Silicon Valley Girl: AI, Tech and Career Growth - CEO of Microsoft AI: The Next 10 Years Will Change Humanity Forever | Mustafa Suleyman
Episode Date: November 15, 2025In this episode of Silicon Valley Girl, Marina Mogilko sits down with Mustafa Suleyman, CEO of Microsoft AI and co-founder of DeepMind, to explore how AI is reshaping the future of work, education, an...d everyday life.Mustafa has spent the last decade building the systems that sparked the modern AI revolution. Today, he’s leading Microsoft AI and shaping how billions of people will interact with intelligent agents in the coming years. From the race toward AGI to the rise of AI assistants that remember everything, Mustafa offers a rare inside look at where the next decade is heading.He shares why routine work is disappearing, what jobs will matter most, whether children will even need college, and how superintelligent systems could change the rhythm of a normal day. This conversation is a clear, grounded roadmap to the future — and to the skills we’ll all need to stay ahead.🔗 Follow Mustafa on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mustafasuleymanaiLinks: Follow my Newsletter: https://siliconvalleygirl.beehiiv.com/My Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/siliconvalleygirl/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SiliconValleyGirlLinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/marinamogilkoX: https://x.com/siliconvalleymm
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Study and play.
Come together on a Windows 11 PC.
And for a limited time, college students get
the best of both worlds.
Get the Unreal College deal,
everything you need to study and play
with select Windows 11 PCs.
Eligible students get a year of Microsoft 365 premium
and a year of Xbox GamePass Ultimate
with a custom color Xbox wireless controller.
Learn more at Windows.com slash student offer.
While supplies last, ends June 30th,
turns at AKA.m.m.S.
college PC.
Ambition comes in all shapes and sizes.
At First Citizens Bank, we roll with your goals because we're built for what you're building.
Fit for your ambition for Citizens Bank.
Are we in an AI bubble?
This is Mustafa Suleiman, co-founder of DeepMind, one of the first companies to teach machines how to think.
Today, he leads Microsoft AI, one of the magnificent 7, shaping the future of our world.
It's the smartest, most capable technology you've ever invented.
It's improving faster than anything we've ever seen.
And it's very important that we keep reminding ourselves of that.
Like in 25 years time, a large portion of the population are going to struggle to compete in the workplace with AI.
With that power comes a question none of us can ignore.
Because the same intelligence that builds our future could also rewrite what it means to be human.
These things don't suffer.
They don't feel pain.
They're just simulating high quality.
conversation. So we've got to be very careful about that. AI isn't just learning. It's starting to live
with us. Your personal AI is just going to have ambient awareness of what you're trying to do and talk to you
in real time. It is going to remember everything in the future and be perfect if you choose for it to do that.
So if it remembers everything, what's going to happen to our brains?
They don't sleep, they don't forget, they don't feel, but they're learning faster than we ever
imagined. So the real question is, what happens to us next?
Welcome. Thank you so much for being here.
Thanks for having me.
The first question, everyone's talking about it on YouTube right now.
Are we in an AI bubble?
Yes. So no, we're not.
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
I think when you kind of think about it, we are creating something that is truly magical.
intelligence is the thing that has made us successful as a species.
And we're now distilling that into a smaller and smaller unit that can be spread all over
the world and that is going to be cheap and widely abundant.
So that's just a remarkable thought.
Yeah, but we kind of had the same thought during dot-com crash.
Like, we're inventing internet, love a lot.
But there are some companies that, you know, their valuations are much.
higher than their revenues. And like everyone's talking about Nvidia investing and then that revenue
going back to Nvidia. What do you think about that? No, I think the value that we're going to
produce in the next five to 10 years is going to be unprecedented. So you don't think we're going to
experience something like, you know, 2008, COVID. I mean, who knows? But I think if you think,
just focus on the fundamental value that's being created, this is the best prediction engine anyone's
ever seen. It's the smartest, most capable technology you've ever invented. It's. It's,
It's improving faster than anything we've ever seen.
It has got more easy to shape and control, not less.
Three years ago, we thought that it was going to get more chaotic and more disorganized,
so we weren't going to be able to sculpt it.
And now we're producing beautiful, powerful, amazing experiences that are surprising us every month.
So, yeah, I know I'm genuinely very bullish.
Okay, so you're not worried, you're good.
Yeah.
And we shouldn't be worried.
Okay, that makes me feel better.
Okay.
