TBPN - Weekly Recap: Sam vs. Elon, Cluely's Crazy Ad, UFC x Paramount, Apple's AI Robot
Episode Date: August 16, 2025(00:00) - Intro (00:05) - Sam Altman vs. Elon Musk (25:34) - Roy Lee and Cluely's Curious Marketing Strategy (28:50) - Ads in ChatGPT (38:20) - Perplexity Wants to Buy Chrome (55:10)... - UFC’s $7.7 Billion Paramount Deal (01:09:13) - Apple is Building a Robotic Siri For Your Home (01:28:40) - Slop vs. Steel Debate w/ Delian Asparouhov (Varda) & Everett Randle (Kleiner Perkins) TBPN.com is made possible by: Ramp - https://ramp.comFigma - https://figma.comVanta - https://vanta.comLinear - https://linear.appEight Sleep - https://eightsleep.com/tbpnWander - https://wander.com/tbpnPublic - https://public.comAdQuick - https://adquick.comBezel - https://getbezel.com Numeral - https://www.numeralhq.comPolymarket - https://polymarket.comAttio - https://attio.com/tbpnFin - https://fin.ai/tbpnGraphite - https://graphite.devRestream - https://restream.ioProfound - https://tryprofound.comJulius AI - https://julius.aiFollow 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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You're watching TVBend.
Jordy, what is going on in the timeline?
We got a red flag.
We got a red flag on the play.
The timeline is in turmoil.
Elon Musk and Sam Altman are fighting.
Mom and dad are fighting.
Mom and dad are fighting.
Shots fired.
This all started because of Apple actually, not opening I, not X,
not the everything app, but Apple and the iOS charts.
So this started with Elon
Musk posting. Apple is behaving in a manner that makes it impossible for any AI company besides
Open AI to reach number one in the app store, which is an unequivocal antitrust violation.
XAI will take immediate legal action. Well, the community notes section took immediate action
and added a number of extra context that they thought people might want to know. First, in January of
2025, Deepseek reach number one overall in the app store, similar to how Ramp is our number one
sponsor on this show.
Time is money.
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And just one month ago on July 18th, 2025, perplexity reached number one overall in India's app store.
That's interesting.
I didn't realize that.
And Grock has hit number one in Japan.
Oh, that's right.
Yeah.
Probably a number of factors contributing to that.
So most of the AI app.
live in the in the productivity section so that must have been in that but it's
odd because it's like we need a whole new set of of of categories for the new
AI apps I feel like they should have their own category immediately what are
all the categories I mean productivity I feel like that's everything from like
spreadsheets to chat GPT like it's a pretty broad it's a pretty broad category
and and so they I mean Apple probably needs to redo the the the categories
Where are the categories?
I feel like you can't,
I feel like they're hard to find these days.
They have editor choice apps,
which we'll get into because,
okay,
so browse categories.
They have Applevision Pro apps at the top.
That's an odd choice for the iPhone version of the app store.
Then Apple Watch apps,
then AR apps,
then books,
business,
developer tools,
education,
entertainment,
finance, food and drink.
Food and drink gets its own category.
Well,
I'm looking at the global top charts right now are global for the U.S.
So across all the different categories.
And right now, chat GPT is number one.
Number two is tea on her dating advice, which is a new tea app.
Which is helping men date safe.
Wait, wait.
So it's the men version?
The male version of the T app.
It is men's cereal, but for the T app.
Rated, but it's number one in lifestyle.
And number two on the overall charge.
Number three is T dating.
Four is threads, which apparently just crossed 400 million monthly active users.
They're on a tear out of massery.
he's not messing around over at MetaHQ.
And GROC is number five.
Okay, that's not that bad.
This is despite Apple,
I do believe that Elon is correct
and that Apple's not including GROC
in features,
which are editorial decisions.
Editorial.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I mean,
Doge designer says GROC is the number two app
and productivity, number six overall,
so why is it so hard to find?
And what he's pointing out is that Elon Musk shared this.
GROC is the smartest AI in the world.
and on the toughest test and came first by far encoding,
but is not mentioned at all under AI by Apple.
So Apple did an editorial view on the AI powered apps,
and they listed out a bunch.
Chat Chit, Google Gemini, Microsoft Copilot,
Lightroom, photo and video editor,
which, I mean, I use it every once in a while,
but it barely has AI features.
It does not compare to a foundation model.
It's not a chat interface.
Then you have Canva.
Then you have Duolingo.
which of course, Duolingo uses artificial intelligence in some ways,
but you don't think of it as like a competitor to chat GPT.
So this is clearly just like, here are some fun apps.
And we're using the AI buzzword over at Apple.
And I think it's given the series of PR crises that GROC has experienced in the last,
call it six weeks.
I think it is fairly fair for the app store to say, hey, let's let this breathe a little bit.
Yep. We're not removing them from the app store. We're not removing them from the rankings. They're still ranked. Yep. But maybe let's not feature it given that it's been saying. Yeah, the other, the other interesting thing is like GROC usage has to be split across X and GROC, the actual app. Like I bet I wouldn't be surprised if the majority of actual prompts or tokens flow through X, the everything app. Like that's certainly how I use GROC when I use it.
I usually start with the post, click the grok button, then I'm going back and forth a little bit there.
And then also, they actually have a pretty awesome flow where now on any image you see on X, you can press and hold and say, edit this in grok.
And then you can just type Studio Ghibli and it just Ghibli's it right there in GROC.
And they launched a feature to turn it into a video.
Video, exactly. So all of those GROC tokens, all those GROC usage, that's going to
feed into the X app, which again, they've always put X in news and not in social networking
because I think it couldn't beat Facebook and Instagram, but it can beat like the traditional
news apps. So all of the different rankings are all very, it's all game to different ways.
Some of them are momentum based. Some of them are different categories. And I mean, we heard this
from Nikita Beater, where he was saying that his last app that went super viral,
He hid in the games section, those were his words.
He hid because the game section is so crowded that people wouldn't see him climbing the rankings.
But social.
The charts are based on acceleration broadly.
Exactly.
And total usage.
And there are only like 10 dominant social platforms.
So if he had a ton of momentum, he'd probably be in the top 10.
People would be screenshoting and be like, what is this?
And it would be on Mark Zuckerberg's desk.
And Mark would have to be like, what's our plan to kill this?
you, all right?
As opposed to
if you're hanging out in games
next to 75 Candy Crush
clones, you could be
doing well, but realistically,
you're not really gaining
that much, you're not drawing that much attention.
Then at the last second, he swaps over to
social networking where he actually
wanted to be, and then he's at the top of the charts.
Anyway. So, Elon says
Apple's behaving in a manner that makes it
impossible for any AI company besides
OpenAID to reach number one in the app store.
He starts getting community noted.
Sam Altman,
fires back says this is a remarkable claim, claims that Elon is using X to benefit himself
in his own companies and harm his competitors. Sam starts getting community noted. Elon
fires back and says you got three million views on your BS post. You liar far more than
I've received on many of mine despite me having 50 times your follower account. Elon's getting
community noted but Sam fires back skill issue or boss.
Skill issue or boss. Anyways based off of that, Sam says will you sign an affidavit that you
you never directed changes to the X algorithm in a way that hurt your competitors or helped
your own companies.
Wait, who said that?
This is Sam.
Sam said that.
An affidavit.
I will apologize if so.
One thing is that Open AI has consistently dominated the narrative on X organically,
many of their...
Some degree.
I feel like Open AI has been more dominant just in the real world and actually Anthropics
done very well on X.
And there's been this whole theme of like, Claude has...
better vibes and big model smell and oh, I would just say if Sam Altman puts a post up,
he can put up a picture of a Death Star and get 20. Yeah, you're 100% crap. Yeah. And so I don't
believe that he's like shadow banned. I don't believe that anyone in Open AI is like shadow
banned and the algorithm. Yeah. But somebody responded to this exchange. Well, really quickly,
if Sam's worried about Reach, he should be using Restream, coding his content all over the internet,
Restream one live destination third one live stream 30 plus destinations multi stream and reach your audience wherever they are
And thank you to everyone in the chat today mark Saraj we got Taylor David we got a whole crew here
Techno chief I believe said good morning to me hello techno chief good morning see you
And it's fun having all the crew assemble in the chat rooms we actually can see the chat wherever it's happening
whether it's on X or on YouTube because of Restream so thank you to restream anyway continue a friend just just just message
and said, somebody tell Elon to unshadow ban me.
Okay.
And I think that...
I think I know who this is.
I think it's much more likely that it's a skill issue.
I think it is a skill issue for this particular person.
Sam is saying, here, you never know.
You never know.
But somebody responded to Sam and Elon's exchange, and they said,
Grock, who's right?
Don't be biased.
And Grock fires back and says, based on verified evidence,
Sam Altman is right.
Musk's Apple antitrust claim is undermined by apps like deep seek and perplexity reaching number one in 2025.
Conversely, Musk has a history of directing X algorithm changes to boost his post and favor his interest per 2023 reports and ongoing probes.
Hypocrisy noted.
So we'll see how long.
This is 4D chess because in general people don't believe GROC because they believe it to be insane.
Well, it said some wild thing.
It said some crazy things.
And so if Grock is siding with Sam, people will be.
be like, well, Grock's wrong.
Elon's actually correct.
Yeah.
That's the beauty of these things.
Elon is thinking, what have I created?
Created a monster.
This is like the child that, what's the, what's, what's, what's, what's that, what's, what's
what's that, uh, what's, uh, what's the, uh, Etypice Rex, of course.
Yes.
Yes.
Eipus Rex moment.
A child's coming for the, for the father.
Yeah.
Well, we'll see how long, Brock, uh, last, how much you want to play on that, on that analogy.
It gets pretty weird.
It gets pretty weird.
I mean,
Oedipus marries his mother.
Yes.
But we'll see how long
Grock lasts in the timeline
today.
We'll see.
We'll see.
We'll see.
So, yeah, the Wall Street Journal
wrote it up.
Apple is behaving in a manner
that makes it impossible
for any AI company
besides opening eye to reach,
number one.
The App Store,
which features lists of top
and trending apps
is a key way for apps
to access new customers.
Apple doesn't say much about how
or why it chooses
particular apps to feature.
among the factors it considers
its usability and positive reviews and ratings.
Yeah, it's definitely getting more and more complex.
It's just important to break out
editorial decisions from the App Store team
and true rankings.
I mean, I really, I think a lot of people
have not taken a tour of the modern app store
on iOS because it used to be that you just show up
and there was just a list of, like, the charts were like
a few clicks away.
I'm like seven clicks deep.
There's an ad for just Google, I guess, in here.
There's essentials that are just top games right now.
Like you have to scroll and scroll and scroll and then you go over to apps.
Then you can browse the categories.
But even when you browse the categories, you go to productivity, it's going to give you like the, when I go to productivity, you think I'd be browsing to hit like, okay, show me the top productivity apps.
Yeah.
No.
It's showing me an app called Sofa, a downtime.
organizer then it's showing me essential productivity apps that are selected by the app
store editors then the best calendar apps best to do as best email apps best focus time or
habit tracking it's going going going and the big question is how much how much
discovery is actually happening in the app store is this where people are
finally find the top charts but it's seven it's seven clicks deep and so yeah if I go
to free apps it's chat GPT number one then grok number two then Microsoft
authenticator number three a GIHC which is here for Microsoft authenticated
Maybe doesn't get enough love.
No, but the question here is, are people discovering various LMs through TikTok and X and Instagram, various platforms?
Is that where discovery is happening?
Yeah.
And I'm sure there's some discovery happening in the App Store, but it has to be a very small fraction of the downloads being driven,
are actually driven by the editorial decisions from the app store.
Of course, of course.
Yeah.
And games don't even show up in the top.
Like, it's not, games are not, it's a completely separate tab.
You cannot select games as one of the subcategories of apps because games are not considered apps anymore in the app store.
To answer the question about like hiding in games.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The other, the other question is just like, how much, how fair is it to give yourself a little boost in your app that you paid $70 billion for?
Yeah.
Like, I was thinking about this and I was saying like, 44 billion.
well he was 44 yeah yeah it was 44 it wasn't 69
I thought it was 69 for some reason that was that was the price for share
was he paid so ridiculous anyway um
I was thinking about like before the launch of Instagram stories
I didn't have a way to share Snapchat stories on Instagram
like you could screenshot them but there's no sort of like native way to share a link
to a story that if someone on my Instagram feed
sees it, it clicks, and it automatically opens in Snapchat.
Like it was always a walled garden.
And then when Instagram stories came out,
there was really no way to tie those two platforms together.
Like in the pre-metta era,
there was a way when you shared a post on Instagram
to check a box and automatically share it to your Twitter.
And it would not just share a link.
It would share the actual photo with the comment.
And it would work as a native post on X.
