 hours a day, seven days a week to deploy that.
And then he upped it to a million satellites.
I think, again, the audacity of his scale is extraordinary, but he backs into the numbers
as a first principal thinker and he makes it work.
Yeah, a couple of thoughts here.
You know, the AI infrastructure now stops being a real estate problem and starts becoming a launch
problem, right?
And this is one of the moments where we're seeing the category change in real time where
it's not a rocket company, it's not a satellite internet company.
It's like literally civilizational infrastructure.
company. And there's such an unbelievable demand for power that we have to do this. And let's remember
that this was, you know, data orbital compute was not in anybody's bingo card a year ago. And here
we are designed it and like planning on getting it out there. Incredible. And even more, every large
AI company is talking about putting up their orbital data centers. And now that new Glenn is not
functioning, right? It's going to be down for at least a year, maybe more. SpaceX is the only story in town,
we'll see of relativity space makes it happen, or rocket, rocket labs gets their larger vehicle
operating.
This next story, you know, Elon loves building the machines that build the machines.
And so this week, SpaceX announced a gigasat factory, love the term giga.
Once again, of course, in Texas, and they're going to be producing the A1, the AI-1 satellites
in late 2027.
The scale is enormous, a thousand acres, capacity for 11 million square feet of facilities.
And Dave, you remember when we were with Elon at the Gigafactory, and this is the Gigafactory Playbook once again.
He was building out, again, 11 million square feet for Optimus production.
So the important thing here is it's fully integrated.
You know, they're going to produce the solar ingots, the wafers, the solar cells, and the entire AI one satellite all on one campus.
And vertical integration matters.
You know, if you control the entire supply chain from raw materials to finish product.
You control your cost and your timeline.
And that's probably the number one thing that Elon does extremely well is manufacturing.
Dave, and look at Texas just running away with every one of these projects.
Everybody.
It's crazy.
Yeah.
And then in all the posts online, if you look at X, everyone's like, oh, my gosh, he's taking over all of Texas.
Look, 1,000 acres is about two golf courses.
The next time you're flying, look down, it's just two golf courses, guys.
He's not taking over all the land in Texas.
But the impact of this on the economy in that state is unbelievably healthy, unbelievably good.
I don't know why more states aren't competing for this.
I think there's an important point that we're sleeping on, which is vertical integration.
Yeah, sure, he's doing that.
But it's not necessarily just for his own sake or because he wants to be the master of the supply chain for this.
it's because if you follow carefully SpaceX's announcements in connection with its IPO,
they've been releasing demo videos, concept videos of doing this on the moon.
And if you're not in a position to vertically integrate production of these AI orbiting data centers,
then you're not in a position to start manufacturing them off the earth,
namely on the lunar surface.
So he and SpaceX released this video of an electromagnetic slinghametic slinghamphetics,
launching, bam, bam, bam,
AI orbital data centers
with a rail gun from the surface of the moon,
presumably manufactured on the surface of the moon.
Yes, so I think that that's the essential thing
that we arguably should be talking about here.
If you have vertical integration of the solar and the compute,
then you can do that on the moon.
And then your delta V is far more favorable,
and you can just start slinging these things out
and building the actual Dyson swarm, not from the Earth's surface,
where the economics for heavy launcher less favorable.
I'll never forget.
I was with Elon at SpaceX headquarters,
and we were having a conversation about, you know, the fact,
he was bemoaning the fact he has to make everything, right?
We're hearing that same thing from Brett Adcock at Figer
and a lot of other high-tech companies.
And there was a product called PICA,
which is the heat shielding for the Dragon Capsule.
and he was getting screwed by the manufacturer.
And so he just turns the manufacturer and said,
forget it.
I'm going to make it myself and put you out of business.
And just the ferocious mindset he has is extraordinary.
Well, do you have a prediction, Peter?
It would be great to get everyone's prediction.
But this partnership right now between Dario and Elon is insanely powerful.
Because Alex is pointing out continually that new physics is going to be invented by AI imminently.
And that new physics, if it goes right into these gigafabs,
It could be just mind-blowing what comes out the other side.
And also, if Dario wins the race to self-improvement,
then he's going to have the smartest AI and rapidly accelerating.
But Elon will have the space-based data centers and the manufacturing capability
to turn that into a closed loop, you know, self-manufacturing closed loop,
which Dario hasn't even started on.
You know, there's no physical stuff going on at Anthropic at all yet.
