Tech Brew Ride Home - Now OpenAI Wants To Find You A Job
Episode Date: September 5, 2025From the, this wasn’t on my bingo card file, OpenAI has launched a sort of job board? Why Broadcom might become Nvidia’s big rival. Is AI image generation about to have its Napster moment? And in ...the Longread Suggestions, a deep-dive state of the job market in tech. 00:00 Intro 00:33 OpenAI Job Search 04:22 Broadcom Competes With Nvidia? 07:41 AI Image Napster Moment? 11:30 Nividia's "Self Dealing"? 15:35 Longreads Links: OpenAI Plans Jobs Platform, Certification Program for AI Roles (Bloomberg) OpenAI set to start mass production of its own AI chips with Broadcom (FT) Warner Bros. Discovery Sues AI Giant Midjourney for Copyright Infringement In Major Legal Battle (The Hollywood Reporter) Nvidia to Pay $1.5 Billion to Rent Back Its Own Chips From Cloud Startup (The Information) Weekend Longreads Suggestions: State of the software engineering job market in 2025 (The Pragmatic Engineer) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the Tech Brew Ride Home for Friday, September 5th, 2025.
I'm Brian McCullough today.
From the This Wasn't On My Bingo Card File, Open AI has launched a sort of job board.
Why Broadcom might become Nvidia's big rival, is AI image generation about to have its
Napster moment and, in the long read suggestions, a deep dive state of the job market in tech?
Here's what you miss today in the world of tech.
Did not see this one coming.
plans to launch a jobs platform in 2026 to match employers to candidates with AI skills and also
a certification program for teaching AI, which should launch in the coming months. Quoting Bloomberg,
OpenAI is working with multiple organizations on the program, including Walmart, the largest
private employer in the U.S. OpenAI said it plans to certify 10 million Americans by 2030.
The company unveiled the jobs initiative Thursday in conjunction with a
White House Task Force meeting on artificial intelligence and education hosted by First Lady
Melania Trump. Tech industry leaders including OpenAI's Sam Altman and Alphabet Sundar Pachai attended the
event. Altman is also expected to meet with senior White House officials later in the day,
the company said, we believe fundamentally that AI will unlock more opportunities for more people
than any technology in history, but it will also be disruptive, said Fiji Simo, the chief executive
officer of applications at OpenAI and the former head of Instacart.
While we can't eliminate the disruption, we can certainly help more people become fluent in
AI and connect them with companies that need their skills, end quote.
For the jobs platform, OpenAI plans to use AI to help match local governments and companies
of all sizes with potential candidates.
The service would put the AI developer in closer competition with companies like LinkedIn,
owned by OpenAI backer Microsoft.
I don't envision it as just a simple job post-apeutic.
said Simo, who previously worked as an executive at Meta overseeing the main Facebook application,
I envision it more as a candidate being able to talk about what they can offer and demonstrate
that with a certification and then us being able to match them with companies that have similar
needs using AI. OpenAI is working closely with Walmart to develop the certification program,
details of which are being ironed out. Certifications will be available for free to Walmart's
roughly 1.6 million store and corporate employees in the U.S. and vary by roles, but may come with
a fee for other companies in the future. As companies race to incorporate AI, there have been
mounting concerns that the technology may replace entire categories of jobs. A recent study by
Stanford University researchers found that over the last three years, employment has dropped
13% for people who are just starting out in fields determined to be the most exposed to AI,
such as accountants, developers, and administrative assistance.
We don't want to pretend that we know how it's going to play out,
Simo said. Instead, what we want to do is have solutions for every kind of worker to be able
to adapt to this new world.
Simo noted, there was a time when people thought Excel spreadsheets would replace accountants.
Instead, the software ended up assisting people in those roles, she said.
Likewise, opening eye highlighted online pickup and delivery roles that didn't exist a decade ago
and now make up a big chunk of Walmart's current workforce. At the same time, we want to acknowledge
that there are some categories of jobs that might be deeply disrupted, CMO said. For those,
what we want to offer is all of the ways to really learn a new set of skills, end quote.