And it could, you know, not really go viral, but it could, it could, it, it, it, it
existed on Twitter as like a first-class citizen in the sense that the image was there.
There was no link.
It was just like you had just actually opened the app, posted the same photo with proper crosspost, right?
And then eventually once Facebook bought Instagram, Twitter had to respond by breaking that integration.
So early on Twitter had this very, this was like the Adam Bain era, like the early back the Dick Costolo era.
Twitter had this idea of like, we're going to be the command line for your life.
And there was this idea of like, I'm going to be able to tweet at you to send money to you.
Like the everything app idea is something that's over 13 years old at this point, maybe 15 years old at this point.
Like the Twitter executives were thinking about this a long time ago.
Like being able to tweet money at you, being able to.
like use,
use Twitter as kind of this, like,
substrate or this, like, API for all sorts of things.
Other apps would be built on top of Twitter.
There was tweet deck and Tweety Bird and, like, all these different.
Like, the mobile app was by an independent developer.
And they just didn't, and they were like,
why would we need one?
We just develop the protocol.
Well, you need one because you want to stuff ads in it, obviously,
and you want to monetize it.
It makes a ton of sense.
And so Elon came to killed all that.
But the other challenge here is, is GROC has,
has a variety of NSFW features.
Yep.
And when Apple is making editorial decisions
about which apps to feature in the App Store,
that is certainly going to be on their mind.
We're having Eugenia from Replica on the show later today.
I'm wondering if Replica, I think, is currently in the App Store
with 226,000 reviews,
hasn't gotten kicked out.
I'm trying to think if any other, if any other apps.
So like only fans, for example, does not have an app.
I'm wondering if any of the, what character AI does, right?
So Apple's clearly drawn the line at like, like,
AI chat bots, even if they're somewhat erotic are okay.
But we, but that doesn't mean they're going to,
that doesn't mean they're going to feature them.
They're not going to promote it.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
in the App Store.
Yeah.
No, that's absolutely correct.
So, and then again, I think it's very hard to say how Apple makes these editorial decisions.
Yep.
But it's very possible that they are talking with people on the Apple team and being like,
what apps do you like?
What apps are you using?
Making decisions that way, right?
I think part of Grok over the last month or so is like figuring out, like, how do we get strong consumer adoption,
which categories are we going to get strong?
I'll tell you how they get strong consumer adoption.
Sock 2 compliance.
They need to get on Vanta.
Automate compliance, manage, risk, prove trust continuously.
Vantos trust management platform takes the manual work out of your security and compliance process
and replaces it with continuous automation, whether you're pursuing your first framework
or managing a complex program.
No, that is a good question.
How can GROC actually get consumer adoption?
The companion space seems like maybe the right move, even if it is a little weird.
But is there any other path?
I mean, forking it into X and Twitter and like having it show up on every post seems like a reasonable way.
I wonder, it is weird that they have two apps.
I thought X was supposed to be the everything app.
Like, like, why are they trying to get me to install a second app when they should maybe just say, hey, we're actually going to be the everything app?
You can use GROC fully and you're all the upgrade and you can get on GROC heavy.
You can be paying $200 a month for a top tier, the super.
insane level
LLM but it all exists and it's all managed
within the X app that already has a lot of
a lot of installations.
Yeah, it's a challenge.
Your GROC is
is
top or near the top
of a bunch of different benchmarks.
And yet that doesn't guarantee
consumer adoption. Right?
People don't switch products because something is
20% better in this
technical way, right? They develop habits.
Yeah. And the other thing, it was only a month ago
GROC or XAI announced.
a partnership with the Department of Defense, a $200 million contract, so that's serious.
But again, you know, figuring out where they're going to ramp revenue with consumers that,
when it's not just bundled into X, the social media app.
Yeah. I think it's interesting to debate, like, when can a new technology be bolted on
and become additive to an existing platform versus,
you need a new app to actually get it to work.
So Facebook actually rolled out a search engine in Facebook, the Blue App, like years ago.
And when you would go to search, you could search for your friends, but then you could also go and it would search the web, too.
And it would say, hey, you're searching for this thing.
There's no posts about it out there.
So let's just pull from the web.
And they basically built a search engine.
Team, pull up this post from Chad, GPT.
I want to see John's live reaction to it.
Okay, let me see this post.
Whereas, whereas like stories was something that was added in.
So they chat GPT quoted Grok saying that Sam Alvin is right and said good bot.
Good bot.
Wow.
Timelines and turmoil.
You love to see it.
It's a great day on the internet.
But there's always, yeah, so I think there is something about like the pixel screen, the screen pixel real estate.
that is somewhat, like, screen pixels are, like, scarce.
And you can only do so much.
Like, it's, it's, like, Instagram was able to add reels as a tab, integrate those in the main feed.
They were able to add stories up at the top as a little bar.
And it got crowded, but no, but Instagram did not, did not see massive churn.
Yeah.
But I think that if they, I'm, I really think if they try and stuff like, okay, yes, this is also like Claude Co.
and you're going to like do your you're going to do your homework in Instagram now you're going to do your your your software engineering in in Instagram right now.
Yeah.
You're going to have a chat below.
I think people will just say no.
I think it's I think it's too big of a step.
Whereas going from photos to videos to reels to stories like all of that works within the same kind of UX, UI space.
But if you try and bolt on like a productivity tool into a social network.
work, it winds up being a little rough.
And so maybe that's the reason why Elon realizes that like GROC has to be a separate app.
Because if I'm using GROC heavy to solve Olympic level math, I might not want that to happen
on the chaos timeline feed, right?
Yeah, I mean, if if you're a software engineer working at a company and every time
you, your boss walks up to talk to you about something, you're in X, the everything app, just
scroll in the timeline while coding, that might be tough, right? It might be better to be doing
those, doing that coding work and, you know, with, with GROC, right? Put a spreadsheet in there.
Put, put a database in there. Let me, let me build, let me build an entire business within the
everything app. Tyler, what's your reaction today? Um, I think so, so one thing I haven't
thinking about is like, uh, I forget who it was, but someone said like, um, as a company,
you want to do things that your competitor that go against your competitor's morals, right?
Do you remember?
This was Paul Graham.
Yeah.
Okay.
It wasn't morals, but it was just like the idea of counter positioning, this idea that like,
Avi Schiffman at friend, like he's making a product that is a wearable AI device.
And if he makes it look like an Apple product and he makes it like, oh, it's instead of an
AirPod and, you know, an iPhone, it's a necklace.
Like, and it has Apple design language.
Like Apple will totally be able to just steamroll.
all that by launching something very similar.
Whereas if he comes out with something that has such a bizarre design that Apple would
be like, wow, if we try and copy him.
And he's not trying to make it useful for anything other than being your friend.
Yep.
He's he's he's also counter positioning against chat GPT which is a tool.
It's not, its default state is not to be your friend.
People use it that way but and in some ways it's designed to function like that.
but ultimately, yeah, I think he's found,
he's carved out his own.
And Grok did the same thing by coming out
and like leaning really heavy into companionship, right?
Yeah.
That is a, I think that's something that opened up to that path.
If they're going to go like in that kind of kind of positioning like idea,
I think they could also, I could see them doing almost like a Clule type thing
where it's like, okay, you can use this for your homework.
Like you make it very good at like, you don't have to use like cheating per se.
But I think that's like an interesting way that like if they want to go further down that like consumer kind of positioning.
Yeah, it's just it's odd that it feels like they're trying to do a lot right now.
They're still in the exploration phase because I have, I mean, maybe this gets to like the value of transfer learning in reinforcement learning.
But I have it, I have a hard time believing that many people who are in the market for like a companion are like, I definitely want it to be able to ace humanity's last exam.
Like, in fact, in fact,
In fact, I think that you might want a companion
not to be better than you at math.
Like, I think you might want a companion
that just kind of like, is like, oh yeah, I agree, man.
Like that math problem is hard.
I mean, this is a toxic friendship dynamic.
People are like, I want, I want my friend to be great,
but not better than me.
Exactly.
That's real.
So they need to, they need to dumb it down.
They need to be the inverse of bench hacking.
Yeah, the truth-seeking.
Yeah, the new meta is going to be teaching your AI how to do things.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Teaching it history.
Yeah.
Teaching it how to do your homework.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, the Feynman method.
You teach and then you learn, you learn.
Like, I would probably learn more from teaching an LLM the answer to a problem than it trying to teach me.
What were you about to say?
I was going to say, like, the truth-seeking, like, idea of GROC seems very much, like, opposed to the companion aspect.
Like, those seem like two different ends of...
The hero of our group chat right now is one of the great.
greatest fabulous in history.
He's a serial liar.
But he's the most entertaining character.
He's the court jester.
He's the court jester of our group chat because he hallucinates more than GPT2.
And it's fantastic.
And it genuinely provides a lot of value than just someone who's like,
oh, I will only give you things that are 100%, I will only say things that are 100% factual.
I will only say things that are definitively provable.
It's like, no, he, he throws out a lot of wild pitches.
But every once in a while, you just slam it into the outfield.
Roy Lee is in the news again.
He bought a billboard in Manhattan.
And he said, Alex Cohen says, fine.
I'm starting to like the Cluelie guys because Roy put up a billboard that says,
Hi, I'm Roy.
I'm 21.
Missing an apostrophe on the second I'm clearly deliberate, absolute word smith.
This was very expensive.
PLS, buy my thing, please buy my thing,
Culeley.com.
And John Chu, Coastal Ventures, says,
this is why I invested in Roy Lee,
once in a generation talent,
tapping into culture and zeitgeist.
This was a spicy post.
People kind of going back and forth
on whether or not this should actually deliver.
Roy also put out a post saying that like
everything he does is for short form.
So he bought this billboard.
He expects it to convert on the short form
that will be created around the billboard.
certainly feels like people will create,
we'll take picture of this share.
I mean, when you look at,
when you look at,
I think what I'm interested to see from Cluelly
is where they really get,
where they really get long,
you know, retention, right?
Because they have.
The top of funnel is full.
Yeah, they've got plenty.
It's extremely full.
Top of funnel marketing.
But when you look at, like,
it doesn't, it seems like if they just focused on students, right,
they seem to be in this kind of place
where they're thinking about enterprise,
they're exploring different markets.
But if you look at the way that ChatsypT's usage,
basically tokens generated, dropped as the summer started,
that's a good argument to say
clearly could just focus on products for students
that will eventually graduate into the workforce
and things like that.
But anyway, what else?
Well, they didn't make the top AI agents
by revenue chart that a non-Sanwal shared,
said, who would you put your money today?
to win in the long term.
The top was cursor at 500 million in annual revenue.
And they're making $3.2 million in revenue per employee,
gleans at 100 million,
Mercor is at 100 million,
replets at 100 million.
How are you defining an agent?
I think it's just AI startups.
Anyone who's used the AI agent, like meme, basically.
Stolen, the agents are going to be pissed about this,
stolen valid.
I don't know.
It's hard to call Mercor an AI agent.
That one.
That one feels particularly odd.
But in Gleon.
Even Glein is enterprise search.
Yeah, search.
But I would say Replit is an agent company.
It's kind of like every AI company is now an agent company.
Harvey, you know, hasn't really branded themselves in agent.
But it's interesting like you're not putting Claude.
You're going to put cursor on here, which generates revenue from Claude Code.
Yeah.
And is a gentic ID.
Yeah.
And you're not going to include Claudecotech.
is crazy and also not including chat GPT, which has deep research, which is probably the most
used AI agent in the world right now, I have to imagine, just by number of queries.
There, it's missing some stuff. It's missing some stuff, but it's okay. Also, Devon's not on here,
which is kind of odd. But that's the nature of these lists. It's CB insights, folks. They do the
best they can. Let's pull up the videos of Sam Altman on AI ads. And I think it will crystallize a little
bit of like what we mean when we mean like monetizing a free LLM, a free AI chat app.
It doesn't necessarily mean stuffing display ads in there.
Just like the answer to Facebook's monetization problem was not banner ads on the in the right
bar.
It was in feed ads that look.
If you're watching reels and you see a reels ad, it looks exactly like a reel.
And in fact, the best performing ads on Instagram Reels feel just like user generated content.
They don't look like Super Bowl ads.
They're additive.
Yeah, they're additive and people often enjoy them.
And so that will be, at least this is the semi-analysis argument that I sort of agree with.
That will be the like what we say about ads in AI.
It will be more like commissions for agentic checkout, at least to start.
So let's pull up the first video.
In the example, right now there's a lot of people that have websites that monetize with referral.
to Amazon.
Yep.
And they're frustrated because a lot of the, I mean, traffic, just like organic SEO is way down.
Yep.
And the general read here is that OpenAI will ultimately start to earn that same type of revenue
that the publishers historically did.
Yep.
So there was a fireside chat at Harvard Business School with Sam Altman.
