TBPN Live - DOGE Zoomers, The De Minimis Loophole, Supersonic Corridor, A Healthier America

Episode Date: February 4, 2025

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Technology Brothers, the number one live show in tech. We have some breaking news on the cover of the Wall Street Journal business and finance section. Masayoshi Son and Sam Altman were pictured in Tokyo on Monday. Masa was holding a crystal ball and dropped it. And Sam Altman is watching him pick it up. And it's so funny because they don't really address it in the context. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. They don't really address it in the context of this article, but it's very clear that the wall street journal was like, this is a metaphor of some sort.
Starting point is 00:00:35 That is a great omen. That's actually dropping a crystal ball. I mean, these things can, people always read into these things. People were like, oh, the Cybertruck, he broke the glass. Like these live demos, sometimes they go wrong. But yeah, Masa, you got to work on that grip strength. The Lone Ranger will send you some grip strength trainers, and maybe you won't drop the crystal ball next time. That's actually wild. Yeah, I'll read some of it. In his newly built palace near Tokyo, lined by stone statues of Roman emperors and surrounded by an 18-hole golf course, Masayoshi Son was stewing. After declaring for years the imminent arrival of artificial intelligence revolution,
Starting point is 00:01:19 this chief executive officer of SoftBank Group had missed out on it. I haven't been able to do anything, he thought, according to a speech he gave to SoftBank investors last year. Can I just get old like this and die? As it turns out, all he needed was a new golden boy. And now Sohn, who has a history of latching on to charismatic startup founders, has found one in Sam Altman. In what would be the largest yet investment in a startup, Sohn is preparing to put as much as $43 billion Sam Altman. In what would be the largest yet investment in a startup, Sohn is preparing to put as much as $43 billion towards Altman's OpenAI in a pair of transactions.
Starting point is 00:01:51 SoftBank is in talks to invest between $15 billion and $25 billion in the chat GPT maker as part of a blockbuster $40 billion funding round the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday. The round would value OpenAI at up to $300 billion, nearly double its valuation in October, and under an undeniable sign of Sohn's confidence in its prospects. Jordy, what you got?
Starting point is 00:02:15 Okay, so my reading into this is this is separate from Stargate. So not only is Sohn levering up his arm position to go heavy into Stargate, it's not enough to just own the infrastructure layer. He's got to own the developer tool and the consumer product layer in OpenAI. And honestly, it's absolutely insane. To put this into context, one of the biggest software ipos ever snowflake we've talked about it on the show they raised in their ipo like 2.5 billion or something like that you know somewhere in that range and so just so so sam is is raising you know
Starting point is 00:02:58 such an egregious if he gets his round done it's truly uh he's he's definitely the greatest fundraiser of all time putting adam newman to shame hit the gong a pre preeminent uh gong hit um but uh honestly absolutely insane if they pull it off and the only two people on earth that could are masa and sam so and and from what i know, this kind of Sam was really just out there testing the deep research product. He posted about this, that he was using the deep research product to find a new, I think some type of a vintage Acura.
Starting point is 00:03:37 And he must've just run into Masa while he was doing that and they just hit it off and now they got a potential deal. So love to see you know a little coincidence like that turn into a big funding round yeah i i hope they got out to the track and put those nsxs to work i'd love to see masa behind the wheel that's a good driver for a 40 billion dollar round throw in throw in uh you know why not throw in a vintage you know acura right yeah uh it's a rounding error so and so uh in addition the japanese tech and investment conglomerate has
Starting point is 00:04:12 committed 18 billion towards stargate so 18 billion for stargate between 15 and 25 for chat gpt for open ai so that's a combined know, we're in the 30 billion territory. Uh, fantastic, but they got the money and remember the 30 billion, the 30 billion number was Moss's initial target for vision fund. He went, he was going to Saudi Arabia to meet with MBS and on the plane, he had written out that he wanted 30 billion and he circled that. And then he crossed it out and wrote a hundred because he liked he liked the idea of saying give me 100 billion i'll give you a trillion and so um masa continues to lever up to go bigger than ever and um you know uh we'll see how it pans out uh
Starting point is 00:04:58 it's too way too early to have any judgment um and uh but. But we like any opportunity to hit the gong. So thank you to Masa and Sam for providing that. For sure. Yeah, it's unclear. You know, the metaphor of dropping the crystal ball, that clearly happened because he didn't go turbo long AI three years ago. But maybe he's picking the crystal ball back up and he's putting the money in the right place
Starting point is 00:05:25 i just i just what was masa doing in every they had a little bit of one of the earlier rounds right this is not their first time investing in the company so mas is getting the updates on every the first of every month and he's like i gotta i gotta own a lot more of this bad boy he's like i don't care if the model layer is getting commoditized. I just, I love Sam. He's my guy. I'm going turbo, turbo long. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:52 Well, hopefully it works out. We always love seeing these big deals get done. And overall, I'm excited to see a lot of capital flow into an American AI company. I think this is exactly what we need right now. So yeah, bad day to be deep seek. Bad day to be deep seek. I'm glad the money's not going there. So close to Japan, yet so far away. Truly, truly. Well, let's go to Luke Ferritore. We broke the news yesterday that he is over at Doge. He has read access to the US Treasury and payments flow and has been doing a
Starting point is 00:06:24 whole bunch of data science and machine learning to understand where money is going in the government. He's part of this crack team of Zoomers that Elon has hired and staffed on a project to understand how the government works, where money is going. It's been extremely controversial. A lot of people came out in support of Luke. We did and the rest of the team. And a lot of people were very upset. And so it was very controversial. A lot of people came out in support of Luke. We did, uh, and the rest of the team and a lot of people were very upset. And so it was very controversial, but we wanted to give a deep dive on Luke and his previous, uh, previous, uh, work on the Herculaneum scrolls today. And so we will go through that in just a minute. Jordy, what you got? Uh, one quick note. I think it's worth mentioning for the audience that hasn't been following Doge maybe as closely
