TBPN - Kling Crosses 12M, China’s Aging Tech Problem, Thinking Machine Turmoil | Rich Greenfield, Jan Sramek, George Lewin, Ara Kharazian
Episode Date: January 21, 2026Sign up for TBPN’s daily newsletter at TBPN.com(01:20) - Kling AI Surpasses 12M Users (15:45) - China's Aging Tech Worker Crisis (23:12) - Rich Greenfield, a General Partner at LightShed ...Ventures and a seasoned media and technology analyst, discusses the intensifying competition between Netflix and Paramount-Skydance to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery's assets. He highlights Netflix's strategic shift to an all-cash $72 billion offer, aiming to streamline the merger process and provide value clarity to Warner shareholders. Greenfield also examines the implications of Paramount-Skydance's $77.9 billion hostile bid, emphasizing the potential impact on the media landscape and the importance of strategic investments in content and technology. (53:45) - Thinking Machine Leadership in Flux (01:13:21) - 𝕏 Timeline Reactions (01:51:18) - Jan Sramek, a former Goldman Sachs trader and founder of California Forever, is leading an ambitious project to build a new city in Solano County, California. In the conversation, he discusses the challenges of traveling with young children, the decade-long effort to assemble land for the project, and the importance of creating a thoughtfully planned community to address housing shortages and economic development in the region. (02:33:17) - George Lewin, co-founder and CEO of Testudo, discusses the launch of a new category of insurance specifically designed for enterprises deploying generative AI systems. He explains that traditional insurance policies often exclude AI-related risks, leaving companies vulnerable to litigation stemming from issues like copyright infringement, defamation, and data breaches. To address this, Testudo offers purpose-built AI liability insurance that covers legal costs, damages, and settlements associated with these risks, enabling organizations to innovate with confidence. (02:47:58) - Ara Kharazian, an economist at Ramp, analyzes business spending trends, particularly in AI adoption. He discusses the disparity between executives and employees regarding AI's impact on work efficiency, noting that while surveys show mixed perceptions, actual spending data indicates growing investment in AI tools. Kharazian also highlights that AI adoption varies across industries, with tech and finance leading, and emphasizes the challenges in measuring AI's true impact on the labor market. TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://Ramp.comAppLovin - https://axon.aiCognition - https://cognition.aiConsole - https://console.comCrowdStrike - https://crowdstrike.comElevenLabs - https://elevenlabs.ioFigma - https://figma.comFin - https://fin.aiGemini - https://gemini.google.comGraphite - https://graphite.comGusto - https://gusto.com/tbpnLabelbox - https://labelbox.comLambda - https://lambda.aiLinear - https://linear.appMongoDB - https://mongodb.comNYSE - https://nyse.comPhantom - https://phantom.com/cashPlaid - https://plaid.comPublic - https://public.comRailway - https://railway.comRestream - https://restream.ioShopify - https://shopify.comTurbopuffer - https://turbopuffer.comVanta - https://vanta.comVibe - https://vibe.coSentry - https://sentry.ioCisco - https://www.ciscoaisummit.com/ai-virtual-summit.htmlOkta - https://www.okta.comFollow TBPN: https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive
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Today is Wednesday, January 21st, 2025,
2026.
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Here with us. Let's show everyone the linear lineup because we got a lot of great stuff for you.
We got Rich Greenfield coming on at 1130.
Many people are saying he has one of the best names of all time.
He does. He does.
If you enjoy business, if you're a business enthusiast, why not?
Lots of people like Greenfield projects.
You start fresh. Greenfield projects are where it's at.
Jan Srimack, founder and CEO of California Forever is in the Ultradome at 1.
Then we have George from Testudo at 140 and Aura closing it at 150 in person.
It's going to be a fun show.
Linear, of course, is the ultimate product, the system for modern software development.
70% of enterprise workspaces on Linear are using agents today.
And you should be too.
So, cling.AI, the video generation video model, has been.
been on a tear. There's an article in the Wall Street Journal showing some pretty staggering
numbers. They hit 12 million monthly active users, and they generated more than 20 million in revenue
just last year. I wanted to dig in and understand where this came from, the history of Kwai
Show, the Chinese company behind it. There's a new farmer filling up the trough for everyone.
Really interesting that they're so neck and neck with Higgsfield. Higgs field last week comes out,
announces they got to 200 million.
Yeah, yeah.
This story drops that Kling seems to be just slightly ahead of them,
but really neck and neck and seemingly competing over the same opportunity.
Yeah, I mean, on the enterprise model API level, even the pro-sumer level,
I think 30% of their revenue is coming from API and 70% is for pro-sumer.
So basically, you have someone in a marketing role or they're just a fun individual creator
and they want some AI video products, some generative video.
And the silence at Davos on Kling.
It's crazy.
It's insane.
It's actually crazy.
It's insane.
They refuse to ask any hard questions.
You got Demis on stage.
You got Dario on stage.
And you're not asking them about Kling and the absolute tear that Kwaishos has been on.
Actually, I mean, Dario did address the Chinese question.
He said that they don't lose, they're not losing enterprise deals to Chinese companies right now.
They're going up against Open AI and DeepMind.
There is an interesting Chinese export control issue that I think we should get into at some point with regard to this story.
But first, let's tell you about Restream.
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Kling has hit 12 million MAUs, 20 million revenue in the last month.
Now, they seem to be on the up and to the right curve.
It's a pretty massive ramp.
The product launched 18 months ago.
But Kling is not its own startup.
It is a new project from Kui Shoe Technology.
This is a Chinese company.
And the founders, I couldn't find a single project.
John, I'm going to blow your mind right now.
Please.
Guess who worked at Kauai Shoe?
Who?
It's been on the show.
Okay.
I share a name with him.
Wait, Connor Hayes?
No.
No?
Jordan Schneider.
Jordan Snyder worked at Kau?
Yes.
No way.
He just responded to the,
to the daily newslet.
Does he want to happen?
And said,
I worked at Kwai Show.
What a comeback.
Tell all.
Jordan,
come get on the show.
You're welcome.
Come hang out if you want to.
I'll send him a note.
It'd be great to hear more of the story from him directly.
But he might be the only person that we can get to go on the record about Kui Shoe because
the founders,
I don't think they've ever done a podcast appearance.
They haven't been, you know, certainly on like the Victory Lab podcast American
circuit.
like many founders that get a company to this scale.
But there are some interesting links
to other American companies.
So Quaise Show was pretty old, especially for the AI.
Boom.
It launched in 2011 as a mobile app
for creating and sharing gifts.
This was before Vine and before Musically.
They were sort of like a precursor all those,
just by a year or two.
So you could almost say that Jordan Schneider
made his money in gifts?
I think so.
I think he created TikTok.
We should put him in charge. We should get them in the CES.
Put him in charge.
We're bringing TikTok back to America, and Jordan should be running it, for sure.
So there's some similar threads.
So Dom Hoffman, the founder of Vine, he worked at Yahoo before founding Vine, and Alex
Zhu at Musically worked at eBay and Microsoft, and I think SAP as well.
And so both of those companies, they had like big tech experience, then they went and founded
these companies.
And the founders of Quay Show, Su Hua, and Cheng Isha.
Chow also did the same. One of them worked at Google, one of them worked at Hewlett-Packard,
and then they jumped into the social media boom that was going on in the early aughts.
Like in, or the late, I guess the late-aughts, early 2010s. Is there a word for the period
between 2010? The teens? The teens? The tens? I don't know. But that era, like, post-Facebook,
there was Foursquare, Twitter, Pinterest, Snap. There were just like a new one every year was
popping up. And so they jump in on this.
And the mobile internet was expanding really rapidly in China at that time.
There was a big boom.
There were a bunch of big winners that came out of that era.
Quichot hit 100 million DAU by 2013.
So basically 18 months after they launch, they're a pretty sizable social media app.
And they actually pivoted in that 18-month timeline from GIFs to videos.
And so once they had the new product dialed, they ramped pretty quickly.
Now, there was a little bit of a slowdown between 2013 and 2019 because they didn't hit
200 million DAU until 2019. So they were sort of saturating then. But they were on a fundraising
terror the whole time. They raised $350 million from 10 cent in 2017. They integrated with
WeChat to accelerate distribution. And the company was worth around $18 billion by 2018,
just seven years into the jury. So not bad, not bad. The Quiet Show IPO was a particular
crazy moment for the company. So they raised $5.4 billion at the IPO. They were massively oversubscribed.
For that, so they say, hey, we want to raise $5 billion.
And $165 billion of demand shows up from the market.
So retail investors just went insane.
They're like, you know, what, $165 billion of demand, only $5 billion for sale.
And so the stock trades up 192% at the open.
And all of a sudden the company is worth $180 billion, and both of the founders are
deca billionaires.
Pretty sick.
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So that didn't last, though.
There was a massive sell-off.
And there were a couple, like, speed bumps
that Quichauds seemingly hit shortly after going public.
So China had a big crackdown on, in regulation,
on local tech companies.
Bite Dance became much more dominant as a competitor
and had Quichu in their sites.
And then the Quichael user growth just sort of slowed down.
And so there were a couple misses on, you know,
MAU growth. The metrics weren't looking as good. And so the investors said, hey, we're
rotating to other things. They were pulling out. And so the stock traded down 80% within six
months. So not great. But today, the market cap's around $40 billion. Like, it's still a very
real business. And also, just financially, the business is very solid. Like, it's not losing
money. You can think about it this way. So it's a $40 billion market cap. This is all
USD. I converted everything. So 40 billion market cap, 20 billion revenue, 11 billion gross
profit, net profit 2.6 billion, two and a half billion. So that's like a lot of cash flow, a lot of
net income to work with, certainly enough to do some training runs, start a Neo Lab or a video lab,
or, you know, take some new bets. And so that's exactly what they did. So in 2024,
they launched the first version of Kling, and they did this just three months after Open AI
demoed SORA. So it was kind of like the Chinese answer to SORA. Since then, they've updated Kling
30 times and carved out a nice little place on the grid of tradeoffs around model performance and
cost. For cinematic footage, people often recommend VO3 still, but for Kling, it has some really
strong characteristics in motion control and physics simulations. There's a number of places
where Kling's been outperforming there, and then there's a number of other sort of niche applications
where Kling is really great. And at 10 cents per second, pricing has been very attractive
relative to some of the other options in the market.
Although there are a bunch of ways to get like free credits,
and then if you buy bulk,
none of the pricing is like exactly apples to apples.
But they've certainly come out as a frontier quality model
at a very affordable price,
and that's led to a bunch of adoption, as we've seen,
with the 12 million monthly active users.
Interestingly, Quichaudsho claims that Kling is gross margin positive.
And so now it's unclear.
include training and we don't really, I mean, it's gross profit, so it doesn't include the
hundred or so R&D people on the team. But my question is like, what happens if they try and
scale another order of magnitude? Will they be paying more for inference? Will they be able to get
those chips because there's still this big debate over how many NVIDIA GPU should be able to
be sent over to China? So there's a little bit of debate there. And it's also just
it honestly gets me excited about MSL dropping a video model because a lot of the same
a lot of the same sort of like precursor elements in terms of like the training data in the ecosystem
when you think about just the raw data in reels that it wind up being a model that's a little
bit more opinionated maybe it has some mid journey sprinkled in there like I think that the MSL
the pressure on MSL has been intense and the initial vibes launch was not loved but
they certainly have the compute, they have the team now, they have the data,
like they have all the key ingredients to a really successful video generation model launch.
The only question is when will it happen?
And will it be one of those like temporary leapfrogs where it's better than SORA and V-O-3
for a month until the other labs update?
Will it have its own characteristics?
Because V-O-3, when it came out, it was like, oh, we can do audio in there,
than SORA was really good at vertical video.
And a lot of these, like, labs, it feels like if you're in video,
there's more room to be opinionated and come out with something
where it's like, we're really good at making content
that's all one scene.
Or our model, by default, we'll do cuts and cut from different shots to another.
Or it's really good at front facing videos.
Or, you know, it gets the face is really accurate.
Or does, you know, face replacement?
You can upload your own.
There's all these, like, features that you can win.
on, I think, nowadays, since all the different base video models are starting to look pretty
photo realistic.
So a lot of it's about...
Yeah, I mean, I'm so...
I can't wait to see Meta's next real launch here, right?
Yeah.
They have so many advantages.
They have the talent now.
The pressure is immense, but they should be able to come out with something that's super
competitive.
Yeah.
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So last month they did 20 million and of course Kwai Show put out a statement about it
Their shares went 3.6% higher to rank among the top gainers on the Hong Kong exchange
Year to you're your to date quite shows up 23% so they've been on a run and there's a lot of investor optimism about quich shows
Potential to monetize AI the company's AI powered video and graphics generation capabilities will likely drive earnings over the next few
years, S&P Global Ratings analysts wrote in a recent note, that could lower content creation
and advertising costs and boost content creation on Quaisho short-form video platform.
The companies has the second largest independent short-form video platform after bite dances
Duyan, which is basically the Chinese version of TikTok.
And so, is this going to be super important to the AI race in America?
Probably not.
We're still living in a world where you have Open AI, Anthropic, Google, really battling it out.
And then XAI is doing interesting stuff.
MSL has interesting stuff.
And then there's a couple Neo Labs that are maybe doing interesting stuff.
But the Chinese labs haven't been putting a ton of pressure.
But I think this is interesting because we're actually getting firm data on how these products are monetizing.
Of course, Google, they're not even breaking out Gemini revenue or metrics.
they'll throw out sort of random numbers,
but it's not like YouTube where they have to report out specific things
or like Amazon with ADBUS,
where they have to break out those financials.
Quiet Show is kind of doing a service to the public markets,
at least they're creating a comp for what revenue looks like
relative to MAUs.
And I mean, right now, if they're doing 20 million in revenue,
on 12 million monthly active users,
they're getting, what, $1.80 per monthly active user, a $1.80 a month,
basically like a $20 a year subscription.
That still feels a little low, but not bad for total ARPU,
for such a new service that really we don't know the mix of like Enterprise versus ProSumer,
where they will be.
Yeah, and they're not breaking out where their users are, right?
So Kling is available on AWS.
Like you can go and provision it in America and so yeah, we're not exactly sure and I think some of that inference might run in America in that case
So not exactly sure where they're where their biggest customers are
But it's just interesting to see you like you're not going to get this level of detail from Google
Because de-mines its own thing and then Gemini's in there and then you can't even just subscribe to just V-03
You have to subscribe to Gemini Ultra and then you get V03
credits. And so even Google, like, I mean, I'm sure Google knows how much, like, I pay for
Gemini Ultra, and then they know how many deep research reports I file, how many normal
prompts I use, how many times I just talk to it. And they know my, my usage pattern relative
to how many V-O-3 generations I'm doing per month for my, you know, $250 or whatever I pay.
Yeah. Anyway, moving on. Vanta. Automate compliance and security.
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There is another interesting, just sort of like nuanced narrative that I hadn't really noticed
while I was digging into Quayshow.
One is this China's aging tech workers issue, the curse of 35.
They're firing unks over there.
That's what's happening.
You can't even be an unk.
You truly can't.
You truly can't.
discrimination against older employees, particularly apparent in sector where executives openly state
a preference for youth. And so we've had back in force on, you know, in VC Twitter about, oh,
should your team be really young and cracked or should you get the experts in there? What's, you know,
obviously in America that you cannot discriminate based on age. But that hasn't stopped plenty of
people from opining about what the correct mix is, whether or not,
You should follow those rules.
But there's an article in the Financial Times that sort of has some charts here about how big tech groups in China have been downsizing in the past few years.
We can go through that.
But let's read through a little bit of this China's aging tech workforce.
The first hint, Lau Bai 34 received that his position at short video app Kwai Show might be at risk is when a 35-year-old colleague was sacked.
I was both shocked and anxious.
I realized that our situations were very similar and the same thing could soon happen.
me, said Laobai, using his nickname to avoid repercussions from his former employer.
Just months from his 35th birthday, the developer was dismissed, another victim of the group's
reorganization known internally as limestone. Wow, they're giving code names to age discrimination.
That's insane. Quichael is pushing out junior workers in their mid-30s, according to five
people with direct knowledge of limestone, including current and former employees. Laubai was told
his termination was part of the company's overall redundancy program.
The so-called curse of 35 has long-plagued workers across white-collar professions,
with older staff widely perceived as being less willing to put up with long working hours
because of responsibilities at home.
As China's tax sector reels from Beijing's crackdown,
this article is from 2024, by the way,
and economic slowdown.
Tens of thousands of jobs have been cut over the past several months,
and older workers are seen as particularly vulnerable.
technology companies have made no secret of favoring young and unmarried workers.
Ageism in the tech sector is a big problem.
There's a perception that older workers don't keep up with the latest technological developments.
They don't have the energy to keep up the hard work and that they're too expensive.
Thankfully, our very own John Coogan, who you're very much keeping up with the latest technological developments.
Otherwise, we wouldn't be talking about this because you didn't just read about Kling.
you studied and you wrote about it.
While China's labor law prohibits employers from discriminating on the grounds of attributes such as ethnicity, gender, and religion, it does not explicitly refer to age. Whoa. Hence Project Limestone. But Yang said some had interpreted the law more broadly as prohibiting discrimination against older people, meaning employers would not explicitly cite age as a reason for dismissal. Chinese tech executives have long publicly voiced their preference for younger workers in 20,
2019 Tencent President Martin Lau announced a plan to reshuffle 10% of the company's managers
saying their jobs will be taken up by younger people, new colleagues who may be more passionate.
Brutely.
By you, Chief Robin Lynn, an internal letter also made public in 2019, announced the company's plan to become more youthful by promoting more workers born after 1980 and 1990.
This thinking is deeply embedded across most tech companies.
Well, let me tell you about label box.
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So that's right.
Between 20 and 30, most people are full of energy.
You're more willing to march forward and sacrifice yourself for the company.
But once you become a parent, your body starts aging.
How are you going to keep up with the 996 schedule?
So as a former sales manager at May-Tuan, referring to the Chinese tech sector's infamous work routine of 9 a.m. to 9 a.m.
six days a week. Bight Dance, which owns the video app, TikTok and e-commerce giant Pinduoduo,
have some of the youngest recruits among Chinese tech companies data suggests. The average age of their
workers is just 27, according to the latest figures. The average age of staff at Quayshou is
28 against the 33 years old at Ride Hailing Abdi. The average age of the worker in China is
38, according to the All-China Federation of Trade Unions. This trend has become only more entrenched
with progressive waves of layoffs.
And this is the chart that I wanted to show you.
So big tech groups in China have been downsizing in the past few years.
So this is 2021, 2021, 2022, and 23 for Alibaba, Baidu, Kwaisho, and Tencent.
And they're all downsizing across those three years.
Now, I was wondering if this was just an anomaly post-COVID, just one particular period during some economic gyrations.
So I went and pulled more recent data on what's going on and it feels like they're all continuing to shrink.
The one that's growing again is 10 cent.
But Baidu has significantly downsized.
Alibaba has continued to downsize and shrink.
And I think Quichow has as well.
And so there's an interesting dynamic there that I didn't, I mean, we hear about layoffs in big tech in America, but it feels like it's like a very temporary layoff and shrink it.
and then it starts growing again pretty quickly
as they do more acquisitions.
Now, to be clear, some of these companies have shrunk
because they've divested whole business units
or sold off a piece of a company.
And so you can't really count that
because it's like the two, the jobs still exist.
They're just at a separate company.
Anyway, Lambda.
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building AI supercomputers for training and inference
that scale from one GPU to hundreds of thousands.
We have our first guess.
Before we dumb it, it's worth noting,
I pulled up MAG7 employee counts,
and every single company in the MAG 7
has increased head count over that same period
that we just showed.
Yeah, yeah.
There have been like periods of layoffs,
but even when Mark Zuckerberg comes out
and says, hey, we're laying off a thousand people
in the Metaverse team and the reality labs team,
it's like, well, he's adding tons of people
to the AI teams and tons of people
to the Instagram teams and threads teams
and Facebook core and marketing and salespeople
and events people.