And, you know, you know where the rubber really hits the road is,
is the AI that designs chips.
So here's Elon building the TerraFab,
but the chip design itself comes from the smartest AI,
which is probably going to be Dario.
Maybe, you know, Open AI has a chance too.
But that duopoly becomes incredibly powerful
if they stick together.
But do you think they'll still be friends five years?
Yeah, these guys, I mean, all of the players here
have formed partnerships and broken partnerships
and reshuffle the deck, you know,
probably multiple times over the last few.
years. So what's your question? Is the partnership going to stick together? Well, five years from today,
are Dario and Elon friends? No, like shaking hands. No. I haven't seen, honestly, I love, I love Elon,
but I haven't seen him partner for the long term ever. Every, every partnership comes together.
He takes the lead and runs with it. I'll register a prediction, which is I think they're going to be
such crazy things happening in the next few years that we'll look back and laugh at ourselves
for even asking the question of whether Elon will be shaking hands with Daria.
That's not an answer to the question.
Interesting.
It's questioning the question itself.
Salame, thoughts.
I totally agree with you, Peter.
I think this is like, just, I'm just boggled by the level of somebody thinking at civilization scale
on a non-stop basis, and I love it.
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All right. Amazing.
Let's move to our next story here.
Let's put some financial figures on this.
SpaceX valuation is right now in Polymarket,
expected to hit $2.13 trillion at the close of the first day of market.
And here's the news.
Morgan Stanley projects SpaceX revenue could grow from, get this,
$18.7 billion in 2025.
That's the last number we have on the books.
to 3.4 trillion by 2040.
At those revenues, at 3.4 trillion by 2040,
that puts SpaceX's value at someplace between 50 trillion to 100 trillion, right?
We're seeing the birth potential of the first $100 trillion company.
And these charts down below tell the story, right?
So here's the revenue numbers today.
Starlink is 11 billion of revenue.
launch revenue is a measly $4 billion,
AI revenue from XAI at $3.2 billion.
Here comes Google at $11 billion,
and then SpaceX total of $18 billion.
So crazy numbers.
Any thoughts on this?
I mean, I don't think people could have predicted this.
Again, no company in history has ever hit a trillion dollars of revenue.
So just to put this in contact,
you're talking about the really, really big guys like Walmart and Amazon.
on. You know, they're getting close, but they're not at a trillion yet.
So this is 3.4 trillion.
Yeah, on the other hand, a trillion is what, like 3% of U.S. GDP?
That's today's GDP. If we undergo his predicted 3xing year over year or 10xing year
over year of GDP, that still makes this a relatively small drop in the bucket.
I think it's not investment advice, obviously, but I think it is very much a conceivable
scenario and one in which maybe the Dyson Swarm gets built and most of or a large chunk of
civilization runs on the compute that the Dyson swarm provides. Yeah, sure, a few trillion
dollars. Makes total sense. Selim, we want to close us out? I got nothing. Okay. All right.
I have a question for Brian, though, just on that narrow point. So let's say we do build the Dyson
swarm. Let's say most of the compute in our solar system is no long
Earth-based, and presumably most of our economy consists of AI agents trading.
What do you think will be the role, if any, of cryptocurrency in that future?
Well, I think Bitcoin will be the new gold standard and then the payments will be happening
on chain.
So capital formation will probably happen on chain, borrowing and lending.
You know, that's the financial system that the AI agents would end up using.
So that's the most likely outcome in my point of view.
So you think basically there's almost no impact on margin regarding whether our compute is terrestrial or orbital on how the crypto rails or broader financial rails of our civilization operate.
No latency considerations, no trust-based considerations, no decentralization considerations doesn't make a difference.
Well, I think a lot of those things will get better on a crypto-based system, like the decentralization characteristics.
the soundness of money, right? If you're talking about syncing up a blockchain between multiple
planets like Mars and Earth, there would be some delay in that, but I don't see any reason why,
you know, if you need to transfer money between Mars and Earth, it couldn't happen on chain
and have a laser link between them or something like that. And, you know, so they're not going
to be real-time payments between those planets, but there could be appropriately delayed payments.
They won't need to settle as often. So are these the conference?
conversations you're having in your executive committee every day?
My conversations are sometimes a lot more mundane about, like, how do I get these two people to work together, you know?
But we still got to solve all the human problems before we start building interplanetary financial systems.
By the way, I have to point out, you know, this projection by Morgan Stanley is definitely a fundraising tool ahead of the IPO.