Starting point is 00:07:04 as some other people, but it's important to understand that Luke is actually not an employee of the government. From what we know, he's an employee of Doge, which you can think of as operating as this sort of personal vehicle for Elon and Elon's team and this sort of initiative to try to have an impact on the government. So think about it more as like a, almost like a consulting shop, think tank. So that's the right way to look at Luke, but we'll kind of get into where he got started. Yeah. And so let's go through some of these posts. Of course, he famously won a portion of a $700,000 prize for figuring out how to read ancient scrolls that were carbonized by Mount Vesuvius, which we'll go through today. And people are having a lot of fun with this. Armin Thule says the Doge Zoomer is preparing to fire half of the federal government. And it's the bobs from office space, but with zoomer haircuts of course and so people
Starting point is 00:08:07 are having a lot of fun with this uh you know everyone it's become a massive political football uh even though i think luke is is pretty much just uh trying to understand where the money's actually going which is a very reasonable thing for either party to want to do i i like that everybody had to clarify that he only has read access. It's not like, you know, he's very, you know, he's not just in there, you know, just like he's using it like Venmo or cash app, just whipping money around. He's just trying to get it. He's just trying to understand the scrolls that are the U S treasury department's database and incredible paper trail. It really is like the scrolls project all over. It's so,
Starting point is 00:08:45 it's so funny, the similarities. And so Jarvis writes, like five people who understand how computers work, show up in DC, and within two weeks, restructure the entire system that's been in place since World War Two. That's wild. I love this post. It's so funny, but it is it is a testament to AI and data analysis that you can actually do this extremely high leverage work and comb through all these payments. Somebody else was saying that one of the early Doge projects was just get a dump of payments, just get a whole bunch of like just data on where things are going and just look for the crazy stuff that pops out that seems like really weird and if you look through the uh the ppp loans there were a lot of those that went to reasonable you know restaurants that were closed down by mandate because of covid made
Starting point is 00:09:36 sense that they would that they would need ppp to bridge but then there were some people that set up uh llc is called like ford raptor llc and we know what that guy was doing. And so you don't need to be a genius. It's not a left right issue. Like you're leafing through that. You're like, why are my tax dollars going to buy someone a truck? Like this should not be happening. And so hopefully, you know, the Doge team can find a bunch of stuff like that. Yeah. And part of it is understanding, okay, let's understand where the money went. And then let's understand how it's being spent. And yesterday we highlighted that out of 700 ish million dollars that was going towards just one university in California from the federal
Starting point is 00:10:15 government. So this is us federal taxpayer dollars going to a California university. Yep. We both live in California. I'm a product of the UC system. I'm nothing against the UC system, but they were spending 40% of the budget, roughly $300 million a year purely on administrative costs. So it's not, you know, you know, the first step is understand, let's understand where the money's going. Yep. Second step is let's understand how it's being spent. But there's a lot of work to do just on the first part, because this is one of the most complicated systems that I can even think of. Right. Yeah. And there's just been generations of craft built up. Well, let's move on to Ashley Vance's article, uh, which, which touches, touches on the Herculaneum scrolls project.
Starting point is 00:10:58 Uh, he wrote this back in, uh, over a year ago, actually a year ago tomorrow, or maybe today, February 5th, 2024, Ashley Vance and Ellen Hewitt over at Bloomberg write, a few years ago during one of California's steadily worsening wildfire seasons, that hits hard, Nat Friedman's family home burned down. A few months after that, Friedman was in COVID-19 lockdown in the Bay Area, both freaked out and bored. Like many a middle-aged dad, he turned for healing and guidance to ancient Rome. While some of us were watching Tiger King and playing with our kids' Legos, he read books about the empire and helped his daughter make paper models of Roman villas. Instead of sourdough, he learned to bake panis quadratus, a Roman loaf pictured in some of the frescoes found in pompeii during sleepless
Starting point is 00:11:46 pandemic nights he spent hours trawling the internet for more rome stuff that's how he that's how he arrived on the on the herculaneum papyri a fork in the road that led him toward further obsession he recalls exclaiming how the hell has no one ever told me about this the herculaneum papyri are a collection of scrolls whose status among classicists approaches the mythical. The scrolls were buried inside an Italian countryside villa by the same volcanic eruption in 79 AD that froze Pompeii in time. To date, only about 800 have been recovered from the small portion of the villa that's been excavated. But it's thought that the villa, which historians believe belonged to Julius Caesar's prosperous father-in-law, had a huge library that could contain
Starting point is 00:12:29 thousands or even tens of thousands more. Sorry to interrupt. We have to really bring back the word prosperous into today's vernacular. It's a fantastic word and everybody should aim to be prosperous in their own way. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:12:45 So he says, such a hall would represent the largest collection of ancient texts ever discovered. And the conventional wisdom among scholars is that it would multiply our supply of ancient Greek and Roman poetry plays and philosophy by many fold. So we're talking about like a five or 10 X increase
Starting point is 00:13:01 in the amount of text from Greek and Roman, uh, literature, uh, high on their wishlist are the works by the likes of, uh, of Sappho and Sophocles, but some say it's easy to imagine fresh revelations about the earliest years of Christianity. So it's been a massive goal of, you know, all these ancient scholars to unearth these and we'll go through how they did it. Uh, Jordy, you got anything for me? No, that's it. That's it. Okay. So some of these texts would completely rewrite the history of key periods of the ancient
Starting point is 00:13:30 world, says Robert Fowler, a classicist and the chair of the Herculaneum Society, a charity that tries to raise awareness of the scrolls and the vilacite. I love that he's just out there being like, I got to spread the word of these scrolls. I got to get the word out. Someone is going to figure this out. And he landed on it. He found Nat and Nat put together Crack Team and actually figured it out basically.