Like the whole organization is just growing,
so fast that one niche like layoff is not really going to cause a multi-year trend, at least in America,
we're still growing.
So just sort of interesting that I didn't realize that was going on, that there was such a concerted
effort across four major Chinese tech companies to really reduce headcount, but it is happening.
Yeah, it is worth noting, though, that in the chat is sharing this well, that 2022 headcount
and current head count look very, very similar.
So there hasn't been a ton of growth.
Anyway,
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And without further ado, we'll bring in our first guest of the show.
Rich, welcome to the TVPN Ultram.
How are you doing, Rich?
Great to have you back.
Busy week.
Busy week in media world.
Earnings kicking off.
Yes.
Earnings.
What's top of mind?
What's keeping you the busiest?
Look, I think everyone's,
trying to figure out what is the future of Netflix?
What happens to Warner Brothers?
Does Paramount come back?
I mean, we talked about this on your show a few weeks ago, right?
We were talking about sort of this battle.
Does Paramount come back?
You know, they haven't raised their bid since we talked, you know, before the holidays.
They have not raised their bid as of yet.
But they did say it wasn't their, they said it wasn't their best in final, right?
That is true.
but, you know, the, when you look at sort of the, how much Netflix clearly wants this,
you know, Netflix yesterday went to all cash on their offer.
The Warner Brothers Board came out and talked about the piece that Netflix isn't buying,
which Paramount said was worthless.
The Warner Brothers Board said was worth, you know, $3, maybe even more as much as four to five,
maybe even more if it gets sold into pieces, which we think is possible.
And so the bar, you know, in terms of like, what does Paramount have to do to,
win, that bar is going up and up and up. And I think that's the challenge right now is how
badly do they want this? Do they want to over lever the company to get this? Or is there a better
use of capital? I mean, it's not like there aren't other assets out there. I mean, you could go
into the video game world, right? Like there's assets like Take Two, two of the biggest
actually the two biggest entertainment franchises in the world. Okay, but what's actually,
what's actually important for Paramount? Is it to build a compelling consumer subscription, right?
because when you look at them overpaying for UFC
or maybe they're not overpaying,
but if they...
It launches this Saturday.
Yeah, which I'm excited for.
But they pay $700 million or, no, was it?
It was more than that.
What was it?
It spent a billion one on UFC.
Yeah, billion.
About 2x what ESPN was paying.
Yeah, and I guess like my question,
question is how F-Dar they if they don't get the Warner Brothers assets?
And I mean that from like a how compelling is there is their subscription
without those assets?
Look, you can license a lot of content.
I mean, Netflix despite trying to buy Warner Brothers, Netflix actually just went out and
did a global licensing deal with Sony.
So after Sony movies are in movie theaters, the next place they
go is to Netflix all around the world. That's a deal that Paramount could have done. They could have
outbid Netflix for that deal. Those licensing deals are out there. I mean, universal movies are
actually going to now be, after they do a short stint on Peacock, they're going to show up on Netflix.
Like, if you want to license catalog content, there is lots of ways to do it. I mean, heck,
Amazon, like the craziest thing that's happened this week, honestly, Amazon, you probably remember
a few years ago, they went out and they spent.
$8 billion on MGM. Everyone thought that was absolutely insane. Then they had to go back because
you actually, even for that $8 billion, you didn't control the James Bond franchise. They ended up
paying the broccoli family another billion dollars to get access to control the James Bond franchise.
And then what happened today, guys? Today, the entire James Bond franchise is licensed to
Netflix. Netflix. Like literally, you can go watch Dr. No on Netflix right now instead of watching
this show. Like, it's crazy, right? So there is lots of content to license, but you have to be
aggressive. And so I think, you know, again, if Paramount has, you know, Larry Ellison's willing to put
$12 billion into the Warner Brothers deal, the Middle East is willing to give them $24 billion to invest
in this transaction, that's a heck of a lot of capital. If you want to start really both creating
a lot more content internally and licensing a lot more, Paramount has the ability to do that. There's more
NFL rights coming up for a bid soon.
Like, there are many ways to attack this beyond buying Warner Brothers.
And I just think there comes a point where overpaying for something gets silly and you're better
off finding an alternative.
And I think that's sort of the question mark.
Because remember, for Paramount, they need to buy all of these linear cable networks because
unlike Netflix, remember, Netflix generates $11 billion of free cash flow a year.
Paramount has negative free cash flow.
So, like, the ability to bid here is very different.
These are very different companies.
So what's Netflix's rationale for buying versus licensing?
Is that just thinking long-term that they're, that they'll make more money over the long-term,
or is there some other, other rationale or value that they would get from owning the whole thing as opposed to just licensing it?
John, it's a great question, because I think if you step back,
back. And they even said this. I asked this question, like, you know, what changed? Because
Netflix had not been interested in making acquisitions. They were a builder, not a buyer,
you know, throughout their entire history. And I don't, if Paramount hadn't put this in play,
and like this asset hadn't become sort of in play, I don't think we'd be sitting here talking
about Netflix buying Warner Brothers. I think once it became clear, this asset was going to trade,
and that there was a way to buy it without getting all of those sort of dying cable networks,
that there was a way to just buy the streaming business and the most importantly, the studio.
Because what this is really about, this is like when Bob Iger at Disney, remember years ago, he bought Pixar, he bought Marvel, he bought Lucas Films.
Those three iconic acquisitions of IP have totally transformed the Walt Disney company.
I think that's what Netflix sees here is, hey, these IP libraries are going to trade.
This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
Someone's going to own them.
let it be us. Like, let's not let this get away from us because we can do so, just like
Amazon for Bond needs Netflix, the ability to take all of that Warner Brothers catalog and
shine a light on it the way Netflix can, I think was just too big of a, you know, talk about a
five, ten year opportunity. It was too big to pass up. How do you think the studios and the platforms
are kind of trying to process how Gen AI will impact the value of IP? Because if I look at this and
Like if you have IP and the cost to produce new content drops dramatically, which I think is my assumption generally is that you're going to be able to produce, like, when you look at animated content and even like kind of blockbuster films, I expect the, I expect the cost to produce these things is going to drop dramatically, which means if you actually have a monopoly on the IP, you can create a lot more different content around it.
And I think that Gen.I. will also mean that there's just a bunch of like more and more and more and more and more.
like net new content, net new IP being created, but it's unclear if you have, it will maybe even
become harder to like generate real breakout hits if the whole zone is just being flooded
with a ton of content.
Well, look, in a world where, first of all, let me just step back.
I agree with you.
Gen AI is going to lead to an explosion of content.
And I don't think this is just video content.
I think it's an explosion of content.
So whether it's gaming content, you think about a UGC platform like Roblox, you think about a short form, or shorter form, you know, UGC world of video like YouTube, you think about Spotify, like all of the platforms in a world where content creation gets cheaper, the platforms win.
That is exactly part of the long-term investment thesis on Y own Netflix now.
Yes, it will get easier to make content from the Warner Brothers Library.
it'll get cheaper for Netflix.
I mean, certainly animated content,
which takes three to four years to make.
I mean, look, you know,
one of our questions for Netflix on their earnings call
was, like, how big of them misses it
that K-pop Demon Hunters, too, isn't coming out
until 2029?
Like, that's embarrassing, guys, like, right?
Like, it shouldn't take four years
to get that sequel out,
but that's because of the timeline
for animation.
That's going to compress dramatically.
Is that everything?
Because I thought that there was also
sort of just an unpredictable,
It was an unpredictable success.
They had negotiated the contract with Sony,
and so they kind of got caught flat-footed when it became such a success.
And again, it was a success that only would have happened on Netflix
where a movie can go viral,
where if that had had some limited run in theaters,
it probably would have just been forgotten.
It's true, but they struck the deal at the end of 25,
and you're not getting a movie until 29.
That is just the timeline, like Sony Pictures Animation,
which is up in Canada.
sure. There's a backlog of films that are before this, and there's just no way to accelerate that at the moment.
But I think, I want to go back to Jordy's point.
Making it cheaper to make content does mean the value of existing content probably comes under pressure.
Like, there is no doubt that since you're going to have so much more content created, existing content will have less value.
I think that's a negative for Netflix. It's a negative for Disney.
But the platform side of the equation, which is what Netflix is known for,
just like YouTube and Spotify and Roblox,
I think all of those platforms become huge beneficiaries
because people are going to have so much more content
on those platforms than they do today.
So I think it ultimately becomes an advantage.
It hurts one side of the business,
but I think as you look at it holistically
becomes a big long-term advantage
because the platform, big platforms have the eyeballs.
Like that's where people turn to, right?
Like you come home from work and you turn on Netflix,
you turn on YouTube.
Like those are the fundamental winning platforms,
and they're battling it out.
And I think AI makes that battle,
both of those companies even more powerful.
And so the sounds like,
if I could summarize the place that you're getting to,
is maybe not believing that Paramount
and the Ellison should just lever up
to this insane degree
when they could potentially take some more,
you know,
take maybe still tens of billions of dollars,
but just allocate it across a wider variety of deals.
Is that one path that you're seeing?
I think they're stretching.
When they tried to buy this thing at 19
and there were no other bidders, it was a brilliant idea.
Maybe even at 23, it was a brilliant idea.
As you start to realize that you're not winning at 30,
that's pretty, I would assume, to both of you and me,
like they're not winning at 30.
Right, so they're going to have to bump,
and they're going to have to bump meaningfully.
And so to pay $34, $35, like, you start to get to valuation levels, I don't think you can put any more debt on this.
And so you've got to come up with $10, $12, $14 billion more equity.
And even that is too levered.
Like, I wouldn't want, I would not want to be in this transformative AI media world sitting there with seven times leverage.
That is not a great place to be.
And so I truly believe David Ellison has a huge opportunity over the next decade.
but I don't think over levering to buy Warner Brothers is the best path forward.
Also, it's worth noting the state Oracle at the beginning of Q4 was trading at $313 a share.
It's now trading at $174 a share.
And so that has to be a factor, too, in terms of everyone's confidence around like, hey, how much can—
How much cash do you have available?
Look, Larry's got plenty of capital.
If you wanted to buy this for all cash, he could.
But remember, he's not.
This is a $100 billion transaction.
The Ellison family is putting in 12.
Yeah.
You know, so, like, there is a limit on how much I think the Ellison family,
they put in, you know, $8 billion, or sorry,
they put in six of the $8 billion of cash into the Paramount transaction.
Redbird put in the other two.
So six plus 12, that's an $18 billion commitment between the two deals.
It's a big number.
but on the flip side, given the size of this transaction,
I think there is a limit to how much they probably want to invest in this sector.
And again, I just think leverage is not your friend.
I look at sort of how you win over the long term in this media space,
especially given how much change,
and I think you two do a great job highlighting sort of how technology is changing what's happening.
Being levered is the last thing you want.
And I think what was really interesting is that when Skydance bought Paramount,
they injected cash onto Paramount's balance sheet to de-lever it because they didn't want to be levered.
And so I think even they understood that they don't want to be levered.
They're being forced to lever to try to compete against Netflix.
And I think that's actually the mistake.
And I just think that there's other ways for them to win long-term.
Overstretching the balance sheet does not, to me, seem like the right path.
Explain the cable assets that are sitting within Warner Brothers Discovery.
You have CNN, I believe.
There's a few other.
Yeah, and when some of the numbers are floating out, CNN doing something like projecting 600 million of even on like 1.8.
Yeah, seem like a good business.
My question is you have this Netflix fight over the Warner Brothers like that, the studio, the IP library.
And to Netflix, it feels like the TV assets are less.
valuable. Certainly they were carved out of the initial offer. Are those more important to Paramount
Skydance, the Ellison family? Is there a world where Netflix takes Warner Brothers, the studio,
and the cable assets go to Paramount? They're critically important to Paramount because Paramount,
as I said, doesn't generate free cash flow. It doesn't have the earnings capacity of Netflix.
And so in order to finance this, to lever this up seven times, you need all of that cash flow.
If they were only buying what Netflix was buying, John, this would be levered over nine times.
And so you have to have those assets.
If you're going to finance it the way they're doing it and not do this as a cash deal,
in order to do debt, they need those assets.
This becomes really important assets.
And so for Paramount, they have to stop the split of this company, which is supposed to happen this summer.
If Warner Brothers splits, Paramount can't do this deal because they can't finance it the way they currently are financing it.
The reality is these assets like CNN, do I think public market investors will like these assets?
No, I don't think so at all.
I don't think these are growth businesses.
I don't think investors are going to be excited at all.
But I do think that there are strategic buyers of these assets where there is the influence and power of owning a news network that will far outweigh its public market trading value.
And I think that's really the opportunity.
If you put this up for sale, someone's going to come in and buy CNN because it actually has important, you know, strategic value.
You think about like a next star, which is trying to build their own, you know, news network, trying to build out, you know, they're in the process of making a major acquisition of Tegna.
Like, there is certainly an opportunity where I think you'll see multiple buyers come out of the woodwork, maybe even billionaires who want, you know, hundreds of billionaires.
who see this as a way to influence.
Because remember, you could change the direction of CNN
from the perception of liberal.
You could move it more center-right if you wanted to.
And so I think there's a lot of people
that would look to buy CNN if it was available.
What about, is there any political saving grace for the Ellison's?
Is there any chance that the Netflix deal gets blocked?
is that the angle?
Like if they're not increasing their offer,
I'm sure they're back channeling,
trying to get it killed.
That would be my assumption.
I'm sure they are,
but you guys are the,
it's funny,
doing what we're doing right now
is the single greatest reason
the deal should be approved.
And I mean that sincerely.
Like, look at what we're doing.
Yeah.
We are sitting on the internet,
on X,
broadcasting live,
no cable subscription required,
but you are absolutely competing against the NBC.
And like there is no doubt in my mind
that what you're doing is a real comparable,
you know, a true competitor to linear television.
So trying to tell me that you have to define, you know,
streaming TV, subscription TV,
let alone free streaming TV like YouTube and X,
that we're going to put up artificial barriers
and say this is somehow different
than watching CNBC or,
or CNN or Fox News.
Like, look, you can make the argument.
Will it hold up in court?
Yeah.
I would love to see how a judge
is going to isolate those categories.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You mentioned Take 2 Interactive.
It's a $44 billion company.
GTA6 is coming at some point.
How does that make any sense
for either Netflix or Paramount to own?
It feels like for both of them,
it would be a massive, just different business line to enter.
Obviously, like, in the attention economy, they do compete.
If you're playing GTA6, you're not watching CNN.
But they just feel like fundamentally very different businesses to me.
Is there some synergy that I'm missing?
Well, I'd say for Paramount specifically, I mean, Skydance, Skydance games is a real focus.
I mean, Ellison, you know, I think if there's anyone in the traditional or legacy,
media world that bridges northern California and southern California, it would be David Ellison.
You know, he grew up friends, not just obviously his dad is Larry Ellison and Oracle,
but he grew up friends with Steve Jobs, right?
And like, so if you sort of look at sort of his understanding of technology, you have to
believe that he understands the importance and power of gaming.
It's why Skydans games has such big ambitions.
And so, you know, I look at sort of the power of that GTA franchise.
and Red Dead, and like, you look at sort of like the future,
and you go, sure, it'd be great to make more movies
and it'd be great to have a bigger studio with Warner Brothers,
but there's many ways to win in entertainment,
and I think video gaming is a huge category,
and while I don't think Take 2 and Strauss is looking to sell anytime soon,
look, it would be a much smaller transaction relative to Warner Brothers,
and you would get some incredible IP,
and you would shift away,
rather than owning more TV and more sort of legacy studio,
you would shift the focus of the company in an entirely different direction,
which I think could be really exciting.
Yeah.
Why did Jared Kushner pull out of the deal?
You would have to ask Jared Kushner.
I have absolutely no idea,
but I mean, I'm suspecting that just politically it didn't look great.
I mean, it might have been one thing when this was a friendly,
straightforward acquisition, but when you were getting into a competitive bidding situation and
it was sort of being looked at as sort of, hey, this is the, you know, this is someone tied to the
president that's influencing it. It might have just been, this did not look like he thought it was
going to look, but again, I honestly don't know. I've never met him. Yeah, that makes sense.
How are different video generation AI models, are any of these factors showing up in
earnings and financial reports and conference calls, like, how are management teams messaging
around generative AI? Is it just a growth opportunity, or is it actually becoming something
that moves the needle either on the cost side or the revenue side for anyone?
I would really keep your eyes on Amazon. I think they're the first mover here and really
trying to make a dent here. And it's not to make less content, you know, or sorry, to make
content cheaper and spend less. Amazon's literally looking at this.
as can we actually use AI to bring the cost down 20, 30%,
and then make more content for the same budget?
And so this sort of speaks to what you guys were sort of hinting at before.
This is a way to increase the total amount of content.
And obviously more content means more engagement.
And so I really think Amazon's taking a lead here.
Netflix has their own AI playbook.
I think you're gonna start to see it up from Netflix.
And of course, the other company that's talked about it,
we haven't seen anything,
but the other company that's most vocal,
about it would obviously be paramount, where Ellison certainly believes in the power of technology
to change the cost structure of this business. What about Disney? Disney did the big deal with Open AI.
Yeah, I wanted to ask if you're hearing about other IP holders rushing to try to do, like,
when we saw that deal happen, I was like, wow, this having like a one year, maybe more exclusive
on all the Disney IP, I feel like could be pretty significant. Once it's live, it's going to be
incredibly viral.
Jordy,
what's the last time
you used Sora?
I was never bullish
on Sora specifically.
So that's the problem, right?
So all of this is
I don't know what I was going to say.
What I was going to say, I was
bullish on the Disney IP
deal, specifically because
parents are going to
be willing to pay
to bring joy to their children by
turning their life into
Disney scenes.
Yeah, or, or,
I mean, do kids just love watching Bluey because they love Bluey?
Like, I don't, do you want to watch yourself in a, you know, I guess for the creative
parent that can actually tell an interesting story.
I mean, I get the gimmick.
Like, I remember when Sora first came out, we all did it, right?
Like, we were all trading these around, sending around.
I remember I was in a Nick's jersey before they put the copyright controls in.
I was in a Nick's jersey on the court, dunking.
Like, it was, I was catching the game winning pass and, you know, for the Giants.
Like, and I think, I think you're a little, I think you're a little bit jaded.
I mean, Disney has a whole business of just like, have lunch with a character, right?
Parents are spending hundreds of dollars.
I mean, he goes back to you're at Disneyland.
You're the kid puts their face through the cardboard cut out and they appear to be Superman.
And, and he's a little version of that.
Anecdotally, when I first took an image of my son and I turned it, I turned the two of us into dinosaurs,
he has never forgotten that moment.
And he'll bring it up all the time.
into dinosaurs and I'm really like we're not using AI right now we're going to go
we're going to go to the beach look I think it all depends on how sort of how preconceived
it is like do is it just turning it in and you have to go figure out how to make something
interesting and compelling or is it sort of already pre-engineered and preset where you stick in
your faces and the scene comes to life like I think it's got to not be a lot of work because
I think, you know, people don't, I think I will say I am not a terribly creative from like
writing stories.
Like, you know, people need to be taught how to do it.
I think that initial how to prompt, how to make it good is not easy.
And so it'll be interesting to see how easy they make it for parents to make this really
a great experience.
So I like the idea.
And look, I give Disney credit.
You would not have expected Disney to be the one to jump out in front on AI, given how much
they're focused on sort of protecting their IP.
So I give them a lot of credit for trying.
I think the key is SORA needs to become something that really becomes less of a gimmick
and more where you actually want to sit down and actually like watch the content,
because I still feel like it right now, it feels very gimmicky.
Yeah.
Yeah, I do.
I wonder what OpenAI is getting out of it, right?
Disney has 150 million people visit the parks annually.