You know, Morgan Stanley is one of the banks that's going to profit from this deal.
I'm reading every day on X that players are opting out of SpaceX.
It's overvalued.
They're valuing it at 700 million, not 1.7 trillion.
So we're going to see.
I, you know, I fundamentally believe in the long-term value of SpaceX.
I just hope retail investors don't get hit in the process.
So while I have Brian, Brian, longevity and biotech, one of my favorite stories.
So first off, congratulations on your.
recent raise at New Limit, $435 million to push us towards age reversal. If you don't mind,
tell us, you know, origin story of New Limit and why you and Blake started and what are you guys
doing there? Yeah, well, actually Jacob Kimmel and Blake and I all started it together as co-founders
and Jacob's the CEO now. So he's really running it day to day to day. He's brilliant. Yeah, he's a
he is. Yeah, so the origin story goes actually back to the IPO of Coinbase, but he'll
or not. And 2021, having gotten some liquidity from Coinbase and thinking about the next 10 years
and what we're going to be the big technology trends that could drive civilizational progress,
I kind of felt like a lot of the big ones had good teams working on it, right? AI and fusion energy
and brain machine interfaces and all the rest space. One that I didn't see great teams working on
as much and that maybe seemed underfunded was longevity. And so I reached out to a few folks,
started hosting some dinners with just top scientists and biotech CEOs and kind of went around
the table and said, right, what's on the horizon that's most exciting to you, but it's underfunded?
And one of the folks mentioned epigenetic reprogramming, which is this area that talks about
how you can reprogram cells. Shinya Yamanaka famously won the Nobel Prize for this in 2012,
showing you could reprogram an old skin cell into a young embryonic stem cell.
and he, by doing so with just these four proteins added to the cell, he had this kind of remarkable
discovery that he changed both the age of the cell and the type of the cell. So at New Limit, we're trying
to do half of what Shunya Yamanaka did. We don't want to change the type of the cell. We just want to
change the age. And what we mean by that is really just restoring the function that the cell had
when it was younger. And we built a high throughput screening system. It starts with AI to explore
the, you know, 10 quadrillion different parts.
possibilities, combinations of different proteins you could use to reprogram a cell. And it starts to,
it originally ingested all of the existing literature. Now it's been ingesting the wet lab data
that's been coming out of New Limit, which we have the largest data set out there by far.
And so it recommends the next set of experiments that we run in our wet lab. We do these pooled
screens and see if phenotypically we can make cells look younger. Then we take the best
hits out of that in the funnel and we put them through functional assays, which are a little
slower and more expensive to see if they actually act younger. For instance, we might take a
reprogrammed liver cell and see if it can process caffeine and acetaminopin and alcohol or whatever,
kind of like a young liver cell. And then the best functional assay candidates, we then are
starting to run through non-human primate and human trials. So yeah, the process has gone faster than I
would have expected. I thought this was going to be like a five or ten year kind of basic research
endeavor, but we've actually been able to demonstrate successful reprogramming of human cells now
and our first drug candidates going into the clinic next year, hopefully followed by a bunch more.
Amazing. Human trial next year. You and Blake put in the first 100 million. I remember that.
I remember coming to your lab and seeing it. Full disclosure, I'm also a shareholder,
an investor in New Limit, very proud of that. So congrats on the progress. And other news related
in epigenetic reprogramming, life bioscience is another one of my portfolio.
companies announced they've they've dosed their first patient with their OSK treatment today.
So, yes, we're on the verge of longevity escape velocity.
Brian, what do you hold as a target for, you know, when do we hit L.E.V?
Do you have a number in your head? Do you have a goal?
You know, man, we need Kurzweil to come plot another curve for us, don't we?
He's got his prediction. His prediction is 2033.
Huh. I'd have to go look at his data on that. I actually, I haven't looked at the exact year that it would be projected to happen. I'm just been, again, trying to solve more mundane problems. Like, how do we hire the next, you know, bioinformaticist or whatever? But yeah, I hope he's right. I mean, he has been right on so many things. It wouldn't surprise me if he's right again. I have an idiosyncratic position, perhaps unsurprisingly. I will go out on a limb and say that I think L.V is going to be.
spiky in the same sense that AGI is spiky and that on certain spikes it seems possible it might be
achieved later this year. And the reason why I say that is, and I wrote about this in my newsletter
and I know Peter, you immediately said, oh, but, but, but in the past few weeks, there were,
there was a really interesting paper published on the first placebo, rather double-blinded,
study on HIV patients receiving GLP-1s, looking at epigenetic clocks.