Starting point is 00:13:52 I mean, it's not 100% done. And Nat, for anybody that's not super familiar, he was a co-founder of GitHub or he just joined as CEO? He was CEO, yeah. So he's CEO of GitHub, a tool that literally every developer that I know uses every single day. Yep.
Starting point is 00:14:10 And he has a thing for aggressively pursuing passion projects and side projects with not necessarily any sort of direct monetary incentive, more so using his wealth to try to uncover knowledge. And so the scroll is one project that that's really exciting. And the one that he went pretty viral for recently was
Starting point is 00:14:31 called plastic list.org, which is similar to what what another founder named Cormac is working on a friend of mine. And what plastic list did is he went and he spent probably roughly half a million dollars. So similar to the, to the sort of scrolls project and, uh, tested hundreds of different popular food products because he realized that this one, uh, he'd realized this one protein shake that he was drinking had just like egregious levels of microplastics. And he was sort of traumatized by that. So he's he's saying all right let's test a bunch of different products and so he's very um uh he's doing exactly what we want other other uh other bean airs to be doing so not just building companies and investing but saying hey let me let me spend half a million bucks to sort of unearth some uh you know important knowledge for humanity
Starting point is 00:15:21 and and pull together some great people in the process. So, yeah. Um, I'm, I'm already excited for, for Nat's like next project because you've gone. Yeah. 100%. So we'll pull up a picture of the scrolls. You can see these and you and John, I, I actually can't see this on my screen by the way. Oh really? Yeah. Um, you should be able to see the screen. I'm sharing the Bloomberg Business Week. This is an ancient Roman scroll. I see Luke's scroll. So I think you might be in the wrong tab. Oh, did it never?
Starting point is 00:15:55 Let me try and share this again with you. Let's go share. Let's go here. Is that good, Ben? Can you see that? Bloomberg Businessweek. This is an ancient Roman scroll flash-fired by a volcano. And we got pictures of Nat Friedman here.
Starting point is 00:16:18 And so you can see from this scroll, people have spent hundreds of years trying to unroll them, sometimes carefully, sometimes not. And the scrolls are brittle. Even the most meticulous attempts at unrolling them have tended to end badly with them crumbling into ashy pieces. In recent years, efforts have been made to create high resolution 3D scans of the scroll's interiors. The idea being to unspool them virtually. This work, though, has often been more tantalizing than revelatory. Scholars have been able to glimpse only snippets of the scroll's innards and hints of ink on the papyrus. Some experts have sworn they could see
Starting point is 00:17:00 letters in the scans, but consensus proved elusive and scanning the entire cache is logistically difficult and prohibitively expensive for all but the deepest pocketed patrons. Anything on the order of words or paragraphs has long remained a mystery. So can you imagine you discover this ancient Roman scroll and you're just absolutely thrilled? You're like, OK, I'm going to start. I'm going to start unrolling it and just disintegrates like immediately every single time and they've tried so many different like bring in the uh yeah and and uh mike solana posted something earlier today that was it was pretty interesting he basically said blogs from the uh early 2010s are actually less recoverable in many ways than these ancient
Starting point is 00:17:41 you know multi-thousand year old scrolls, which, um, is a whole other issue of like, how do you properly archive the internet and all the content we put out so that it can be, um, you know, preserved for, uh, you know, people, you know, 5,000 years from today. Uh, but anyways, looking a couple of chads here, just a couple Roman empire enthusiasts. Uh, we'd love to see it he clearly like became actually actual buddies with the the professor on the project and they're just like hanging out now um and so uh friedman isn't your average rome loving dad he was ceo of github and most importantly within github he developed github co-pilot which is their AI coding assistant. And he's been AI pilled for years and years and years, because this was one of the first LLM implementations
Starting point is 00:18:31 that actually got traction. And I remember back in, I think it was built on GPT-3 and back in 20, I guess it was like 2020, 2019, 2020. He was saying like, like every other model, like, like GPT-3 at the time, people would kind of use it as a search engine or to like, you know, do copy editing and stuff, but it wasn't quite dialed there. GitHub Copilot was the one product that didn't have super high churn. Obviously that's changed now with things like perplexity and chat GPT and a lot of these apps, but GitHub Copilot was the first canary in the coal mine for these LLMs. These AI systems are robust enough to be used by people for, for a long time. Yeah. Now, now, um, I'm sure people, a lot of people just know him as an investor because he's
Starting point is 00:19:16 now deploying a ton of capital and his ability to have an idea and then pull together super talented people and just ship it. He did this with, um, uh, uh, another, uh, Nat Grossman. So there's Nat Friedman and Nat Grossman. It's Daniel Gross, right? Daniel Gross, sorry, Daniel, Dan, Dan Gross. And they shipped an entire cluster just for their portfolio companies because they have another program called the AI grant, which is like a similar to YC type of structure. So I love that just like having an idea, sharing it publicly, and then just like quickly actually acting on it, just not letting it stay in the timeline is great to see. Yeah. And so he launches the Vesuvius challenge, offering a million dollars in prizes to people who could develop AI software capable of reading four passages from a single scroll.