If in the line there's like a QR,
code that's like turn yourself into such and such character.
While you're waiting.
I think like right now, open AI has a challenge, which is that free LLMs are pretty great, right?
And they have this gap.
Three is great.
Yeah, they have this real gap between turning on commerce and turning on ads and really
unlocking that from a revenue standpoint.
And I think if they can, in making these sort of like magical products that are unique to
Open AI that you're not going to be able to get at at you know through Gemini or any of these other
LMs I think it I think it could buy them a little bit of time to to turn on some of the other
monetization but again I think you're I think you're right on SORA I wonder how they're doing
see if they're still in the app store top 25 they've been in the top hundred I think they're
around 60ish or something and I agree with you I haven't used the SORA app very often but I am seeing
clearly content that has been generated with SORA distributed on Instagram.
And so there is a world where you create a prosumer tool that's subscription that people
are paying for.
And then the really creative people are distributing that content elsewhere.
They've already said that some of it will go on Disney Plus.
And so you could have someone who's a creative storyteller, tell a story that takes place
in Disney IP as the world that they're interacting with.
And then that does do well and it goes out.
And maybe it's not every single person using the SORA app to generate their own videos,
but that you're seeing content that was generated through that partnership.
And it's monetizing in a variety of ways.
I don't know.
This all gets back to what we said before.
Yeah.
There's going to be a heck of a lot more content.
There's going to be more content.
Over the next five years, there's going to be an exponential explosion of content.
Yes.
And it's funny you mentioned Instagram.
Another example, platforms.
Yeah.
platforms win.
Totally.
That is the key.
If you own and control a platform and the cost of creation comes down, you're going to be a
long-term winner.
And so that's why Spotify, why Netflix, why YouTube, why Roblox.
Like, that's how we're positioned is picking platforms are going to be the big winners over the
next five years.
So maybe that means that Paramount plus Warner Brothers and HBO is more of a platform than separate.
And there is actually a creative value to putting those together and overpay.
And so maybe there is some rhyme to the reason behind David Ellison's aggression here.
Building a platform, a daily use platform is really, really hard.
I'm not saying it's impossible, but it is really hard.
If you got the Sopranos and Looney Tunes and Superman and Batman,
and you're on there as a kid and you grow up,
and it's one of the key apps that you open next to Netflix,
next to Disney Plus.
The funny thing is, and what you're saying is,
it's all the reasons why Disney should be bidding on Warner Brothers Studio as well.
They need more content.
I feel like that one just aesthetically actually does trigger FTC just because Superman and Spider-Man can never cross paths.
Batman and Iron Man, it's too similar.
They're billionaires.
They're tech guys.
It doesn't work.
They've got to be separate universes.
I'm just saying they should want a lot more content.
They should.
100%.
No, I agree.
If they could get it done.
And they could make the same.
argument that Disney Plus Plus Warner Brothers is no more powerful than YouTube and Spotify and
Instagram and all the other platforms that are soaking up people's time, including
what are you what are you paying attention to this earning cycle?
I mean like I think the the you know this is obviously the 26th outlook for a lot of these
companies and I think you know you're going to hear sort of like in a world where so much is
changing so fast.
I mean, we came out with our, you know, we do a quarterly earning scorecard where we sort of highlight phrases that are used.
And it'll be interesting to see while AI dipped in terms of mentions last quarter, do we see even more companies talking about AI as we moved through the year?
I think that's going to be really interesting to watch.
And is it in a positive or negative light?
And like who's being disrupted by or helped by, I think is going to be really interesting to watch.
And then, of course, just going back to where we started, you know, whether it's Netflix or Paramount, someone's going to win one or
brothers, well then the question is, what does everyone else do? Because everybody else looks really small.
And so sort of seeing, you know, the reverberations of what happens because of all of this is going
to be really important to listen as you move through earnings. What do you think about some of the
private movie studios? Do you think any of those will get picked up? A-24 did around at 3.5 billion
Thrive Capital mid-2020. Certainly building a lot of IP.
they found an interesting mix of content.
I really like a lot of their films.
Do you think anyone will try and acquire
some smaller studios?
Look, the biggest problem is
smaller studios don't move the needle,
which is why I think, you know,
something like Lionsgate hasn't been bought,
but why Warner Brothers,
you're seeing this massive interest.
I don't know about the smaller studios.
I certainly think, like,
as you look at something,
you know, you look at Sony pictures
or Sony, you know,
the Sony, you know, pictures and TV.
there are assets out there that, you know, look like they are ripe for, you know, M&A,
whether it's sale or some form of combinations, it does feel like you're going to see more combinations in the year ahead.
But again, you can also just license their content, which is what Netflix and many of the other streamers have done.
Well, thank you so much for taking the time to come chat with us.
Always a good time to hang out.
Great to hang.
Have a great rest of your week.
We'll talk to you soon, Rich.
Goodbye.
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Back to the timeline.
The messy drama that dealt a blow to one of AI's hottest startups.
This is an exclusive in the Wall Street Journal.
After a relationship with a colleague, a Thinking Machines co-founder had his role changed.
Months later, he was fired after a contentious meeting.
Megan Brobroski has the story in the Wall Street Journal alongside Keech Hege.
Miramarotti's meeting with her co-founders going off the rails.
Marotti, the chief executive of AI startup thinking machines lab,
had shown up for work on Monday last week expecting to have a one-on-one with Barrett Zof,
her chief technology officer, according to people familiar with the matter.
Last summer, she had learned that Zof was in a relationship with a colleague in the month's
since she had expressed repeated concerns about his lack of productivity according to the people.
She was invited instead to an impromptu meeting with Zof, another co-founder, and a third employee.
The three told her they disagreed with the direction of the company and that they were considering leaving.
They asked Zof to be given charge of all technical decision-making, according to the people.
Moradi responded that Zof was already CTO and asked why he hadn't been doing his job for months.
So they're clearly beefing.
That's a very funny, it's a funny request.
Like, what was he doing a CTO if he didn't have full control?
But, I mean, obviously, CEO can override all sorts of stuff.
And there's other people around the table.
And, you know, titles only mean so much.
There's soft power all over the place.
So two days later, Zof was fired within hours.
All three had signed offers to rejoin Open AI, the AI lab that they had ditched a year ago to join Maradi's fledgling startup.
up. The departures are a sign of how the heated AI race that is consuming hundreds of billions
of dollars in transforming the economy is as much a battle for talent as technology for all the
high-tech advancements, AI startups are springing to develop. They are ultimately at the mercy of the
humans powering. So do you think this was a three-hour talent acquisition process? Do you think
Open AI just looked at, check the timeline and said, hey, we got three people that are on the market.
Maybe we should hire them.
It seemed like they were talking before.
They entered the portal and then they immediately got the control.
The trade portal for sure.
That's exactly what happened.
No, I think very obvious that the conversations had been ongoing.
It's very likely, I would assume they had already agreed to terms.
Yeah, it seemed like it.
Prior to the news going out.
Well, let's continue.
But first, vibe.com.
We're D2C brands, B2B startups, and AI companies advertise on streaming TV,
pick channels, target audiences, measure sales just like on meta.
So Zof's firing and decision to rejoin Open AI with colleagues also marks a pendulum swing for a company that Maradi, the startup, for a startup that Maradi, that startup's former technology chief, had founded with 20 former Open AI employees.
So 20 people from OpenAI left during the Thinking Machines Foundation.
Addressing Zof's departure to thinking machines employees, Maradi said there had been multiple issues.
with his performance, trust and conduct,
according to an internal message viewed by the Wall Street Journal.
Zof said she fired him after he exposed an intent to take a job elsewhere.
Thinking Machines terminated my employment only after it learned I would be leaving the company.
Full stop.
At no time, did Thinking Machines Labs cite me on any performance reasons or uneathical?
John, I'm breaking up with you.
No?
You're fired.
I'm bringing up with you.
It does feel like a little bit of that going on.
But, yeah, there's a war for narrative here between,
between Barrett and Mira, clearly. They didn't, so he says thinking machines didn't cite any performance
reasons or unethical conduct as part of the reason for the termination and any suggestion otherwise is
false and defamatory, Zof said in a statement to the journal. The exits, coupled with fellow
co-founder Andrew Tulloch's decampment to meta last fall, leave thinking machines with just three
of its original six founders. Marotti spent six years at Open AI where she earned a reputation for emotional
intelligence and lack of ego and was named interim CEO
during the brief period when CEO Sam Alman was deposed.
She helped launch its first product and ran almost every
aspect of the company before starting thinking machines last February.
Many of the early researchers, including Zof, that she hired,
came from OpenAI's post-training team, the division that built
Chachybtee and was tasked with teaching AI models how to communicate with humans.
Marotti's issues with Zof started over the summer when she began to suspect
he was having a relationship with a colleague
with whom he had lobbied
to bring over from OpenAI, according to people
familiar with the situation. In responses to questions
from the journal, Zof said that many people
at thinking machines wanted to hire the woman,
including Maradi. At the time,
Maradi was in the process of raising
one of the largest seed rounds in Silicon Valley history.
The company ultimately raised $2 billion at a
$12 billion valuation when she confronted
Zof about the possibility of an undisclosed
relationship with a female
employee who
was junior to him at the
company but did not report to him. He initially denied it according to people familiar with
the situation. By June, however, both Zof and the woman had told Maradi about the relationship,
which had begun when they were colleagues at Open AI people with knowledge of those discussions.
Said the woman then left the company and returned to Open AI, which is sort of a wrinkle in this.
Zof told his boss that he had been manipulated by the woman into a relationship, according to people
familiar with the matter. Shortly after that conversation, he took a break for more.
Okay, I got to, I generally think that the...
Mira, she told me it was cuffing season.
I didn't know what it meant, so I just said, okay.
I got cuffed.
Is that what happened?
Yeah, I mean, I think just saying, like, I was manipulated into becoming the significant other.
You know, you got to take a little responsibility.
You know, everyone is assuming that this is a romantic relationship.
They never reported that this is a romantic relationship.
They just said that he had a relationship.
relationship with someone else. And it was undisclosed. And I think that more companies need to be
clear about the rules around disclosures of relationships. Like if you and Tyler start an esports team,
for example, like you would have a relationship. You would be teammates on playing call of duty.
And if you didn't disclose that to me, I would feel left out. I'd be like, why don't I,
why am I not on the team? If I find out that Tyler and Scott are going off and drinking a bunch
athletic beers, athletic brews every night, you know, without me, that's a relationship
that bros.
And it wasn't disclosed.
And it wasn't disclosed.
And you might be very angry.
I might be angry.
They didn't disclose.
So I think relationship disclosures need to go beyond romantic relationship disclosers.
If you're just broing out and broing down with people, that needs to be disclosed.
That actually is kind of a real thing.
Sometimes, like, yeah.
Catching up Monday after the weekend.
Somebody's like, oh, yeah, I was hanging with so-and-so on Saturday.
I'm like, wait.
Where was my invite?
You guys hang out on Saturday?
What?
You didn't disclose that relationship?
Yeah.
Oh, so you have a relationship where you go to Korean barbecue together.
Okay.
And you just didn't think to tell the rest of the company that.
KBQ.
Yeah.
What's your thoughts?
I was going to say, I think there's, you know, I like to imagine there's some kind of like Shakespearean tragedy here, right?
Yes.
Like the Montague's and the Capulets, that's Open AI and Thing Machine.
Oh, yes.
And it's these forbidden lovers.
Yes.
And can't be together.
But now they are.
They're united because everyone is an open AI, even though, I mean, if you go to the journal and you say, I've been manipulated by that woman, who's now my colleague, because they both work at Open AI now, right?
So that's odd.
Wait, do we know that the colleague went back to open AI?
So the woman left the company, thinking machines, and returned to Open AI.
So Barrett and the woman in this relationship, which might be romantic, they might just be playing board games together or playing cod professionally together.
who knows. But they had, but they were both at Open AI. They both went to thinking machines,
and then they both went back to OpenAIA. And so they're, the, they're all in the Monagyu camp now
or the Capulet camp. I don't know who's who. I haven't studied enough to assign roles.
Do you, do you, do, have you read Shakespeare recently? Well, you know, at the end, like,
they both die. Yeah. Is that what, is that, they both die and they get steamrolled by a NeoLab?
Is that what happens in Romeo and Juliet? I don't know. Okay.
One thing is, like, rewinding to November 13th, Bloomberg reported,
thinking machines in funding talks at $50 billion valuation.
Yeah.
So the big question.
Yeah, the big question now is, did any of this financing talks actually convert into real investment?
And if not, I think that it's very little chance that a round gets done in that territory anymore.
Yeah.
Yeah, it is certainly not the best thing to have hitting the journal if you're out on the fundraising track.
At the same time, these mega rounds, it just feels like they take a long time.
We've been hearing about the Anthropic round for a really long time.
And we've also been hearing that the Anthropic round, even though it's been going on for, I don't know, six months or something, like it's going really well and everyone's excited.
And there was a whole bunch of FUD around the XAI round.
Is it going to happen?
Have they hit benchmarks?
Is there too much fear around all the different hallucinations and whatnot?
Are they seeing real traction?
The round got done.
And so this is not, like, it's not over because these rounds can just take a long time.
So it's not like, oh, you need to have the round closed in three months.
Yeah.
If you're raising at this level.
So it's a lot of fundraising.
Yeah, but this is obviously three cow-hounds.
We're figuring a lot of stuff out.
Yeah.
You know, we have a lot of momentum.
We're really excited about what we're doing.
And then you have articles in the journal that are saying your own co-founders disagree with the direction of the company.
Yeah.
I think most investors are going to be like, hey, we should probably chat before we give you another $5 billion.
But Mir is going to say they only disagree because I fired them for having relationships.
Yeah.
He said, she said.
We're solid.
Yeah, it is a he-shed.
And it has Silicon Valley talking.
Over the next several months, executives of thinking machines witnessed a drop-off in Zof's performance
after he was cycled back to a new technical contributor role with reduced executive and managerial responsibilities,
and they were tracking his performance.
They said his usage of slack, the main arena where the company did its work, declined precipitously in the following months.
He was locked in.
I don't know.
I don't see a problem with if you go from a manager to an individual contributor,
you don't need to be slack in as much.
You need to be locked in, you need to be grinding, right in prompts.
In his responses, Zof said he worked as an individual contributor for two months
and also worked on projects that included recruiting and retention of talent,
roadmap planning, and the release of the company's model training product tinker.
He said he was also out of the office for parts of November and December to illness
and a death in the family, very tragic, that's very sad,
in addition to the holidays.
So he's like, I'm not on Slack.
I was with my family on Christmas.
In October, shortly after Toulog left for META, where he had previously worked,
Zof reached out to Altman to talk about coming back to Open AI.
By the time of their meeting with Maradi last week,
Zof, co-founder Luke Metz and third employee, Samshone Holtz,
had been unhappy with the direction of the company for months
and had been holding talks with both OpenAI and META in recent weeks
about joining either company as a trio.
according to people familiar with the matter.
Interesting that meta, amid the crazy buying spree that they've been on in the talent wars,
did not jump in with something, you know, so much higher.
They already have Andrew Tulloch.
They've already got one thing in Machines co-founder.
They're basically acquiring the whole team piece by piece.
They're going to wind up paying more than the 12 billion price.
Yeah, and I don't know.
I mean, it wasn't that long ago that people were speculating,
okay, what is thinking machines worth in an aqua-hire scenario?
And based just on that type of analysis, it's worth.
a lot less today than it was less talent a few months ago.
I wonder, I wonder what they mean when they say unhappy with the direction of the company.
Like, what do they, what do they want?
Like, are they excited about the ads product at ChatGPT?
Are they excited about SORA?
Are they excited about Open AI for health or for science, research, particular technical direction,
just the GPU scaling, the buildout, just how rich Open AI will be with the backing of Oracle
and all the, yeah, it's $1.4 trillion.
A little bit nerve-wracking if you're an investor.
But if you're an AI scientist, you're like,
I'm going to have unlimited resources.
And so it could be that. I don't know.
I think the big question is obviously,
what's Albania's move?
Stand by, Mira, ride with Mira.
Potentially lead this round at 50, right?
Albania, the government of Albania
is an investor.
Is an investor?
No way.
Into thinking machines.
No way.
They could decide to take a bigger swing, though.
The GDP of Albania is somewhere around 30 billion USD.
30 billion.
And anyways, they might, you know, take a Trump-Intel kind of dynamic.
Yeah.
You know, we need a nationalized thinking machines.
They could.
I have like a joint venture between...
I don't think you can nationalize a company that's based in America if you're not an American government.
Joint venture between A16Z and Albania.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I saw a vibra of Jamie Diamond talking about, like, how important it is that his bank is big.
And he says, J.V. Morgan, has to be big because we bank, you know, all of the Fortune 500.
We bank governments. We bank the U.S. government.
That's what he said. It's such a good line. Banking governments.
I really want to know what's involved in that.
Anyway. Yeah. So.
Yeah. I think, like, I think that my takeaway from this is, like, the pressure, the pressure for thinking machines to deliver went from.
like, like pretty extreme to like maybe slightly more extreme.
But it's actually not that much of a difference.
I feel like they were already under a lot of pressure.
Similar to meta, where like dense talent concentration haven't shipped anything like,
you know, truly remarkable yet.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Obviously everyone's looking to see if they're going to be a real horse in the race.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
And the other thing is like this team was created during an insane people.
period of drama.
Yeah.
So it's not all that,
it's surprising that...
Born in the drama.
They were born in the drama.
Now they're living in the drama.
Yeah.
And, but they can consolidate.
Yeah.
They can refocus.
They can realign the team.
Yeah.
They still have a bunch of super talented people.
Yeah.
And I'm,
I'm sure they can still, you know,
figure out kind of a niche and deliver.
Yeah.
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Well said.
After the meeting,
so the three co-founders,
the three Thinking Machines employees
that have this meeting,
Mira asks them,
have you already committed to jobs elsewhere?
Mets and Schoenholz said they hadn't.
Zof didn't answer,
according to some people that were in this meeting.
The day after the meeting,
Zof had dinner at a pizzeria
with meta executives, Alex Wang,
and Nat Friedman, he confirmed.
On Wednesday, he was fired.
Marotti posted on acts of thinking machines
had, quote, parted ways with Zof.
Less than an hour later, opening eyes,
CEO for applications.
Is it CEO for applications, Vigisimo?
I thought a CEO of applications, Vigisimo.
Anyway, she's running the application.
She posted that Zof, Mets, and Shonholz
were returning to the company
and that negotiations had been underway,
quote, for several weeks.
That's an interesting thing
to put in your hiring post
because there's clearly going to be a narrative
about how sudden was this, when
was this decided, blah, blah, blah. But she
is saying proudly that we've been
talking to these folks for weeks. She said
Zof would report to her
while the other two would report to him.
So,
the craziness with
thinking machines. End of the day, you got
Mira, you got John Shulman.
Yeah. Like still
insane team. And it feels like there's, yeah, it feels
like there's some sort of niche that could, they could
carve out. The, I mean, when we first heard about the like fine-tuning for LLMs for business,
for B-to-B companies, like that seemed like not, it was not the AGI superintelligence pitch.
It was also not the, okay, we're going to niche down and give consumers one specific thing.
We're going to go after audio. We're going to go after video. We're going to go after,
we're going to make an AI version of Excel or AI version of PowerPoint. Like there's so many,
like niche AI companies that have done very well. We're going to do AI for legal,
AI for health, right? Like there's all these ways that you can niche down. They kept it sort of
broad, but it felt like going into the enterprise with her connections and her background and
the team seemed like something that could ramp revenue very, very quickly. Yeah, and the raw
talent of the team. Totally. Yeah. A lot of which still exists. Yeah. So, but I mean,
really, like the strongest way to counter like the vibe war that's happening right now is just show some
good numbers. Because if the business is working, even if you have a little bit of tumult on the
technical side and there's, you know, a CTO leaving, like if the business is working. With OpenAI,
it's like, you know, some of the craziest drama ever grounding a company and then you look
at, you know, the revenue ramp and it's like, you know. And the DAUs are just through the roof and
you're like, okay, well, clearly the user was completely unaffected. I bet if you look at the
chat GPT daily active user growth chart, you cannot see Sam Altman getting fired.
then rehired. It's not like people were like, well, I'm not using this app today and I'm
firing it back up. What's easy? Like, no, there was no blip in the graph, I'm sure, around that
because this was like Silicon Valley drama. And for the average user, it's like, did it deliver or not?