And I know all the caveats, epigenetic clocks,
or-bath-style clocks aren't as good assays at determining biological age as a variety of
functional measures.
I know all of that.
Okay.
Nonetheless, with all of those caveats out the way, out of the way, for the first time,
to my knowledge in the literature, I'm starting to see evidence of some sort of measurable,
at least double-digit age reversal as a result of GLP-1s.
And that makes me ask whether, as we're now with Reda-True Tide and other Chinese have
their own, I think, second and third generation GLP-1s, whether we're going to start to see
hidden under our noses in the same sense that we flew past the Turing test without remarking that
AGI basically passed the Turing test, with a whimper, not with a bang, whether this
year, maybe next year, but as soon as this year, we're going to, in a spiky way, in a subpopulation,
fly past L.E.V without broader notice that it just happened.
Well, we're going to have some level of proof, right? We have this $101 million health span
prize going on where we're measuring functional reversal of age, right? Again, the biomarkers right now,
you know, you can test your biomarkers on a Horvath clock and many different clocks. The problem
is if you test yourself in the morning and test yourself at night, you'll get different answers.
And so I don't think there is a reliable biomarker for aging. Brian, I don't know if you agree with that or not,
but what I care about is less a number on a page, but more functional. Do you have the ability
to process liver function that you did earlier in life? Do you have the cognition, the immune,
the muscle that you had 20 years younger? So I think we're at the beginning of that curve. And just like
in the singularity we're living through it.
I think we're in the process.
And I agree, GLP1 drugs are probably one of the very first longevity drugs out there.
Brian, any thought?
You think Peter, or maybe a question to Peter and Brian on this?
You think we're going to be arguing N years from now, let's say it's not this year.
Let's say it's the early 2030s.
We're going to be arguing over whether we've passed LV or not.
And we're going to bring folks onto the pod years from now saying, oh, no, it definitely
hasn't been hit because my favorite van.
Benchmark hasn't been passed yet while others will say, no, it was actually past five years ago.
Brian, I like your theory.
I like your theory on that, Alex.
I would agree with the Turing test comparison where we probably will go past it and people
won't.
Nobody will react.
I think that's probably likely.
I don't think it'll happen this year or next year, but 2033 could potentially happen.
I mean, it's like the FDA approval part is the slow part, right?
The AI part is going really fast.
I will fly anywhere for the treatment.
I want to make a couple of comments here.
You know, if you talk about LEV,
we won't know for a long time
because people won't be dying for quite a long time.
We won't really know when it's hit,
except for a certain medical tests, et cetera.
So I think this is going to drag out by definition.
My favorite comment from the life extension world
is that the baby that's going to live to a thousand years old
is already alive.
It's not just blows your mind.
Yeah.
And I agree with you, right? The whole basis of our health span prize was not to be a longevity
prize where you have to wait 30 years to award a winner. It's an age reversal, right? Do you have
the function that you had earlier? You know, one of my favorite things right now that we haven't
reported on, and I'm working to get Martine Rothblatt on the pod, Martines, the CEO of United
Therapeutics, is work, she has been working on restoring your thymus. So going from
from your own IPSC stem cells,
your induced plurpotent stem cells,
and regrowing a thymus.
And of course, you lose your thymus in your 20s completely.
And it's one of the most important organs for regrowing.
Have you been thinking about thymus capabilities at New Limit?
It's not one of the ones we've targeted yet,
but yeah, I think it's on the list somewhere.
We're gonna have to get to all the major tissues at some point.
I was arguing with Jacob,
I want muscle rejuvenation.
please. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that would pair nicely with the GOP ones, right? For sure.
I want to say something I've been wanting to say for months and months, and I can only say on
this episode, which is, you know, as we talk about life extension, there's been two things true
in the world. So it was a history of humanity, death and taxes. And we may, this will crack
death and Bitcoin is going to crack taxes. So there you go. I love this tweet. I love it.
I love it when a brilliant, successful entrepreneur from outside of biotech gets into biotech
because you get that fresh view, kind of, you know, what is possible?
You know, you're not jaded.
You're not calloused.
You're just like, what is possible.
Really curious to know what you buy for $435 million.
And does it surprise you, like, where that money goes?
Yeah, well, on the idea of going into biotech, I mean, there's definitely some Elon inspiration
there, which is like we're living through a golden age of software where fortunes are being made.