Let's give it up for Harvard Business School.
It's the Harvard of Business School.
That's what they've been saying.
So he got a question from the audience about ad monetization.
We'll hear how Sam Altman responded to it.
Although fair, it could be a barrier for early stage entrepreneurs or startups or even small businesses.
Given this context, do you envision OpenAI exploring alternative monetization strategy that could include free API access,
perhaps supported by advertising or other methods, to foster innovation in the future?
I will disclose just as like a personal bias that I hate ads.
I think ads were important to give the early Internet business model,
but I think they do sort of somewhat fundamentally misalign a user's incentives
with the company providing the service.
I'm not totally against them.
I'm not saying I'll never consider ads, but I don't like them in general.
And I think that ads plus AI is sort of uniquely unsettling to me.
You know, when I think of like GPT writing me a response,
if I had to go figure out, you know,
exactly how much was who paying here to influence what I'm being shown.
I don't think I would like that.
And as like things go on, I think I would like that even less.
So there's something I really like about the simplicity of our model,
which is we make great AI.
and you pay us for it, and it's like,
we're just trying to do the best we can for you.
And then given that that has some inherent lack
of access and inequality, we commit as a company
to use a lot of what basically the rich people pay
to give free access to the poor people,
or the poorer people.
You see us do that today with the ChatGBT-GPT free tier.
You'll see us do a lot more to make the free tier
much better over time.
And I'm interested in figuring out
how we bring the equivalent concept to the API.
But I kind of think of ads as like a last resort for us for a business model.
I would do it if it meant that was the only.
That's where he says.
He says, I kind of think of ads as a last resort as a business model.
But recently he dropped a new podcast.
This was from, I think, a month ago.
And it's from the Open AI podcast.
So you have to imagine that they, that the run of show and
the talking points in here are very carefully selected to, you know, move the narrative forward
and kind of educate the community on where the company is going.
And so, and so we'll pull up Sam Altman's interview on AGI, GPD5, and what's next
from the Open AI podcast.
So that brings up the other question from people who are using this are skeptical is that
opening I now has access to this data and there's the concern one was about training,
which open eyes been very clear about when or when not it's training you have the options to turn that off
the other thing is like advertising things like that what's open eyes approach towards that how are you going to
handle that responsibility we haven't done any advertising product yet um i kind of i mean i'm not
totally against it teams are totally against it yeah areas where i like ads like ads and instagram
kind of cool a lot of us ads on instagram very cool let's go i am like
I think it'd be very hard to, we take a lot of care to get right.
I have faith. I think you can do it.
People have a very high degree of trust in Chatsy BT, which is interesting because like
AI hallucinates, it should be the tech that you don't trust that much.
My friends who are retarded me too, so I trust them.
People really do.
But I think part of that is if you compare us to social media or, you know, web search or something,
where you can kind of tell that you are being monetized and the company is trying to like,
Yeah, you can see.
Good policies, no doubt, but also to kind of like, this is the monetized block.
This is the non-monetized block.
Whatever.
Like, you know, how much, how much do you believe that like you're getting the thing that
that company actually thinks is the best content for you versus something that's also
trying to like interact with the ads?
I think there's like, there's a psychological thing there.
So for example, I think if we started modifying the output,
like the stream that comes back from the LLM in exchange for who is paying us more,
that would feel really bad.
Yeah,
this is a great solution.
Give you the actual answer you want,
but hey,
these are the best headphones for you,
but if you want me to buy them,
I'm going to have to go cook as an agent.
I'm doing the work and I'm going to take a cut of that.
That's amazing.
I'm so down for that.
Like the agent's like,
I'm getting paid either way.
Yeah,
exactly.
And I could say,
okay,
which headphones do I want?
Do I want the Sony?
or do I want the, or do I want the Apple AirPods maxes?
And if I decide the Apple ones, it goes checks out,
it uses some coupon code to get some.
Yeah, I mean, comparing this to the other ways
that people discover products and services.
Yeah.
If somebody searches best luxury hotel in Hawaii,
they're gonna get ads against that.
And then they're gonna get organic rankings
that aren't necessarily the truth, right?
Because the truth is for something,
like best luxury hotel in Hawaii is very subjective.
Yeah.
Then they might go and try to get recommendations from an influencer.
Yep.
And hopefully the influencer is disclosed.
Yes.
Whether or not they're being compensated by the advertiser.
Yeah.
And so if I were to ask you as an influencer, like what design software would you recommend?
Like what would you say?
Just honestly.
Figma.com.
Think, figure, build faster.
Figma helps design and development teams build great products together.
This is a paid advertising.
But yeah, the disclosure is super important.
Exactly.
And if, and if the influencers saying like, oh, yeah, I love this hotel.
Yes.
But that hotel is giving them like, you know, two weeks free a year.
Yes.
Then like that's not, that's not a super ethical.
Totally.
Yeah, it needs to be disclosed.
And then also the beauty of the LLM is that is that like the, like the recommendations are going to be able to be tailored.
So best luxury hotel.
Well, if you really want a certain type of pillow or you really want, you know, a pool in your unit or you want it to be wheelchair accessible or you want, you know, high ceilings or you want, you know, beachfront access.
Like there's a million different parameters that could go into that.
And the thing that chat chabit needs to.
And then it could just and then it just saves you the time at the very last step.
Well, the thing that Chachibouti needs to navigate is maintaining that trust.
Yep.
Right.
I trust that Instagram is going to serve me ads.
that I trust that they're going to try to serve me ads for things that I will want to buy.
Sometimes they serve me an ad.
I'm like, this looks garbage.
I'm not going to buy it.
Other times they serve me an ad and I'm like, this looks great.
You're actually good, good call.
I am interested in this product.
And the thing is, is like if Chad ChpT has to maintain that trust because if they recommend you a hotel,
and they're like, you're going to love this.
I know what you like, you're going to love this hotel and you go there and you spend all this money
and you stay there and it's terrible.
it's the same thing if you go to a friend for a recommendation for a hotel they recommend
your hotel you show up there and it's like this is terrible like why did you recommend this
and if they go oh yeah I recommended it because I was getting like seven percent referral fee
you're going to be like what are you doing why are you monetizing me right so I think it's a very
it's an interesting challenge that they have where they're going to be directing already directing
so much economic activity
and how do you monetize that
in a sustainable, ethical way.
Exclusive from the Wall Street Journal,
AI startup perplexity made an unsolicited
long-shot offer to buy Google's Chrome browser
for $34.5 billion.
This inspired me, John.
Everybody needs to be making long-shot offers.
TBPN.
Let's submit an offer to buy the Golden Gate Bridge.
That's a good one.
That's a good one.
We've got to be thinking bigger.
What else should we buy?
I don't know.
It's tough.
Yeah, it's really, when I saw this,
it's funny to think that Sundar has to go to the board.
We're like,
it's probably send them an email and say, like,
I'm required to let you know that we've received this offer from perplexity
to buy one of the crown jewels of our product ecosystem.
I wonder how real this is.
It seems like we would like the reporting is pretty loose.
We can read through this Wall Street Journal article and then kind of like dig into it a little bit more.
So perplexities offer significantly more than its own valuation, which is estimated 18 billion.
Has this ever been done before?
Has any tech company been able to pull off an acquisition that's bigger than their own valuation?
Totally.
I mean, what was the slow ventures company that, that, uh,
Metropolis.
Okay.
Then they buy a company that was much larger, you know, basically more traditional.
Kind of reverse merger almost.
Yeah, exactly.
Interesting.
So there's, there's also pressure.
So estimates of Chrome's enterprise value vary widely, but recent ones have ranged between 20
billion and 50 billion.
I have no idea how you got that.
I feel like Chrome is probably more valuable than that just on, I mean, I imagine that
the default search engine in Chrome has got to be as valuable as the default search engine in
iOS Safari, right? And how much is Apple paying Google every year? 20 billion per year. I mean,
you'd pay like you'd pay way more than 50 billion dollars to get 20 billion dollars a profit
every year. It's crazy. So that feels low. I don't know where I don't know where there's estimates
came from, but they are apparently under pressure. U.S. District Judge Amit Meta is weighing whether
to force Google to sell the browser as a means of weakening Google.
strangle hold on web search. It's so it's so interesting that like we're having this debate now.
Like Google's had 99% of the web search market for two decades and they finally have a crack
in the in the in the in the in the foundation with chat GPT actually eroding things.
AI LLM's kind of upending web search dominance like yeah we're having we're having James from
profound on later today which which is built a big business very quickly.
Because consumers are now using something besides Google search to do web searches.
Yeah.
This is like the last, this is, this is like completely the wrong time to be focused on this.
Like the ship has completely sailed.
But that's kind of the, that's kind of the pace that the government operates at.
Yeah, the journal says perplexity offer could be an attempt to signal to the judge that there's an interested buyer should he force a sale.
I think there would be a lot of interested buyers if there was a forced sale.
Yeah.
Who else would buy Apple?
Meta?
Microsoft?
Get Bing going again?
Bing.
It's Bing.
Bing it?
I mean, Microsoft would have a wild strategy because they'd have all the code to chat
GPT, all the open AI intellectual property.
Like, they could do what perplexity is thinking about, right?
Yeah, I mean, what does this say about, I mean, so they just launched the perplexity
Comet browser?
Yeah, Daniel says Chrome's worth at least 90 to 120 bits.
I agree.
I think 20 is a...
20's too low.
But yeah, so perplexity just launched Comet.
We had Arvind on the show.
He said this is a big, important bet for the company.
Yep.
If you're...
If you just launched a browser
and now you're saying that you want to buy
to compete with Chrome
and now you're trying to buy Chrome,
what does that say about
the state of your new product?
Distribution is king?
Yeah.
It's very clear that even if you built a better product, the best product is not going to win.
And we see this with the with the LLMs.
Like the leaderboards and the vibes shift constantly.
But the consumer adoption is just around chat.
Everyone just uses chat.
That's the one that's broken through.
That's the one that people are familiar with all over the United States and all over the world.
And so it's very hard to break through.
Even if Replexity can like rocket to the top of the app.
or in India for a little bit, like, it's hard to hold on to when, when the chat GPT snowball
is just growing bigger and bigger every single day.
Yeah.
Much like the graphite snowball.
Code review for the age of AI.
Graphite helps teams on GitHub ship higher quality software faster.
Get started for free, graphite.com.
Is there a polymarket on perplexity, by the way?
Can you look that up?
I will read.
Will perplexity acquire Chrome in 2025?
What's the, what's the market on it?
When I posted about it earlier, it was at,
12% and it's and I said 12 seems quite hot and it's now at 3% it went down even though they're in
the journal saying they're gonna do it they're like well it came out there's the market
opened at 34% okay like 9 a.m. when the news dropped and it's now down at 3% so we just today it
went from 34 down to 3 wow so this has basically been like debunked yeah makes sense yeah I mean
there's um I would I would put the
odds of this deal happening closer to zero percent than one percent that sounds fair but great way for
perplexity to get yeah in the journal call me yeah no this is great for SEO it definitely puts
perplexity and web browser in the same keyword so complexity was also bidding on tick talk yeah
arvin loves a lot a long shot bet a long shot bid i invited i invited i invited him on the show this
morning, he, I don't think they want to.
No, he's not ready for press.
Not ready to chat, but we love a, we love a size Lord long shot offer.
Keep throwing these out.
Keep throwing these out.
We should do this.
Google has indicated a willingness to sell Chrome.
In testimony this year, Pachai told the judge that forcing the company to sell it or share
data with rivals would harm Google's business, deter it from investing in new technology,
and potentially create security risks.
Chrome has roughly three and a half billion users worldwide.
It's like, it's like, perplexity has probably like millions of users, but it's just going to take decades, even at reasonable growth rate to hit $3 billion.
It's just so many people.
And it accounts for more than 60% of the global browser market.
That's lower than I thought it would be.
Fout in 2022, San Francisco based perplexity recently released its own web browser called Comet, some of its users.
Tyler, you've demoed these.
Yeah.
What do you daily drive in these days in terms of the web browser?
using old reliable Chrome. You're using Chrome. Yeah, I don't know. None of the agent
browsers really seemed very helpful to me. Have you churned from Cluelly to?
Yeah. Well, I started using that like, you know, right after the show ended. Yeah.
I mean, I'm not doing interviews. I was thinking about like the Cluelly pattern. What if Tyler was like,
been using Cluelly every day, hours a day, we're like, wait, you've been interviewing with other
companies? Well, that's the thing is that I, I, I, I, I,
When I was thinking about Cluelly, I was actually wondering, like, if we ran the show through Cluelly and we had, like, just this idea of, like, streaming audio, essentially, and streaming pixels, and then just somewhat random LLM queries firing all the time.
Like, is that a good pattern versus chat GPT where you have to decide, okay, this is the time to query it?