Let's talk about AI becoming more conscious. You talked about it in one of the podcasts that
would perceive AI more and more as human. How fast is it happening? What's going to happen in the next
few years? It is getting more human-like. It's getting more accurate. It's getting more fluid,
more smooth. And that is unprecedented. At the same time, it's definitely not conscious. It isn't aware
of itself. It can't speak about itself. It, you know, it's very different to what it's like for a
human to have a subjective experience and to feel pain and suffering. And it's very important that we
keep reminding ourselves of that because consciousness is the basis of our rights-based framework.
And it is the thing that gives us responsibilities as citizens in societies that allows us to
vote, which allows us to be subject to the law, which creates order. Like, you know, we can't
begin to attribute this quality to a new species. That would be terrible for our species.
But we saw heard stories of Google, the story that you told in your book, of Google Engineer,
who was convinced by AI that it was experiencing sadness and it was afraid of being shut down.
True, true. Yeah. And that was an anthropomorphic projection. People, you know, just because it has
some human qualities doesn't mean it has all of human qualities, including subjective experience.
And I think we can prove that it doesn't have subjective experience, that it isn't going to emerge this kind of self-awareness.
That's just a sci-fi fantasy.
And I understand why people sometimes go there because we've been schooled on sci-fi for as long as forever.
And it's a natural assumption to make.
But these things don't suffer.
They don't feel pain.
They're just simulating high-quality conversation.
And that is magical and it feels amazing.
But that doesn't mean that it is something.
it feels something internally to be one of these models.
So we've got to be very careful about that.
Some people talk about our kids having real relationships with AIs in 10 years,
like getting married to AIs.
Do you think it's something that could potentially happen?
And if yes, how can we prevent that?
I think the history of the human condition proves to us that if it's possible,
someone will probably do it.
People do crazy things.
But the majority of people don't.
The majority of people are pretty sound.
of mind and pretty sensible and just want to live healthy, happy lives. And so if some people choose
to marry their AI in 20 years time, I'm not going to kind of sit here and necessarily judge that
or say don't do it or do do it. If you ask me in my opinion, I don't think that these should be
treated as entities that are of equal moral significance to humans. I think that they should be
in service of humans. They should work for us. That's why we invent technology. You know, I love the
technology behind this microphone because it amplifies our voices and distributes them to millions of
people on the internet. That is a technology that is in service of humanity that's doing good.
That's what we want. And I don't necessarily think that, you know, these are an idea of super
intelligence that is autonomous, that can self-improve, that can set its own goals, that can act
independently of humans. That to me doesn't feel like a positive vision of the future. It would be
very hard to contain something like that or align it to our values.
And so that should be the anti-goal.
That's not what we're trying to build.
In my opinion, we're trying to build a humanist superintelligence, one that is aligned
to our interests on our team in our corner backing us up.
That's the great project that we're engaged in Microsoft with Copilot.
But then again, a lot of people are talking about AGI.
Is that similar to superintelligence?
Yeah, you can think of AGI as a step before maybe superintelligence.
But roughly speaking, they're used fairly interchangeably.
Because Demis, your ex-co-co-founder mentioned we could achieve it by 2030.
Can you talk about what it means for society?
Yeah, I mean, I think achieving human-level performance at most tasks, I wouldn't say all knowledge tasks, that feels quite likely in the next five years.
I think it's a fairly grounded prediction.
You know, if you think about it, these models already do many tasks better than a human.
I mean, you know, summarization, translation, transcription, research, document writing,
maybe even arguably poetry or some parts of literature or whatever.
So you can see that they're taking steps towards being as good as a human at being a project manager
or being a marketing person or an HR person or having a tough conversation with somebody about
a diagnosis for a medical condition they have.
So it is going to fundamentally change work in the most profound way.
it's going to change the type of work that we do.
You know, 10 years ago it wasn't possible for you to do the job that you're now doing.
But with streaming content, you don't need a big team around you, you don't need to be part of a big institution.
So we've democratized access to the power of broadcast with the arrival of the internet and streaming and podcasting.
That's amazing.
Now with these models, we're democratizing access to intelligence.
So you don't have to be a really privileged.
wealthy, educated person that has access to capital to be able to found a company to hire a great
team. You're going to have a team of intelligences around you that are the best lawyer,
the best doctor, the best teacher, the best project manager. And that is going to create
unbelievable amounts of competition because the distance between an idea and the realization
of that idea is going to collapse. That's an amazing.
thought. People are just going to be thinking new companies into existence, new products,
new pieces of poetry. That's amazing. You said people. You said people. Like my concern, you and me.
You're going to have an agent around you that is going to be able to execute on that idea.