And so I think these hard tech problems deserve more capital. And, you know, it's almost like SpaceX probably would not have existed unless some, a wealthy individual like Elon who had had an exit, had at least some of his own capital to go try and do it. Same thing with Tesla, right? So venture capital sometimes doesn't get you all the way there. It's almost like to do these real moonshots. You have to like find someone who made a billion dollars in software and then go found step two, go found the moonshots. But I hope that that's not the case forever. I think a lot of the
money that's been made in crypto and AI will actually go into the next moon shots and
all of that stuff.
But sorry, your question was about which part, again, sorry.
Well, 435 million, you know, what if that can get you?
Is it automate a bunch of wet lab tests?
Does that give you like concurrent many, many lines of research?
What does it look?
Run a human trial.
It's, yeah, a lot of trials.
A lot of trials.
I mean, in a software company, most of your costs are people and then some AWS and stuff
like that. In a biotech company, typically it's like it's people and then materials like reagents and
things. But in this case, now that we're getting ready to go into the clinic, yeah, it's, you know,
your average phase one trial might be, I don't know, 10 or 20 million and you can kind of go up from there on
phase two and phase three. So you need to get enough shots on goal to get some of these candidates to come
out the other side and have a big impact. So we've got enough capital now to run a number of trials,
which is good. Alex, I love this tweet I saw from
at Sam Swara, starting to mourn all the people who died before the singularity.
I'm mourning all the people who've died, period.
And I think, you know, to Brian's point about all of the grand challenges that there
aren't yet billionaires solving, I think I'll throw this out to the universe, to the
economy.
I would love to back or otherwise support someone building a company to use advanced
compute to digitally resurrect everyone who's ever died. I think it's a tragedy that we've had so
many billions of deaths over the millennia. Let's fix it. I love that. I love that. All right, our next
story here is a fun one. Our last three stories in the field. Columbia University researchers successfully
edited a PCSK9 gene. This is, you know, your LDL, your bad cholesterol and an HPG gene for
hemoglobin in embryos in vitro. So, you know, this is, you know, this is.
opening of the conversation. I remember when I was at the Whitehead Institute doing my medical degree,
and the first gene editing capabilities of restriction enzymes came out. A lot of hand-wringing
around embryo editing, zygote editing. You know, 2018, a scientist in China, he, Xanku,
successfully edited the CCR-5 gene in two young girls that were brought to term healthy.
to make HIV resistance.
So the question is, are we going to start, you know, when this gets reliable enough,
are we going to start editing our kids?
You know, my son, Dax just did a project on this at school.
And his point was we give our kids the best food, the best education, the best friends,
the best clothing.
Why not start with the best genes?
So I am curious what your thoughts are, guys.
Yes, of course.
like this is this is much more advanced than even gadica the whole plot of gadica was it's it's still your genes your parents genes just the best combination with extreme in vitro selection of embryos this goes beyond this to to do base editing of embryos and you know base editing itself is is looking tremendously promising invented by david lu and a collaborator at harvard better than first generation crisper you're able to
to do single nucleotide swaps in DNA with minimal error rates.
This is tremendous.
And I can't for the life of me understand, Asilomar or otherwise, why this wouldn't become
a broad spread practice.
Yeah, obviously, you know, shadows of eugenics come to mind.
But at the end of the day, if you're getting rid of predatory disease or if you've got some,
you know, if you're a family.
below five foot and you want your kids to be taller.
You know, the ethics of this are going to evolve, and morality around this is going to evolve,
and societal norms are going to evolve.
Selim, what do you come out on this?
Well, two things.
One is this is going to have a lot of people freak out.
But let's note that we have an old word for all this is called breeding.
For thousands of years, we've been crossing dogs and cats and horses and humans to select
for the traits what we want.
What's happening now is biology is becoming a digital programmable domain.
disease prevention is the most compelling case here,
but the governance things that this will bring up
are going to be unbelievable
because we're going to be editing diseases
like right before birth at this point.
I say, this is incredible between sequencing, CRISPR, IBF, AR modeling,
like anything is now possible.
Just think of yourself, your 50 trillion cells
for every human being in the world
is now a software engineering problem.
How do we think about that?
Brian, I think one of the bigger,
problems with this particular
or one of the bigger complexities is jurisdiction.