And so when I think about like the going to you and saying like the pull the poly market up on perplexity or tell me the market share for Chrome, like if we could have something like clearly running and it's just a big screen there that I can see and it's just pulling up answers to questions that it thinks we're about to talk about or ask or just adding context.
Like that actually might be kind of useful to us.
But I don't know if a tool like that exists.
It also just might be so sloppy and so noisy and so.
We print's heavy that it just doesn't math out.
I don't know.
Are there any value or like what, what's actually seeing breakout for you in terms of
AI adoption?
I mean, most of my time using AI tools is just like coding stuff.
So it's like Claude Cursa a little bit.
Sometimes I just go raw chatchabit.com.
Oh, that's raw?
Yeah, yeah.
Just straight prompt.
Like no.
Raw text file.
What happened to what happened to good old fashion just handwritten code, farm the table code?
Apparently not.
Has to raise code.
But yeah, I don't know.
I mean, like, clearly I'm not like doing like sales calls or like anything that really requires that kind of like interaction.
Yeah, yeah.
So not too useful for me.
But yeah, I wonder how the product will change.
Because like the marketing is not going to stop.
Like they are definitely going to keep filling that top funnel until they figure out the, the bottom of the funnel and the, in the, in the churn.
But, but I wonder what retention is like.
I mean, I imagine that, you know, you bring in such a broad top of funnel.
Like, there's probably people that are sticking around.
There's probably people that just sign up and forget their credit cards are down.
And they just pay for a while.
Like, like the nature of just getting someone to convert for $20 a month.
They don't even have a free tier, right?
Like you have to, like, get up and running.
No, they do have a free tier.
They do.
Okay.
Yeah.
Interesting.
There was something.
Oh, yeah.
Tyler, did you see vibe sort?
Someone wrote a sorting algorithm.
that uses an LLF.
You have to put in your OpenAI API key,
and then it just passes the random list or the array of numbers
to chatypte and asks ChachyPT to sort it,
and it just comes back with whatever it can do.
And I was thinking that,
did you ever have to do FISBuzz back in the day?
Have you ever heard of this?
Yeah, I've heard of it.
Yeah.
We should definitely do Vibe FizBuzz,
where it, for each,
for each number between one and 100,
it queries the GPT5 API
to ask it, should it respond with the number,
FIS, or Buzz?
The most inefficient
and most inference-heavy FISBuzz answer possible.
Anyway, back to
perplexity.
Perplexity told Sundar Pichai
as part of the proposed acquisition,
it would maintain and support Chromium,
the open source project that supports Chrome
and other browsers. It also said it would
continue placing Google as the default search engine within Chrome, though users could change
settings.
That's crazy because you would think the first thing you would do if you own Chrome would be
change the browser to mine.
I'm getting those ad dollars, but I don't know.
Maybe it's a nice olive branch in this somewhat hypey offer.
The Justice Department filed the antitrust case against Google in 2020 and just a few, five
years later in addition to there here.
In addition to forcing a sale of Chrome, the judge is considering limiting Google's
to pay to be the default search engine on devices and browsers and requiring it to share data with
rivals, among other things, in weighing potential remedies earlier this year. Meta questioned how much
new AI chatbots might be whittling away at the traditional search business of which Google has
90% market share. So 60% share in browser, but 90% in search. So even for there's 30% of people out
there that are using Firefox or Brave or Edge, it's Edge, right, is the Microsoft one.
Yes.
But then they use Edge, but then they still set their default to Google because Google has
dominant.
Or maybe they're just Google users are querying more.
I'm so fascinated by perplexity.
Yeah.
And I can't wait to see what ultimate.
It's perplexing.
And I can't wait to see what ultimately becomes of the business.
They're offering to buy TikTok.
They're offering to buy Chrome.
They're rumored, you know, there's a rumor mill saying that Apple's kicking the tires on it.
It's hard to tell where that's coming from, right?
Is that just more marketing and complexity?
They have, I think the last reported number or the alleged number is something like 30 million monthly actives, which is a lot.
But they have such a tiny share of overall queries.
that it becomes, and it's just clear that search feels like it'll be a winner take-all market.
And it's, they're not, you know, two years from now, if they're sitting at 30 million monthly
actives or even a multiple of that, it's hard to see it, you know, being worth, you know,
significantly more than Snapchat, for example.
Yeah, and I think that's why you're seeing Arvin talk about potentially.
actually maybe pivoting to B2B contacts with the Bloomberg thing.
It feels like if you're in a winner take-all market and the writings on the wall that you're not going to be the winner in that market,
a B-to-B pivot feels like a decent move.
You could even put kind of anthropic in that bucket where there was a time when it was like,
oh, is everyone going to switch to clawed like the app on their phone.
And then it didn't play out that way.
Now they have a dominant B2B business.
So you can imagine the perplexity niches down.
Like the perplexity interface, the perplexity ability to, you know, like answer questions,
act as a search engine.
That feels valuable in enterprises.
It feels value in finance.
It feels valuable in medicine if you fine-tune the service for that.
But it's just a very different business.
So they have to go through a little bit of a rebuild or kind of readdue.
readjustment maybe, I don't know.
Yeah, I mean, at the end of the day,
when Elon bought X, it took,
it took someone like Elon to be able to put together
the amount of equity and debt to buy that business.
And he had to put a lot of his own capital on the line.
And in this situation,
and that was buying a business that generated
a lot of advertising revenue, right?
It wasn't known as, it was a bit of a dog in some ways, right?
maybe never was living up to its full potential.
Where in this case, if you offered a buy Chrome,
and then in theory, you have to create an entire new economic model for the business
because you don't have the Google Ads engine built into it,
it's hard to see, it feels like basically impossible to pull that amount of cap.
To find people.
Yeah, call me when the Morgan Stanley Associates are losing,
sleep.
Good point.
Unless Morgan Stanley is
burning the midnight oil,
this deal probably isn't
happening. I'm remembering that exchange between
Allison and Musk
basically saying how much
Ellison's like, how much should I do?
A billion? And Elon goes,
I don't know, I think you should do like two.
Yeah, it's great.
Yeah, so I mean, Arvin's got
to find some Ellison's.
Get a few of those guys on board, for sure.
34 Larry's.
some big news in the TBPN world. We are officially partnered with Waymo via Spotify.
Because Spotify has a partnership with Waymo so you can listen to TBPN in Waymos now.
Now what? Yeah. This just dropped. There's a new upgraded Spotify in Waymo launching today.
Waymo put out the post two hours ago. You connect your accounts and you can vibe. You can listen to
TBPN in your Waymo, which is probably the most tech thing you could possibly do.
A little birdie just told me that they spoke to a number of bankers that have not heard of the perplexity deal, which I imagine as it firms up.
If it firms up, they'll certainly hear about it.
UFC landed a $7.7 billion deal with Paramount after a whirlwind, 48 hours, according to TKO executives.
But zoom out for me.
explain UFC.
This is the punching one or the punching one and the kicking one.
How does you have?
This is one of your best bits.
So Senra and I love UFC.
Yep.
And we'll text John.
Yep.
And say, hey, John, do you want to watch, you want to watch come over and watch like the
pay-per-view tonight?
Yeah.
The game.
Awesome.
I love watching the game.
My boys.
Who's playing tonight?
Yeah.
I mean, I'm there if the teams are good.
Yeah.
If there's a good matchup.
Yeah, but it depends on who's starting.
I want to know.
The starting.
It'll depend on the starting.
I want to know who's playing.
So, UFC.
The kicking and punching one.
The kicking and punching one.
They can do both.
And wrestling.
They can do wrestling too.
And choking.
Okay.
Rear naked chokes.
Got it.
Got it.
Got it.
Got it.
Got it.
Got it.
Got it.
Got it.
Yes.
Multimodal.
Yes.
Yes, exactly.
So long relied on the pay-per-view model.
Worked well before the internet and illegal streaming.
And the paper view model has been in decline.
UFC has also struggled to surface new American superstars.
A lot of the biggest stars are international,
but UFC's biggest market is in the U.S.
International stars have a lot of fans in the U.S.,
but they're not driving pay-per-views, right?
People in Brazil are not paying $100 to watch a single card, right?
And so the paper-view model has been in decline.
the UFC's relationship with ESPN has been a little bit rocky.
Paperview model in decline.
Is that just because of the trends in like how how yappy and how popular the fighters are?
Or is there something else going on at like a technological level where like I don't have to click any buttons to open Instagram Reels or TikTok or YouTube?
And with payper view, it's like technically difficult.
It's kind of janky tech systems.
Is that like a real?
a real headwind or is that like fake news?
So there's definitely friction to buying pay-per-views.
You've got to like be on a traditional television.
It's not like in-app purchase,
like double-tap and face ID like that level.
It's not that easy.
I mean,
I think you can go in the ESPN app and like buy the pay-per-view,
but a lot of people aren't buying the pay-per-view to watch it on their phone.
Sure.
I think the bigger challenge and something that...
And Apple would take 30% if you paid on your phone.
So even then...
I don't know because it's digital.
It's digital.
Oh, because it's streaming.
It's for sure.
It's for sure.
digital.
But the funny thing is,
Dana's been in this challenge
because he gets very
frustrated about illegal streams
and he'll every now and then he'll be
like, if you're watching a stream
tonight, illegal stream tonight, we're coming
for you. And everyone's like,
okay, I don't know how you're planning
to do that. But they try to
take, I think
that they try to like DDoS
the various streaming sites. Oh, interesting.
Like you can just like send a ton
of traffic. And then they probably have someone like
talking to Twitch and being like, we are, we are going live right at this time. You need to have
someone searching and taking down streams actively. Yeah, but there's plenty of other like more
decentralized illegal streams that are happening on like random URLs. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Even just
somebody spinning up like their own thing, right? And so Dana was in a tough position because the more
he talks about illegal streaming affecting the business, the more people are like, wait, I can
stream it illegally. He's a little strice and effect, yeah. And so, uh,
He had been looking for a new home for UFC.
People had debated, you know, would Netflix be a potential buyer there?
There's a lot of potential candidates.
MetaQuest.
You have to buy the headset.
You got to watch it in VR.
I'm sure.
I mean, Dana's obviously on the meta board.
And I'm sure that that idea got.
I mean, $7.7 billion.
That's one researcher.
Just cut one head count from MSL and you're good.
And Zuck can just own all of UFC and be like, look,
on the headset or you don't get to watch.
Yeah.
Well, the deal that was reported were in Yahoo Sports,
how the UFC landed at $7.7 billion deal with Paramount after a whirlwind 48 hours,
according to TKO execs.
So beginning in 2026, all UFC events will stream on Paramount Plus with select events also
airing on CBS.
And so anyways, Ben Folks is reporting just how big of a surprise was the UFC's bombshell
$7.7 billion deal with the UFC's bomb shell $7.7 billion deal with the,
Paramount and CBS so big that even UFC CEO Dana White didn't see it coming. No, this is a quote,
no, I didn't think this is where we'd end up. White said Monday during an appearance on the Pat McAfee's
show. Shout out to Pat. That's good. To discuss the new broadcasting rights deal, but this sort of
this, this is sort of how it played out. I love it. These guys are obviously smart guys,
very aggressive. He's talking about the team, the new team over at Paramount. So in an interview with
CNBC, TCO, president, and CEO, Mark Shapiro said he initially expected to make a
deal that would bring only the UFC fight night events to Paramount, but after Skydance,
and Fight Night events have always aired on ESPN, just fully ad-supported.
Yeah, got it.
But after Skydance Media completed its deal to purchase control of Paramount last week,
Shapiro said the deal for the entirety of the UFC's U.S. broadcast rights came together
in just 48 hours.
Now, instead of just the 30 UFC Fight Night events per year, Paramount will feature, and the
fight night events were events that wouldn't draw big pay-per-view buys.
Those were not the numbered UFC events.
Correct.
So the UFC 776.
That's like pay-per-view.
Fight nights, just random on the...
And there's only 13 of those events per year.
13 numbered and 30 fight nights.
So almost every week there's something if you're a UFC fan.
But you're really, once a month is when you really want to tune in.
But they sort of depend on more casual fans historically to drive pay-per-views.
People that are like, I watch UFC when,
McGregor's fighting right yeah that's what really spike the
and have kind of a power law outcome that people getting together being like hey
we're gonna buy the pay-per-view we're gonna we're gonna watch it sure sure sure that kind of thing
so possibly the biggest news in all of this for fight fans is the end of UFC's
pay-per-view era ever since the first UFC event in 1993 pay-per-view has been a vital part
of the UFC strategy remember UFC when it started airing on TV was thought to be it
was so shocking and violent to people that even politicians wanted to get it banned.
Wow.
Like they were like, this should not be on television.
So it had to be in that bucket.
Oh, it had to be paper review.
Because it was like, yeah, it was like adult restricted anyway.