This is actually a bit of a hot space, this AI job search thing. The information says that AI contractor
marketplace Mercor has received investment offers valuing it as high as $10 billion, just six months
after raising $100 million at a $2 billion valuation.
Though I do want to caveat that a bit,
Mercor is a specific sort of jobs marketplace
for finding experts to label data for AI training,
sort of like what scale AI does.
But still, the point stands.
And we all know that AI has made Nvidia
the biggest company in all the land,
but you know who else has been writing
the AI wave to great success?
Broadcom.
Broadcom is approaching a market cap of a trillion and a half dollars. I believe it was just a few months ago that they passed a trillion dollars in market cap. And their stock jumped 10% just this morning, at least at the time of this recording, after a good earnings report. Quoting Bloomberg, CEO Haktan had previously said that AI revenue for 2026 would show growth similar to the current year, a rate of 50 to 60%. Now, with a new customer that he said has immediate and pretty
substantial demand, the rate will accelerate in a way that will be, quote, fairly material,
Tan said.
We now expect the outlook for fiscal 2026 AI revenue to improve significantly from what we had
indicated last quarter, he said, end quote.
Gee, who could that new customer be?
Well, sources say it is OpenAI, who is set to produce an AI chip co-designed with Broadcom
to ship in 2026 and has committed $10 billion in orders.
The chip will only be used in terms.
internally at OpenAI. Quote, Broadcom's chief executive Haktan on Thursday referred to a mystery
new customer committing to $10 billion in orders. Open AI's move follows the strategy of tech
giants such as Google, Amazon, and meta, which have designed their own specialized chips to
run AI workloads. The industry has seen huge demand for the computing power to train and run
AI models. Open AI plan to put the chip to use internally, according to one person close to the
project, rather than make them available to external customers. Last year, it was a lot of
It began an initial collaboration with Broadcom, according to reports at the time, but the timeline
for mass production of a successful chip design had previously been unclear.
On a call with analysts, Tan announced that Broadcom had secured a fourth major customer for
its custom AI chip business as it reported earnings that topped Wall Street estimates.
Broadcom does not disclose the names of those customers, but people familiar with the matter,
confirmed OpenAI was the new client.
Broadcom and OpenAI declined to comment.
Tan said the deal had lifted the company's growth prospects by bringing, quote, immediate and fairly
substantial demand shipping chips for that customer pretty strongly from next year. The prospect that
custom AI chips will take a growing share of the booming AI infrastructure market has helped propel
Broadcom's shares more than 30% higher this year. They rallied almost 9% in pre-market trading in New York
on Friday. HSBC analysts have recently noted that they expect to see a much higher growth rate
from Broadcom's custom chip business compared with Nvidia's chip business in 2026.
Nvidia continues to dominate the AI hardware space with the big tech hyperscalers,
still representing a significant share of its customer base,
but its growth has slowed relative to the astronomical figures it saw at the start
of the AI investment boom, end quote.
So I guess the story here is that the rest of the industry is finally coming for
NVIDIA's fat margins. Your margin is my opportunity, as they say, capitalism is a hell of a thing.
Warner Brothers Discovery has filed a copyright lawsuit that accuses Mid-Journey of using its content to
train AI and thereby letting users generate images of characters like Superman and Batman.
The lawsuit accuses Mid-Journey, which has millions of registered users of building its business
around the mass theft of content. The company, quote, brazenly dispenses Warner Brothers'
Discovery's intellectual property by letting subscribers produce images and videos of iconic copyrighted characters,
alleges the complaint filed on Thursday in California federal court. The heart of what we do is
develop stories and characters to entertain our audiences, bringing to life the vision and passion of our
creative partners, said a Warner Brothers Discovery spokesperson in a statement, Mid-Journey is blatantly
and purposefully infringing copyrighted works, and we filed this suit to protect our content,
our partners, and our investments, end quote. For you,
years, AI companies have been training their technology on data scraped across the internet without
compensating creators. It's led to lawsuits from authors, record labels, news organizations, artists,
and studios, which contend that some AI tools erode demand for their content.