Starting point is 00:20:06 Maybe there was obvious stuff no one had tried, he recalls thinking. My life has validated this notion again and again. So it's this VC investor mindset applied to like ancient history research, I guess. And so as the months ticked by, it became clear that Friedman's hunch was a good one. Contestants from around the world, many of them 20-somethings
Starting point is 00:20:24 with computer science backgrounds, developed new techniques for taking the 3D scans and flattening them into more readable sheets. Some appeared to find letters, then words. They swapped messages about their work in a Discord chat. And often, much older classicists sometimes looked on in hopeful awe and sometimes slagged off the amateur historians. So it was a little bit spicy.
Starting point is 00:20:43 Oh, are these AI kids going to be able to make an impact here? They don't really know the true stuff. I love that there's like these little subplots and battles going on. You're not a real historian unless you've got gloves on and you're sort of trying to piece apart, you know, disintegrating this ancient scroll. This is very disrespectful to the guys
Starting point is 00:21:00 who just go Indiana Jones mode and get in there. I posted about this. You've got to be the only edge. who just go Indiana Jones mode and get in there and fend off snakes. The AI models have eaten the entire internet. So the only edge now is to go Indiana Jones mode and go looking for rare esoteric knowledge and discontinued books, right? Yep. But they really did here. And so you can see a picture here.
Starting point is 00:21:25 Before Mount Vesuvius erupted, the town of Herculaneum sat at the edge of the Gulf of Naples, the sort of gateway wealthy Romans used to relax and think. Unlike Pompeii, which took a direct hit from the Vesuvian lava flow, Herculaneum was buried gradually
Starting point is 00:21:41 by waves of ash, pumice, and gases. Although the process was anything but gentle, most inhabitants had time to escape, and much of the town was left intact under the hardening igneous rock. Farmers first rediscovered the town in the 18th century when some well diggers found marble statues in the ground. In 1750, one of them collided with the marble floor of the villa thought to belong to Caesar's father-in-law, Senator Lucius Calpurnius Piso Sisonius, also known today by historians as Piso. During this time, the first excavators who dug tunnels into the villa to map it were mostly after more valuable artifacts like the statues paintings and recognizable household objects initially people who ran across the scrolls some of which were scattered across the colorful floor mosaics thought they were just logs and threw them on a fire no terrible um eventually though somebody noticed the logs were often found in what appeared to be libraries
Starting point is 00:22:40 or reading rooms realized they were burnt papyrus. Anyone who tried to open one, found it crumbling in their hands. Crazy. Should I go on? Let's see. Today, the villa remains mostly buried, unexcavated, and off limits. And so there's levels to this project where they get a few scrolls, they scan them, it's very expensive. And then that and then the more that they can unearth, the more they can decipher, the more they can invest in more digging and more scanning, because each one of those is very expensive. I think even just just taking the scroll to the CT scan, I think they flew it on like a private jet and like needed to like, really like make sure they couldn't check this. You can't check this on United, it's going to be a disaster. It's going to fall apart.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Yeah, at least you throw an air tag in it. Yeah, so we have about 800 scrolls from the villa today, but there could be thousands or tens of thousands more. For the past 20 years, Brent Seals, a computer science professor at the University of Kentucky, has used advanced medical imaging technology designed for CT scans and ultrasounds to analyze unreadable old texts. No one else was working on it and no one else thought it was even possible. Progress was slow. Sales built software that could theoretically take the scans of a coiled scroll and unroll it virtually, but wasn't prepared to handle a real Herculaneum scroll when he put it to the test in 2009. The complexity of what we saw broke all of my software.
Starting point is 00:24:10 The layers inside the scroll were not uniform. They were tangled and mashed together, and my software could not follow them reliably. And of course, 2009, this is before the deep learning revolution. I'm sure this was more of a, of a, of a programmatic approach, like more algorithmic approach to like mapping the geometry and trying to unroll it. Terrible job for like hand coding, perfect for deep learning. And so by 2016, his, he and his students had managed to read one scroll, a charred ancient Hebrew text by programming their specialized software to detect changes in density
Starting point is 00:24:46 between the burnt manuscript and the burnt ink layered onto it. The software made the letters light up against a darker background. Sales team had high hopes to apply this technique to the Herculanean papyri, but those were written in a different carbon-based ink and their imaging gear couldn't illuminate it
Starting point is 00:25:03 in the same way. So massive setback in 2016. It is crazy how long this story has been going on. Yeah. And relevant too. I'm sure Luke is already dealing with this. He had been posting last week, does anybody have any way to process huge volumes of PDFs through any type of programmatic way? He's going to figure out how to do it with one document format. Then he's going to get, you know, a trillion new documents in another format and be having to do it in the same way. So he's, uh, he's prepared. Yeah. And this, this next paragraph is the biggest indictment of current, uh, Silicon Valley, uh, rich guy,
Starting point is 00:25:42 billionaire VC culture. So, uh So Nat Friedman finds this guy, Sales, who's working on these scrolls. And he had set up Google alerts for him. Nat Friedman's just getting obsessed with Rome. A year passed, there's no news. He starts watching YouTube videos, really understands that this guy, Sales, needs money. So in 2022, Friedman was convinced he could help. He invited Sales out to California for an event where Silicon Valley types get together and share big ideas. This is like the perfect thing to send this guy to.