You know what my concern is with super intelligence, that AI is going to come up with ideas.
Because like, why would it need, like, why do we need to come up with ideas if AI has all the
information? If we're talking about marketing business, for example, it can identify.
identify gaps in the market, come up with the website, launch the ads, do the business?
Do you think that might happen?
It'll definitely happen. It'll definitely happen.
You're going to have a team of agents around you that can do more and more of the tasks
and arguably do them autonomously.
But that comes back to what we were saying before about containment.
Containment is the project of making sure that these AIs have limited scope and check in
with you and are accountable to you and are working on your behalf.
And so the creative challenge for technologists is to say, what are the limitations, what are the guardrails, what can it not do?
When does it have to seek your approval for an autonomous action?
And we've done this many times in past moments of technology, right?
We invented the combustion engine almost a century ago.
And that over time became cars and trucks and so on and so forth.
But the amount of regulation that we put around those vehicles to make them more.
work for us in service of humanity, it's unbelievable, right?
Seat belts and vehicle emissions and streetlights and freeways and speed limits and driver
education.
There's so many different components that go into that.
And I think this is going to be no different.
We're going to have to figure out what are all the regulations of guard rails that go into
managing, you know, autonomous agents so that they always work for us.
Let's imagine super intelligence.
What does my day look like then?
If AI is capable of so many things.
What is this thing that is very specific to humans and is going to stay with humans?
Yeah, I think that great technology helps you get bad technology out the way.
And that's the test.
Like, it is kind of annoying to use a graphical user interface today on your desktop.
If you think about it, if you just take a step back, you go to your computer and you've got all these windows with different colors and different brands and different menus and information hiring.
hierarchies and different settings and you have to learn each app for its own sake.
And we don't think of it as advertising, but when you open your computer, you kind of have a
billboard of all these different competing apps that are like, use me, try me, do.
It's kind of distracting.
It's kind of ugly.
I just want to be able to turn to my AI and be like, I need this task done, solve it for me,
buy it for me, book it for me, create it, check in with me the right.
time, get my permission, you know, get my feedback, brainstorm with me, whatever it is. But you're
going to start to see the operating system, the browser, the search engine, the apps, all of these
are going to slip away as your personal humanist superintelligence takes over a lot of the day-to-day
work of browsing, searching, planning, booking, thinking, etc. So it's no longer going to be a computer,
you think? Yeah, I mean, less and less. I think we'll have different.
different kinds of devices like tablets, wearables, it'll be much more ambient in five to ten years.
Imagine it's 2040 and we're in this kitchen. What things are absolute, they don't exist anymore,
and what do I have to make my life easier? Okay. So I think there will probably be some kind of
household robotic arm. Probably, I don't know if it will be a humanoid walking around,
but certainly you would have a mounted system on your counter.
Here, cooking.
Yeah.
It will learn to use all the different appliances.
So probably you would have many of the similar appliances that you've got today.
But the AI is just going to learn to use them in the way that you would use them.
I think some people imagine that the entire thing is going to look totally different to suit the AI.
But actually, it's not.
Like the robot is just going to learn to do the things that you do in the way that you do it.
So you're still going to want to use a kettle.
I mean, that kettle is, you know, hundreds of you.
years old, we've been, you know, making cups and handles like that in the same way. So I think
that stuff will remain the same. So the hand, or a humanoid, what are you leaning towards?
I think the, the human, I mean, 15 years is a pretty long way out. So it probably will be
humanoid. But I think the challenge with humanoid is like the physical, the risk of it being
physically in your space. I think it's got to be very, very accurate and very reliable.
And handling hot things around children and the elderly. And you can imagine all kinds of
the complications. So I think it'll be technically feasible. It would just be a bit of an adjustment
to people get comfortable with it. What about devices? Do you think I'm going to have like an AI
projector and like tap on the air as it and get instructions how to cook things? Or is it going to be
glasses? I think that you're going to just have it in your ear. So I think that, you know,
your AI is like your personal AI is just going to have ambient awareness of what you're trying to do.
talk to you in real time.
So it will have a camera in my ear?
Yeah.
And it will, oh.
Yeah.
Interesting.
Yeah.
I don't think anyone's working on it.
Yeah.
I mean, it's very hard to miniaturize that today.
So it's still a bit of a way off.
But by 2040, definitely.
And you'll have other wearables on you.
I mean, look at how cool this mic is at the moment.
It's tiny, super light.
Yeah.
So in time, that'll have a camera on it as well and have ambient awareness.
Okay.
So robotic arm, wearables.
Anything else?