Yeah. And that's just something that happens all the time when there's these drama elements that
burst onto the scene and take over the timeline for a few days. Yeah, another possible route and
and things would have to get really bad over there.
They'd really have to be directionless,
which, again, the team clearly was debating on if the direction was correct,
but it sounds like they do have a direction.
But I still think this is a company that would have a pretty meaningful valuation
in an aqua hire context, right?
Like if Amazon were to come and buy them,
how much would Amazon pay to get John Schulman and Maramari?
Yeah.
like at Amazon.
Should be able to clear the pref stack for sure.
Yeah, by like a long shot, you would imagine.
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What's next?
I wanted to look at this photo of Davos.
It's AI generated, but it captures a good vibe.
A whole bunch of private planes parked there.
That's not real.
But I like the Kevin Quack contextualized it anyway,
saying this looks like Hoth echo base and and he shared one further down that's
that's Davos transformed into a into a Star Wars scene anyway over in Davos
Trey says we need to know what those machines are thinking you call it
thinking machines intelligence thinking machine intelligence TMI labs I mean
we don't know it's possible that when they think when they're they were
debating the product
direction. They were talking about should we make branded 45s, right? We know they're making,
we know they have branded plates. Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes. But we never saw evidence. Maybe that was the
technical direction. Yeah. Like, do you lift heavy or do you do lower weight, higher wraps? Yeah. And there
was a massive debate over that. Uh, anyways. I mean, Jim Buddy is another relationship that you
need to disclose. If you're spotting each other, I want to know about it. I want to know who's spotting
who. Because that's an important relationship that's happening outside of the workplace. I got to
about it if you're gonna be lifting together.
Anyways, I'm rooting for thinking machines
and excited to see what they do.
The Demis and Dario are apparently just broking out
in Davos. I love it.
Liss Aal-Gaib says, Demis Hesabas,
is CEO of Google Deep Mind at Davos quote.
When told that Dario Amade was here earlier today,
his face lit up.
Two minutes later, he was talking about a CERN-like collaboration
for AI.
Once the labs are close to AGI, they're just stoked on each other.
I'm on pretty good terms with pretty much all of the other leaders at the leading labs.
I love Ilya and we're good friends. You love it. Just some positivity hanging out at Davos
Demis said he thinks entry-level jobs and internships might fall away due to AI
sees consistency as the biggest problem with current agents.
Advice for college graduates get incredibly proficient with these new tools, AI agents. And so
Yeah, we were debating this earlier.
Like, like, the role of a junior engineer is going away,
but is it possible that it just changes?
Like, like, what makes a senior engineer that much better with an AI tool
that they don't need anyone else who can potentially use AI tools as well?
How much of this is something where, I mean, to go back to like the Chinese young
hiring boom.
There's an element where
I'm sure there's companies where
you have older software engineers who are more
resistant to adopt AI technology
and you'd actually be better off with a young
junior person. Here's a tough question for you, Tyler.
What are
you fantastic at that
AI is bad at?
Walking around
being physically
embodied. Embodied. That's the last thing.
So maybe that's like for China. It's like,
Maybe the, you know, Silicon Valley has kind of found like pederasty from first principles.
Maybe, you know, it's just a similar thing over there, right?
There's actually a lot of value.
I think, like, so generally, like, I'm kind of, I've always gone between, like, is our jobs actually going to go away from this?
Or are they just going to get, like, more fake?
Yeah.
Like, Jordy and I were talking about this earlier where it's like, are there just going to be no junior jobs in like five years?
Or are they just going to be like you're just kind of, it's like, you know, you're,
in the office because it's like people like having other people in the office and stuff like this.
So I don't really know where I sit, but I think I'm probably more in the camp of like,
you just don't need to hire new people.
Yeah.
Ken Griffin.
What did Ken Griffin say?
Ken Griffin has been on a tear.
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So the post here, one up for the team.
Citadel's CEO says AI has re-empowered technology departments in every business,
but claims that 50% of entry-level white-collar jobs will disappear due to AI in five years is hype.
He's throwing some cold water on Dario's talk track.
But let's play the video.
Let's play the video.
Are we getting audio?
Where's King Griffin on this one?
Is this the right one?
From Disclosed TV, Citadel CEO says AI has reempowered technology.
Is that the one, Jordy?
Yeah.
Let's play it.
And we are, I guess, in the market for an AI agent that can play videos on our...
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We're an extraordinary period.
First of all, it's a pleasure to be on the gloom and doom panel.
We're not going to do.
We're not an extraordinary period.
As I said at the beginning, it's not preordained that it has to head badly.
The end note of the 1920s, which was, of course, the Great Depression, Andrew.
So let's take a step back and talk about where we are right here right now.
The area of recklessness is the spending.
of governments around the world,
who are all, with little exception,
all spending well beyond their means.
That's the recklessness of this moment in history.
This is not a parallel to the 1920s
in terms of the recklessness of the private capital markets.
It's a story of the recklessness of government spending.
Within the private sector,
there's a huge question as to where AI will take us.
And I was carefully taking notes
in listening to what Larry has to say
or to what Madame Lagarde has to say,
because this is one of the big issues of our moment.
Will AI create the productivity acceleration
that is honestly that is hoped for in Washington
and in the halls of government around the world
as a ways to overcome the profit at spending
that we're currently engaged in?
The world needs a savior, and the hope is that AI,
is the savior that we need for productivity.
And the challenge with this is it may or may not be.
We just don't know yet.
Now, there's a tremendous amount of hype around AI,
and in some sense, the large AI companies need to create that hype
to raise the tens of, or actually hundreds of billions of dollars of investment.
You hear that, Tyler.
That are going into the field.
Cope.
be able to raise hundreds of billions of dollars. We'll spend, and Larry can probably correct
me of this, but roughly $600 billion this year in CAPACs for data centers in the United States.
I think it'd be larger. But does that mean that it's getting hyped up too much, or the hype
is required as a sales mechanism?
Go ahead.
Larry's backing you up, Tyler. All right, let's play the next video, which was the one I was
originally talking about, which is talking about job loss.
What AI has done is it has reempowered the head of technology in every business in the United States,
and it has pushed budgetary resources into the hands of the chief technology officer.
So what you're seeing across American business is actually the impact of American businesses spending more on digitization writ large,
of which AI is just one component.
It's one component.
But in some sense, it's the cover story
that creates the space for American companies
to really embrace technology in a much more profound way.
I was in China about a year and a half ago
with a group of prominent global executives,
and they were all talking about how AI was changing their business.
It was so fun.
And I said, let's go around the table
and let's each share a story
as to how we're using AI
to make our business better.
I heard five or six great stories.
Not one involved generative AI.
Does that mean that the productivity
from generative AI is...
You're telling me a big company's inefficient
in the influencing technology.
Are you in a camp that, you know,
as Dario Amadee says,
you know, half of all entry-level white-collar jobs
will, you know, be gone in the,
next five years? Is it that kind of change?
Look, you know, put yourself in his shoes.
How much money does the AI community need to raise over the next five years?
So he's wrong about this, right?
Demis doesn't need to raise.
Damis doesn't need to raise.
Datas Center spent the United States this year over half a trillion dollars.
Google's doing this as a cash flow.
Over $500 billion.
Like, that's true for every other lab lead except for Demis.
You would expect Dennis to be like, no.
You're going to profoundly change the world.
Yeah, but the question was about Dario.
Oh, Dario, okay.
So is it high?
Yes.
Of course.
AI will not.
Like, how else are you going to get people to write $500 billion of checks just this year alone?
Right?
There needs to be a level of like AI is your savior almost.
And the question is, where will AI land in productivity gains at the end of the day?
In certain areas, we know it's going to be profound, whether it's call centers,
whether it's helping to improve the productivity of software engineers.
But in a number of white-collar jobs, you know, there was a recent Harvard paper.
on this, they called it AI
Work Slop. That it looks
good, but if you sort of
peel back the onion,
the substance isn't there. I was with one
of my colleagues who runs our Commoddy's business, and
he handed a report on
that we were generally with an AI
engine. Doesn't matter what the topic
was, the first few sentences, like,
wow, that's really insightful.
And then you go down below that, and it's
all garbage. So that's going to, and we are
running out of time, but that suggests that
AI is not going to come to the rescue to make up for the various negatives that we discussed
about in the first part of this conversation. So in 10 seconds, does this mean the US economy?
But remember, the spending on technology writ large is having a clear positive impact on the economy.
So which economy in the world benefits most from this conflagration of geopolitics, economic policy,
and technology change? I mean, who benefits the most? That's a really interesting way to put it.
In 10 seconds.
In 10 seconds.
You know, when it's all said and done, it's somewhat ironic, but it's the United States and China are the two big beneficiaries of this moment.
Yeah, so one thing, like, the way that I like process this is as somebody who, who's not indexed to AI scaling and AI progress.
But a lot of the most talented people he's ever worked with have ended up working in AI.
They've gone from the East Coast and gone over to the West Coast and started working at the labs.
And so while he's not working in a lab, I do feel like his, and you can argue like he's not a GI-pilled.
He clearly is not processing models developing more advanced like reasoning,
and agency and all these things that are going to unlock value.
We could be here next year and he could be like, oh, like, I got a report from a commodities trader.
It was AI generator.
It was amazing.
Like that's happening in so many other fields where people have said, oh, like, I'll always be able to clock generative imagery.
And then they look at the latest nanobanana pro output.
And they're like, yeah, okay, actually, I can't.
I have updated.
That certainly happens.
The interesting thing about his, so I like his, I like the point about the incentives of lab leads
to make grand proclamations about progress in order to underwrite larger financing rounds.
That's clearly true.
That's clearly something that does happen.
But explain Demis sounding exactly like Dario in terms of timelines and impact.
Like a lot of their rhetoric is very, very similar.
And Demis is in a position to just say, oh, yeah, like we're going a lot slower because
we're doing this off of cash flow and like we don't need to raise and it's going to be longer.
Like that actually might be to his benefit to sort of like pour cold water on all the competition
that's out there trying to raise all this money.
If he comes out and says, yeah, like you don't, you don't need to lever up and build a trillion
dollars worth of data centers because progress isn't going to be that fast.
That would be probably beneficial to Google, maybe.
I don't know.
But it certainly doesn't seem like he has to message that.
I mean, maybe to the Google shareholder.
somewhat, but not really. It's not really showing up in Google's financials yet. It's not
really changing business. Well, Demis might wait until Anthropic and opening I get their S-1s out
and then decide, all right, it's time. Now it's actually over. What do you think about that?
As a counterpoint to Ken Griffin's CEO of So the Dell, he's saying that all of the AI hype
is about fundraising for these labs. Demis doesn't count there, right?
Right? Yeah, I mean, doesn't he still have to like convince, you know, Sundar to like give them?
Yeah, and the internal markets. Yeah. And the show. But I think that's probably true. But I still, it's like, you know, he had the example of like, oh, he talked to business leaders and how are you improving your company with AI and none of the examples were AI. Like those are, you just know those are like, it's from some consulting firm that gave them the model that was like three years ago.
Yeah. They need some, they need some younger people at these companies that would be using generally of AI in transportation.
formative ways as opposed to, yeah, I mean, it feels like those two things cannot be true.
You cannot have a sclerotic, you know, large business that is failing to take advantage of AI
and simultaneously not be hiring young people who are more AI native.
It feels like you have to, you have to, you know, embrace one or the other, like either.
Yeah, and he's discounting like any concept of progress, right?
like he's like oh when you read something it's like total slop now that's exactly how code
was like two years ago yeah now there's software agents that can you know pretty autonomously
build entire system yeah yeah that's that's certainly like not unlikely to happen in just general
writing yeah yeah yeah king griffin needs to vibe code a mobile game or something yeah i think i think
calling calling out that's saying like labor replacement theories and pitches are like catnip for
venture capitalists. They're doing white collar work. And if they get the pitch that, you know,
some technology is going to, like if you go to, if you went to VC and you gave a really
compelling pitch of how your product is going to replace all VCs in the world. And it actually
made some sense. And you could kind of imagine how it would play out. I'm sure you get a lot of
investor interest in something like that, right? Because you're just trying to hedge. So it is,
it is like the most compelling narrative. narrative. Yeah. Finn.
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Let's click over to Jamie Diamond at the World Economic Forum in Davos. He's talking about raising taxes and special interest groups and the audience.
That makes society work better for everybody. Would you raise taxes to pay for that?
I don't think you'd have to. I think it would drive a lot of growth. I think I did the numbers at one point. It would be $60 billion of spending. I think it would be $60 billion of spending. I think it would.
probably create more than that of growth and taxes.
And if you have to raise tax a little bit, that's fine.
But again, I don't want to have the buying your argument.
I don't know anyone, okay?
And you guys in the room, you know, be Democrats, Republicans,
who thinks the spending that sending another trillion dollars
to Washington, D.C. will actually improve anything.
So when you say raised taxes, if you said raise taxes
and directly give it to the people who need it, do it?
Of course.
No?
So, that does not what happens.
We are running out of time.
all these interest groups, you know, and they give it to their friends and all that.
Which is why the people are considered a swamp.
It's kind of a swamp.
You know, the 17,000 lobbying groups.
Bank companies are guilty, too.
They're just fighting for their one self-interest as opposed to what's good for my country.
But, you know, that's what happens in Congress.
You know, and you see how these bills get spent, like the Chipsack was a good idea.
Until, you know, it had to be a union, place base, child care, diapers, you know.
What the hell are we doing?
And we do it over and over.
And then it fails.
That's my president.
He's not going to spend more money.
Yeah, Jamie Donnan's great.
Let me tell you about Century.
Century shows developers what's broken and helps them fix it fast.
That's why 150,000 organizations use it to keep their apps working.
Demis, we've been talking about him and his blockbuster performance at Davos.
He had a number of interviews.
This one with Emily Chang talking about.
about a pause on AI and whether or not he supports it.
A very revealing quote, very, you know,
says a lot of his timelines and his pee doom in some ways.
Let's watch this clip from Emily Chang interviewing Demis.
To give regulation time to catch up,
to give society time to sort of adjust
to some of these changes.
In a perfect world, if you knew that every other company
would pause,
every country would pause. Would you advocate for that?
I think so. I mean, I've been on record saying what I'd like to see happen.
It was always my dream of the kind of the roadmap, at least I had,
when I started out deep mind 15 years ago and started working on AI, you know,
25 years ago now, was that as we got close to this moment,
this threshold moment of AGI arriving,
we would maybe collaborate, you know, in a scientific way.
I sometimes talk about setting up an international CERN equivalent
for AI, where all the best minds in the world would collaborate together and do the final
steps in a very rigorous scientific way involving all of society, maybe philosophers and social
scientists and economists as well as technologists, to kind of figure out what we want from this
technology and how to utilize it in a way that benefits all of humanity.
And I think that's what's at stake.
Unfortunately, it kind of needs international collaboration, though,
because even if one company or even one nation or even the West decided to do that,
it has no use unless the whole world agrees, at least on some kind of minimum standards.
And, you know, international cooperation is a little bit tricky at the moment.
So that's going to have to change if we want to have that kind of rigorous scientific approach to the final steps to AGI.
Pod friendly guy in the YouTube chat says,
damas is the Steve job of AI.
You're wearing the TVPN turtleneck today.
Maybe we need to make a turtleneck and award it to the who we crown, the Steve Jobs of AI.
No, he's a fantastic communicator.
Demis is inspiring, balanced, measured, knowledgeable, just not, he's not completely accelerationist at all costs, but also not completely dumerous.
I don't know.
It's a really great take.
I don't know.
What do you think, Tyler?
Yeah, I think there's maybe an interesting way to look at this, like the question of pausing.
where, so if you take, Dario says that he's not competing with deep mind or open AI, right?
Because he's an enterprise, they're a consumer.
Yeah.
Wait, wait, wait.
Sorry, sorry.
Clarify who's who there?
So, Dario.
Dario and Anthropic.
Anthropic is enterprise.
Is saying we're not competing with deep mind because that's a consumer company?
Is that what he said?
Yeah.
That's what he said yesterday.
Like broadly, he was like, we don't have to monetize, billion users, whatever.
He's like, just ignore those companies in their enterprise businesses.
They don't matter.
Yeah, but so if you take that and then.
So that means, you know, there's some way in which, you know, DeepMind's real only competitors, Open AI.
If, you know, we were just talking about how DeepMind doesn't have to raise money, right?
They're from my cash flow.
So basically, there's a way to look at it where you can either pause for safety reasons so we can catch up with regulation or whatever.
Or it's just because if we basically pause all AI, it's actually fine philanthropic, right?
Because they don't have a like super direct competitor, right?
Open AI is trying to get more into enterprise.
Maybe deep mind is as well too
But like they have like fairly strong position perhaps
Yeah
And then it's gonna hurt opening I a lot right
Yeah, they need to raise a lot of money
To compete with deep mind
Yeah
So if you can basically make this like almost
Cartel looking you know
Like thing
Group with Anthropic and Deep Mind
You can basically try to take out open AI
No
It's kind of like
I mean that's very cynical way to look at it.
Yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah I hear you
The other the other interesting thing is that he says
He says
he would maybe potentially support a pause,
but then what he describes is not,
oh, all the researchers just focus on productization
of the current models.
Like stop training, stop doing reinforcement learning,
stop optimizing models,
and instead, like, let's build more great SaaS.
Like, that's not what he's saying.
He's saying, like, let's all still do research.
He's like, we need to pause AI progress
to focus on ads and AI progress.
That would fire me up.
But that's not what he's saying.
What he's saying is, like, get all the
research together in CERN.
And CERN is not pausing scientific research.
Like, if anything, CERN is a way to accelerate AI research, but in a collaborative way.
So he's really just calling for more collaboration and a pause on competition or a pause.
And I mean, I feel like everyone in the scientific community, in the research community,
definitely laments the days of your where there were more open research papers, more sharing of knowledge.
It wasn't all constantly just backdooring through hiring and poaching.
Some of it was just open.
You could just download the transformer paper.
But even in that case, like DeepMind is still like, you know, on the defensive, right?
Because Open AI is trying to take, like, Google is like, oh, search is dying, right?
Open AI is trying to take it away.
If you can basically get everyone to be like, oh, we're going to, you know, collaborate,
everyone's going to share the research.
That's probably better for DeepMind.
So, yeah, so game theoretically.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you would never expect the leader to.
say, hey, let's pause the race.
You wouldn't expect Open AI to pause the race
because they're the ones who have so much more
to gain from attacking the other...
Just continuing, pushing further. Yeah.
Interesting. Yeah. Okay.
I mean, it depends on what you mean by pause.
Because I feel like if there was like a model freeze
and you only have Opus 4-5, GPD 5.2, Gemini 3-Pro,
you have those models.
Like, Open AI could still compound on
the on the DAU front, right?
Yeah, I mean, yeah, there's a bunch of ways it could actually go down.
But there's like different ways to look at it, I think, rather than just like pure safety.
Yeah.
There's some extra context here from Andrew Kerr.
And he says, Dario said the same thing during the day after AGI discussion this morning.
They were both asked for their timelines.
Demas said five years.
Darius said two.
Later in the discussion, Darius said that if he had the option to slow things down, he would
because it would give us more time to absorb all the changes.
He said that if Anthropic and Deep Mind were the only two groups in the race, he would meet with Demis right now and agree to slow down.