Starting point is 00:26:16 Sales gave a short presentation on the scrolls to the group, but no one bit. And Nat Friedman says, I felt very, very guilty about this and embarrassed because he'd come out to California and California had, had failed him. And I'm sure what happened was like, Oh yeah, we just wanted to hear about this crazy stuff, but we really want to put our money in like B2B sass. Like I couldn't possibly throw a, throw a 20 in the, in the tri-corner hat for this
Starting point is 00:26:39 guy. It's so funny because you know, many of the people that were pitched there on this idea would go on to donate millions to VCs for Kamala. And meanwhile Nat goes long on the scrolls and becomes literally a myth himself for uncovering this kind of thing. It's a legendary move. Yep. And so Friedman proposed the idea of a contest he said he put up some of his own money to fund it and his investing partner daniel gross offered to match it uh seal says he was mindful of the trade-off the herculane and papyri had turned into his life's work and he wanted to be the one to decode them more than a few of his students had also poured time and energy into the project and planned to publish papers about their efforts so now suddenly a couple of rich guys from silicon
Starting point is 00:27:27 valley were barging into their territory and suggesting that internet randos could deliver the breakthroughs that eluded the experts more than glory though seals just really hoped the scrolls would be read and he agreed to hear friedman out and help design the ai contest they kicked off the vesuvius challenge on the ides of march treatment announced the contest on the platform we fondly remember his twitter and many of his tech friends agreed to pledge their money toward the effort while a cohort of budding papyrologists began to dig in to the task at hand incredible uh so they uh so they lobby the italian and british collectors for years to scan the first scroll suddenly the italians were now offering up two new scrolls for scanning to provide more
Starting point is 00:28:11 ai training data with freedman's backing a team set to work building precision fitting 3d printed cases to protect new scrolls on their private jet flight i was right from italy to a particle accelerator in eng, where they scanned for three days straight at a cost of about 70k. That's a lot of money, but it's such a good investment. It's so interesting. And yeah, the whole thing is like... Way less than the cost of flying private from LA to London, though. Yeah. And so seeing the imaging process in action drives home both the magic and difficulty inherent in this quest. One of the scroll remnants placed in the scanner, for example, wasn't much bigger than a fat finger. It was peppered by high energy x-rays, much like a human going through a CT scan,ometers. These images were virtually carved into a mass of tiny slices, too numerous for a person to count. Along with each slice, the scanner picked up infinitesimal changes in density and thickness. Software was then used to unroll and flatten out the slices, and the resulting images looked recognizably like sheets of papyrus, the writing on them hidden. And so these, like the files from
Starting point is 00:29:27 the output of this scan are massive. So it's a perfect case for data analysis and AI, an algorithm that can detect tiny amounts of ink on each little piece of scroll fragment, can then combine that data into a unified legible simulation of how the scroll might have appeared back in 79 AD. It is crazy. It's 2000 years old. That's so, so old. Like even, even finding a book from 200 years old, that's 200 years old is difficult to deal with. And like the paper might be dissolving. Imagine 2000. Yeah. And so hard enough to find a original copy of Mary Meeker's internet report. Yeah, we we gotta get that original hand printed by mary meeker staple you know that's that's priceless right yeah yeah uh there's only a few copies left it's our time yeah yeah those are the real dark scrolls yeah yeah yeah the draft
Starting point is 00:30:18 that didn't make it to the to to the printer uh and so this is where luke ferritor enters the story luke ferritor was hooked at from the start ferritor a bouncy 22 year old nebraskan undergraduate who often exclaims oh my goodness i heard friedman describe the contest on a podcast in march i think there's a 50 chance that someone will encounter this opportunity get the data and get nerd sniped by it and we'll solve it this year. Friedman said on the show, Ferritore thought that could be me. I love that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:50 He's good. This is, this is a guy who's looking to get nerd sniped by opportunities, right? Yes. You're not on the level unless you're actively looking to be nerd sniped by opportunities. Yeah. And so there's a,
Starting point is 00:31:01 there's a photo of, uh, of Luke here, uh, with his, with his hand-built piece. He's got some graphics cards in there. He's grown up a lot in the last year. It's looking great. Looking great. Um, and so, uh, and, and this is an interesting, uh, twist.