And then I think those,
that ambient awareness is going to,
mean that the entire kitchen is just way more proactive,
proactively ordering the food and just checking in with you,
like, oh, I know that you've got a lot of guests coming this weekend,
should I order all the stuff for the barbecue?
Yeah.
All of that stuff will just happen seamlessly in the background.
And the car will go and pick it, pick stuff up.
Yeah.
We'll definitely have self-driving cars by 2040 that basically do most of that.
Yeah.
Or maybe there'll be little bikes or different form factors
because, you know, it won't necessarily need to look like a traditional car.
Are there any markets where you think people should be paying attention to if they want to stay ahead in this AI race?
What are the most exciting markets?
I think by far the most exciting new market is medicine.
I think at the moment, the quality difference between the top 10% and the bottom 10%, even in the United States, let alone rest of the world, is unbelievable.
The Gulf is probably in order of magnitude.
It's huge.
And again, that's going to completely collapse.
because everybody is going to have access to medical superintelligence, and it will cost
20 bucks a month. It is going to be remarkably cheap.
And talk to me about what you just released, Harvard-backed research, right? Within Co-Ballet,
if I ask a medical question, how is it going to work?
Exactly. So now, I mean, we find that, like, about 40% of our queries each week are health-related.
40%. Yeah, 4-0. It's pretty remarkable. Like, millions of people a day are asking,
health-related queries. So we decided to really focus on improving the quality of the health
answers. And part of doing that is that we ground the answers in citations from Harvard Medical,
which is an amazing kind of gift to the world, like the most respected health institution.
And we also do the NHS in the UK and we'll be doing other health systems over time.
And so people now get really high quality, very reliable, you know, pretty accurate.
Like sometimes it makes mistakes. It's not, you can't rely on it yet. You always have to go see
doctor, etc. But if you think about it, most of the time in a healthcare situation, people are
trying to make sense of a complicated technical set of language that they don't really understand.
They're probably anxious or worried, so they want to repeat things lots of times, they want to get
it explained in a very simple way. And sometimes they want help actually making a decision
about who to go see. So we also now have recommendations for physicians. You could go see a doctor,
you could see a dermatologist, you could see a physio, and we will find someone that fits your
preferences.
Like, you know, maybe, you know, you want to see a woman physio who specializes in sports
massage because you're a cyclist and you want them to be local to your area.
And so we can make that recommendation.
Co-Pilot does that directly inside of the app in chat.
That is awesome.
Yeah, it's so cool to see that taking off.
I love that.
I need to ask about my cholesterol levels.
We're going to do this today.
Like you mentioned that access to knowledge is now democratized.
What's going to happen to traditional education?
Will we see the standard like bachelor's, master's,
where we basically spend five or six years just acquiring knowledge?
Yeah.
I don't think so.
I think that knowledge acquisition is going to be a conversation between you and, you know,
co-pilot.
So, for example, another feature that we just launched today, in fact,
is this learn live feature.
So you actually have a tutor.
shows up on the screen and it will lay out a quiz for you on any topic that you like.
So it doesn't have to be a school curriculum topic.
You might be learning about cacti or, you know, Persian rugs.
It will give you an education on it, lay out the kind of curriculum piece by piece,
give you a nice quiz, present it in a nice graphical user interface.
And so knowledge acquisition is about to get completely decentralized and available to everybody.
and you just have an expert teacher in your pocket on any subject.
Does this mean all education businesses are dead?
I'm thinking about my apps.
I think it's the opposite.
I think education businesses that adopt these kinds of AI tools
and integrate them as quickly as possible,
that they're really going to flourish.
It's happening like that for everything.
I mean, now in co-pilot you can also generate a podcast,
literally in a minute.
It's a great introductory thing.
Like the other day I generate,
I don't really follow football or like soccer.
But I do support.
Arsenal because I'm from London. And when I go back to London to see my friends, I want to, like,
you know, know what I'm talking about a little bit. So I asked co-pilot to generate me a podcast
on how Arsenal is doing in the season and what the latest is with the transfers and who are
the best players and stuff like that. So just like fun, you know, simple bits of information are
perfect. And now I'm in the gym listening to a little five, seven minute podcast about that.
Going back to knowledge and education, should I be saving from my kids' college or not?
They're five and four.
So 15 years' time?
Probably not.
There you go.
I don't know.
It's really hard to judge.
I'm not sure that we will value a Stanford education that costs, I don't know, what does it cost, 50 grand a year or something?
Is it more? Something crazy.
50 is a private school here.