But there is no cooperation or coordination between all the different groups involved.
So no one can agree on anything.
And it's very funny thinking about this CERN-like, bring all the researchers together in the context of like the craziness at Open AI, the craziness the thinking machines, all the interpersonal aspects, the human element of AI progress.
that you get everyone in and it's like,
okay, we need to pick a leader.
Like, okay, who's in charge?
Who decides what?
Like, how do these all these people get along?
Because some of them have some pretty crazy bad blood.
He's like, hey, you kicked me out of this lab,
and then you quit when I thought you were going to be my co-founder,
and then you were having this relationship with this person.
Like creating harmony in the barnyard might not be the easiest thing.
Interesting point from Deepak in the chat.
No open AI at Davos, question mark,
There is. So I believe Sarah Fryer didn't interview there. The interviews are on like a delay. A lot of them happen at 10 p.m. Davos time. Also, the first day of the conference was yesterday. So we will be getting more Davos content today. I did feel that though. But a lot of it's just about when different segments happened. So I mean, amazing move by Dario and Demas to come out with absolute heater on day one.
very early, establish some ground games, some ball control. Because Sotian Adele is there. He's
going on the All-In podcast, and he's already giving quotes, and there's some clips from him.
But we haven't seen him. He hasn't been aura-farming. Microsoft hasn't been aura-farming Davos,
as effectively as Google and Anthropics. So, you know, a little bit of tale of the tape there.
Well, let's skip ahead. To 11 Labs. Build intelligent, real-time conversational agents.
Reimagine human technology interaction with 11.
Labs, and I believe the CEO of 11 Labs is there at Davos, but what do you want to move on to,
Dr. This is, I mean, this was the, probably the story that got reported on the least out of
Davos over the last 24 hours, but is arguably the most important. The most expensive car in the
world, everyone wants to know. Of course, it is the car that Jensen bought his parents. So let's
pull up this clip. I love it. This is great.
on that journey and I know we have many more years of that journey ahead of us.
Thank you. I appreciate that. My only regret was at the IPO, after the IPO, I wanted to buy my parents something nice. And so I sold Nvidia stock at a valuation of $300 million. The company was at a valuation of $300 million. And I bought them a Mercedes S class. It is the most expensive car in the world.
Yeah.
They regret it.
They still have it?
Oh, sure.
Yeah, they still have it.
Yeah, good.
Jensen, congratulations on that.
Sure.
Yeah, what is five?
So it's currently a $4.5 trillion.
$4.5.
And an S class when...
Trillion.
They went public in 1999.
So...
So what was that class class?
Like 60K something back then?
I don't know.
80K?
What did...
I mean, you're talking about a...
Maybe a billion-dollar car?
I don't know if I have the math right there, but it seems like...
Yeah, around 65K.
It seems like the stock might be up to 15,000 X.
I don't know.
I mean, it's definitely up 1,000 X, right?
Because it's, yeah, 300 million, 300 billion.
And then you get another zero, so 10,000 X.
Wow, that is brutal.
Brutal.
Brutal.
Worse than the TV I bought.
with a Bitcoin. Hey, worth it. I bought a TV with a Bitcoin. Terrible. Not even 4K. Things in the
trash now. It was like a thousand dollars back then. It was ridiculous. Anyway, Cisco, the
Davos of Cisco. Cisco AI Summit. It's February 3rd. It brings together leaders from
NVIDIA, Open AI, AWS, and more to discuss the future of the AI economy. The whole thing will be
live streamed and will be there for a gigas stream. Mark your calendars, February 3rd, Cisco,
I hope to see many of you there. We're very excited. President Trump had some comments in Davos.
Alex Heath broke the story, took it to the timeline. Alex Heath says a quote from Trump,
Mark Zuckerberg showed me a plant where he put it over map the size of Manhattan, miles long,
miles wide. It literally covered most of the island of Manhattan. It's called a big plant.
I think he's talking about a data center. But I don't.
I like that he's calling a plant.
That is a big plant, a power plant, essentially.
A plant of things.
And President Trump also said that the stock market dip is peanuts,
that the stock market is going to be doubled.
And boring business quotes it and says,
the president is literally telling you
that the stock market will double from here and you are buried.
It's a crazy, crazy line.
What else did Trump say here?
He said, our stock market dip is peanuts.
The Dow is going to hit 50.
50,000 and double to 100,000 in a relatively short period of time.
Anyway, let me tell you about Apluven, profitable advertising made easy with axon.a.I.
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Someone should try to follow up and figure out, ask the president, are you giving financial advice?
And what's driving it? Are multiples going to double? Or is our earnings going to double? Or are we going to see a little bit of earnings growth?
a little bit of multiple expansion.
What's driving the valuation increase?
I'd love to know that. Let's get to the bottom of it.
Semaphore made a print newspaper for Davos.
I mean, first, we need to confirm that Philip Johnston,
the founder of StarCloud, former guest on the show,
he is there at Davos.
He's dropping takeaways.
He's asking questions.
He was the only person that got to ask Demas a question, right?
That's crazy.
I mean, makes you ask some questions.
It does. It does.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, what a run from Philip Johnston.
But it's been fun seeing like the on the ground.
Obviously, there's a lot of polished clips
that are going out from the media organizations.
But he's doing citizen journalism over there.
And we thank him for his service,
bringing clips to the timeline,
saying that Jensen Wong announced
that we need more energy.
And also he broke the story,
at least to me,
that Jensen's parents own,
the most expensive Mercedes in the world.
I wonder if they still have it.
Anyway, let's go to Semma4.
First, let me tell you about Gemini 3 Pro,
Google's most intelligent model yet,
state-of-the-art reasoning,
next-level vibe coding,
and deep multimodal understanding.
I like that sound cute.
It's a good one.
It's the best.
Anyway, read over at Semaphore says,
it's fun to work for a print newspaper,
again, although I missed the print deadline
for some changes,
which brought back some fond
Wall Street Journal memories and traumas.
We really missed our window to do the
TBPN print newspaper. Somebody sent us a fully built-out TVPN print newspaper. It looked absolutely
fantastic last year. We wanted to roll out at least a weekly, maybe daily print newsletter, but
couldn't get around to it. This is a very interesting lead, too. I can't find this actual article.
I'll have to find a digital version of this, but he says, techies ignore the geopolitics on their
Davos Home Turf. Quote, this reminds me of Burning Man, but not how you think. I'm like just zooming
into trying to read this. AI has finally been eclipsed by geopolitics at Davos. There are essentially
two conferences happening. One involves Greenland, Venezuela, and the rewriting of the world order. And the
other is really just a tech conference centered around selling and dealmaking. That's the one I want to go to.
Yeah, we were texting with a journalist who is writing a story about tech's involvement in Davos.
And my point was like, it does feel like Davos is coming back and the tech companies are there.
Although from the outside, I think a lot of people think of Davos purely as a meeting of world leaders and geopolitical,
and they're following the Greenland story.
And they're very much looking at the front page of the Wall Street Journal.
But if you go to the front page of X and the timeline, it's all Damis and Dario clips and Ken Griffin and a few others.
But mostly, like, the stuff that I've been seeing has been focused very much so on tech.
But there is a whole different story going on all around Greenland and whatnot.
But we got to talk about AI timelines.
It's more interesting to me.
I'm just so excited.
Should we talk about why Elon is racing to take SpaceX public?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
But first, speaking of public, public.com.
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So why is Elon racing to take SpaceX public?
Putting data centers in space push the bean air toward an IPO, sources say, according to the Wall Street Journal.
SpaceX resisted going public for years.
Then came the rise of artificial intelligence.
Elon's rocket maker became one of the country's most valuable private companies due in part to its ability to develop risky space businesses outside the scrutiny of public investors.
Its executives like to say the company wouldn't IPO until its rockets.
were regularly flying to Mars.
That was before the rush to build data centers for AI computing prompted Musk, Jeff Bezos,
and others to propose putting them in space.
The idea has prompted skepticism for many engineers, given the technical challenges, poised
by building solar-powered AI data centers that zip around the Earth.
But it has continued to gain traction, and Musk has become obsessed with the idea of SpaceX
being the first to do it.
Such a feat would be hard to attempt without billions of dollars in capital and IPO could
deliver in one fell swoop.
the billionaire.
It's so funny to just refer to
Elon as like just a billionaire.
The billionaire also sees the SpaceX IPO.
Did you correction like two months
of a trillionaire?
Yeah, two months once he's a trillionaire.
Teener.
Teener is a new, I'm excited
to be throwing that around.
The Seas of SpaceX IPO is a way to help
his AI company XAI, catch up to rivals.
Musk has a long-running rivalry with OpenAI
CEO Sam Altman, who last year
explored buying a rocket company to deploy satellites with AI computing capabilities in
space. Two of XAI's competitors, OpenAI and Anthropic are eyeing their own IPOs this year,
and Musk seems eager for SpaceX to hit the public market first. SpaceX is expected to select
banks to lead the stock offering soon. Musk has told people he wants to complete the IPO by
July. He wants to get it done so he can have a nice summer. Philip Johnson needs to spack
StarCloud, like today. He spacks it. It's going to 20.
billion overnight. Like, it's going to be the biggest meme stock. Anytime that there's a,
that there's a, like, a public spacked comp to an Elon company that's, like, private, it's just
like, everyone wants it because they want the, they're like, well, if the Elon thing works,
like this one will take 2% of the market. So math's out.
Certainly be able to raise a lot of money.
Musk's apparent change of tune on SpaceX IPO plans in the middle of last year,
surprised many. The Bean Air, soon to be Teen Air, has loudly completely, completely.
about running his existing public company Tesla and is repeatedly tangled with regulators in the courts
over issues like his compensation.
Everyone thought, like, Elon ran the biggest A-B test on what it's like to run a large-cap company
in the public markets and the private markets.
He had a terrible experience in the public markets with Tesla, getting sued and dealing with
all that, dealing with complicated comp packages.
And so it felt like he would definitely prefer to be private all the time.
He wanted to take Tesla private, remember?
at funding secured.
He's never been a fan of the public markets,
but he has changed his tune.
So, anyways, building and launching thousands of satellites
would be technically demanding.
Costly and SpaceX officials quickly decided
the easiest way to raise the tens of billions of dollars
that required was to dip into the newly thawed
U.S. market for IPOs.
Meanwhile, XAI was trailing rivals,
including OpenAI and Google's Gemini,
by key metrics such as revenue and user base.
A SpaceX IPO was seen by some of its
investors as a potential cash cow that could supercharge XAI's growth and help and in turn help SpaceX.
If SpaceX succeeds with putting data centers in space, its investors expect XAI to become a customer.
Some investors believe SpaceX could purchase a percentage of XAI or Musk, who owns more than 40% of SpaceX,
could tap that stake to invest in his other companies, including XAI.
Plus, a publicly traded stock creates a capital safety net of sorts and would be reassuring to investors.
So anyways.
The two companies of existing ties, SpaceX, has invested $2 billion in XAI as part of $5 billion financing,
and then XAI raised a bunch more money.
So very exciting.
Anyway, CrowdStrike, your business is AI, their business is securing it.
CrowdStrike secures AI and stops breaches.
And we have our first guest in the TBP and L3M.
I'm Yenz Remak, the founder and CEO of California Forever.
Good to have you on this show again. Welcome back. How are you doing? Sorry, let me get my
Di-Giote. I'm great. How are you? How's the new year going? How is your break? How are the holidays?
We have three young kids on the four and we dragged them nine hours. We dragged them nine hours
to see my mom and dad in the Czech Republic. Okay. Nine hours time of their friends there and then
nine hours back. Yeah. So you can imagine how my Christmas was.
More like a day of travel with young children.
is more stressful in many ways than 99% of work days.
I went to Europe over the break.
I went to Austria, but didn't bring the kids.
So it was very relaxing.
That's a big difference.
My new pet peeve is single people, couples on airplanes
who are complaining about the long flight.
I'm like, really?
Oh, sure, shit.
You have to sit there for 12 hours and drink wine and watch Netflix.
That was terrible.
Well, I used to think when a kid was crying,
it meant the parent was doing something bad.
So I'd be on a flight and the kids crying and I'm like, wow, this parent is just like being abusive or whatever.
Why is the kid so upset?
Turns out kids will just cry for a million reasons.
Anyway, give us the update.
How are things going?
Just sort of reset for us on the project.
How long have you been working in California forever?
Where are you in the process?
I've been working on this for almost a decade.
Almost a decade.
So, Alainzada in 2016, started in 2017.
Okay.
It was about seven years of land assembly,
and then we introduced it publicly in about two years ago.
And were you full-time back in 2017?
Yeah, I was full-time.
I was the only employee for seven-and-a-half years.
And obviously, confidentiality was very important for us,
and so what the demand is, when I say I was the only employee,
I mean, I did everything, we raised the Bill and dollars in their period,
and I did everything from bookkeeping to being everything else in the country,
I literally did.
And the confidentiality, was that in part because if people knew what you were doing,
they would come in and start trying to bid against you on land stuff and realize like, hey,
he's already spent...
He needs this plot, so he's willing to pay more, and that is the game theory.
Yeah, and it always happens.
I mean, even if you have university, if you have public universities buying land in a city
to build a building, they don't come in in like, we are MIT and we would like to buy this
part of land.
Yeah.
So what was the structure of that fundraising?
Because you probably had to draw a salary.
Is it like a search fund where a venture capitalist might raise some money, pull some management fees to fund their salary and operational overhead, and then like when there's a deal to be done, there's a capital commitment that happens a transfer. Is that what it's like?
We structured it as a partnership that raised money over time at different valuations as we made progress.
And then I just took salary like any other finance.
It was pretty similar to a normal tech company. There's some nuance because it's real.
state and because of the just the sheer amount of capital that we needed and how long it took to do it.
But other than that, pretty, pretty standard.
Yeah. And what was the, what was the first pitch? What was the first plot of land that you
bought? What was that negotiation like? Well, the first few were, the first few were listed.
So when we came to the market, there, there were four or five properties that just been
listed and sitting on the market. Okay. For two years or something like that?
Was there anyone else thinking about doing anything in this particular region?
I don't know if anyone.
I mean, not right now, but the great irony of the situation is lots of people thought
this was a really good idea in 1958.
Oh, yeah.
Seriously.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's this, there's in 1958, the Federal Commerce Department and the Army Corps of Engineers
go together.
This is almost before computers.
And they wrote this thick binder.
They called it the future development of the San Francisco Bay Area, 1958 through two
2020, and decade by decade, they planned where growth should go in the Bay Area.
And you open these maps, and they did it decade by decade, and you look at the first one,
and Santa Clara is still orchards and so on.
Then they correctly predicted this explosion in places like Pleasanton and Dublin in the East Bay
in the 80s and in the 90s.
But the part of Solano where we're building remained open, and then you flip open the 2010 map,
and where I thought there should be a city, they had a city.
And I was sitting there in 2015 and I'm like, okay, maybe this isn't just Jan's insane idea.
Maybe some smart people thought about it.
And then you look at other regional planning documents in the Bay Area, something called the Association of Bay Area Governments, which is the regional planning body.
Had a plan called 1970 to 1970 to 1990.
And in the plan, they literally said, by the end of the 90s, we are going to be running out of space in the Bay.
And we're going to need to build some new cities.
otherwise the region is going to become unaffordable.
And there are some areas where you could build cities
that are really good for it.
And the part of the bay, that's the best place to do it,
that is five times bigger than anywhere else,
is the area of which we've acquired
about 90% of the last 10 years.
So this is a very old idea that we've dusted off
and obviously we're building something different
that when they would have built there in the 50s.
But lots of routes in regional planning.
So in terms of development,
it feels like AI has been,
the mega trend over the last few years. Most of the building that's happening around AI is happening
in Abilene, Texas, and just wherever the natural gas plant lines are and sort of all over America
in pretty low population areas. No one's really thinking that, oh, you know, meta needs a data
center right next to their Menlo Park campus. But the AI megatrend also might drive up housing
prices in San Francisco a ton. A lot of people are predicting this based on the IPA.
PEO schedule if Open AI Anthropic get out, there's a trillion plus in liquidity going loosely
into the San Francisco housing market. You can see some really crazy dislocations in that market.
Is that something you're tracking as an accelerant of your plans?
Yeah, 100%. And I think it's, and I think it's, honestly, it's more from the policy perspective.
Because the last time, I mean, this has happened in the Bay Area periodically for the last 20 years.
The problem is we haven't done anything about it in 50 years.
And every time it gets worse, and then there's a bit of a pullback and like, oh, it's going to be better.
And then it just comes back stronger than before, right?
And dot-com boom, then social, crypto, now AI.
And so from a policy perspective, the argument that we've made is we need to get ahead of this,
because if we don't, this is going to be way worse than what we saw in 2017, 2018.
And when it last happened in 2017-2018, the problem is tech is going to be.
going to get blamed for this. Oh, yeah, of course. It's wrong and it makes no sense because you
just create all of these real-work-paid jobs, but you're going to get blamed for it or we're going
to get blamed for it. And so we as an industry need to get ahead of it. And you saw attempts at this
in 2017 and 2018. In Google and Apple and Facebook and I think Amazon app in Seattle all made these
$500, $1 billion, $2 billion commitments to go and build affordable housing. But what happened when
you look at the numbers is they would maybe build a few hundred units or a few thousand units
because building in existing cities is just so time-consuming, so expensive. It costs a million
dollars to build a small, too-bed affordable apartment in San Jose. A million dollars.
And it takes 11 years of planning. Whereas our argument is... Affordable housing for millionaires.
Yeah, exactly. Heavily subsidized by the taxpayer. Whereas our argument is if you create a place
where you can build, you can get the private capital markets to build it, and we are proposing
to build 174,000 homes.
For context, 174,000 homes is more homes than San Francisco has built since 1950.
Since 1950.
And sure, we should build a lot more housing in San Francisco.
The idea that you can solve the Bay Area housing problem.
The trends are the trends.
In San Francisco or in Manlo Park is insane.
No city in the world has ever solved housing affordability.
the issue without spreading out a little bit.
And then the question is, do you spread out just by spreading out
with sprawl, or do you spread out and actually thoughtfully
plan it and be able to build something really magic?
What is the number of homes that the California government
has projected or needed to sort of solve the housing crisis?
Three million.
Three million?
Just in California.
Just in California.
And the way that they're like in some ways, you can say like,
okay, 174,000, like, it's starting to make a den.
It was less than 10%.
But it shows that you need projects at this scale to ever solve it
because you're not going to solve this problem by like,
oh yeah, there's an empty lot behind this, you know, in this neighborhood.
Let's put up eight units here, right?
It just doesn't, that really doesn't make it down, right?
Yeah, I mean, I think that's going to be a part of the solution,
but you'll need, I think California will need multiple California forever.
And our hope is that by blazing the path and showing how you can,
how you can finance it, how you can buy it, how you can work with the community to get the buy-in
and to convince people that you actually care about it and you want to do it right and you want to
do it well. We make it easier for others to do it. I will say we do have what I think is by
far, it's a very unique site, the idea that you can put together. I mean, we own 70,000 acres
at this point. It's 110 square miles. It's two and a half times bigger than San Francisco. It's
five times bigger than Manhattan. It's bigger than Washington, D.C. by
one and a half times.
Wow.
And so the idea that you can find that,
by the way, I drove from my meeting in downtown San Francisco
to the site in 55 minutes the other day.
Now, that's not the case depending on how you time it with traffic,
but it's pretty close.
So it's gonna be hard to do it at this scale,
but we certainly should be finding 500 acres
at the edge of, or 1,000 acres at the age of Sacramento
and all different parts of LA and so on,
and building it at medium density and walkable
and some industrial jobs.
But I think in California, it's 3 million units.
It's about 2 million in Southern California.
It's about a million in Northern California.
And so we come close to solving 20% of it.
And that's just one of our projects.
That's the expansion of a city called Su-soon.