Starting point is 00:31:16 Do you know Casey Hanmer? I've actually met this guy. He has a, he has a castle in Los Angeles that he uses for his company, Terraform Labs. Very cool company. They're converting, they're trying to build, I think it's natural gas conversion from the air using solar. So they're going to put out a ton of solar panels and then basically create, like, suck carbon out of the atmosphere, use hydrogen and get natural gas for energy. So you can use the solar panels to basically generate gas that then you can use and it's all carbon neutral. So very cool. And he has a ton of really interesting blog posts about his thoughts on global warming and energy and stuff
Starting point is 00:31:55 and where we go from here. So then Casey Hanmer, an Australian mathematician, physicist, and polymath scored a point for humankind by beating the computers to the first major breakthrough. Hanmer took a few stabs at writing scroll reading code, but he soon concluded he might have better luck if he just stared at the images for a really long time. This is so funny to me. Eventually, he began to notice what he and other contestants have come to call crackle a faint pattern of cracks and lines in on the page that resemble what you might see in the mud of a dried out lake bed and uh there's a there's an image here of all the letters deciphered um and the crackle became a big thing in the discord um to hanmer's
Starting point is 00:32:41 eyes the crackle seemed to have the shape of of Greek letters and the blobs and strokes that accompany handwritten ink. He believes it to be dried out ink that's lifted up from the surface of the page. The crackle discovery led Hanmer to try identifying clips of letters in one scroll image. In the spirit of the contest, he posted his findings to the Discord. In June, at the time, Ferator was a summer intern at SpaceX. By the way, I love how this is a contest, but everybody's working together. It reminds me of the,
Starting point is 00:33:09 um, the Russ Ulbrich case where, yeah, everybody wants to win. You know, everybody wants to like pin Ross and like be the guy. Yeah. But at the same time,
Starting point is 00:33:18 it's, uh, as much as it's a contest, you know, especially in the case with this girls, everybody's sort of sharing their discoveries along the way. And it's not, it's a contest you know especially in the case with this girls everybody's sort of sharing their discoveries along the way and it's not it's not a they're not seeing it as a zero-sum game they're they're playing for humanity right and also the challenge you see i actually disagree with you because in the in the uh uh in the ross albert case all of the different groups they weren't
Starting point is 00:33:40 working together well at all no no they weren't working together well at all no two of them were embezzling money and doing fraud i'm not saying they were working together well but there was some collaboration in this case you could imagine a world with the scrolls where nobody wants to share anything in the discord because i want the 700k totally totally and and there's also this interesting thing where uh in the ross albert case everyone thought it was going to be this like crazy hacking data analysis that would win the day but just going on Google and looking back at old posts was like a very key part of the story. And it's the same thing where Casey Hanmer just looking at it and staring at it for a long time actually helped break the case wide open, which is awesome. So Veritor was a summer intern at SpaceX. He was in the break room sipping a Diet Coke when he saw the first
Starting point is 00:34:25 post and his initial disbelief didn't last long. Over the next month, he began hunting for crackle in the other images. One letter here, another couple there. Most of the letters were invisible to the human eye, but 1% or 2% had the crackle. Armed with those letters, he trained a model to recognize hidden ink, revealing a few more letters. Then Ferritore added those letters to the model's training data and ran it again and again and again. The model starts with something that only a human eye can see, the crackle pattern, then learns to see ink that we can't. Unlike today's large language models, which gobble up data, Ferritore's model was able to get by with crumbs. For each 64 by 64 pixel square of the image. It was merely asking, is there ink here or not? And it helped that the output was known. Greek letters squared along the
Starting point is 00:35:13 right angles of the cross hatched papyrus fibers. So it's like the perfect case for using AI. And fortunately, because it's not this massive, large language thing, he can run it on his computer that he built by hand. You know, he just needs a graphics card and he doesn't need to write some somewhat complex code, but he doesn't need a massive data center. You don't need to build Stargate for this, which is great. It's a really cool, cool opportunity. So in August, Ferritore received an opportunity to put his software to the test. He'd returned to Nebraska to finish out summer and found himself at a house party with friends when a new crackle rich image popped up in the contest discord channel. As people around him danced and drank, Ferritore hopped on his phone, connected remotely to his dorm computer, threw the image into his machine learning system, then put his phone away. An hour later, I drive all my drunk friends home and then I'm walking out
Starting point is 00:36:05 of the parking garage and I take out my phone, not expecting to see anything, he says. But when I opened it up, there's three Greek letters on the screen. I love this anecdote. It's so good. Amazing. Amazing. Somebody was posting that this is the counterpoint to Vivek saying that, uh, you know, Americans, you know, just, just are jocks and, you know, don't have the work ethic. He's, he's locking in remotely from his phone to try to inch forward and create more progress, you know, from Nebraska, right. Solving this incredible, almost impossible challenge. So it's just such an amazing story. I'm not going to pretend I understand the Saved by the Bell references, but he's clearly the good character in that show.
Starting point is 00:36:49 Whatever that means. So around 2 a.m., Ferretor texts his mom and then Friedman and the other contestants about what he'd found, fighting back tears of joy. That was the moment where I was like, oh, my goodness, this is actually going to work. We are going to read the scrolls. Soon enough, Ferretor had found 10 letters and won $40,000 for one of the contest progress prizes.