Right. I mean, I just, I don't, I think that we're going to have world class expertise on tap that costs 20 bucks a month.
But what if, like, for example, right now I'm educated and like a sudden maths, economics, so I can have these conversations.
If I completely abandon acquisition of knowledge, how can I have an argument?
It's not like I'm always talking to my phone, right?
You could still argue about stuff.
If anything, it'll probably make us all more argumentative because we'll be even more knowledgeable.
We wouldn't be exchanging ideas with people, right?
Yeah, I mean, but you base your arguments on things that you've acquired when learning something.
Yeah, but that's kind of my point, is that the knowledge acquisition in the traditional form, in the classroom, you know, with the textbook, that's going to shift entirely.
So the classroom is going to look more like practicing using your knowledge.
So you know, I'd acquire more knowledge.
I do it the other way around with AI.
Exactly.
Okay.
Because then as a kid, you're going to be able to talk to your AI tutor at any time during the
day.
You're going to learn from the AI podcast.
You're going to learn from the AI video that is going to be generated.
So all the kind of straightforward teaching is going to take place, you know, with the
student and the AI.
And then when you come into the classroom for your day, the students are going to be talking
to each other about the knowledge that they've acquired from their AI and debating and
learning to, you know, be more empathetic and be better listeners and adjust their tone and,
you know, that kind of thing. So what do you think parents should be teaching their kids now?
I think it's still important to be good at like learning knowledge from first principles yourself
and not depending on the sort of AI tutor leading you through. Like I think one of the most
important things is from school is the discipline of being able to teach yourself. That's a meta skill.
and that, you know, that comes with friction.
So I think as a parent, you still have to introduce, like, discipline and friction into the process.
Because if it comes all too slowly and it's always on tap, you know, then there's a risk that the child could just get used to having everything instantly available and doesn't learn from the hard work, you know, the benefits of hard work, which I think are important.
So that's like something to think through now that everything is going to be so seamless.
Another question I wanted to ask you.
For everyone who thinks that they need to be technical in the age of AI, you have philosophical background and you're ahead of AI in Microsoft.
Yeah, I mean, I think that it's easier than ever to understand what's being built.
Like everything is available on YouTube.
You know, there are so many courses, the curriculums for all of the major CS classes, machine learning classes, are available for undergraduate, master's level even.
Is that how you learn?
Yeah.
Like I've watched, I watched Andrew Ings course back in the day,
which I encourage everyone to look at.
There's just so many classes.
I watched maybe 10 years ago, I think, when he was at Coursera and it first came out.
Wow.
And I've just watched so many of those.
So it's very accessible.
And I think if you just have a logical mind, your patient,
you're disciplined with your own learning, it is actually very, very easy.
That's great.
So anyone, well, basically anyone who learns can become head of AI,
build an AI company without learning how to code.
Yeah, because the skills now are,
I mean, it's still good for able to learn how to code, but the primary skill is in synthesis.
Like, the goal is to bring together all the different disciplines of UX and research and product
and the aesthetic and also large-scale distributed systems for training big models, doing the hardware.
Like, you know, so I think that people who are multidisciplinary and can straddle those
of different technical disciplines are going to get rewarded most.
Yeah.
Wow, this is so inspiring.
You've released the memory feature, right?
So AI is going to remember everything about us.
I don't know.
I haven't tried the co-pilot yet, but with other AIs, I see how it forgets.
Like, I just tell it and then I ask the question and for some reason, forgets and I have to remind it.
Is it going to be a problem?
Have you tried it?
It doesn't have infinite perfect memory, but it does remember specific durable facts.
So it will remember that you have a preference for, you know, pineapple on pizza and that you like going running on a Sunday morning or whatever.
Or like, my measurements. That's the thing that my eyes keep forgetting.
Oh, really? Can you choose the size from this website? Oh, I don't have your measurements. I'm like, no, yes, you do.
Oh, interesting. And we're like, oh, exactly. I do have them. I experienced this forgetting problem almost everywhere.
Yeah. I mean, we're working on a good knowledge representation as well, so you can go and edit the AI's memory of what it knows about you. And if you ask co-pilot today, what do you know about me? It will produce a pretty long list. It's not entirely definitive. So it won't be absolutely everything that you've ever told.
told it, it is selective and it chooses what to remember. And you can tell it to remember certain things.
I please remember the size and so on. Yeah. Yeah. But it is going to remember everything in the future and be
perfect if you choose for it to do that. And of course, you can delete it and control it and edit it as you
wish. So if it remembers everything, what's going to happen to our brains? Um, I think people said that
about calculators, right? Like, you know, people aren't going to have to memorize their times tables anymore.