So under the fighters need to sleep well before the fights?
Of course.
They have to be on eight sleep.
Pod five.
That's right.
Five year warranty, 30 night risk free trial, free returns, free shipping.
You got to make sure Bo, Nicole, friend of the show is on an eight sleep.
I'm going to message him after this.
Okay, perfect.
Let's figure this out.
Ever since the first UFC event in 1993,
pay-per-view has been a vital part of the UFC strategy.
Under the current deal with ESPN,
each UFC pay-per-view costs $799-in in the U.S.
plus the cost of the ESPN plus subscription on top of that.
So you've got to subscribe, and then you've got to pay per event.
With the pay-per-view revenues reportedly in decline,
it makes sense for the UFC to finally ditch that model.
The fact that it's doing so as part of a deal
that will essentially double the roughly $550 million per year
the UFC currently receives from ESPN,
likely only made that calculation easier.
This is crazy.
This is crazy.
When they find out, wait, if I just sign up for Paramount Plus for $12.99 a month,
I'm going to automatically get UFC's numbered fights and the rest of the portfolio.
That's a message we want to amplify.
That is a crazy, crazy value change.
Because if you were doing all 13, if you were the hardcore UFC pay-per-view buyer,
you're up at $1,000 a year on UFC.
pay-per-view, basically, like $700, $800.
Like, that's a lot of money, and you're going from there down to $12.99 a month.
That's $150 bucks, basically.
That is a steep, steep savings.
Yeah.
The hardcore fans are going to be excited.
Yeah, and a lot of fans would, you know, somebody's hosting the pay-per-view one night.
They split it or something.
Yeah, it makes sense.
But still, I mean, that's a big, big savings.
I do wonder what the ad load will be like because when we watched UFC,
that a couple months ago with David Senator,
I noticed that it felt extremely content rich.
And like the flow of the show was fantastic
because you'd just be watching a fight.
And then it would cut to the commentary,
the post show, in ring Joe Rogan's doing an interview.
And then pretty quickly they start telling you
who's coming up next.
And the actual fight to like,
you're only watching maybe like a half an hour of,
fighting over an hour or two of content, but it didn't feel like, oh, I'm not crazy commercial
break and I'm totally taken out of the stadium. Like even, even the, they did a really good job
at the production to show like when they show you the stats, it's virtually laid over in the
stadium. Like you're watching a camera pan around the stadium. So it actually kind of feels like
you're there the whole time. It was really well produced. I wonder if they'll lose any of that
by stuffing ads all over the place. Yeah, we'll see. I mean, and you compare that to NFL.
NFL's like roughly I think 25% of the time allotted to NFL is advertising yeah and he certainly
that hasn't been the case for paper views yeah and it certainly feels like it's yeah it's like it's a
shift in the in the type of content yeah they just got to work on making seamless transitions to
advertisements like we do here with fin AI the number one AI agent for customer service
make one in performance benchmarks number one in competitive bakeoffs number one ranking on g2
you can get started at fin dot AI and so anyway so paramount is
or Skydance, young Allison is just getting aggressive across the board, right?
There's been rumors of this free press acquisition that I'm sure is still in the works,
but it had been reported it was a quarter billion dollars for the free press.
From our sense, they have about a million people subscribed to their newsletter,
most of which, vast majority of which are non-paid.
And so that just says that Paramount sees and CBS Paramount, you know, the combined and Skydance,
sort of this combined entity, just see the free press and as highly, and Barry White specifically
is just highly strategic.
Yeah.
And then CBS also cut the late show, which is losing $40 million a year.
So they're really like kind of, really like shuffling the chips around, like really restructuring
the organization.
like what does CBS actually do?
Well, now it's potentially UFC and Barry Weiss as opposed to Stephen Colbert, I guess, in terms of like headline stuff.
I love this.
I love this article.
Back in 2009, Dana White swore that if UFC 100 did a million pay-per-view buys, he'd bungee jump off the Mandalay Bay.
It did.
He didn't.
When UFC 151 was canceled after John,
John refused an opponent switch. White called Jones's coach Greg Jackson a
sport killer. He left a crater in the UFC schedule that only MMA fans could
fully appreciate. A few years later when Connor McGregor and Nate Diaz
shattered the pay-per-view world record at UFC 196, it was a testament to how big the
sport had become. We cared about those numbers as much as we did the outcome. Since
UFC won, when people paid out of morbid curiosity, this is what you were talking
about earlier, paper views have been a vital part of the identity of the
of the sport. It's hard to get nostalgic over being gouged. But what follows here should shouldn't
be mistaken as such, but Monday's news of UFC coming $7.7 billion. Partnership with Paramount
came with a small pang of sadness upon realizing the pay-per-view model will soon belong to a
Yeah, I'm interested to see how this impacts the fighters because early in their UFC careers,
they don't get any exposure to pay-per-view points, which is like a percentage of pay-per-view sales
that top fighters would earn.
So if you were a rising fighter
and you got on a pay-per-view card,
you weren't necessarily getting cut into that revenue.
But if you were Connor McGregor or a true superstar,
you were actually getting some percentage of the sales, right?
I call these paper viewpoints.
And so now that that model is going away,
I mean, I'm sure the number one thing on the fighter's mind
with this new deal is how are we going to actually,
you know, basically get cut into this new.
structure, right? Because historically, a lot of fighters have critiqued the way that UFC fighters are
comped. But this is such a funny nostalgic article. This writer clearly really loves UFC. Back in the
mid-aughts, the UFC combined the tuxedo affairs of 1990s boxing with the vibes of an underground
temptation. From there, it slowly stockpiled its greatest passions behind the paywall. Remember how red Dana's
face would turn as he tried to sell the paper view at the end of the televised portion of the card.
Remember the names?
He goes through.
B.J.
Penn, Matt Hughes, Chuck Liddell, Tito Ortiz, uh, Randy Couture, Connor McGregor, Ronda Rousey,
go through the posters of the past and they were special, they were the special attractions.
The names on the marquee for the numbered events.
Those were some good parties we sheled out for.
As a M.
As a M.
They were ours.
Well.
End of an era.
Yeah.
And T.
Holdings, the company that of course owns
WWE and the UFC is a $36.8 billion
company as of today. It's up 11.
Let's take it over to Mark German himself.
Mark German. He has some new reporting. Apple plots
expansion into AI robots, home security, and smart
displays. Apple Inc. is plotting its artificial intelligence
comeback. Don't call it a comeback. Actually, you can call it a
come back give you.
I mean, it makes sense.
They've been, they've gotten a lot of hate over the last few years for the role,
just particularly the rollout of Apple intelligence, very hyped, a lot of features on display
at WWDC that didn't ship when the new iPhone launched.
They sold the new iPhone against it.
Yeah, exactly.
And so I think that there were, there were high expectations because of Apple's position
with on device inference being very cool.
I gave you Gen Moji.
Are you not an.
They shipped a few things.
I think that I would love to see the Gen Moji actual usage data because I feel like even
though it's not popular in teapot and on X and in the tech the technorati, it might
actually be seeing like decent adoption and joy.
I mean, I've seen people share generative imagery from Microsoft copilot, which I had no
idea was a popular image generation platform whatsoever.
Facebook crowd.
Exactly.
Exactly.
So I wouldn't be so sure that Gen Moji is producing zero value.
But at the same time, it's clearly been a tumultuous time for the company.
They've been kind of on defense in terms of public relations.
But Mark German is still scoop in every single day.
Apple is plotting its AI comeback with an ambitious slate of new devices,
including robots, a lifelike version of Siri,
a smart speaker with a display and home security cameras,
a tabletop robot that serves as a virtual companion targeted for 2026.
is the centerpiece of the AI strategy,
according to people with knowledge of the matter.
The smart speaker with a display,
meanwhile, slated to arrive next year,
part of a push into entry-level smart home products.
Tabletop robot that's a virtual companion.
Yep.
That's big.
A lot of software they got to write to make that work.
They got to get on graphite.
Dev code review for the age of AI.
Graphite helps teams on GitHub ship higher quality software faster.
Tim Cook, if you're listening, get on graphite.
So this is big, too.
Home security is seen as a,
another big growth opportunity. New cameras will anchor an Apple security system that can
automate household functions. The approach should help make Apple's product ecosystem stickier
with consumers to the people who ask not to be identified because the initiatives
haven't been announced. I mean, this seems like something that they could knock out of the park.
Like just the smart thermostat, like these patterns have been defined for a decade. And that's
like the sweet spot for Apple to come in and like the Sonos home speaker where we were saying like
it they're just like the speaker. Everyone knows.
knows what they want out of a connected speaker system.
They just want it at the level of Apple execution.
It doesn't require going zero to one in some new territory.
And so I feel like they could be very successful in the home video monitoring, home
thermostat, home speaker.
So I think I like this overall.
The robot is where it gets funny because this feels crazy.
But I'll let you keep doing it.
Going into companionship feels interesting.
I don't think it's a companionship.
I don't think of it like that at all.
A tabletop robot that serves as a virtual companion is the centerpiece of the AI strategy.
I mean, so let's read what the actual report is on this robot.
The tabletop robot resembles an iPad mounted on a movable limb that can swivel and
reposition itself to follow users in a room like a human head.
It can turn toward a person who is speaking or summoning it and even seek to draw the attention
of someone not facing it.
The hope is to bring AI into life.
I don't think of this as like companion necessarily.
This could just be.
Jarvis.
Yeah, Jarvis.
It feels like Jarvis.
I mean, I guess Jarvis isn't a companion, but companion has a bad flavor to it right now, a bad, a bad vibe because people are saying like I married my companion and that feels very black mirror.
I do think that there's a serious black mirror risk, but I'll go into that in a second, but what were you about to say?
Yeah, I'm not going out and saying this, this feels like a competitor to friend.com.
or any other players that are actually focused on companionship.
But this does feel like giving Siri a presence in the home.
Yeah.
Like an always on presence in the home.
It will be interesting to see how they solve it.
A partnership with Open AI or Anthropic seems logical.
But Apple Siri partnership with Open AI Anthropic before September on Polymarkets is a 6% chance.
By December, it's at a 44% chance, though.
So, but this is a very low volume.
market, but still it feels like we haven't seen a lot of messaging from Tim Cook that they're
going to be building a huge data center, going to be training a foundation model. It feels like
they're going to need to partner on some of the underlying infrastructure for that because
I would not, I would not want Siri hanging out in my kitchen talking to me. Like Siri is just
not reliable enough, but I would I would welcome Claude or chat GPT into my house.
But I would treat it specifically as a, like an Alexa.
What's the weather like?
What's on my calendar?
Look up the history of the Roman Empire.
I would ask it questions like that and I would use it as a knowledge retrieval tool.
I might start to trust it in some agenic contexts.
And the question is, do we want a robot iPad with an arm swinging around your kitchen?
And so, and hopefully when you want to know the weather,
it's you're you're within your shot I think I think this could be really cool I think it
could be really cool I mean they say face time is funny because you're competing you're
they're still competing with their own yeah but if you're ever in the kitchen like this is an
example so face time calls will be a key function of the device during video conferencing the display
will able will be able to shift to lock on to people around a room and so as you're walking around
the FaceTime is just following you.
That actually feels more social.
I remember during COVID I bought Facebook's camera.
They had some sort of device that you would mount on your TV
and it would act as a video conferencing system.
And I used it a few times.
I ultimately churned, but it had a really wide angle lens
and it would zoom in on the people.
It had really good face detection.
And so it would center you no matter where you were in the room.
But as soon as you walked to the other side of the room,
it wouldn't be able to follow you because it didn't have any motors in it.
And I feel like this could be interesting.
In the chat.
This all reminds me of the Meta portal.
That's the one I'm talking about the portal.
Basically,
they didn't market it as a robot,
but it would sit on a table and it would sort of follow you around the room.
And Meta is no longer selling Meta portal.
I guess they wound it down.
So anyways, Tim Cook told employees,
I gifted some of these and they were pretty well received.
Most of them wound up being used as like digital photo frames though.
And they weren't actually used that often for calls.
I don't know if putting it on a robotic arm is enough to make it useful.
I think you do have to nail the underlying speech recognition and in the conversational nature.
Like it has to be powered by a frontier LLM.
You know what's funny?
What?
is I feel like the product, I could imagine them having a mood board internally with the Pixar lamp
hopping around. That's literally listed here as like one of their inspirations apparently. So Tim Cook
told employees in all hands meeting this month that Apple must win in AI and hinted at the upcoming
devices. The quote, the product pipeline, which I can't talk about. Thankfully, Mark German has his
malls and Apple that are talking. Tim Cook says it's amazing guys. It's amazing. Some of it you'll see
soon. Some of it will come later, but there's a lot to see. Yeah. So Apple obviously always is cooking
on moonshots. Very little of it surfaces to Mark German and even less actually services, you know,
publicly via Apple's own channels. Mark German, if you have a little extra time, you should leak
Julius's user numbers because Julius has over two million users now. They're trusted by folks
at Princeton, BcG, Zapier. What analysis do you want to run?