Starting point is 00:37:09 The classicist reviewed his work and said he'd found the Greek word for purple. Isn't that amazing? That's so amazing. So, uh, one, we got to start using, oh my goodness, because it's, it's, it's a great, it's a great phrase and a great substitute for an alternative. But I just wanted to put it out there for our listeners. This is an example of a great side hustle. So next time you're thinking to yourself, I like my PM job. I make a couple hundred thousand dollars a month at Meta, but I'd like to do something on the side, why not just sort of try to crack the code of some ancient scrolls to make a few, an extra 10, you know, 10, uh, $10,000 on the side, you know, it's a good,
Starting point is 00:37:51 it's intellectually stimulating and just a great sort of not, it's not passive income, but it's, it's a nice, you know, second income stream. Yeah. I mean, there, there are a lot of stories like this. I'm pretty sure Greg, uh, George Hotz, the, uh, the, the hacker who broke the PS three, the original iPhone, uh, uh, jail broke the iPhone and eventually went on to develop comma AI and, uh, a bunch of other cool stuff, but, um, fantastic hacker early in his career, he would do, uh, hacking competitions and bug bounties. So he would go to Facebook and say, I, I hacked your entire system. Like I'm a white hat hacker. I'm not going to do anything bad, but can you give me a reward?
Starting point is 00:38:28 And they'd say, absolutely. Like you just saved us billions of dollars. Here's a hundred K or something like that. And then was he part of the reason that a lot of these companies ended up rolling out more formal programs around this? Probably generally, yes. Part of a tribe. And then I think there were even startups created that were just marketplaces for bounties yeah uh at
Starting point is 00:38:50 some point or another i don't know if any of them really broadly caught on but um it's cool yeah cool strategy and and i think at one point he won a car because of it or like i i think he he hacked the iphone and uh steve wozniak sent him an email being like, this is awesome. Like you're an amazing hacker. And then Steve Jobs was like, this is unacceptable. This destroys my business or something like that. I'm not exactly sure of the story,
Starting point is 00:39:16 but it was very funny that he was just like, you know, as a kid, he was very young and he was having an impact and making money. Love to see it. So Ferator continued to train his machine learning model on Crackle data and post his progress on Discord and Twitter. The discoveries he and Hanmer made also set off a new wave of enthusiasm among contestants, and some began to employ similar techniques. ferritore formed an alliance with two other contestants yusuf nader and julian uh schillinger in which they agreed to combine their technology and share any prize money i love this this is the crew that they're building love it and so in the end 18 teams submit entries for the grand prize
Starting point is 00:39:59 some submissions were ho-hum but a handful showed that friedman's gamble had paid off scroll images that were once ambiguous blobs now had entire paragraphs of letters lighting up across them. The AI systems had brought the past to life. It's a situation that you practically never encounter as a classicist. You mostly look at texts that have been looked at by someone before. The idea that you are reading a text that was last unrolled on someone's desk 1900 years ago is unbelievable. And you are on mute.
Starting point is 00:40:33 A group of classicists reviewed all the entries and did in fact deem Ferator's team the winners. So he actually won. They were able to stitch together more than a dozen columns of text, while entire paragraphs all over their entry. Luke got the email telling him that he won, and he just goes, oh my goodness. Oh my goodness.
Starting point is 00:40:58 I'm fully taking that term and using that constantly. It's so good. Oh my goodness. Oh my goodness. It's so good. Oh my goodness. Oh my goodness. It's so nice. Still translating the scholars believe the text to be another work by Philodemus, one centered on the pleasures of music and food and their effects on the senses. Peering at and beginning to transcribe the first reasonably legible scans of this brand new ancient book was an extraordinarily emotional experience i love that
Starting point is 00:41:26 they're just like so stoked it's great yeah uh let's it beats uh it beats slightly changing the color of a button to a different shade of blue and getting you know one percent increase in conversion you know it's close but it's definitely slightly more emotional everyone involved in this story is just so earnest and that's what i absolutely love about this there's just not there's not an ounce of cynicism here and it's just beautiful and that's why i'm so optimistic about his work at doge i think he's just genuinely yeah and that's why the people that are actually sending ridiculous messages hating on him trying to dunk on him, making him turn his account private. It's like, if they just took literally five minutes to try to understand his story, it's hard to say, how do you position this? This guy's a bad person,
Starting point is 00:42:17 right? I mean, a lot of those people that are aggressively anti-Luke, they are not reading this coverage. They're reading some clickbait, sensational viral article about how he has right access to the Treasury and he's going to send money and he's just going to steal all the money for Elon. You saw there was this, I forget which politician, he represents somewhere between San Antonio and Austin, Texas. So Texas-based U.S. representative. He was posting, we need to figure out how to fire Elon Musk. Like he's, we need to use every bit of political power and pressure and every law to get this man fired. And it's just so funny because he's not an employee of the government. You can't fire him.