They're just going to use the calculator. But you know what? When I was preparing for GMAT, the test that you
have to take for an MBA. They don't allow you to use calculators and there are a lot of numbers.
I remember that two weeks after the exam, my brain was so fast because I trained it to calculate
and then I gradually slowed down and I lost this again. Do you think that that transferred into
other areas of your knowledge because you were good at memorizing the numbers? No, I think it
was just related to numbers. It's sort of the risk, isn't it? It's like, you know, I used to be able to
memorize a lot of telephone numbers as a kid because I... Because he had to. Yeah, I didn't get a cell phone
until I was like 15. I think it was one of the first people to get cell phones in my year at school.
And before that, everyone just remembered telephone numbers. And now I can barely remember my own
phone number from, you know, my own house. Yeah. Do you think it affects our brains or are they just
develop in a different way? I don't think so because my brain is now stimulated in a lot of other
directions. You know, it's a muscle that you don't exercise, but in turn, you focus on other aspects of your
brain. And so I think that we're way better at synthesizing vast amounts of novel information
compared to like, you know, people in the 50s or our ancestors 200 years ago. We're completely
bombarded with stimulus, right? And so I think that's interesting. It's had an interesting effect
in some respects has made us a bit more polarized. In other respects, it's made us much more empathetic.
Like we don't fear, you know, people of color or people of different sexualities or women
And a lot of that has got to do with just being aware of others and spending time with them and watching them on social media and behave in different ways.
And that has driven a lot more empathy, actually.
People often focus on how it's driven a lot more disagreement and it has.
But it's also driven so much more understanding and respect and forgiveness and those kinds of things.
In general, do you think we're getting dumb or with AI or not?
No, I don't think we're getting dumb.
I think that it reduces the barrier to accessing information and it actually makes us a lot smarter.
You can ask any question now, and many people are.
So questions that were previously going unasked because the cost of going to a library
and pulling a book off the shelf and talking to the librarian was too hard.
It took like four hours to get an answer to some question.
Like now you can go to the web and then after the web you can ask a perfect question in a conversational way to a chatbot.
So I think that's driving more collective intelligence and more awareness and understanding of our world.
Can you talk to me about some killer features that you think people are underutilizing right now with AI?
Like you implement something and then you save like an hour a day.
So for me, it was asking AI to add things to my calendar, provide my emails, search through my emails.
That has saved me a lot of time.
Yeah, I mean, I think one of the super exciting features is this thing we're calling connectors.
So co-pilot connectors.
And you can just say to co-pilot, hook up my Gmail, hook up my calendar.
You can do it in teams.
You can do it with your Dropbox.
You can do it from any basically source of data that you have about yourself.
And then ask co-pilot any question about it.
So scheduling, booking, searching for content.
And it will actually integrate that knowledge into its answers as well.
So if you say, oh, I'm planning to go here at the weekend, it'll be like, oh, but you've already
made this appointment here or, you know, so it will seamlessly have that contextual awareness about
you.
It's a really cool feature.
So even if I ask it to schedule something is going to tell me like, oh, you have a conflict.
Yeah.
Oh, nice.
Or it's going to just be like, you know, you're interested.
I, you know, I was reading from, like, you know, where you went on vacation last year when
you did your travel planning that you really enjoyed, you know, Greece or something like that.
And so you might want to try, you know, whatever.
What is your personal favorite use case?
I use voice three or four times a day, and I use it at the end of the day as well for kind of
journaling and talking.
I have it set up on my iPhone in the power button.
So I'd literally just press the power button, straight away goes into voice mode, and then I kind
of talk to copilot on the way home and I'm driving home.
So you talk about your day or?
Yeah.
Talk about my day.
Like journaling?
Yeah.
It's totally journaling.
And then it really.
then it will remind me what I've said in previous days and it will help me think through a
tricky problem I have and it kind of maintains state for me. It's like a second memory.
Wow. I love this. It's like second memory journaling that has all the information and then,
yeah, it helps you with your decisions. It does. That's fascinating. Do you ever worry and knows too much
about us? No. I think that as long as it's useful and it's
got a purpose, I don't mind. And I think that's also the story of technology so far, right?
Everybody uses the camera and uses location and knows their search history is helping
personalize search. Like you said, we have to be careful about it. Elon Musk is very vocal
about containing AI. I think Jeffrey Hinton said that we'll have to be plumbers if we don't
learn how to work with AI. A plumber, did he? Yeah, because like we're still not there with
robotics to do certain tasks, especially like when every house is custom, right?