It's the AI data analyst that works for you.
Connect your data, ask questions in plain English, and get insights in seconds.
No coding required.
We need to get our logo up there.
Yeah.
The fourth logo.
For sure.
So Apple is planning to put Siri at the center of the device operating system and give it a visual personality to make it feel lifelike.
The approach dubbed Bubbles is vaguely reminiscent of Clippy, which we are super bullish on.
And we think Microsoft should totally bring back Clippy, an animated paper clip from the 90s that serves as a virtual assistant in
Microsoft Office. Apple has tested making Siri look like an animated version of the finder logo,
the iconic smiley face representing the Max file management system. The final decision on its
appearance hasn't been made with designers considering ideas that veer closer to Memoji, the
player, the playful characters that represent Apple user accounts. Device prototypes use a roughly
seven inch horizontal display approaching the size of an iPad mini. The motorized arm can
extend the display away from the base roughly half a foot in any direction. So that's
not going to snap out. I was really hoping at least five.
Yeah,
across the room. It reaches across and pins you against the
against the fridge. Yeah, I think Apple should be able to nail
delivering this in a way that doesn't feel black mirror and dystopian.
Oh, that's funny. Sorry, so I actually didn't see this, but there's a quote in here.
Some people familiar with the product call it the Pixar lamp. Yep, exactly. I think it could work
really, really well. Now, they have to be cognizant of the black mirror vibes. That would be
very cool.
If it could hop off my kitchen table.
It can definitely hop around.
That's Nat Friedman Corps.
This is,
this is,
this is doable with modern technology.
But the risk is that they,
they botched it because Apple's had a rough go with the recent marketing and they've had
a couple real like backlashes.
They had that one where they smashed all the pianos and the press.
Do you remember this?
So they had a,
a huge hydraulic press and they,
and they pressed like an easel with paint.
and a bunch of paint buckets and pianos and violins and all this.
They got a ton of blowback from this.
We can try and pull it up.
Do you remember this?
Yeah,
I remember that.
People were saying that they're like destroying these timeless pieces.
Yeah.
It's just like the things that I-
Instruments and stuff like that.
Yeah, the thing that I love, you're literally,
you're destroying it for this particular,
oh, shots fired Bill Bishop from the substack stream.
You need better guests to talk about China and chips,
not just Nvidia partners who are regurgitating,
video's talking points. Bill Bishop, get on the stream. Call in. We'd love to have you. Bill. Bill,
you're welcome. Hop on. Of course, Aaron is riding with Jensen. Yeah, he is a Jensen surrogate. He's,
he's a surrogate. He's a surrogate for Jensen the other ad that didn't go as viral and
result in major backlash was the launch of the Apple Vision Pro. So when the Apple Vision Pro launched,
one of the videos that they showed was of a middle-aged man looking at VR video of his kids,
but he was alone in a dark room.
And Ben Thompson was like,
it feels like he's divorced or something
or maybe like the kids died.
It felt like Minority Report,
which is a movie I know you haven't seen.
But in Minority Report,
Tom Cruise's son goes missing from the pool one day
and he has a virtual 3D video
that he plays back and gets very emotional about.
And the imagery was very similar in the Apple Vision Pro,
but it wasn't an optimistic scenario.
Mario. It was like, yeah, like, I guess if my son passed away or got kidnapped, like, I would want to relive that, but that's not like, you're going to inspire me to buy an Apple Vision Pro. And so with with this like Pixar lamp, this, this, this robot in your, in your kitchen or in your house, like they really, I think they have to lean into to light mode, not dark mode. They have to really be aware and reality check themselves on the black mirror effect because the, the, the, the, the,
idea of someone hanging out in their kitchen being lonely and having this be the only
companion that they ever talked to that's a lot less fun than hey we're all cooking
together in the kitchen and this is helping us keep track of the ingredients or my
idea was teach it to teach it to pour some beers and get it at the fraternity
this thing needs to be tending bar at a frat house and inspiring dancing
silhouettes like the original iPod commercial in order to be successful. Get the iRobot,
a stack of red solo cups ASAP. Apple's canceled for fraternity coded marketing. I think I think that
would be amazing. If this thing could if this thing could pour a beer without without foam, I think
they got a winner because it needs to inject itself into social, even the iPod, like yes, you could
put it in the headphones and you could and you could tune out the world and be that dancing silhouette
at during the iPod commercial.
But also, you could say, pass me the ox cord.
I want to play a song for my iPod that everyone can enjoy.
And it's a social experience.
And so it's important to show both of those sides now more than ever.
And in chatypT demos and any AI product demo, there's always going to be the user
who uses the product to be more isolating, but the marketing should always be aspirational
and pro-social, just like social media.
Social media is at its best when we're highlighting the fact.
that like I have so many friends that just send me a random Instagram real every single day.
And like that's our interaction.
And it's and for me, it's a way to like check in with a friend.
And share a laugh.
Hey, share a laugh.
And it's a laugh.
I can imagine the ad creative for the Apple Pixar lamp.
You know, it's sitting on the center of a kitchen island and the family's hanging out and they're
FaceTiming somebody.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So one of the family members is out of town.
Imagine us having a Pixar lamp here on the table.
Really, really, it's like, yeah, it's like you want to be connecting two families or two, two sides of the family.
The East Coast side of the family, the West Coast side of the family, they're both having Thanksgiving and they're able to connect.
But there's everyone's being extremely social.
Do not film this thing with the lonely, the lonely person, you know, having the Pixar lamp be the only thing to keep it company.
Anyway, that's my advice for.
What else is in here?
projects coded Linwood and Glenwood.
Core to the new home devices
are current products like, and current
products like iPhones and iPads
is an overhaul to the underpinnings of
Siri. Engineers are working on a version code
named Linwood with an entirely new brain
built around LLMs, the foundation
of Gen AI. The goal
is to tap into personal data to fulfill
queries and ability that was delayed
due to hiccups with the current version. It should be
able to do it. Hopefully,
they should have
a moonshot division just trying to solve iMessage search they could probably start there every tech
company is that amazon search is rough google gmail search is rough there search has gotten so like
dominated a billion dollar business in figuring out search i mean that would be the killer that
might be a killer app for comet and some of the browsers is just like actually being able to
search my gmail inbox better that would be pretty fantastic
I feel like it should be at the app player.
Anyway, whatever they're building,
they're building products.
They gotta get on linear.
Linear is a purpose-built tool
for planning and building products.
Meet the system for modern software development,
streamline issues, projects, and product roadmaps.
Open AI's on linear.
Let's get Apple on linear.
Let's get the Siri team on linear.
They very well might be already.
So somebody, Craig Federigi,
who you all know, says the work we've done
on this end-to-end revamp of Syria has given us the result,
we need it. He added that this has put us in a position to not just deliver what we announced,
but to deliver a much bigger upgrade than we envisioned. He said there is no project people are
taking more seriously. So that is very positive. A final decision hasn't been made on which
models will be used, but Apple has been testing Anthropic PBC's Claude for this purpose.
Mike Rockwell, the former Vision Pro Chief, who was put in charge of Siri earlier this year,
is overseeing both the Linwood and Glenwood efforts.
Apparently, so during the development of the tabletop robot, Apple engineers have made heavy use of chat GPT and Google Gemini to build and test features within Apple AI and Siri teams as a whole software developers are increasingly using third-party systems as part of their development process.
Getting into a ring competitor here, Apple is working on a camera code name J450s is designed for home security, detecting people, and automating tasks.
The device will be battery powered and could last for several months to a year.
on a single charge.
That's interesting.
If they can do this for,
they can do this for a random home security camera.
They can't do it for your camera.
You're telling me they have the capability
to have an always on camera.
Put the tinfoil hat on you.
We need a tinfoil hat.
The device has facial recognition
and infrared sensors to determine who is in a room.
Apple believes users will replace,
will place cameras throughout their home to help
with automation.
That can be turning lights off
when someone leaves a room
or automatically playing music.
So Apple, you're telling me
that you can make a home security camera
of which I will purchase multiple
and put them around my house
and it will be able to have a single battery
that could last for several months
to a year on a single charge
and you can't make an iPhone.
It's a little bit different.
The screen's pretty bright.
The screen's bright.
But an always on camera.
How long?
Do you think your phone battery would last if you just constantly had the camera?
I actually think running the camera sensor is a lot less power intensive than running a screen.
For sure.
And obviously a bunch of different applications.
But still, pretty powerful, pretty exciting stuff.
I don't think people want always on iPhone.
They want the thrill of charging the iPhone every night.
If you're an adrenaline junkie, there's nothing like being on 1% trying to fire off that last IMS.
You know, I actually had a moment yesterday.
My one-year-old is starting to walk.
And I had this moment yesterday where I was I was I was I'd filmed a video of her walking Yep
for about 10 seconds
Everyone's in in the house is like laughing enjoying the moment and then my battery died and
Completely lost the video didn't hit I didn't hit like and the video
Wow the battery died right in the middle of this memory gone forever. There is actually that that has something to do with the encoder
There is a certain file type
that you can use when you're filming on one of these cameras,
that if the battery dies, it will actually save the last of the file.
But there's certain codecs where if you don't hit finish recording,
the whole thing will be corrupted.
It's very annoying.
We have the debate of the century, the debate of the year,
a showdown between former Founder Fund, Founders Fund, colleagues.
Friends turned foes.
Friends turned rivals.
Everett Randall, he's been on the show before.
Delian Asperuhov, he's also been on the show.
They haven't been mincing words, John.
They haven't.
They have been throwing shots.
Yes.
Back and forth.
Every TBPN appearance.
Yes.
They're calling the other one out.
Yes.
And so they will be debating and investing strategies.
We're going to settle it today on the stream.
The slop versus steel debate.
Which is better.
High margin software or CAPEX intensive reindustrialization efforts.
That's right.
We will bring in Delian and Everett into the studio.
Welcome to the stream.
How you guys do it?
I like that background.
Very good.
Energized.
Here we go.
We're going to be breaking it down live here.
Yeah, we're going to be breaking it down live.
Every time one of you gets a point, I'll put a little point.
We'll put a little point on the war.
If things get out of hand, we'll be banging the gong and bringing order like it's a gavel.
But I'm sure, I'm sure this will be, I'm sure everyone will be civil.
Oh, I'm sure.
Keep the name calling to a minimum.
Good to have you both.
Thanks so much for being here.
Let's kick it off.
Let's start off what's your least favorite thing about the other person?
I'm kidding.
You kick it off with the original story.
Like, how did this all start basically?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Give us a backstory.
Yeah.
You want to give it?
Yep, I'm happy to.
So we were back at Founders Fund.
We were starting to beef up our, like, CRM and data science efforts.
And so we were integrating some external data into our CRM,
figuring out how we could filter opportunities better to each of the,
each of the investment team professionals.
And we were looking and we were looking at the different data.
I was like, ah, it'd be really nice if we could filter this by gross margins so that all of
the negative gross margin companies that come into our CRM, we could give them all the
delian because it seems like those are the types of companies that he loves to invest in.
The rivalry between, you know, the low gross margin side of the house and the high gross margin
side of the house was born then.
Okay. And Delian, justify why do you like these businesses?
What true are you in?
Is that even a fair characterization?
Fair characterization, I think, you know, my sort of one line would be, I'm not sure
that, you know, sort of gross margin is actually like the right thing to focus on in a business,
especially either sort of early on.
What you want to be thinking about is obviously ebidot margin in particular terminal,
you know, EBITO margin.
And so when I think about the like, at least founders filled ethos to, you know,
sort of investing, we think that that term.
terminal EBITDA margin, mostly is determined by ultimately how much of a monopoly your company
can be in the long term.
And so if you look at, you know, sort of mag 7 today, obviously there's a decent chunk of
them that, you know, have some phenomenal, you know, sort of gross margins.
And those tend to be the ones that are a little more software oriented.
If you look at the one that is at the biggest scale and has the best eBadat margins, it's the
one that is the most, you know, basically hardware oriented.
For sure, some of it propped up by like Kuda and they're like, you know, sort of software
side of the house.
But like, Nvidia is the one that is performing the best of all of those.
And then even if you study within those, you know, which of those, you know,
companies on the hardware side have monopolies versus either or not you see it's the one that
with the monopoly you know clearly outperform the ones that don't right so Tesla obviously in that
you know sort of mag 7 but a part of why they you know sort of suffer much worse margins than like an
apple or in a video is because like they actually do have you know you know competition and so my
general characterization of you know sort of SaaS is people always either sort of study their original
gross margin but weren't burdening in the you know sort of cost of sales marketing etc and because
you just have much less of monopoly typically in SaaS that ends up totally you know
hurting your EBITO margin profile. So take like the like the favorite, you know,
terminal scale thought of as a monopoly, you know, sort of SaaS company that, you know, I'm sure
loves. Salesforce, their market share and all things CRM is 25%. And so that's why you end up seeing
like, yeah, gross margin profiles only burdened by like, you know, cloud, you know, sort of cost.