So if you live in a country,
so suppose your parents are in the U.S.,
and you go to a Caribbean island,
and that Caribbean island
that say, yeah, do whatever you want,
so then you've got a baby,
then you bring that baby back in the U.S.
That's inevitably going to happen.
So regardless of what your local laws
decide they would like it to be, it's not going to
actually work locally.
So that's a really big complexity
in this whole area.
area. Brian, you want to weigh in? Yeah, it's a great point. I mean, I think this is going to happen, too. I think it'll be
good for humanity on net. I think a lot of people will freak out about it for a while, but it's, I think
there was a Pew Research study I saw that something like 80% of Americans would support embry editing
for disease prevention. So that was more than I expected. I thought 80% is pretty high, but, you know,
only about 20% I think supported it for, quote, enhancement.
The part that I've never been able to figure out is what's the line between disease prevention
and enhancement, right?
Not having a disease sounds like a pretty good enhancement to me.
I mean, there's cases where, like, let's say osteoporosis, right?
So if you have that, it's a disease, but if you had a gene edited to prevent it, you have
stronger bones.
Stronger bones sounds like an enhancement, right?
I basically think the line is so blurry that people will start with this for,
disease prevention and then it'll upgrade over time. And I think anything's, you know, on the table,
even IQ or whatever. It's like, should we have more smart people in the world? Probably. I mean,
that seems like a good thing to me. And that's change, right? Because, I mean, if you remember a while
ago, IVF was considered immoral in the early days. And now it's, it's enabled millions of families to
be formed. Well, but not to state the obvious, but, you know, if you are seven foot tall or higher,
you have a 50% chance of making the NBA.
And if you make the NBA, that's a $20 million a year of paycheck.
So if you're a couple, you know, just a regular everyday couple in the U.S.
and you have the option to have a seven foot long, tall child by design,
you're going to go to that Caribbean island and make your seven foot tall child for economic reasons.
You know, think of what could go wrong then.
So there's going to be some serious guardrails.
There has to be guardrails around this.
You know, there's a company I love called Nucleus.
Kian Sadagi, the CEO, is going to be.
be at my abundance longevity trip in October. Brian, I'm hoping to have someone from you limit there
as well. But what Nuclius does is you fertilize, you know, 20 eggs, you know, 20 zygotes, and then
you sequence them and you can choose the one out of the 20 that have the attributes instead of
playing dice and waiting, you know, and hoping for the lucky sperm. You can actually pick the one that
has the right attributes from within the gene population that you have.
Separate from base editing, a step before that, but still something you can do today.
Remember the line from Gattaca.
Your child is still you, simply the best of you, except that's not even true with base
editing.
It's better than the best of the parents.
Well, Brian, listen, thank you for joining us today.
Grateful, I know you've got, you know, the world's largest crypto company in the world to run.
So appreciate your time, my friend.
Yeah, thank you for having me.
This was a great conversation.
I love talking with people who want to build a future.
Yeah, for sure.
And that is most definitely this amazing group.
All right.
Our next story here is Anthropic launches Fable 5 and Mythos 5.
Here we go.
Andre Caparthe, who has joined our friends at Anthropic,
is now shilling for the news models.
Here's his quote, super exciting release.
Fable 5 is the same underlying model as Mythos,
but with added safeguards.
You can 10x your test suite, auto-optimized code, run giant research projects with custom HTML for the results, anything.
Alex, over to you.
Very impressive release.
Anthropic is back in the lead now.
Until today, GPT 5.5 was the lead, the state of the art, across most of these benchmarks today for probably about five minutes.
Anthropic takes back the crown across most measures.
of superintelligence. A few notes, the distinction between Fable 5 versus Mythos 5.
Mythos is a, as reported, a less inhibited version of Fable, or conversely,
Fable is a more inhibited version of mythos that has certain scaffolding and other restrictions
that prevented from having more ambitious conversations that might relate to biology, chemistry,
cybersecurity, perhaps other areas. But I've used it. It's incredible.
I gave it my typical benchmark, which is favorite e-val, asking it to one-shot a cyberpunk
FTF first-person shooter that's visually stunning, did an amazing job, no errors, ran immediately,
had a nice soundtrack that came with it. What's more interesting, if you look at the benchmarks
and then also the demonstrations, far be it from me to suggest that Pokemon games are actually
the secret to superintelligence. But if you look at the demos,
that have been coming out from Anthropic and otherwise, it is able to play just from pure visual
reasoning now. This is Fable 5 or Mythos 5 doesn't really seem to matter. It's able to,
based on just watching the screens of games like various Pokemon games, it's able to win them.