Warner Brothers Discovery joins Disney and Universal, which earlier this year teamed up to sue Mid-Journey.
By their thinking, the AI company is a free writer plagiarizing their movies and TV shows.
In the lawsuit, Warner Brothers Discovery points to Mid-Jurney generating images of iconic copyrighted
characters. At the forefront are heroes who are at the center of DC Studios movies and TV shows
like Superman, Wonder Woman, and The Joker. Others are Looney Tunes, Tom and Jerry, and Scooby-Doo characters
who've become ubiquitous household names. More are Cartoon Network characters, including those
from Rick and Morty, who've emerged as something of cultural touchstones in recent years.
Mid Journey, which has four tiers of paid subscriptions ranging from $10 to $120 per month
and didn't immediately respond to a request for comment,
returns characters owned by Warner Brothers Discovery
even in response to prompts like
classic comic book superhero battle
that don't explicitly mention any particular intellectual property,
the complaint alleges.
As evidence that Mid Journey trained its AI system
on its intellectual property,
the studio attaches dozens of images
showing the tools' outputs compared to stills
from its movies and TV shows.
When prompted with Batman's screencap from the Dark Night,
the service returns an image of Christian Bale's portrayal of the character featuring the costume's
Kevlar plate design that differentiated it from previous iterations of the hero that appears to be taken
from the movie or promotional materials with few to no alterations made. One of the more convincing
examples highlights a 3D animated Bugs Bunny mirroring his adaptation in Space Jam a new legacy.
The lawsuit argues Mid Journey's ability to return copyrighted characters is a, quote,
clear draw for subscribers diverting customers away from purchasing Werner Brothers Discovery-approved
posters, wall art, and prints, among other products that must now compete against the service,
end quote. Yeah, you might want to click through on the article and the show notes to see some of the
images that they cite in this. This specific thing, my ability to go to Mid-Journey and generate an
image of Batman, and then print it up and put it on my wall, like this is the closest thing I've seen to
the Napster example since Napster happened. Like I'm not a lawyer, obviously. I don't know the
legal ins and outs of this, but this is one of those, I think maybe the genie is out of the bottle here,
folks, situations. If I want to make an image of Bugs Bunny, I'm going to do it somewhere,
somehow on some tool, and it's going to look pretty darn perfect. Are you going to sue me?
Sue the tools, sue all of us? I mean, Napster example once again.
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trust news, I want to highlight something that people have been whispering about in Silicon Valley vis-a-vis
NVIDIA, which is, and this is not my opinion, I need to stress that, but that NVIDIA,
these folks say, is doing a lot of self-dealing. They're oftentimes the supplier and the investor
and the customer in a way, by way of example. A source tells the information that
NVIDIA has agreed to rent 10,000 of its own AI chips from Lambda for one.
$1.3 billion over four years. The latest example, again, of what people say is NVIDIA's
circular financial arrangements. Quote, the contracts position NVIDIA as Lambda's
biggest customer ahead of the firm's planned initial public offering. It's the latest example
of the circular financial arrangements NVIDIA makes to get its own chips into the cloud market
and to help smaller cloud providers compete with traditional big ones such as Amazon and Google.
And it shows how insular capital markets for AI can be with NVIDIA working as a
supplier, investor, and customer for multiple small cloud providers, also known as Neo-Clouds.
Lambda leases data center space fills the facilities with servers powered by
Nvidia's graphics processing units and signs contracts with cloud customers which rent them.
It isn't clear how much Lambda paid for the Nvidia chip servers it is renting out to
Nvidia or how Nvidia is accounting for the deal, given that it is essentially on both sides
of the transaction and is also an equity investor in Lambda.
NVIDIA's own researchers plan to use the GPU servers it will rent from Lambda,
according to a different person with direct knowledge of the arrangement.