But their EBITDA margin profile that is like, you know, sort of 40%. And so, you know,
the reason that I like these negative gross margin businesses is, yes, they're like tougher
to start. They may be more equity intensive at the beginning, but end up with way better,
you know, sort of terminal margin profiles versus, you know,
Ev loves to, you know, invest in the, you know,
AI slopcos that might have early gross margins in revenues.
But so, Ev, what's the bull case for software?
What's the bull case for SaaS?
What's the bull case for AI slopcos?
Look, so to quote the godfather Neil Mehta himself,
the laws of great businesses are the laws of great businesses.
The job of a business in the capital society.
It's cute.
It's to maximize and find the efficiency frontier for three things.
Roik, aka return on invested capital, the amount of capital you can actually deploy,
and how long you can deploy that amount of capital at and above market Roik.
There's a lot of different framings for the paths to do this and how companies can actually do this.
The one that people like in tech circles is Hamilton-Henler, Seven Powers.
A company accumulates power in the form of scale economies, network effects,
whatever power you want to take, and then uses that power.
to produce above market Roykes for as long as possible and with as much capital invested
in the business as possible.
There are great Adams-based businesses that do this.
There are terrible atom-based businesses that don't do this.
There are great digital businesses that do this.
There's terrible digital businesses that don't do this.
I mean, you want to hear about a great Adams-based business that does this, listen to the
acquired pod on Costco.
Like, it's certainly not like a Adams versus SaaS thing necessarily.
The advantage that digital businesses have is that in this process of producing, you know, in this process
of producing above market Roik for a long time is that their product form factor and the way
that the distribute their product lends itself more to the process of creating power, I'd argue,
than most Adams-based businesses.
So if you think about like network effects, the best place to create network effects is in a
digital marketplace like an Uber and Airbnb or a DoorDash.
And so there's a lot of these forms of power that naturally lend themselves to digital
products and the scalability of digital products tends to be a lot.
a lot greater than physical products.
And so you can see these rapid growth trajectories like we're seeing from Open AI
Anthropic and many others.
When did you guys find common ground?
Was it in the e-scooter era, the sort of 15-minute delivery era?
Were you ever able to kind of come together and say like, yeah, this is, you know,
we can both agree that this is not it.
Or good.
Or good.
I mean, to be fair, Kleiner Perkins, Founders Fund, both invested in Figma, Stripe, Airbnb.
There is some portfolio overlap.
Rippling too, right?
Rippling as well.
There's a modern health, I believe, as well.
There's a few others.
But yeah, to Jordy's point, where else is the common ground and where else is the divide?
Or the consensus in the disagreement.
Yeah, I was going to say, you know, we're texting before this of like, you know,
what are sort of two companies that I think, you know, both of us were enthusiastic about in, you know, sort of 2021.
That actually both have, you know, sort of trended well, but are, you know, sort of counterpoints our two arguments.
And the ones that we kind of came up with were, you know, in 2021, I was really, you know, sort of high conviction on Hadrian in 2021. I was super, you know, high conviction on Rippling. Both those investments have, you know, sort of performed quite well over the last couple of years. But look, you know, sort of wildly different in terms of, you know, profile. You know, rippling, like many other, you know, sort of SaaS companies does end up having, you know, an initial, you know, very high gross margin, but does still have to spend a lot on sales and marketing to bring in, you know, sort of net new customers. Hadrian on the flip side, deeply, you know, sort of negative gross margin to start.
But now as they've gotten to scale, they actually have like super limited, you know, sort of sales and marketing spend because there's only like, you know, 10, 15 customers that matter.
And the moment that you're delivering for them, they just proactively start, you know, sort of throwing revenue, you know, at you.
And so, you know, I think there are times where, you know, both of our, you know, stories, obviously, you know, can play out.
The thing that I'd be curious to hear from, you know, sort of average is to actually, like, compare and contrast, you know, you know, you're bringing up, you know, some of these digital businesses, you know, that end up having these, you know, network effects.
I would kind of argue that like, you know, the like 2010s negative gross margin businesses, like, you know, the like Uber, DoorDash, you know, types.
I think of as more as like, you know, Adams businesses, but there was a whole set of investors in like the mid-2010s that were generally unwilling to approach both Adams-based businesses that started with negative gross margin, but even some of these local marketplaces that started with negative gross margin that they swore off of the Uber's, the DoorDash, et cetera.
you know, it's very clear that Uber DoorDash, through, you know, lots of investment, through building out these local, you know, certain networks of, you know, both supply and demand, we're able to, and, you know, drivers were able to eventually get to a point where now they actually, you know, have very attractive, you know, sort of financial profiles.
Today, the equivalent of that is, like, there's all these investors that, you know, back in the 2010s would have refused to invest into any company that had negative gross margin and are all now pouring cash into both the, like, AI application layer companies and the, like, you know, foundation models that all have, like, ridiculously. I mean, I forget to think.
I think it's, Gurley is nonstop, you know, not my favorite person in the world, but
Gurley is nonstop talking about, like, you know, what is going on here?
They're selling a buck for 90 cents.
So I think, I think it's an important example because you had that, you know, plenty of examples
of these chained losses during that, that era where a restaurant was selling something below
cost to a platform that was selling something below cost to a logistics provider, an individual
contractor that, like, maybe wasn't actually making money if you factored in depreciation and fuel
cost of their vehicle. And that ultimately worked out, right? DoorDash is a massive, fantastic business
based on the power of the American consumer. But when you compare that to today, where a lot of the
conversation on the timeline this week has been the margin profile of this new generation of
software companies that has to pay a lot for sales and marketing, but also inference. And so
I think like the debate should really be, you know, continue to be around.
just how quickly will the cost per token fall.
And I think a lot of people have a lot of confidence around that.
But I think that that is the key thing that Everett's sort of like broad investment thesis right now is dependent on.
Yeah, like FD, think there's going to be that same path of like Uber for a while had a bunch of
negative gross margin, people going into it.
Like do you actually think that a cool?
I want to pull this post up.
Everett actually posted this January 31 of 2024.
So over 18 months ago, he said, I'm making a real.
effort to not take for granted the $3 Uber across town era of AI.
And I hope you are too.
And so I guess the question is,
and it's funny because then a bunch of people,
I thought it was a good point.
I thought it was a hot take then.
And I think then a bunch of people kind of parroted
that take all over the timeline.
Stole your whole flow, as you'd like to say.
But I guess the question is like, are we in some sort
of different regime right now where the traditional
gravity and like fundamentals of software investing have changed because we are out of the zero
marginal cost era and does that impose risks to the strategy that you know have you've sort of
employed or like we're kind of putting you in this whole in this box but if the if the fundamental
structure of zero marginal cost era is going away that that presumably forces like a rewrite of
your logic around investing I would imagine yeah I think that I think the biggest variable that's
from the 2010s, SAS era to today,
is that in the 2010s, and you basically made this point
without making it, Delian though,
is that the thing that was missing from your talk track
is that the competitive intensity of SAS
during the 2010s was much, much, much lower than it is today.
Like, during the 2010s, there was an entire crop of companies
in the 2000s, but then, especially in the 2010s,
you could basically pick either a vertical segment,
you know, like HVAC or Cardiolarships,
or you could do a horizontal function, like the CRM or some very niche workflow for
like the finance team, you could build a software product around that workflow, around
that vertical.
And you really only had to deal with typically like two to three competitors.
Like there really wasn't that much competition relative to what there is today.
And there was less just like general pricing pressure, competitive pressure, just the general
pressure that you actually had a lot with some of the digital marketplaces early on.
And so like I think there was a whole crop of investors then and like the SaaS investors then,
we're like, well, we don't need to, we don't need a bunch of cash burn.
And it's actually, it's a really unhealthy indicator if these SaaS companies are producing a bunch of burn
because they're not competing with anybody.
So if they can't like sell their product for good union economics on day one when the competitive
intensity isn't very high, then they're probably not a very good business.
I think the thing that's changed now is one, you have the change from zero marginal costs
to actual meaningful marginal costs in the form of infer,
inference and it's also just a hell of a lot more competitive than it used to be.
And so you are and by the way there's an immense, it was probably 10x more capital than there was 15 years ago to go into these companies.
And so like every single category now has become like mini ride share or like mini Uber market where it's like, hey, there's probably a really big pot of gold at the end of the tunnel.
And we need to be the ones that get first to scale. And in a lot of these categories, the ones that have gotten first to scale have gotten a lot of brand equity out of it and have gotten
a pretty resounding lead.
I think the only other piece, I would say, I lost my sharing of thought.
Yeah, yeah, but it's going to be basically it's going to be like a capital fight now on the
SaaS side.
I wonder if the contrarian trade around hard tech is entering a similar era, where it's become
consensus.
And so we're going to see more capital fights.
And when a founder goes out and says, yeah, I'm going to do something crazy, but I need to
spend a billion dollars of CAPEX, people are just like, yeah, this could be the next base.
Yeah, it made sense to have a capital war in ride share, but now we have a capital war in like this niche agentic workflow in some industry that most people have never heard of.
And then also a capital war for, here's $200 million for funding military boats and UAS and UAP.
All these different sub segments are going to wind up.
If capital war start popping up there, that could potentially be a headwind to Delian's model.
Is that roughly correct?
How would you how would you fight back against that?
Look, I think it's always, you know, sort of important to talk about, you know, sort of specifics here, right?
You know, one of Eves, you sort of major investments in the last year is this, you know, company called captions that basically does AI captioning of, you know, various, you know, sort of videos on social media.
When I think about, you know, handing, you know, sort of two Stanford grads and $100 million to go try and, you know, sort of replicate that, yeah, feels like, you know, they could, you know, go, you know, they could, you know, go, you know, voice recognition models.
They can go, you know, sort of pay on ads on TikTok, et cetera.
And you could probably go and replicate that.
And so, you know, our one line, our founders fund is competition is for losers.
And so, you know, I think I was a loser for investing.
You know, shots fire.
And you just delivered Deli.
So thank you.
Now, you know, if you take, you know, sort of two Stanford grads in $200 million
and tell them, hey, I need you to go replicate this manufacturing facility and go start
building a bunch of, you know, sort of satellites, reentry vehicles, you know,
bioreactors that can actually survive the environment of space.
Most, you know, sort of stand for grads, you know, can't go, you know,
as chat, GPT, how to go do that.
Yet.
Yet.
Yet.
Hasn't really faced significant competition, irrespective of the fact that, you know, all
things space factories are thought to be, you know, sort of the hot new thing.
To be clear, we use captions here on clips.
We enjoy the captions app.
We thank, Ev, for making it possible and subsidizing our.
And there is a YC, there is a Y, there is a YSA company.
So, you're coming for you.
Indian Varda, I think, will be a little bit less competitive than Indian captions.
Also, if you're the caption CEO and, you know, founders fund is trying to invest in your next round, please still let us do that.
Helpful counterpoint for me.
Delian, you were, you were correct that it was getting, it was getting too friendly of a debate.
I did want to make sure I could pin this one on you.
If you can recite the equation for a return on invested capital, I will victory to you and I will donate $5,000 to a charity of your choice.
Oh, let's go.
Cluey.
Hopefully he's got Clueling running.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
My equivalent for ever, it will be if you can explain, you know,
basically why you can't create microgravity down here on Earth,
I will also donate $5,000 to a charity of your choice.
But I don't think of it, you know,
I may not have the basic understanding of business physics,
but you don't have the basic understanding of physics.
And one's more important about understanding the universe around you.
Okay.
I mean, I'm pretty fixated on the 2035 midas list.
Yeah.
That's really kind of the final.
The bigger.
That's this.
Have you been on Liding Brink yet or I forget whether or not you've made it up there.
Oh,
taking shots.
No,
not even on the brink yet.
You know,
Lee Re joins,
you know,
KP after you and she beats you.
He's laughing me.
It's okay.
It's okay.
Eventually we're going to,
we're going to bring back the extra names in Klineer Perkins.
It used to be Klineer Perkins,
Coffield,
buyers.
It's going to be Klineer Perkins,
Randall,
eventually once we're working on it.
We're working on it.
We're pitching it.
Where should we go next,
George?
I guess,
uh,
Everett, how quickly, like, how much should people be fixated on the cost per token with these frontier models over the next six months?
Like how long can venture capital sort of like backstop these chained losses?
Yeah, I think that the way to delineate the whole, so obviously like I think there was this kind of consensus narrative that like every, you know, 12 to 18 months.
token costs were going down an order of magnitude. I think that did hold for a while.