We're also looking at doing a second project on lands that we own on the west side,
sorry, on the east side of our property around a city called Rio Vista.
That could add tens of thousands of additional units.
So we get close to solving 20% of Northern California's deficit.
Which is a big deal.
Yeah.
Talk to me about the transportation issue, 55 minutes when there's not that much traffic, could be more.
As an LA resident, I'm thinking.
Yeah, it's easy.
Exactly.
That's my daily commute.
Yeah.
But, yeah, what has the Bay Area done recently?
I know the bridge, the Oakland Bridge was improved.
But what's on the table in terms of like toll roads, congestion pricing, building new bridges,
adding ferries? Are there lessons to be learned from Manhattan and how they've solved things?
I've seen people be very pro-c congestion pricing, very anti-c congestion pricing all over the place.
What's your vision for what you would advocate for in terms of modernizing transportation in the Bay Area?
It's a great question.
And there's so many layers to it.
I'll try to keep it brief.
I'll give a slightly nerdy answer.
the first step in any kind of transportation planning is land use planning.
Where do you put things and how do you lay them out?
Sure.
To kind of eliminate the needs to go that much in the first place.
Okay, sure.
So, yeah, you don't want to have to go to San Francisco just to get a burger.
There should be a burger joint locally.
And the same thing for all the different amenities.
And jobs in particular, because in Northern California,
we have this really, really dumb distribution of jobs where the Northern California mega region
increasingly works as one place.
Yeah.
From Sacramento all the way to San Jose.
I mean, you have people who live in Sacramento,
they work in the way two days a week.
Yeah, yeah.
They do the commute, right?
There's a ton of people that live north of the Golden Gate Bridge
and commute in San Francisco,
and then there's a ton of people that are really far south
and commute up to the tech companies and whatnot.
Exactly.
And right now the challenge is,
basically all of the jobs are between San Francisco and San Jose
and then up in Sacramento.
Yeah.
And then you have four million people in places like East Contra Costa County
and Solano and Stockton and San Joaquin.
There's basically no jobs.
Yeah.
So what happens in the United States?
in the morning is all of those people get in a car,
and they have a two-hour commute to Menlo Park.
The number of people who live in Solano County
who work in Manlo Park
and have a two-hour commute each way every day
would blow your socks off.
It's more than half of the county commute.
Outside of the county.
So it's completely insane.
So the first solution,
and this is actually our big contribution to the region,
is to take a bunch of jobs
and put them in the middle of the region,
which makes life better for everyone
who lives in Palo Alto, San Francisco,
because you don't have all of those people
sitting on the 101 or 3D coming down.
So big office buildings for tech companies
or big companies, big employers.
Big manufacturing.
Big manufacturers.
Have you talked to companies?
Are they receptive to that?
Because there's sort of like the first mover
is going to have a rougher time, I imagine,
than if they're already, hey, we're already in Menlo Park
and most of our employees are right here.
At least the executives are.
Yeah, there's a lot of people that commute,
but maybe 50% of the employees
only commute less than 30 minutes.
Like, that's probably a pretty common stat for a tech company in the Bay.
How are you thinking about pitching this to companies to go and take that leap and be the first one?
I mean, we start with, there has to be a reason for them to be in Solano.
Sure.
And generally the ones that...
Not just pricing.
And the biggest one, we found two big ones.
The first one is manufacturing.
Sure.
You have this whole wave of companies doing manufacturing.
A bunch of them are headquartered in the Bay Area.
Yeah.
And then I think the sweet spot is you are a company, you figure out a new way to do X, you've raised 20 million, you have 20 people.
You've perfected it, now you've raised 100 million, and you need to build a factor.
And the factory is going to have 100 or 200 employees, and you want to build it somewhere.
Right now what happens for virtually every single company, and we've spoken to 400 of them, is they say, we really want to build it in California because we're still figuring out how the factory works.
Yeah, the factory is the product.
The factory is the product.
And if every time that our software engineers or AI engineers need to go to the factory,
they need to go on a plane and fly to another state, that's a three-day trip.
It's like, oh, it's three hours to go to Austin.
No, it's not three hours.
Yeah, yeah.
It's an hour and a half to the airport.
Then it's Thursday.
Then it's late.
Then you're flying.
Then it's to get there.
So it's a free day trip, right?
And our value problem is put the factory in Solano.
Because if you get in a car in Manlo Park in the morning, you can be in the factory of 80 minutes,
and you can be back home and have dinner with your kids.
And that really works.
Now, what that means is if you put the first factory there,
then you go and you raise $500 million.
And you need to build factory number two.
Our value prop is we have so much land
that if you want to build Factory 1, which is 100,000 square feet,
we can reserve enough land around it for five or 10 years
that you can put Factory 2, 3, 4, 5 next to it,
and you can have them all in the same place
instead of having to solve this problem
over and over and over again in a different place.
Now, that means that we get the factory that employs 500 or 1,000 people.
Now, if you want to build a gigafactor that employs 10,000 people where you are really, really cost sensitive,
maybe that still goes to Ohio, but that's okay.
But a lot of the cutting edge stuff would be in Solano.
And to your point about AI, that's becoming even more important.
We already see this down in L.A., by the way.
There's a lot of startups that start in Elsugundo, and they have 5,000 square feet.
They're doing some R&D.
And then once they start building larger factories,
they move just outside of El Sigundo,
just a drive they might still have, you know,
SpaceX was started in El Sigundo,
but eventually moved to Hawthorne and grew out of that,
and then eventually Starbase in Texas.
And so for that interim step
in the San Francisco hard tech, deep tech community,
that can make a ton of sense.
They don't have that, exactly.
They don't have that.
And even in L.A., when you,
at least when we talk to a bunch of those companies,
L.A. is becoming a kind of Elsugendo and Hortorn
are becoming and Torrance are becoming,
victims of their own success.
Oh, sure.
Because they are fully built out.
That's expensive.
There's no available land.
So a bunch of these companies will tell you,
we can't really build another factory here,
and we still have R&D in the Bay.
So it might be an even outlet for companies that started out here.
They have a factory here.
They have a bunch of talent in the Bay.
And then to your point about AI,
everyone talks about building the factories of the future.
How are you going to build the factories of the future?
You're going to build them with AI talent.
Where is 85% of the market cap?
in AI in the Bay Area.
Do you think you're going to convince those engineers easily
to spend every week flying to some other state?
It's a real, it's a real competitive advantage.
Hey, I know you can go work at Meta for $100 million a year,
but how about if you work for less than that in Utah?
Yeah, and then you fly all of them.
What does success look like for this year?
One thing that I just appreciate so much about this project
and this company is that most people come up with an idea,
like to make a new city or make, you know, and they start running the calculations and they
realize, okay, not only is this going to be hard, but it's going to take, you know, 10 plus years.
So I'm not even going to start, right, because I want to be doing something where maybe I can
see more tangible progress on a faster timelineer. I need a billion users like two years from now,
not, not. I need 100 million ARRR today. Today, today. The bar is three months now.
But so you've just chunked it out and you're just like, you know, 10 years in, which is probably the moment where it really is hopefully more exciting than ever.
What does this year look like in terms of just pushing the ball forward?
Well, hopefully it will break around this year.
And so that would have seen ambitious a year ago, I think.
But I think there's a few things that kind of aligned.
So if I just, there's this really interesting thing that's happened where a lot of things
have come together at the same time for us, where we've announced it, what is it, two years
ago.
And of course it was very controversial, right?
You come to a community and it's a guy with a funny accent and we want to build a major
new city, which we haven't done in America in a hundred years, so nobody even thinks that
you can build new cities.
And it's like, oh, it's not just going to be a city, it's going to be a massive manufacturing
park.
And by the way, we'll build the biggest shipyard in America on the south end of the property.
everyone is like, you guys are crazy and we don't trust you. But what's happened over the last
two years is we've actually done the work, we've put together this incredible team. And so we've
built a lot of trust. And now there's a tremendous amount of support for it in the community.
And then what's happened at the same time at the state level and at a national level,
I mean, think back to where we were as a country two years ago. Abundance wasn't really
a thing. Built wasn't really a thing. We didn't just have an election on affordability.
re-industrialization was kind of beginning.
And so at a macro level, there's been this massive shift towards
we need to do this, and that exists in California.
And so right now where we are is,
we had a big announcement this morning that we can talk about,
but basically the goal for this year is the stretch goal for this year,
I'll say that, is to break around.
And there's lots of reasons for why
that makes sense for Solano County.
it makes sense for California, it makes sense for the country.
Sorry.
Going back, closing the loop on congestion pricing.
Yes, sorry.
Are you pro, con?
What do you think?
I think it is, I think the direction that I'm most excited about is we should use congestion pricing
to build a lot more capacity.
I think it's really politically complicated to come and say, we are going to take this existing
roads that right now is free and make it paid.
Yeah.
But I think people want a lot more capacity.
Sure.
And paying for it with congestion pricing is great.
New York has proven that it, I mean, I lived in London when they introduced congestion pricing.
It clearly worked.
Yeah.
So we've known that this works for a long time.
It was a big fight to do it in New York.
I think that self-driving cars are going to force us to do it because there's an induced demand with soul driving cars.
When the cost of driving a car is just the financial cost, but you can be what you're
watching Netflix or drinking mill or whatever.
People are going to drive more.
We're going to send packages back and forth.
It does feel like if you believe the self-driving car narrative,
you have to be long suburbs.
You have to be long suburbs,
and then you have to believe that it's going to force us
to price at least some of the roads and some of the capacity,
because without it, it's induced demand,
and there's just going to be more and more driving, right?
Yeah, yeah.
If the cost of your door-dash delivery drops by 70%,
because you don't need to have the driver in there.
You're going to get more.
You're going to get more roads.
And yes, there's some intelligent routing that you can do.
Exactly.
To have multiple people in the same car.
But that's what congestion pricing incentivizes.
I think the political opening is to say, we're going to charge, we're going to price these roads.
We're going to use part of that revenue or all of the revenue to fund the construction of them.
And that also, I think, is a way to get it through politically.
Sure.
Because in California, you have a environmental interest group that, you have a.
that doesn't really want to build highways,
but if you price those highways,
they are much more open to it.
And so I think that's the grand bargain that you can drive.
The other thing that I would say is,
what we hope the city will do at the scale of the mega region
is if you look at the California mega region
from San Cozac to Sacramento,
it's kind of like a donut.
And the middle of the donut is all of the property that we own.
And part of the issue we have is that this used to be two regions.
It used to be the Bay Area and Sacramento,
and they've become one and they've grown and they've become what would be, I mean if the Bay Area was a state,
if Northern California was a state, there's 12 million people who live there.
It would be a seventh largest state in America.
And right now we haven't really tied it together in terms of transportation infrastructure the way that we need to.
That's why when you try to go from Palo Alto to Tahoe on a Friday night, it's such a disaster.
And so we need to build more capacity there.
And putting a major new city in the heart of the region is how you help pay for some of that.
What are you seeing on the, are you tracking the rebuild of the palisades in El Tadena in L.A.?
Obviously, we experience the fires down here.
There's a huge amount of construction.
The hope is that it's really quick construction.
We've already talked to a friend who's, I think, finishing rebuilding this summer, which is pretty crazy, pretty fast.
Are there any lessons, learnings, just supply shocks to demand for building labor?
Are assets actually getting reallocated from Northern California to Southern California to enable the rebuild?
Or is that something that's not really changing your plans at all?
Or are there any lessons that you've learned from?
Yeah, I mean, I'm not deeply involved in the rebuild.
We far away from it.
But from my vantage point, we are still at a point where permitting and coordination is the bottleneck.
It's not the laborer.
It's not the construction.
It might become that.
I think what it illustrates is just the complexity of building infill in general, just building
in existing cities, because you have thousands of people who own the land, and they need to all
agree on construction schedules and redoing it and so on. I will say that there's some pretty
impressive success stories. I'll give a shout. I mean, Alexis Rivas at the cover has been doing
great work in terms of both documenting the permitting challenges, and then I think that they
delivered several units already. And so I'm a huge fun of what they're doing. I think
the product is beautiful.
Yeah.
It's a factory-built ADU company.
Yeah, exactly.
I think they started out as an ADU
and now increasingly single family
and then I think they have ambitions beyond that.
So I think that's an interesting area.
But I do think what the Palisades did
if there is one silver lining to it
is that, and it was
partially because of when it came out
with abundance and other books of the topic,
it exposed a lot of people to just
how insane the city.
is that we've built for permitting something in California.
And my favorite example that I give is,
I think a lot of the rules that we've put in place in California
were genuinely well-intentioned.
And I mean it.
I mean, some of them were just bad people using a pretense
to put in place a rule that they knew exactly what it would do.
But most of it was well-intentioned.
But I think having two glasses of wine is a pretty good idea.
I think having 50 glasses of wine is a pretty bad idea.
What's the analogy here?
And regulations in California,
Oh, so you have 50 glasses of wine worth of regulations.
Every single one of those regulations, you look at it's like, it's a good idea.
Like, it's a good idea to have more standards on heating in the buildings.
It's a good idea that the community should be able to have another review on the design.
This is a good idea.
This is a good idea.
But this is 50 years of legislators who each felt like they wanted to fix an issue.
They've created this layer cake of regulations that's just very hard to get through,
which actually is one of the things that we can deal with better than individual homeowners
because in some sense we are permitting the entirety of the city at once.
And what that means is we're doing it wholesale,
which means we have to spend an insane amount of money on lawyers and consultants
to do all of that work,
but we can drive down the costs of the housing
because we are spreading it out over so many units.
And a big factor is to permitting is speed, right?
Even if you're still dealing with the same number of regulations,
if you can just turn approvals over faster throughout the build process,
you can still have a tremendous impact.
I want like a synthetic permitting office in, like, embedded in CAD or something.
So as you're designing your structure, you put a window there,
and it runs a simulation to say, hey, if you were to submit this,
the permitting office would say no to that.
And then you slide the window over two inches.
and says, okay, now you're good.
And you just have like sort of red, green lights
on everything you're designing.
So you're getting feedback instead of having to submit,
wait for them to come back with the revision.
What you submit should be almost always approved and accepted.
But there's still all of this uncertainty when you submit permits.
I think that's much closer than it might seem.
Yeah.
And I think there's a, and even before we get to it,
I'm really optimistic about AI tools that you basically embed in cities.
Sure.
And then as they get these applications come in,
instead of people manually review them,
you just do a pre-scan.
And I actually had discussions with legislators
in Sacramento who want to run those bills.
But you could basically...
Actually, it's very much what you said.
You can summon your application
and it just runs it through
and it says, we think that this is acceptable
or here are some issues to fix.
So that's kind of the front end to the client,
to the architect or to the builder.
But then even to the employees
who are working those jobs and improving it,
you could see a system
where it comes to them.
and it's like, recommendation is that you approve it,
and the five areas where me, the AI,
have the least confidence, is these five go check them.
Yeah, yeah.
Because I think it's easy to vilify
some of the permitting authorities and some of the people who work there,
but they're just trying to do their best.
And some of it is real.
I mean, I don't know the details of it,
but the tragedy in the nightclub in Switzerland,
I was talking to a friend who is on the ground and who knows it,
And part of the issue allegedly there is you basically had a situation where it was a small town.
There were some relationships.
And the fire chief, my understanding is the fire chief or whoever was in charge of doing the inspections.
It was friends with the club owner and they didn't want to do a bit of the costs of revising the material they had on the floor.
And then they had a fire exit and they locked it because they didn't want the teens to be sneaking into.
to the nightclub.
Interesting.
And so you're like, it's very easy to be really, really upset
about your fire department and be like,
this is stupid, we should get rid of it.
But if you wanna be able to walk in a restaurant,
or you have kids walk in a restaurant,
or walk into an office and feel like,
feel secure in the environment,
I think you need a balance,
and I'm hopeful that AI can actually give us the best of work rules.
Yeah, me too.
Jordy, that's question.
On the, on the customer,
side for California Forever, customers being businesses that would come in and build facilities.
Are you within the range now where you can move?
You've said you've talked to hundreds of companies that it would be potentially leasing or buying
or building in California forever.
Given that you're hoping to break around this year, are you at a point where you can actually
get more serious with these companies and say like, hey, let's actually like put this into
not go from like concept to actual like planning around.
building factories, shipyards, et cetera.
Yeah, I mean, we've, so we have two timelines.
We have a default timeline, which is we're going through the usual process
when we would break around in 2028.
And that's what we've told the companies we said,
this is where we feel pretty strongly that we can deliver.
And actually part of where the 2029 breaking ground,
sorry, 26 breaking ground is coming from is a bunch of those companies
have come back and said, you know, we left Solano as a location,
we left putting the facility in the middle of what you're building,
But we need to place it and break out in 2026.
And so if Solano can deliver and if you can break around in 26, we want to put it there.
If you can't, unfortunately, it's going to have to go to name another state, generally speaking.
And so we've brought that to the local elected officials and we've brought that to kind of economic development agencies at the regional level and said, can we work on this?
Can we figure out a way to do the permitting in parole?
Because you don't want to lose these jobs.
These are tax revenue and jobs that will just go to other places.
and we have an opportunity to keep it here in California.
Exactly.
How has this support been from local officials
and even Sacramento?
I mean, it's night and day from two years ago.
And as I mentioned, in the beginning,
obviously very controversial
and people didn't know what to make of it.
You look at it today,
there's an open letter that I was put up this morning
on our website in connection with a labor announcement we've made.
That is basically this, I mean, honestly,
it's a love letter to kind of,
California that is signed by the construction unions, by us, by a bunch of other people, saying,
hey, this is the state that used to be able to build a Golden Gate Bridge in four years.
We built, we built Hollywood, and we built a California water project.
Surely we can break around on this quickly, and there's a moment.
And if you look at the signatures, it's the former speaker of the California Assembly, Bob Hertzberg,
who wrote the legislation around how cities would expand.
It's Alan Berto, who I think is one of the most respected urban planners in the world.
former Senator Bill Dodd, who was Senator for our district until two years ago.
It's countless local mayors, former supervisors.
And so there is a really incredible coalition that's come together to say, hey, we can do this.
We don't have to kind of skip steps.
We can just do them in parallel and break ground.
And part of that is company saying that.
Part of that is construction workers saying, I'm sick and tired of commuting for two hours.
I want to have a job many minutes from home.
Part of that is Solano had some old industries closed down
in the last couple of months.
They had a...
There was a Budweiser Brewery in Furfield.
It was 50 years old that's closing.
There's a refinery that's closing.
And so there's a need to replace these jobs.
And so you see the outlines of this compelling argument
to say, hey, this can be a solution
to the very practical local issues of tax revenue and jobs.
But at a much bigger level, this can be...
This can be a real moment for California where the state can show, hey, we can do big projects.
This isn't just high-speed rail.
And I think there's something deeply poetic about doing that in 2026.
Yeah.
I mean, it's 250th anniversary, right?
I love it.
Growing up as a kid, I can't tell you how many times I, like, saw a piece of land and thought out loud with whoever I was with, what if we put this there?
What if we put that in every single time the messaging was.
was, oh, like, yeah, technically you could, but it'll take so long.
Like, it's not worth doing.
And so I'm so optimistic that getting California forever off the ground, active,
a real place that people live and work and build will just inspire.
It could be, like, really a real turning point for the whole state.
How many acres do you have now?
Your empire's growing.
What's the total amount of acreage for California?
Total acreage.
Give us the number.
69,000 acres.
Boom.
Congratulations.
Thank you so much for coming to this week and L.
Always to visit the studio.
I'll come back when we break around.
We can't wait.
We can't wait for our first episode.
From there, we'll do it.
You can come over, we'll do it from there.
Thank you so much.
All right, I'll talk to you soon.
We'll talk to you soon.
Go bye.
The New York Stock Exchange.
Want to change the world?
Raise capital at the New York Stock Exchange.
Chiching.
We have some news here from OpenAI.