Other major Lambda customers include Amazon and Microsoft, which together made up just
under half of its $114 million cloud revenue in the second quarter.
Microsoft and Amazon use Lambda's GPU servers primarily for internal purposes,
not for Amazon Web Services or Microsoft Azure cloud customers.
Lambda has projected cloud revenue of more than $1 billion by 2026 and more than
$20 billion by 2030 as it aims to win cloud contracts with the likes of OpenAI, Google Anthropic,
XAI, and other large AI developers. By 2030, it projects having nearly three gigawatts of computing capacity,
nearly half the amount of capacity some of the largest cloud providers produced today,
and up from 47 megawatts in the second quarter of this year. It's not clear how the firm plans
to obtain that kind of capacity, but going public could help it raise more debt to expand its
operations. Lambda's business and its heavily concentrated customer base resembles that of
CoreWeave, a much bigger GPU-focused cloud provider that recently went public, and that
Nvidia has also heavily supported. Until now, Lambda has mostly signed smaller, shorter-term
contracts for GPU rentals. The deal with Nvidia is the largest in its history and will likely
fuel its marketing push as it moves toward an initial public offering as early as the first half of
next year. Invidia has long-supported companies that help get its chips into the market,
and that also are more willing than traditional cloud providers to buy a variety of its hardware
products. For instance, Nvidia has clashed with Microsoft over the design of racks that hold GPUs.
Lambda executives, meanwhile, have privately said they are considering offering a new optics networking
technology Nvidia is developing.
Nvidia helped seed the swift rise of Corweave, which went public in March after raising billions of dollars in debt and equity.
Early in Corweaves pivot from crypto mining to renting out servers for AI, it quietly inked a deal with
Nvidia nearly identical to the one Nvidia has done with Lambda. That deal helped Corweave raise debt
and grow its cloud business at the expense of traditional cloud firms. Invita is boosting the smaller
cloud firms to protect its business in the long run, while Nvidia's biggest customers have been,
Microsoft, Amazon, and Google, those firms are building their own competing AI chips to reduce
their reliance on Nvidia's, end quote. See a previous segment in this show for further context.
Just one long read suggestion for you this week from Friend of the Show,
Gergly Oros over at the Pragmatic Engineer, a deep dive into the state of the tech job market in
2025, including an increase in demand for AI engineers and a rising average tenure at big tech companies.
Quote, today we cover tech job stats, a slow, steady rise and recruitment across big tech and
top startups.
AI engineering trends, massive increase in demand for AI engineers with San Francisco's Bay Area,
the center of gravity for jobs.
Big tech hiring stats, following layoffs in 2022-23, engineering headcount is rising in big
Tech. Growing importance of location. Many roles are listed in geographical tech hubs and engineers are
more likely to swap jobs if they live in one. Tenure rising fast at Big Tech. Since 2023, average tenure at
big tech companies increased at a pace like never before. Is this because people are less likely to
quit or because of Big Tech slowing down hiring? Where are Big Tech moving to and from? Big Tech is becoming a
pretty closed loop talent-wise, most big tech hires are from similar-sized places.
Engineering leadership recruitment. Amazon is heavily cutting engineering managers, while most of
big tech except Apple, is reducing director-plus roles. Remote jobs. The volume of remote roles
keeps declining compared to a year ago, except in AI engineering where more listings seem to be
offering remote work than in recent months, end quote. Read the whole thing for a real state of
the job market sort of long read. I do have a weekend bonus episode for you tomorrow. I
interviewed Julie Samuels, CEO of Tech NYC, the sort of industry group that advocates on behalf of
startups here in New York City. So we talked about the state of the New York City tech ecosystem,
but also, yeah, we got into some tech history, the Electronic Frontier Foundation going to
school in Illinois after the whole Mark Andresen Mosaic Supernova there. It was a great
chat, enjoy. Talk to you on Monday. Ambition comes in all shapes and sizes. At First Citizens Bank,
we roll with your goals because we're built for what you're building. Fit for your ambition.