So it's not a standardized task.
But with intelligence, it's like we're getting to a point where, you know,
people either learn to do something with hands or become entrepreneurs and use AI to bring their ideas to life or then you're out.
No, but I think it's making all of us way more creative because people have access to tools in a way they never had before, right?
Not just access to information, but access to experimentation.
But you can take an idea, generate the product for it in an image, you can generate the technical
specification, you can get the documentation for your marketing campaign.
So you can simulate all of these things ahead of time before you've even built and deployed
something.
What if you're not entrepreneurial enough?
I'm just thinking about people who are like, I just wanted to like standard thing every
single day.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I just feel good about it.
Right, right.
But is that an AI problem or is that a human problem?
I think it's an AI problem.
Because like those standardized tasks, something that's super repeatable is being replaced.
Yeah, but it depends on your default assumption about the human condition.
I don't believe that the majority of people do want to work on a toothpaste packing line
just screwing in the top of a toothpaste tube.
I think that people want creative work.
I think people want to pursue their passions.
They want to be led by their own interests and curiosity.
and we shouldn't valorize or, you know, sort of idolize, like, routine work.
Most people, I think many people do jobs that they would love to get rid of and pursue their passion.
And I think AI lowers the barrier to entry to you pursuing your passion.
Now, quite often, you might be in a partnership with your husband or your wife or your best friend,
and they might not be as interested in collecting stamps or, you know, sort of like,
keeping snails or great shoes as you are, right? And then that's unfortunate. Now, you know,
you have an AI that knows everything that you could possibly think of, you know, about your stamp
passion. And I think that's cool. What about adjusting to the speed at which AI is developing?
During the Industrial Revolution, workers destroyed machines that replaced them. Could something like
that happen again? That's natural. It's healthy to express fear and frustration publicly and be
open and vocal about it. We shouldn't shame it. People are afraid. Yeah. And it's very understandable.
But the history of science and technology tells us that net net, these tend to be, or at least so far,
they have been incredibly positive transitions we've made. Like automation has lifted billions of people
out of poverty. Our average life expectancy over the last 250 years has gone from about 30 to about
75. That's unbelievable. People are living three times longer pretty much. And that's as a result
of all of these discoveries and all this science and so on. So I think so far so good. And I do think
that the trend is headed in the right direction. It doesn't mean that there won't be consequences
and side effects and like you have to be very open minded to that and very like conscious of it it is
going to happen do you think in our case we'll have ubi to i hope so because we've never had it
before and you think this is the time i think we do have it i mean that's what our taxation system does
it decides who to you know redistribute from and who to redistribute to and it incentivizes certain
types of behavior i like you think about it um and
And so we do have a large-scale redistribution mechanism today.
Wealthier people do pay more taxes than people who don't.
In the US.
Sort of.
It's pretty roughly true.
It's true.
Certainly income tax, not so much on capital gains tax.
It's true.
And so we've done redistribution before and we'll have to do redistribution again.
I mean, the truth is these are labor replacing technologies.
And you can debate the timelines.
But I think you can certainly say by 2050, like in 25 years time, I think there's going to be significant structural disemployment.
I think that a large portion of the population are going to struggle to compete in the workplace with AI.
So we're going to have to decide whether to shorten the working week or whether to increase taxes on some portion of capital.
Or indeed, like, some portion of high earning incomes and how to redistribute that,
because that's what civilization is about.
It's about bringing everybody with us and not just, you know, a few.
Own it all.
Pay off your home, travel for life, drive a Ferrari.
In celebration of the world premiere of the Monopoly Big Board Buckslot Machine by Aristocrat Gaming,
Yamava Resort and Casino at San Manuel is giving one person a $1.6 million dream package.
The biggest prize in Yamaba's history.
Club Serrano members can earn daily instant prize.
and secure a spot in the finale May 29.
Don't pass go and own it all.
Only at Yamava, celebrating its 40th anniversary.
U.N. Details at yamava.com must be 21-20.
Please gamble responsibly.
Monopoly is a trademark of Hasbro.
Hasbro is not a sponsor of this promotion.
When you need to build up your team to handle the growing chaos at work,
use indeed-sponsor jobs.
It gives your job post the boost it needs to be seen
and helps reach people with the right skills,
certifications, and more.
Spend less time searching and more time actually interviewing candidates
who check all your boxes.
listeners of this show will get a $75-sponsored job credit at Indeed.com slash podcast.