This is sort of leaked.
through Foxcon, but from Dan, Nice Debt, says, Open AI will reveal, will unveil its first AI
earbuds dubbed Sweet P in September this year, and shipments are expected to reach 40 to 50 million
units in 2027. So, you know, this is citing Open AI's chief global affairs officer, Chris Lahane,
Taiwan's Foxcon will do the assembly for these buds. Makes a ton of sense. You know, you're chatting
with OpenAI, you're chatting with ChatGBT, GBT. You got Johnny Ive on the team,
former Apple, and you put something together that's you're always on AI assistant that you're
chatting with. But 40 to 50 million units, that's a lot. So I wanted to put some context around
how massive that would be. So the Amazon Echo in year two sold 11 million units. The Xbox series
X slash X.
X. This is the sequel
to the Xbox. There's already an Xbox install base.
16 million units in
year two. The iPhone.
The iPhone in year two,
17 million units. The Apple Watch
did 20 million units
in year two. The
PS5, massive
success, hugely anticipated
product. The PS4 was
almost a decade old, lots of people upgrading.
The PS5 shipped 30 million units
in year two. The Nintendo Switch,
did between 35 and 37 million units in year two.
AirPods now, AirPods did do 50 million.
So if the chat GPT, OpenAI, earbuds dubbed SweetP, perform as well as AirPods, you could see 50 million units.
And the iPad, the iPad sold 55 million units in year two.
But it's a tall order.
From the goats.
It's a very, very tall order.
Consumer hardware.
There is more news from Wayne Ma.
in Kianer-Loo, Apple is developing an AI power wearable pin the size of an air tech
that is equipped with multiple cameras, a speaker, microphones, and wireless charging.
Shots fired.
The device could be released as early as 2027.
Yeah, wait, wait, wait, why are you reacting?
I'm just, like, I feel like a lot of the reason why people, like, do the pin or something
is because they can't get all the features from the iPhone, but, like, they already have the iPhone,
so why don't they just make that good?
I guess they probably will, but, like, what, do you think this is a good idea, Jordi?
I feel like I'd rather just have it in my phone.
Yeah, it is crazy if you're in the Apple ecosystem.
system and you have a MacBook, an iPad, a watch, earbuds, AirPods, and the phone and the Vision
Pro. It's like they got 90% of your body covered with tech. Like, you're pretty good.
You're talking to a wired headphone guy. Yeah. I've been rocking Apple wired headphones.
Yeah, yeah. So if this was wired in, you'd be good to go? Probably five, five years now.
No, no, I'm not in the, I'm not in the market for this. I'm not in the market for this.
But I got to wait and see.
I'll continue here.
So Apple's trying to release their device as early as 27 as well.
Such a product would position Apple to compete more effectively with OpenAI, which is planning its own AI power devices and meta, which is already selling smart glasses that offer access to its AI assistant.
Google also plans release smart glasses in conjunction with Samsung.
Apple's development is still in the early stages and could still be canceled.
Still, Apple is endeavoring to move faster than usual to try to stay competitive.
because of Open AI.
It's planning to manufacture roughly 20 million units at launch,
the person added.
Apple's PIN joins a growing portfolio of AI-powered products
the tech giant has under development,
including AirPods equipped with enhanced sensors.
Like, yeah, it's kind of a, it's like,
are people really going to have, like, their PIN on
and their AirPods in and have their phone?
Just how many AI-enabled devices do we need?
I want shoulder pads, the smart cane you want the breastplate.
And there's the Apple, there's the Apple home device that's going to be like, you know.
Okay, I actually do, I mean, we have to, we have to get to our next guest, but I do have a hot take that there might be a future wearable that looks like the Pipboy from Fallout.
How are you familiar with the Fallout series? I'm not, I'm actually not kidding about this and I'll unpack it.
So basically in fallout, you wear a device on your arm and you turn it.
And it's basically a phone that's like glued to your arm.
And then on, you can access your menus through here, right?
Yeah.
And it was always like something fun that like the, you know,
the cosplay community would build out.
Yeah, there's the pit boy.
And people have made real versions of this.
It has this cool retro aesthetic.
It's never taken off.
But I've noticed that if you look at the line,
livestreamers, like I Show Speed, Kaysenot, when they're out in the world, they often have phones
strapped to their arms to read chat while they're going around. Like when I think it was
Speed that went to China and he went on this world tour, he toured America, he keeps a phone
strapped to his arm so he can use both hands. And it feels like weird and cyberpunk, but it feels
like a glimpse of the future. Like we're all going to be living like speed in the future maybe and
maybe we're going to have phones or something like it glued to our arms that could just be an
accessory that actually helps you glue the phone to the arm. It could be some sort of modified
device that's curved to wrap around your arm. But I feel like the end state is like more
technology on your body constantly. And that's like an easy one that people could adopt.
You've already seen you've seen Apple sells the sock that you can keep your phone. And a lot of
people are wearing like almost necklaces with their phones. So their phone never goes in their
bag. Never goes in their pockets. It's always just here and then they can just pull it out and
take a picture or do whatever because they're so glued to their phone. I think like an interim
wearable is just something that makes your phone like permanently dangle here because the phone is
powerful. It has a lot going on in that. But you just never want to put it in your pocket. You're obsessed.
What do you think? Yeah, I mean the next step is just like a pair of glasses. Yeah, we'll get there.
You mount the phone. The phone too. Google made that. Google cardboard. You can take a cardboard box
fold it up and put it put the phone on your face uh anyway yeah i'm so i'm so curious yeah to see
if if open a i and apple just happened to simultaneously kind of land on this very similar form factor
and it actually becomes good enough that that they're in a race i'm not currently you know using lLMs
like multiple times a day for search and research or whatever i'm not having these moments
where I'm like, oh, if I could only just not get my phone right now.
Yeah, especially because of the, I mean, these prompts, they take five, ten minutes.
I still feel like going into an agentic coding experience or even just a deep research report.
It's going to, I'm going to spend a couple minutes there.
And so the two seconds, it takes me to pull out my phone is not the rate limit, maybe if the models get faster.
But expectations are sky high, and it'll be interesting to see the reveal.
how it's marketed, how it's pitched, and then ultimately how it sells. Let me tell you about cognition.
They're the makers of Devin, the AI software engineer. Crush your backlog with your personal
AI engineering team. And I'm also going to tell you about railway. Railway simplifies software
deployment, web app, servers, and databases run in one place with scaling, monitoring and security
built in. We have our next guest, George, from Testudo in the restroom waiting room. Let's bring him
into the TBP and Ultramm. George, how are you doing?
Good afternoon, gentlemen. Good afternoon.
Great to see you.
Good afternoon.
We got to ask first.
Where does the name come from?
Well, it's Latin.
It's Roman military history.
It's all things that we love.
Okay.
It basically is Latin for Roman military formation,
where the shields are on all sides,
the front, the back.
It's been in Law of the Rings.
It's been in many gladiator films.
And that is exactly what our insurance is
for the enterprise we work with.
We are that protective coverage
from litigation.
that they might experience.
Yeah.
Talk to us about the early customers,
who you're going after with this insurance product,
and then we can get into how AI plays a piece into your business.
Yeah, so this is a brand new category of insurance product.
This is generative AI insurance.
So excited to announce and launch that category today.
Category creator.
Category creator.
Come on, we've got to get a gong there, John.
Oh, yeah, of course.
And former Goldman Sachs VP.
Gone for that.
Yeah, there we go.
My hands are.
A lot of gong-ruthy moments.
Love it.
Yeah, exactly.
So, a brand new category.
You'll have heard of cyber insurance.
Yep.
This is AI insurance.
Yeah, so walking through is this,
I build a tool with generative AI,
and then at some point a lawsuit comes along
because of a hallucination.
What are some of the downside risks
that folks are insuring against?
Yeah, so,
Enterprises are deploying AI for, as you know, a huge range of different things.
The enterprise is our target customer, any company in any industry deploying AI for anything.
Quite a large market for us there.
So our focus is to cover these enterprises with an insurance product.
So if they are sued, for example for copyright risk, for kind of bodily injury, personal injury,
all sorts of different types of risk, we cover the legal costs, damages and settlements
associated with any liability risk that they might be exposed to.
How do you possibly underwrite this?
There's so little data.
There's the anthropic, like, billion-dollar settlement,
opening I might have some massive settlement.
At the same time, there's like two data points.
How are you actually?
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, I'm sure a lot of enterprises are like,
I love this.
It's one of those interesting challenges where, like, you know,
if you get, you kind of need to balance that, like,
if demand is too extreme, maybe you're underpricing it.
Sure.
I'm sure you have a lot of comps from, again, cyber insurance
and maybe other insurance categories that were...
Exactly.
Yeah, so that's the secret source,
and that's what's taking us over a year to figure out
how to price this insurance
without needing to connect or invasively audit
the enterprise that we're working with.
So we can turn a quote around in the same day.
Companies like Goldman are not going to allow third parties
to invasively integrate or audit their properties,
their proprietary AI systems, we can price and give a quote indicative terms within the same day.
So that really is key to getting this product out via brokers distributed to these enterprises.
And the pricing obviously is what we spend a huge amount of time doing.
We're using some very special new data that we have sourced ourselves.
We're using lawsuits and basically have ingested the federal and state US lawsuit databases.
We've taken all of the generative AI lawsuits and then we break down those lawsuits.
into specific causes of action.
So we know exactly what's driving the losses where in the US of that data.
We then took it to Lloyds of London,
the largest specialty insurance market in the world,
where we source all our capacity
and essentially presented our view of the frequency and severity
of the Jonas of AI liability risk in the market.
And we're super excited that we're launching the product today
with nearly a billion dollars of risk capital backed by Apollo specialty in Lloyds.
Let's go.
Another gong hit.
What, what, I mean, obviously I'm sure every policy is different and you guys are acting as the, you guys are the broker, right?
So you're not actually deploying your own capital or how does that work?
Yeah.
So we're called a Lloyd's cover holder in the U.S. a similar structure is called an MGA.
It means we have full delegated underwriting authority.
We have the pen essentially.
So the insurer has the balance sheet and the risk capital.
We essentially have the pen.
We do all the technology, the infrastructure, the pricing, the data, the monitoring, the portfolio controls.
And we take submissions from insurance brokers.
And it's our decision, yes, no, as to whether we cover that company or not, again, up to $10 million or $8.5 million of risk for those different areas.
And I'm very excited to, you know, be working with enterprises deploying.
And so how does the claims process?
process work. If I'm, if I'm, you know, if an enterprise is running some Gen A.I. product and,
and, uh, some, uh, they, they end up getting sued because of that. Like what, like, what typically
qualifies versus just a company just being like generally negligent, right? So like if somebody's
driving a car and they're drunk and they crash into someone, the insurance company is maybe
going to like, the CEO says, like, please go download all of Netflix to train.
a video model. That's pretty blatant infringement. I imagine that wouldn't be covered.
Yeah, so I'm hoping we're not going to be doing too much of paying out claims, but obviously
we will be paying some to prove that the product is useful. But the claims are being managed by
our capacity provider by the insurer in Lloyds. And essentially, you're right, we'll be getting
kind of logs, we'll be getting all the information associated with exactly why there's been a
lawsuit. What's really interesting from all our legal data is only 4.9% of all of the
generative AI lawsuits in the US market have been caused by model hallucinations or performance
related issues. So you would think that the model performing, you know, incorrectly is driving
a lot of litigation, but that's not actually the case in the data. Obviously, a lot of copyright
risk, a lot of patent infringement, a lot of DNO claims, things like that. So if you overindex too much
on the performance of the model rather than where that enterprise is deploying the AI or which
industry or what type of revenue that company has, you will miss the driver of the liability.
So we're very excited to talk through our approach.
A scenario in the future where people have a bunch of agents deployed working on behalf
of a company, and let's say an agent goes a little haywire, starts bribing a bunch of officials.
How much are you thinking about like kind of like the sci-fi future where companies have more basically robots working for the company than...
Yeah, if AI kills everyone, I definitely want a payout. That's important to me. Because I'll be on a spaceship going light speed away from the gray goo, boom. And I expect you to send the wire immediately.
Exactly. Product two for us is AI agents.
as you said, product three is AI and robotics.
And so we're getting in bounds for both of those things.
Now, we are going to be multi-line across, you know, the whole AI economy.
And I really believe that AI insurance is the biggest horizontal play,
picks and shovels for the AI economy.
Everything in every industry is insured up to a certain level.
So, you know, we think this is going to be a massive category.
We're excited to be defining and leading it.
And, you know, that agent product is number two for us.
But we don't see a huge amount of enterprise deployment of agents yet.
We think, obviously, these types of insurance products can unlock that adoption.
And, you know, you heard last week with JD from With Coverage,
companies like coalition have done a really good job on the cyber insurance side.
You know, they're a great comparable for us and, you know, huge fans of their work.
Yeah.
You know, this is not cyber insurance.
This is AI insurance.
And so we're very excited about the future roadmap and the category that we're creating.
talk about policy concentration, diversity of revenue and policy size for you.
I imagine that some of the big labs would probably love a billion dollar policy.
They'd take 100% of what you have to sort of allocate.
Are you looking for 100 to spread that across 100 companies at a $10 million policy cap,
$1,000 at $1 million?
What's the right shape of diversification for your business?
Yeah, that's a genius question and exactly what we're focused.
on obviously coming from a capital markets perspective, you know, diversification across
jurisdiction, industry types, revenue bands, AI models, deployments. That is exactly right.
We are weaving a basket of diversified clients, which means we can manage risk on the,
on the portfolio, on the whole portfolio. And then walk me through a YC company, for example.
They raise $5 million, $50 million valuation or something.
They have a couple, you know, customers.
You know, they're making some money.
They're still early.
They're deploying a bunch of generative AI products.
Should they get AI insurance at that point?
There's sort of a normal function when you do a Series A of getting, you know,
D&O insurance, a couple other pieces of insurance when you leave the garage.
How quick on the life cycle of a startup should someone consider this?
Yeah, so unfortunately this is not a product for startups.
This is for kind of mid-market enterprises who are deploying AI.
So we are not currently working with AI vendors or the base model providers.
We think there's too much concentration risk.
We've seen the number of lawsuits that have hit, especially the base model providers.
So as you say, like if we were insuring some of the big guys up to a billion dollars,
I'm sure we'd be paying a hell of a lot of that out in claims already.
So we are focused on enterprises, you know, pings that we're getting.
getting from architectural companies to law firms to banks to, you know, anything under the sun,
really. So those are the target customers and we start, you know, in the mid-market.
What about non-legal negative outcomes from AI? I'm thinking of I run a company. I let a chatbot
talk to some customers. The customers prompt inject the bot and they get refunds or discounts
that I didn't want to give them. And it happens sort of.
quickly and I'm like, ah, they took, like, some scammers came in, hacked the bots and they took
20 Gs off me. Like, can you do anything for me? Yeah, I think we absolutely could do something for you.
It depends whether this is like a first party loss. So you say like a financial loss that you've
suffered yourself. Yeah. Or you've been sued, right? This is a liability product. So this is
protection from litigation. Sure, sure, sure. So first party is definitely in the hopper for us.
But this first product is third-party litigation.
And the liability exposures that enterprises are are exposed to kind of out of the box when they're deploying these AI systems.
Fantastic.
Well, have you announced any funding yet or what's the story there?
We don't announce funding.
We don't believe that's the purpose of this company.
I mean, you guys have Senra and David Senor on all the time.
And he says the focus is building a durable business.
Honestly, that's what I'm focused on with our moat within the data, within the data,
within the licenses, within the capacity, the balance sheet,
and obviously our incredible team.
And honestly, I'm not announced.
I'm not announcing that he's not announcing it.
Building a durable business.
I'm reading that as we're building a durable business
that has raised a little bit of money.
Maybe a lot of money.
Maybe a lot.
But I love it.
I love it.
When you're ready with other announcements,
please come back on.
This is a lot of fun.
Yeah, yeah, very, very cool.
And congratulations.
I mean, honestly, like having.
How you're approaching that.
Having the backing of Lloyds is like probably harder to get bigger, more important to the core business than grabbing a couple of checks from some Silicon Valley investors.
So that's why we're winning the gong.
Yeah, yeah.
Good luck to any YC startup going into Lloyds of London.
It is a den of, you know, cover of underwriters.
Good luck.
Go into Lloyds of London without an accent like this.
I'm serious.
And if you wear the wrong colored shoes or the wrong type of suit, you will.
you will be laughed out of that building.
That's your mode.
That's your mode.
Honestly.
People are like,
oh,
what's your mode?
The mode is I know exactly what kind of suit to wear.
Yeah.
And the,
AI can't disrupt that.
AI cannot disrupt those relationships.
You both are invited to Lloyds of London
and a tour of the inner sanctum of underwriting by our head of insurance and my co-founder
Mark.
So we'd love to have you there.
Thank you.
If you can drink Guinness's at high velocity,
We'd also love to welcome you to Ledenhall Market, the home of insurance boozing, but you won't find us there.
We are hard at work 24-7 around the clock and excited to launch the category.
That's amazing.
Congratulations.
Where are you based?
We're between SF and London, but looking to expand into New York and other cities as well.
Amazing.
So great to meet you, George.
Congrats to the whole team.
Congratulations.
Not congrats on the funding.
congrats on the incredible partnership and all the progress.
Yeah.
I'll have you back on stage.
Great, thanks, jens.
Have a great rest of your day.
We'll talk to you soon.
Goodbye.
Gusto, it's the unified platform for payroll benefits and HR built to evolve with modern,
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Get on Gusto.
And then also head over to Shopify.
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And so fast, I will routinely just buy the products of our guests.
If they're on Shopify, I'll just buy it during the interview.
Yes.
That's one of my favorite pastimes.
Yes.
I really love it.
Well, we have our second in-person guest in the TBP and Ultridome.
Ara Krasian from Ramp, he is the economist.
We'll bring him on down.
He's here in the TVPN Ultridum.
So welcome to the stream, Aura.
Good to see you.
How are you doing?
Welcome to the Ultradome.
Thank you so much.
For those who have been living under a data center,
please introduce yourself for everyone.
My name is Ara Krasian.
I'm the economist at Ramp.
Time of Money Save both.
Let's go.
I research data on where businesses spend,
where they're investing, where they're pulling back,
and what's growing.
Our flagship research is called Ramp AI Index.
Tracks the size of the AI economy.
Okay, well, we're going to have you,
I think Tyler might have some beef
with you. We'll see. Maybe you agree. Because there's this article in the Wall Street Journal that I want
to go through. It says CEOs say AI is making work more efficient, but employees tell a different
story. Tyler took to the timeline to say, auto manufacturers say cars are making more travel
inefficient. Horses tell a different story. And so he's having fun with it. But there is an interesting
stat in this Wall Street Journal article. I don't know if you've had a chance to read this, but
Basically, they asked workers and C-suite executives, how much time do you think you're saving each week by using AI?
And the C-suite said, only 2% of C-suite executives that were surveyed by the Wall Street Journal said, no time at all.
I'm getting no benefit from AI.
Workers, 40% of workers said AI is not doing anything for me.
Conversely, 19% of executives, the C-suite, said they were saving more than 12 hours away.
week and only 2% of workers said they were saving more than 12 hours a week. So you have this huge
disparity, at least in the reporting from the Wall Street Journal. How are you interpreting this piece?
So there's two things going on here, right? You've got either the fact that the surveys may be
the improper way of measuring this. Because surveys don't always correspond to people's revealed preferences.
So if you look at actual spend on AI models, it doesn't tend to reflect, you know, this kind of
hesitance to use them or any lack of adoption. Yeah. Especially because when we track spend,
we're not just seeing that people are blowing a ton of money on models.
We see that the spend that they're doing is becoming larger,
and they're renewing their contracts more,
they're doubling down on them.
They're typically extending those contracts out.
That's not the type of spend that you do or investment that you make
unless you're actually seeing some benefit for them.