And that requires long-term, long-range reasoning capabilities that we really haven't seen until now.
So my guess is Anthropic has probably been very aggressively doing RLVR, reinforcement learning
with verifiable rewards on long-range reasoning challenges,
maybe gameplay, maybe challenges that involve spatial reasoning,
maybe very large code bases,
maybe very large Capture the Flag, CTF hunts,
very large sprawling, both in probably, my guess, would be in space
and in time, RLVR challenges to get some of these results.
It's just incredible what you can one shot now with Fable 5,
with reasoning set to high.
And again, difficult to predict how long Anthropic will retain the crown before, say, GPT 5.6 comes out.
But it is exciting to see the frontier move once again.
Dave, you've been playing?
Yeah, well, it's only been out for about four hours, but I've been playing for four hours.
So it's, I mean, what we're living through, Alex is constantly posting on our internal feed.
It's happening. It's happening.
I mean, it's really happening now.
this is, oh my God.
You know, what's interesting to me, a bunch of things.
First of all, they doubled the price, so it's expensive as all hell.
This idea of commodity A intelligence is not happening.
It's damn expensive if you want the most brilliant thing.
But what it produces is so incredibly intelligent that it takes you quite a while to read
and understand what it did.
And it's like, well, I'll just move on while you're reading and trying to catch up.
And so that's an interesting new thing,
me. And also, I think this is interesting that Anthropic had it in the bag. You know, Alex
just mentioned that, you know, the leap forug is going on. But actually, Open AI pushed out their
best. And Anthropic then said, okay, well, we had this ready to go. So, you know, we're just
trying to make it safer, but now we'll come out and go over the top. And we've been saying
they're pulling their punches. They're, they are, they're, they're gaming this.
That's the first. As you're heading towards your flight, do you want to add anything here?
No. What occurred to me here is that, you know, when you have the split now between the safety guardrails and the performance guardrails.
And I thought that was really interesting because you've got the same underlying model with added safeguards, right?
That's the whole safety debate in one sentence right there.
Well, actually, they even change the name, too.
You know, you've got the mythos, which we've been talking about for a while.
And then Fable is the heavily guardrailed won't do a cyber threat.
won't do a nuclear weapon, you know, version of the exact same model. So they even, even
differentiated it by name to support exactly what you're saying, Salam. With pretty broad buffers,
like you can, friends of mine have tried having conversations, perfectly innocent conversations
with Fable Five high about biology. And from what I've heard, it has pretty broad margins for what
it will simply revert back to Opus for. If it thinks you're asking anything in biology,
or chemistry that could remotely be a dangerous subject.
It'll just downgrade you immediately to Opus.
You know, funny you say that, Alex, because, you know, I'm often trying to work from a plane
and SSH doesn't work on the plane, Wi-Fi.
And so I, you know, use a workaround to try and get access to all my remote agents.
And that also vomited saying, that looks a little bit like maybe you're doing something
sketchy.
And it gave me the, the anthropic, you know, we're not going to answer that query thing,
you know, repeatedly.
So I had to actually find a workaround for that, too.
So, yeah, they've really, really locked it down to try and avoid the sort of security issue.
What I predict is we head towards IPO season for these two companies, these frontier labs.
We're going to start to see the rate of model release increase.
They're going to be leapfrogging.
Who's going to be out front at the day of the IPO?
Who's getting the news?
At least, Peter, we have competition.
The situation could be worse.
We could just have a singleton, a single lab that is not getting leapfrogged at all.
At least we have two competitors at the moment.
in the lead. For sure. All right. Our final story for today, after more than a decade of sucking,
Apple finally made its move to improve Siri. They've announced a multi-year partnership with Google
to power Siri with Gemini AI, rebuilding Siri from the ground up. The big shift, Siri is now
an agent, not just a voice interface. The key breakthrough is personal context. Yes, finally. Siri can now
reason across your messages, your emails, your notes, your photos, and actually get things done.
And it can actually, you know, when I'm sending a text message to Kristen, it can spell it
correctly or it can spell my name, you know, correctly. It doesn't most of the time.
They're calling it persistent AI workspace coming to beta later this year, focused in English.