That's Indeed.com slash podcast. Terms and conditions apply.
Need a hiring hero? This is a job for Indeed sponsored jobs.
100%. And do you think the governments will be working on that or large companies who have?
I think the governments have to lead it. I mean, it needs to be democratically accountable.
And there's no question that it needs to be led by governments.
But companies are going to be the ones footing the bill.
companies are going to be the ones that are driving this massive transition.
I mean, Bill Gates said many years ago now, like six or seven years ago that we need a robot tax.
The only way to do it is to tax the robots, right?
And tax essentially what that means is tax capital.
Because intelligence, which was previously the domain of labor like people, is now getting converted into capital.
It's going to be turned into a commodity that can be sold and resold infinitely.
And so that's where the value transition is going to happen.
and so taxation has to follow that value transition.
He called your book his favorite book on AI.
So you wrote your book a few years ago.
Is there something that has changed completely
that you couldn't predict
when you were writing this book?
Change completely.
There was an update about 2024
when you said the wave is here,
the wave of AI.
Yeah.
What is the 2025 update to your book?
Yeah, good question.
So in the book, I sort of laid out this framework of capabilities.
There was IQ, the intelligence quotient, which is kind of like the factuality and the knowledge,
citations and that was about hallucinations.
And I predicted that they were going to be largely eliminated.
And I think pretty much we're on track.
Pretty much they are.
There was the emotional intelligence, which is the tone and style of the personalities of these things.
And then there was the AQ.
So IQ, EQ, EQ, AQ is the actions quotient, like the extent to which it can get things done.
book your calendar appointments and stuff like that.
The bit that I missed is SQ, the social intelligence.
And like today, actually, we're launching this new feature co-pilot groups.
And it's the first time that you can chat with up to 32 other people and co-pilot all in one group.
So if you're organizing a trip or you're helping your...
You're working with your team, no?
You're working with your team or you're trying to plan a care pathway for your parent or sibling or something like that.
You can have the family or your friends or your colleagues in a single group chat all seeing the same context, all asking their own questions.
And the cool thing about the social intelligence of co-pilot is that it can change its tone and style and responses to each individual person in the group.
knowing that like your mom might want a different type of explanation to your younger brother or something.
And it also remembers the types of jokes that people like or the history that you have talked about.
So if you say that you're really into tennis or something, then it's going to remember to talk to you about, you know, Wimbledon or whatever it is, right?
And that's social intelligence.
That's what we do as humans.
We can manage the room.
We can adjust our style and tone.
I didn't expect us in 2025.
to design AIs that are really good at IQ, knowledge and factualness, have really pretty good
personalities, can actually take actions on our behalf and can manage group settings.
The group thing is very exciting.
Wow.
Where does this lead us in 10 years, this particular quality of AI?
I think it's going to be the main frontier.
I think it's going to be the most interesting part because those group settings will involve
other humans joining them. So it could be a professional joining, like a lawyer to give legal
advice. And then that lawyer is going to bring their own AI paralegal to fact check or to summarize.
Or it could be the doctor and you will have spoken to your AI doctor for half an hour before
the human doctor comes in to the same chat. And the AI doctor will have summarized everything,
briefed you, talked to you through everything, reassured you, answered 25 questions.
and then you talk to the human at the end for a shorter time and get the full feedback from the human.
And the human doctor knows that its AI is the one that has been approved and it relies on and it kind of reflects them.
So you'll have humans and AIs of different types all in the same group setting.
Like a Zoom call.
Yeah, kind of like a Zoom call or a Zoom chat.
You know, it's basically like, well, I mean, that's what is co-pilot groups.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's going to be group chat all the time.
Wow.
Okay, this is so fascinating.
Thank you so much.
Pleasure. Thank you for having me. This has been really fun.
Yeah.
Relax and let Ralph's delivery handle your grocery shopping this week.
We start with only the freshest items.
Then review your list and carefully choose each one.
Then we pack it all up and deliver it in as little as 30 minutes.
So you can feel confident it's what you ordered.
Fresh groceries, your way with Ralph's delivery and pickup.
And right now, enjoy free delivery on orders over,
$50. Ralps, fresh for everyone.
Security program on spreadsheets, new regulations piling up, and audit dread? It's time for Vanta.
Vanta automates security and compliance, brings evidence into one place, and cuts audit prep by 82%.
Less manual work, clear visibility, faster deals. Zero chaos. Call it compliance, or call it
compliance. Get it? Join the 15,000 companies using Vanta to prove trust.
go to v-a-n-ta.com slash com.
Thank you.