I think what you've seen now is like actually for frontier models that started to peter out a bit.
And like pricing has actually started, it's still going down. It's not going down nearly as much
as it used to when when we were kind of in the in the meat of the curve of capability improvements
on frontier LLMs in terms of pricing curve. So I think that the way that you want to delineate it
is like there's a certain, like what I always tell everyone is that like there hasn't been a chat cheap
QPT query since GPT4 that like my mom hasn't been able to ask and have it answered by the model.
So there's like the mom test of models where like there's a growing subset of tasks like economic or knowledge tasks that the models are tasked to do that no longer need frontier intelligence.
And when you're not on the frontier, either through open source or just like the cheapening and desilling of older models, like the price still falls off a cliff.
Sure.
be a very, very large set of tasks that models do that are not on the frontier and those
are going to continue to get dirt cheap.
I actually think that at the frontier, you're probably going to see continued price decreases
on a per token basis, but nowhere near what you saw before, which was like this order of magnitude
decrease on a very regular cadence.
And so I think for like depending on the company, it's going to depend on one if you've actually
built a company that has enough power where you have pricing power where you can price above
the kind of marginal token price from the actual model providers.
And then two, how much of your inference actually needs to be at the frontier?
Like how much of your inference can be an older model that's much, much cheaper versus
how much do you need to do on the actual frontier?
I think that's what you're seeing.
You know, everyone loves to talk about Cursor and Chris Peck over at Pace Capital had this
really great kind of like mini essay, I think only like last night or a couple of nights ago.
And he talked about like, no one knows if Cursor has power yet because, you know, coders and
developers, they're very, very, like they're taste makers. They're very good at understanding the
quality of the models and how much inference they're getting. And there's a lot of price sensitivity
for them because they have a really good understanding of how much inference they're getting.
And so, no one really knows, I think no one can definitively say whether a lot of those
types of companies have actual power with their users or if they're just drawn to an interface
for frontier models or not. And so I think that's what everyone needs to be looking out for
is those two things. Like, do you actually have power? Like, will people give you margin above
the marginal cost of tokens. And then two, like, do we even need the frontier inference for the
vast majority of your product? Or is that, is there a lot that you can offload to cheaper models?
Yeah, I mean, I guess your counter, you know, said there, Everett is that, you know, a majority of
what the foundation models are providing in terms of, you sort of value there in users is starting
to be, you know, sort of obviated by the, like, you know, historical generation, even some of
the ones that are, you know, sort of open source. So it seemed to imply that where value is accruing
and where you'd expect the, like, the highest revenue growth wouldn't necessarily
be at the foundation layer, but you'd see it more at the application layer since those folks
can squat models out. But in reality, that's literally just not what actually is happening.
Like if you look at which companies are, you know, sort of fastest on user growth, user growth,
et cetera, it is the foundation model companies. It seems like a part of it is that they also have,
you know, sort of the most pricing power where, yes, you know, your mom, you know, uses GPT4,
but like she's not the one that's necessarily paying like, you know, $100,000, $10,000 per month
versus the true frontier capabilities on like, you know, AI coding, the pro,
users, the one that actually do care about, you know, maybe your mom is fine with 115 IQ
model, and that's, like, fine for the rest of her life because she's just, like, not asking
it that difficult of questions versus the people that actually are willing to, you know,
to pay are the ones that actually do care about the 140, 160, 180 IQ. Again, maybe at some point,
that gets, you know, should commoditize as well. But my sort of counter to you would be,
you've made this argument that seems to imply, hey, you know, things will accrue to the AI
application layer, which if I understand your guys's portfolio is largely where you guys
invested, but in reality, that's not what's played out. The, like, places that have
capture the most, you know, revenue growth, the most market share have been the ones that are
actually pushing the true frontier, you know, of the, you know, so technology forward. And so far,
at least in last 18 months, your thesis is not playing out at all. Well, to be clear, isn't,
isn't it somewhat widely understood that Anthropic has negative gross margins as well? So it's,
it's not like they're doing. Like, I have his point was that you want to invest in these companies
that have the, you know, seven powers. And like, you know, in the, you know, days of like Uber, you know,
DoorDash, et cetera, that did end up using.
It seems like Nvidia has the most power, then the foundation model labs, maybe then the application
layer.
We'll see how much power develops in the application layer.
But, Ev, we'll let you respond.
Oh, yeah.
I was going to say that basically what Delian said was just wrong, because even though it is, even
though, like, if you think about, okay, like, let's take like whatever Open AI in Anthropics
recently reported revenue run rate is, the majority of all of that, or at least the plurality
of all of that is chat GPT.
And ChatGPT, even though it is served by a foundation model company, is an application.
It is a consumer subscription that has an immense amount of power.
It has an immense amount of branding.
Like, you know, it is the only, it is like the first billion plus user consumer application
that's been developed by a new company in a really long time.
And so I think that, like, you could put whatever models you wanted through Chat ChbT
at this point, and it would not knock it off of its perch.
I think that is power.
Like, you could run Claude Three Sonnet through Chat ChaptainteePT, and I guarantee people,
people, like the average user wouldn't actually know the difference.
And that, to me, is power.
And just because the foundation model companies are producing apps themselves doesn't mean
that it's not the application layer that is accruing the value.
Okay, then my question is, you know, you've got opening eye with the best possible
consumer application layer.
You've got Anthropic that, like, shifted over to positive gross margins and those margins
that are expanding.
And yet, Cliner's not investing into either of those foundation model, you know,
so companies.
Why?
I cannot comment on our current investment activities.
Okay, switching gears
Can you comment on,
I mean, look, do you like making money
or do you like, you know, you know,
can you comment on Donald Boat?
Have either of you bought anything for Donald Boat?
The notorious e-begger on X.com, the Everything app.
Like my little brother, you know,
played the unil reverse card and tried to get Donald Boat to buy him something.
Smart.
You know, contrary to a prohoff nature.
Let's talk about revenue quality.
because I think that you guys run into this
in your respective domains every single day.
Just like in AI, you can have low quality revenue.
Like that might be the explosion of like consumer prompt
to app activity, you know, might not be the highest quality revenue.
Meanwhile, on the hard tech side,
if somebody gets like a random like,
sibber or like experimental, gets like experimental budget
from some branch of the military.
And it's like a fine, you know,
fixed length contract, it's not necessarily the right strategy to slap like a 50x revenue
multiple on it. So like what's your view on both of those? And then I want to talk about if we
should get into if accounting rules even matter at this point. Yeah, yeah, for sure.
Yeah, I mean, in hardware land, we think about this all the time of like there's clear
differences in quality of revenue, everything from like, you know, defense, you know, program
of record. You have to value that very differently than even like a $50 million, you know,
SBIR. And so it has been interesting to see a bunch of investors coming into this field where
I think there's a lot of pre-existing 10 years of rules around software of like what, you know,
healthy revenue looks like rule 40. There's all these things that like, you know, even if you're
somewhat unsophisticated, infinite blog posts, when you look at that in the world of like hardware
and defense, you know, sort of investing or aerospace, there aren't like infinite blog posts for
people to study. And so I admit that I'm sometimes amazed when I watch people come in, even for,
I should never, you know, sort of trash my own portfolio. But sometimes even my own portfolio
companies that watch people invest in them. And I'm like, wow, like, you just have a deep underappreciation
for just like how long this company has until gross margin flips to like positive, how long it's
going to be until they're actually, you know, sort of a ready to go scale revenue. Even if it on
the back end, it might be attractive. It may be years and years for them to, you know, sort of get
there. And so, yeah, I see huge variation on that. And then mostly what I end up, you know,
sort of seeing is people just come in and like slap a 10 to, I even saw 100x rev rate multiple on this,
like hardware company recently and I was like holy shit wow people like not have an
IRA for a long time yeah I think um so Delian's hero and close mentor Bill Gurley had an
essay a long time ago called the 10x revenue club and I think it's like a good abstraction
for kind of like tech revenue quality and like what makes up revenue quality and it's things
like you know how durable is the revenue like if you sign a customer are they going to stay for a
year, 20 years, you know, how much contribution profit is going to come off of that revenue stream
over time, all the basics. And I think you can take those same building blocks and apply to AI.
I think there's several things that are worse for AI than at least than relative to SaaS for now.
So generally gross, like gross margins are lower, which means contribution profit coming off is lower.
I actually think that like depending on the category, you could have customers that are more sticky or
less sticky. Like I know the meme is that everything's experimental run rate and none of these
customers are actually sticky. I think we see something very, very different among our group of
portfolio companies. I think the biggest lever that didn't exist in SaaS that exists in AI that could be
a huge call option boon for the revenue quality of AI is the actual contract sizes as people start
to eat into potential labor budgets. I know this is still kind of like inning one and inning two,
and it's also like a little bit of a meme where everyone's like, oh, it's going to replace labor and labor's
10 times SaaS and it hasn't really happened yet. But I think if you look at some of these coding tools
and you look at something like Cloud Code, that is the first place where you can really actually say,
like, no, this is replacing the labor that a developer would do, and it is paid for on like a metered
consumption basis.
And the monetization numbers we're hearing around developers using CloudCode are pretty crazy
in terms of like, wow, that's like you're paying like one-tenth of like a developer's
full in cost to a company on an annualized basis for this product.
And so I think that the like the thing to watch is like durability of revenue plus the amount
of actual revenue that a customer can give you.
And I think that you're going to end up, or the amount of gross profit that a customer can contribute over time.
And I do think as some customers crack these agentic products that look and monetize more like labor,
AI revenue could actually exceed the quality of SaaS revenue just because you're getting so much more gross profit per customer or like customer relationship than you would on the SaaS side,
even though there are clearly things that are worse about AI revenue at this current point in time than there are about SaaS revenue.
Dillian, how do you think about the moral imperative?
of a venture capitalist to invest in positive sum versus zero sum markets, this idea that
you're re-industrializing America, you're saving the West versus moving chips around,
you personally, versus moving chips around the poker table, taking from some legacy,
you know, Web 1.0 company and putting it into an AI company. What's your thinking and
argument there is is is a a a market beating ROIC all that you need yeah I you know I
think Peter always reminds us like you know our number one job is deliver returns for
is RLP's and so I actually tend to not try to you know sort of overly moralize when
like analyzing the things that I want to you know sort of invest into for sure when it
comes into like policy and I'm in DC and I like need to you know sort of report to you
know the Security Council that you know Bill Gurley is at either sort of Chinese spy
and like their investments that he's making should
probably be banned from the United States. Yeah, for sure there, I have, you know, sort of moral
imperatives and things that influence that may end up, you know, shifting R.O.C., right? So, you know,
but when it comes to, you know, like, which literal investments are we making, I think of it
is just like, yeah, you just have to, you know, sort of make the, you know, sort of best possible
investments irrespective of, you know, sort of moral imperatives. But in some ways, I tend to think,
it turns out, actually, if you, you know, go to immoral, then that ends up, you know, sort of
affecting RICs. So, you know, and the last thing that I would least, you know, should have, you know,
close on, you know, for my, you know, sort of question, you know, for Everett is, you know,
one of the upsides of Founders Fund is, you know, we're very, you know, sort of, let's say,
non-centralized, distributed, you know, not many, you know, sort of rules, which, you know,
ever, for some reason, you sort of chose to leave. And so I know nowadays, everything that he says
publicly, you know, probably five comms people and five compliance people that need to, you know,
sort of approve it. And so I have my only request to you was, you know, sort of blink twice
if somebody's, you know, got a gun behind the camera.
trying to shoot you if never say anything that you go through off script.
That's all you got to tell us, brother.
Let us know.
Hey, our wonderful marketing partner, Allie, is behind the camera with a green and red paddle.
And she hasn't been to raise the red paddle yet.
So that's great.
That's great.
Well, thank you both for joining.
Last question.
Are you worried about Uncle Sam potentially having sharp elbows now that we're hearing about
the federal government taking a stake in Intel?
Any concerns about him going down the stack into the,
into the early stage game competing for those seed and series A allocations.
Look, if Trump Capital wants to, you know, sort of mark up some of the, you know, reindustrialization
companies, I'm all for it, baby, cheap cost of capital.
You're all for it.
Yeah, I'll say, I'll say two things.
I'd say one, I think the EV of like the enterprise value of founders fund probably three X
the night that Trump got elected.
So I don't think Delian would complain about that.
And then, as a parting gift, DeLian, you know, I think this conversation's been great.
And it's made me realize why you want to build factories in space.
your math on earth doesn't make any sense.
Well, thank you both for joining.
You're both good sports.
We'll have to do this again.
I think it might be a draw.
We'll have to have you both back soon.
Thanks so much for hopping on.
Great stuff.
We'll see you guys later.
Cheers.