Two huge implications here. First, Apple is essentially admitting it lost to frontier model or the
foundation model race and chose Google to rent brains rather than build its own. And it's a stunning
concession from the company that has always priding itself on its own stack. Second, the real
remote was never the model. It's the personal context. So, Alex, you want to, you want to share
a few different perspectives here. So one, the glass half empty perspective is Apple for arguably the
first time in modern history has outsourced an key element of its tech stack, which Apple, it's
just not, as with Elon and vertical integration, it's not in Apple's cultural DNA to want to
rent out someone else's technology that's going to be so core to the system. That's the glass
half empty. Second perspective, that perspective says the foundation model is not analogous to say
an operating system, it's more analogous to the role of a search engine, which has to be localized.
So you'll note, Apple didn't announce this in China yet. It didn't announce it in the EU yet for
different reasons. But focusing just on China, I would expect Apple to strike some partnership
that's roughly analogous to the partnership with Google, with one of the three big Chinese AI
labs or tech companies, and that will represent a localization, roughly analogous to the way Apple
localizes its other web search capabilities in China with one of the Chinese companies,
analogously to the way it default to Google for web search. So the glass-have-full argument is,
well, foundation models, however foundational they are, are intrinsically localizable. And so
Apple has merely chosen for its American franchise, Google. And maybe it'll choose another
franchisee for Europe and another one for China.
And Alex, of course, Google's been doing this with Android and its suite of products
for a while now, right? So this is Apple sort of catching up. I mean, I've almost, you know,
moved to an Android phone so many times just because of its ability to, you know,
contextualize all of my my personal context. A third perspective, yes. And a third perspective is
if you buy that foundation model economics are hyper deflationary and are the cost is going down by 40x year over year or anything remotely like that,
then you should view this entire bit of Apple losing its tech sovereignty as a nothing burger.
And yes, Apple maybe is struggling to distill Gemini down to its private cloud compute combined with iPhones this year.
But in a year or two, there will have been so much hyper deflation in the cost of compute that,
for the present capabilities of new Siri that they will easily fit into the new iPhones.
And that any loss of sovereignty or any use, we haven't even touched on this,
semi-embarrassingly, it's not even the case that Apple is just able to distill Gemini,
Google's Gemini or its version thereof into the iPhones.
And it's not even the case that they're able to operate it with a combination of Apple's own
cloud combined with the iPhone Edge compute.
They actually need Google's cloud to do this because it's so compute-intensive.
But all of that over the next year or two can shrink and hyper-deflate down to just working on an edge device as these algorithms get more advanced.
Dave, any thoughts on Apple?
Yeah, lots.
Well, anytime in tech that you don't do anything for a long period of time, you eventually get crushed.
The question is, how does it emerge?
The way it would play out if Apple doesn't do something aggressive is you lose the interface.
you know, Siri is now Google, but Google is Android, and Android is the one competitor to the iPhone.
Remember, all the revenue still comes from the iPhone.
So you lose the interface.
At the same time, TSM moves the chip manufacturing away from the M5 and M3 and M4 to a much higher paying customer in AI data center use.
So, Nvidia or Elon take the manufacturing capacity away for the underlying chip because they just pay more.
to TSM.
So then you've lost your hardware manufacturing under the covers, and you've lost the
interface on the other side, and then everybody just moves to Android because they're talking
to Google or Gemini all day long anyway.
And so also the machines get, the actual physical phones get manufactured by Samsung using
Samsung's chip manufacturing capability, which is immune to TSMC.
Selima, I want to acknowledge your persistence and your ability to stay with the conversation.
This is a new low.
I'm in my airplane seats, so let it just go past. Let's go past this.
Okay, closing thoughts on Apple and Siri.
You're closing thoughts.
I'll believe that it's good. I'll believe that it's good when I see it.
Yeah. We've been so disappointed over and over again. You know, you and I met the founders of
Siri before they sold to Apple. And it was, it had such promise back then. And it just
stuck around just way too long. Gentlemen, I think that's a wrap. Enjoyed having
Brian here, going from Bitcoin to longevity.
Anyway, crazy week ahead.
I'll see you guys in a few days for our next episode.
Thank you, as always, for your commitment to this podcast.
Everybody watching, thank you for your support of moonshots.
We're here to give you the news, help you understand it, help you be optimistic.
It is the most extraordinary time ever to be alive.
I like to say, you know, during the singularity, don't sleep, don't blink.
The words live long and prosper really fit now.
Yeah, they do.
Take care, gentlemen.
Safe travels, everybody.
Peace and long life.
Take care of folks.
If you made it to the end of this episode, which you obviously did, I consider you a moonshotmate.
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