And specifically, I think a year ago,
sort of like mid-AI boom, post-chat GPT,
there were a lot of startups that came out and had, you know,
we're doing vertical AI for this, vertical AI for that, AI, SaaS.
And a lot of people saw the charts.
went from zero to $100 million in 12 months, eight months, two months, two days.
And people were wondering, is it going to be sticky?
Are the venture capitalists going to get burned?
Are these going to be flashing the pans?
Are they going to get steamrolled?
But from the data that you've pulled, it seems like a lot of these companies, probably not all
of them, but a lot of them have become sticky.
The spend has been recurring and it's growing.
But tell me more about what you're saying.
And well, that's the second part of why these surveys may not be the best way to measure this,
is that this kind of adoption takes a long time to actually take place.
We're still in our own tech bubble.
Yeah.
Where I just posted this data about cursor and anthropic.
Okay.
And every time I post about cursor anthropic, it gets way less engagement.
Why?
Because a lot of people don't know what cursor and anthropic are.
Oh, interesting.
And not to, no shade about cursor anthropic, like great technologies.
But when I...
I literally thought you were going to see the opposite, that like the cursor fanboys and the
anthropic fan boys are downranking you or something.
The total addressable social media market for content about anthropic is just significantly
lower.
Interesting.
There's a lot of my followers, particularly those in the accounting stand.
even people involved in procurement
don't, are still new
to understanding what are the dynamics in this market
even for Anthropic, which is
second largest player. So Jordi
had this thesis. We didn't really
fully run the analysis, but
I'd love to sync it up with what you're seeing
because he was saying that there's a vibe war
on X about the hottest lab.
Everyone over the break was obsessed with Cloud Code.
And then Jordy was saying like,
let's try and marry that with what we're seeing
in the app store and look at where things
ranking, there's the discussion that's happening, but then you go back to the app store and you see
a very different picture. What stuck out to you about the vibes versus public perception in the
consumer market? And then maybe we can marry that to what we're seeing in the ramp data.
Yeah, I mean, that was really consumer. Just because you have consumers on an extra thing. This
company's cooked. This company's cooked. And then you just look at like the actual reality and the
charts, which shows acceleration. And it just shows that social media reaction.
in real time are not even actually driving
like macro
acceleration in the
even downloads of different applications.
That has less to do with enterprise.
And then what are you seeing in the spend data?
A lot of those consumer trends
start to reflect in business trends as well.
So in our data set we see that
Open AI has the highest adoption rate
amongst us businesses, approaching about 35%.
And to be clear, only about 46% of businesses
on our platform are paying for any AI model service at all.
Yeah.
The vast majority of them are probably using coconut in some way.
I love the 50% just being like horses.
Yeah.
Horses are actually fantastic.
You don't have quick bath.
Unpack that.
Is it that they're just not paying, but they're using free tiers?
Is it that maybe they're paying but on a personal basis?
And the CEO is paying for a JATGBT Pro subscription or clug code or something.
And then when they go to work, they're not expensing it.
So it's not showing up on a ramp card.
There's a couple dynamics again.
Yeah.
Like, we already get criticism for having a data set that's probably a little bit more tech forward.
Yeah, yeah.
And we're transparent about that, and we think that's an important part of doing this kind of research.
At the same time, I think that we're likely underestimating AI adoption in some ways, because we don't capture free usage.
Yeah.
We don't cap because we only see anything that's associated with ramp card spend.
We don't capture employees using their personal accounts.
And then even when you do capture all that, where do you draw the line on what AI?
usage actually is. I mean, this is a big debate happening in the sort of AI economics research,
particularly as far as how we're going to measure the labor market impact. Because the real
question you want to answer is, are companies using AI? And then secondarily, how intensely are
they using AI? Yeah. It's very difficult to measure. You can't just use dollars to measure
AI intensity. Yeah. Right? Because the models are going cheaper over time. Sure.
So comparing those dollars spent over time is not going to be helpful to you as a researcher.
And then second, where do you draw the line on what AI usage is?
and then what kind of job can actually be automated.
So far, the research has tried to define job families
with characteristics that are exposed to AI and likely to be automated.
That research has gotten plenty of criticism in itself,
especially as the AI models develop,
and they start to be capable of doing more and more.
So now the research community is coming around to,
well, we need to figure out which companies are using AI,
get a data set. Ideally, that's something that private sector is working on.
That's why we put out our Ramp AI Index research.
tracks which businesses are using it and spending on it in some meaningful way and how they're using it.
And then ideally be able to marry that with payroll statistics and see, well, are there shifts happening in this part of the labor force or others?
Yeah, the thing that is going to be, like, I don't care if a CEO does a layoff and says, like, we're doing this because we're getting efficiency from AI.
Because the incentive is just to, like, blame it on AI efficiency instead of we ever hired or business isn't growing as fast as we thought it was or all the stuff.
you actually want, like, for the labor replacement kind of theories to be proven,
you have to see somebody like actively switching spend from payroll to tokens.
Yeah.
And you're going to have to see it over a long period of time.
I agree that when you see these layoff announcements,
a CEO may or may not say that it's about AI,
but that's not going to matter when, you know,
hundreds of thousands of people get laid off all the time.
It's sort of a drop in the massive size of the labor market.
You really want to track these changes over time as they happen, particularly as they affect other sectors.
Sure.
And whether or not those sectors that are seeing the concentrated employment effects are...
Is there any...
Have you been surprised at all at the types of individual companies that are adopting AI, you know,
are you seeing a difference?
Have you broken out, like, professional services firms?
So like accounting, tax, prep, legal versus SMBs, like retail and or...
you know, like, let's say like car dealerships or things like that.
A lot of the early adoption is where you'd expect.
I mean, the vast majority of tech companies, for example,
we do track their adoption, and it's been high for a long time.
The vast majority are already using some AI models.
Finance directly follows that.
And I think that makes sense, especially for tech, right?
These are the tools that were developed by engineers for engineers
and therefore the best productivity enhancing tools were things like cloud code
or the AI code editors, things that would directly help with people
who were building the technology.
in the first place. What we're going to start to see soon, though, is how it's going to affect
other parts of the labor force, especially now, you know, Claude Co-Work is out. Increasingly,
they're AI agent tools that can automate and have access to the broader context of a worker
outside of, like, a coding tool. So you can start to imagine a more typical office worker
benefit from these tools now. And that's where we're going to see the greatest productivity gains,
as those tools proliferate. And we're starting to see that, you know, change in business
strategy now from the model companies themselves. Anthropic is done.
doubling down on subscriptions, increasingly growing their subscription revenue.
They used to be sort of seen as like, oh, it's just about APIs.
That's their business model.
No, they're like really leaning into the consumer side and the employee subscription side.
You know, I think we're going to see that from open-air and a lot of competitors too.
Can you help me understand a little bit more about how you would theorize about the substitutability
between payroll dollars and AI spend?
because if I see a public company CEO lay off a thousand people,
like that might be half a billion dollars of payroll spend over a year.
And if I'm not seeing, well, a quarter billion dollars of AI spend,
I would not attribute it to AI just instinctually.
Because I feel like if there was a substitute of effect,
it would be, well, you know, an AI worker is half the price.
Yeah.
Not an AI worker is 1,000.
the price. So sure, yeah, get, you know, spend, spend $100,000 on AI and lay off a thousand people
that was costing you $100 million. That just doesn't clock for me, but am I off there economically,
or do you think there's something to that? Our early research right now shows that the, the job
profiles that are going to be affected most by this transformation are those most marginally
connected to the workforce. So you can imagine something like a labor marketplace, like an
upwork or driver. Yeah. Yeah. I think this is where people go to, it's anything from
designers to software engineers to
Yeah, we got to check in.
We got to check in on some of those
businesses because I used to think like, oh, you want
a song made for like a video?
I mean, go to go to,
yeah, go to fiber, go to upward.
Oh, you want like a simple website written for SEO.
Like a lot of SEO blog post writing was
highly scoped one-off task as well.
And instructing a human being to do that task
is not dissimilar from instructing an AI
comprehensive. No, the job description is the prompt
and then you're done, and there's very little back and forth.
It's just turn it in, and it'll pay you or I'll grade you.
On ramp spend, we have seen a significant decline in spend on those labor marketplaces,
and specifically among firms that have replaced that spend with AI spend,
but it's not one for one.
Okay.
So there are significant savings.
Is the ratio 50% or a 10%?
More than 50, but unfinalized numbers, it's a lot.
Yeah, but it's not 1,000th maybe or something.
I don't know.
It's somehow, so Fiver's down.
50% over the last 12 months.
Upwork is somehow up 20% over that same period.
Yeah, but over the past couple of years,
I think they're down over the last couple years.
How do you think about this,
going back to this Wall Street Journal article,
how do you think about AI tools diffusing
through organizations,
either from your experience inside of Ramp
versus the companies that work with Ramp?
Like, there is a world where you could see
C-suite executives, they're like, I definitely need to be doing deep research reports on every
business question that comes to me. Maybe I'm not vibe coding solutions myself, but I'm a power
user of these tools because I take my job seriously. Alternatively, there's a lot of young people
who are just AI native entering and they're more on the junior side who come in and sort of bring
these AI tools with them and might demand an AI tool. So how do you think about AI adoption across
levels of seniority within organizations?
It often starts with one team at a company that might be an early adopter or might
be the same adoption dynamics that happen in a larger market where it starts with early
adopting companies happen at the micro level at a company too, where it might be a couple
people at a company that then evangelize it or bring it to a team.
Then you might see a larger like pilot program.
I've criticized the idea of pilot programs because I just think they end up, you end up
trying to sign like a multi-year contract for one thing instead of doing a more constant
evaluation of the types of products coming to market, especially for enterprise lately.
And so the diffusion will always happen, will typically happen like that. It depends on the
company how much leadership there is from the executive team on increasing AI adoption.
I think the vibe has also changed where more and more companies are not shying away from using
AI, I think it's probably a net positive to talk about how you're using it effectively.
Yeah, yeah.
But it certainly defends on the industry, because there is, I think, a PR problem.
Oh, totally, yeah.
But for the task that it does well, I mean, you know, we'll talk about how AI's,
the frontier is kind of jagged.
We kind of know what it's good at doing.
We're not entirely sure.
But for the tax that it's figured out pretty well, I think most companies are very receptive
to evangelizing it fairly quickly.
Are you, as part of your research, are you at,
actively trying to replace your own work.
I knew an Al-Land.
You were an economist at Ramp.
Your job is to look at all of our data
and turn it into easy-to-understand reports.
Yeah, what's your tool chain?
I mean, for a couple of reasons,
I just have to be on top of it all
just so I can talk about it effectively.
But for the experimental,
early-stage research process,
they're so good.
I mean, even a rudimentary aspect
of most economic analysis,
such as doing a seasonal adjustment on your data.
Sure.
And it's really just integrating a Python package.
But there's a lot of different times
where you might use this or that package.
And if before you might have to write that code yourself
to say, hey, do this seasonal adjustment,
you can now just instruct it to, like,
swap in and out packages
and really check your results
across different methodologies.
So it really does make my work a lot better
because it allows you to, you know,
particularly for my job,
you know, everything I do is public-facing.
So all my research is just out there.
But you really only see 10% of what I ultimately worked on.
A lot of the research threads that I go down never see the light of day.
And so AI allows me to experiment a lot more, check a lot of different results faster,
and ultimately get through the bad ideas more quickly so I can focus on the good ones.
Do you think without AI you would need a bigger team in order to put out the amount of research that you put out?
For sure, yeah.
I mean, for me, it's certainly been a productivity enhancing tool.
Sure.
But I haven't figured out yet how to do the more multimedia stuff.
Like I increasingly am making my own videos.
Sure.
I'm still doing a lot of my own editing.
Like I make my own promo images.
I make my own charts.
I haven't found the AIS to be helpful for me.
I think they need to build the RL environment around like premiere or some video editing.
No, my AI girlfriend's always telling me to work on that aspect.
I'm just thinking about you all the time.
I don't want that.
There were some FUD around Open AI
towards the back half of last year.
Is Open AI cooked?
What does the data say?
There's no definitive leader
in terms of the AI race.
Mark's changing really quickly.
Open eye is a distinct advantage
as far as distribution.
It's at the most businesses.
Now, Google also has a distinct advantage.
Yeah.
Because it integrates Gemini for free across all of workspace.
Sure.
So in our data set, I think we likely undercount Gemini adoption.
But Open Eye, just by nature of being kind of this consumer default,
if you're a company that is going to make some early business investment in an AAM model for your employees,
it's kind of a no-brainer oftentimes just go with, hey, what do you know about as a consumer and what are your employees now?
Yeah.
And so for that reason, Open Eye, I think, is in a very safe place.
Cool.
But it's a pretty tense race, and we have seen particularly,
in the sort of product layer, you know, large incumbents being,
losing a lot of market share very quickly to like a new entrant.
Get up co-pilot a couple years ago, that was the major,
that was pretty much the only AI codator available for enterprise.
Six months later, cursor comes down, it's at 50% market share.
Wow.
So I don't think any company should feel particularly comfortable,
even if they have the enterprise backing and distribution.
Yeah, only the paranoid survive.
So Open AI is growing, Anthropics also growing.
1.6 percentage points to 16.7% of businesses using Anthropic,
biggest spenders in the tech sector, leaning heavily on API spend,
and then Google adoption growing as well.
So basically, it's all good news.
There's still a little bit of a horse race,
but everyone's making across the finish line from the most part.
People were worried over the last couple months.
Well, CloudCode is getting so much better.
Is it going to automate away things like cursor or obviated away?
And what we just found in our latest research is that,
Cloud code is definitely accelerating in its adoption,
but cursor, it's really a dollar spent like the pie is still getting bigger too.
So there are enough people entering the market such that,
and also, by the way, enough people that are enough companies that are willing to buy multiple tools
and are still experimenting where at least finding that, you know,
they can afford to have multiple tools at their disposal.
So neither of them are losing, you know, revenues and they still continue to grow.
I imagine that as businesses,
scale at a certain point they want to go with an enterprise plan, they want a contract, they want
billing. Do you think you'll maybe have to supplement your data with survey data because you
might see a drop as a bunch of businesses say, hey, we don't want you training on our stuff.
Let's just sign some big master service contract and wire you the money or something.
Or how are you thinking about adjusting to that?
I think that the value of ramp data is that we see actual money movements.
And you can go to another researcher if you want survey data.
I think what we do well is that we're focused on what we uniquely have access to.
There's no data set that tracks where and how American businesses spend,
at least not one that's available to the general public.
Our research tries to focus on that and track those.
That's great.
And you're pushing the ramp sales team to get even more businesses on the ramp platform.
You just feed me, feed me.
Every time you sign up for ramp, you build my data set,
All anonymized, all aggregated.
We don't do anything like that.
But for that reason,
I, at the start of this podcast,
it's probably the first time I ever pitched Ramp.
I'm pretty separate from the sales team for that reason.
That's good.
Yeah, the real nightmare is when Ramp rolls out enough AI tools
that you have to classify being a Ramp customer as an AI adopter,
and then 100% of the data is AI adopters.
Yeah, this research at some point is going to become useless when it hits 100.
I mean, imagine if there was like a Ramp Internet index in the 90s.
True.
It's like, how many people have web,
If I were still talking about that, 20, 30 years for you.
Everyone would be snoring.
People are still interested in it.
It would be useless research.
But at the same time, there's a ton of interesting research to be done deeper in the internet stack.
Well, what clouds are you on?
What databases are you using?
What front-end frameworks are using?
We're hiring on economics lab.
These are great ideas.
I know you got your talent signing today.
John helped with the census at one point.
I did.
I did work for the census at one point.
Yeah, in college.
It was a fun gig.
They do great work.
They do.
They do.
Yeah, I mean, from working there and doing everything on pencil and paper, I was like the first person I think to ever use, like Google.
Oh, were you a door to door census taker?
I was, I was a manager.
So I was a manager of a unit that would re-interview people to make sure that the door-to-door census takers weren't like lying.
Because if you're a door-to-door sensitive taker, you get paid 20 bucks an hour, you just go up and you're saying, I have to walk to all these doors and say, I saw three people.
I saw four people.
But you could just write that and then just turn that in and not do the work.
And so we'd go reality check all the day.
John was also, what, 20 at the time managing a team of hundreds?
It was a big team and they were all older than me.
It was very crazy.
I want every tech person listening to recognize the value of government data and the checks
that always goes through and the great work that you did in your early career.
Yeah, it was a lot of fun.
Anyway, thank you so much for coming on the show.
Great to have you here.
always great. We'll wind down the show. Thank you. Thank you so much. And with that, we will conclude
today's show. We will be back tomorrow at 11 a.m. Pacific, sharp on the dot, hopefully earlier.
Is there anything in the timeline that we need to go through before we get out of here, Jordy?
Let's see. We didn't even talk about CIA. We are officially signed with CIA. We went Hollywood mode.
That's very exciting. I think everyone's actually. Yeah, very, very excited. We're pleased.
We partnered with them.
We put up a trading card.
We're very excited.
CAA team.
Yes.
They're going to be helping us navigate.
Yeah.
The entertainment landscape.
Yeah.
Very excited.
Yeah.
Yeah, we went down.
We took some headshots at CAAHQ.
Also, you know, I like to think of the creative artist agency.
Sort of the anthropic of agencies.
Do you know the lore?
Did you actually get up to speed on this?
So creative artists agency was.
formed by five agents. They were at WME. They were at William Morris agency in 1975. Who you got?
There's a dinner. You got Michael Ovitz, Michael Rosenfeld, Ronald Meyer, and Roland Perkins and William Haber.
And they're at this dinner and they decide to create their own agency. What happens? They're like,
okay, we need some financing. We're going to start a rival agency. We're leaving WME. We're starting CIA.
What happens? Before they can get financing, they all get fired.
They all get fired.
Seriously, this is real.
This is on the way you be there.
It's almost like thinking machines dynamic.
Yeah, no, it really is like AI lab talent wars all over again.
And I don't know if they're the Anthropic or the thinking machines, but maybe they're
the open eye on this.
But the metaphor is extremely messy, but it's fun lore.
Of course, CIA was incorporated in Delaware and had a $35,000 line of credit and a $21,000 bank loan.
They rented a small office in Century City.
And within a week, they sold a game show called Rime and Rime and Rite.
reason, The Little Rich Show, and the Jackson Five. An early plan was to form a medium-sized,
full-service agency, share proceeds equally and do without nameplaints on doors or formal
titles or individual client lists with guidelines like be a team player and return phone calls
promptly. I like those rules. Great rules. We're very happy to be partnered with them.
I got to reread who is Michael Ovitz. For sure. For sure. Fantastic book. Absolute legend.
And when we were at CAA last week, we, or, yeah, last week, we did confirm that the mail room still exists.
It does.
And it's a physical room.
There was a lot of mail.
There's a lot of people in it.
They were moving the mail around.
Apparently, they said we were the only talent to ever ask.
I think they tell everyone.
They probably tell everyone.
But there was a lot of order in there.
There was a lot of positive energy.
You could see that the next generation is already cooking.
Chomping at that.
And, yeah, getting ready to build.
Anyway, thank you so much for tuning in.
Is that the bomb?
The bomb has been planted.
The bomb has been planted.
I love that.
Mark German says the Siri chat bot is known internally as Campos.
It'll likely be powered by Gemini.
Running on Google's own TPUs and cloud infra, meaning it's far more powerful than the one coming to Syria.
I'm very excited for Grumman.
He's coming back on the show.
We're going to get him in person.
Leave us five stars on Apple Podcasts, Spotify.
Sign up for our newsletter at TBPN.com.
Meta Super Intelligence Lab delivers its first base models internally.
Bosworth calls them very good.
Headlines, more headlines.
More headlines.
A lot of work to do for post-training.
Anyway, thank you so much for tuning in.
We will see you tomorrow at 11 a.m. Sharp.
Goodbye.
Nice work, brothers.
I'll see you on the next one.