Starting point is 00:43:11 And he's working under the direction of the White House and the chief executive officer of the country right now. And Luke's in the same boat. So good luck firing Luke. As a point of clarification, it came out yesterday, Elon is a special employee of the government. He does have a.gov email address. I think the exact structure of Doge is evolving, and I think we'll go through a couple different,
Starting point is 00:43:39 maybe congressional or legal challenges, but it is evolving. But yeah, I mean, obviously there's a lot of people that are anti. A lot of people are pro, even on the left and the right. There's even some people on the right that are like, I don't like that the tech people are in charge. And so it's developing. But we're here to talk about Luke, the brother of the week. And so let's close out with the goals going forward. Barring a mass relocation, Friedman is working to refine what he's got. There's plenty left to do. The first
Starting point is 00:44:12 contest yielded about 5% of one scroll. A new set of contestants, he says, might be able to reach 85%. He also wants to fund the creation of more automated systems that can speed the process of scanning and digital smoothing so that you don't have to 3D print the case, bring it over here, like bring the CT scan there, dig out better. You need a lot of different people here. It's not just about the AI. The AI is just one piece in the value chain here. He's now one of the few living souls who's roamed the villa tunnels. And he says he's also contemplating buying scanners that can be placed right at the villa and used in parallel to scan tons of scrolls per day. Even if there's just one dialogue of Aristotle or a beautiful lost Homeric poem or a dispatch from a Roman general about this guy,
Starting point is 00:44:58 this Jesus Christ guy who's roaming around, he says, all you need is one of those for the whole thing to be more than worth it. What a story what a fantastic story amazing i love it i'm so i'm so excited to see where the scrolls project goes yeah the only the only bummer small bummer yep is that luke was kind of a somewhat of you know he's infamous already he was but he was a bit more of a secret and now when he does raise his pre-seed round it will be 100x ever subscribed and you know we'll all be lucky if we get a thousand dollars slug but uh just send the wire now but it's good yeah yeah here's let's write him a check cash it when you when you incorporate at any terms yeah at any time yeah we need a free incorporation
Starting point is 00:45:47 safe that that just says yeah this goes into your first your first round if you start a company at any point yeah yeah exactly uh well let's let's go to some uh some fantastic analysis from ben thompson over at shutechery he's talking about the day minimus loophole, and he opens with a quote from Bloomberg. The U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs on China and other countries are rocking markets and casting a pall over Chinese firms seeking to go public. Take Sheen, the fast fashion sensation. The online retailer founded in China but headquartered in Singapore is said to be working on what could be one of the biggest listings in London in years, potentially valuing the company at $61 billion U.S. dollars as soon as this year. Trump's executive orders specify that the de minimis exemption for packages worth less than $800, a loophole used by the likes of Sheen for years, will no longer apply though sheen has been diversifying its shipping bases ahead of trump's trade policies the full scope of the de minimis changes is still unclear it's
Starting point is 00:46:50 unlikely that the company would be immune to the changes sheen didn't respond to a request for comment yeah john can you can you break down for the audience so sheen manufactures their products in china and then instead of sending a single shipping container that would have a value far higher than $800, they send the individual packages from China direct to consumers. And that's what allows them to get around that. That's the loophole, right? That is the de minimis loophole, right? Yes, that is the day minimus loophole. And the reason that the day minimus loophole exists, it was not, this is not something that Sheen and Timu lobbied for.
Starting point is 00:47:30 And then, oh, they got lucky and they knew that this was going to be a thing. No, the day minimus loophole makes a ton of sense because if you're some Etsy seller and you want to send someone a $50 package, a t-shirt from Italy to America, it makes sense that having to do all the different customs and tariffs and all the different oversight on that small package is cumbersome.
Starting point is 00:47:53 It actually imposes a massive cost on the government and the ports, and there's all these extra filings. And so the government kind of wisely at the time said, hey, let's just focus on the big stuff that's coming in, the massive shipments of pallets of TVs or the cars that are coming in, let's tax those. And you know what? At the time, I'm sure they looked at it and they were like, you know, if we draw the bar at $800,
Starting point is 00:48:19 that's less than 1% of trade volume. And so sure, we'll lose, we'll lose if we're taxing something at 10%, we'll lose 10% of 1% of our trade, you know, revenue doesn't matter, not a big deal. But then once this loophole started to exist and became popularized, people figured out how to take advantage of it. And the answer was let's ship directly from the factory, an individual package directly to the American consumer. It takes a long time. And so when you go on Timu, I actually, I actually went on Timu and it is the
Starting point is 00:48:51 funniest e-commerce flow you've ever seen. I, you open, you go to Google images and you search for something, you land on the Timu website, you're on mute. And, and you land on the Timu, like, you know, like, like, you know, web view, it really wants you to install the app, but it, it does one of those spinners, you know, the spinners to be like, you know, what's off. They just figured, they realized that like giving someone 10% off isn't as good. So just tell them they got 100% off. And then it pops up another spinner that's like, now you're eligible for a multiplier
Starting point is 00:49:34 and it's like 2X, 3X, 6X. You always win the most, the highest like multiple. So then all of a sudden it's like, you have won $600 in free stuff, like install the app. And then of course, once you go down that funnel, it's like you have won six hundred dollars in free stuff like install the app and then of course once you go down that funnel it's like oh well like you got to pay shipping all this other stuff and the shipping is the only thing that costs money so you know is this whole like kind of scammy like ultra optimized thing but i was just cracking up being like oh really timu like you're just gonna give me all this stuff for free like it's such a
Starting point is 00:50:02 scam well you remember when we launched our trailer for the podcast yeah at the end of last year somebody one of the the negative comments that i saw was um oh uh tech tech brothers do uh timu succession and i was like yes this is timu succession we filmed this video in in basically 12 hours with a two thousand dollar budget is you nailed it yeah uh but it's it's interesting how timu became such a timo you know exploded and and i don't know if if ben has the data here but um it did become popular and it did make it really difficult. If you made custom t-shirts at a factory in LA and you could go on Timu and get a shirt that's, you know, oftentimes something like a t-shirt, you're not as worried about the quality if you're just some company that plans
Starting point is 00:50:56 to give them away. Say you're an ice cream shop, you'd rather pay $5 for the t-shirt than $25 locally. And so it really made it almost impossible to compete if you were a localized manufacturer. Yeah. And it's been part of this value chain erosion that's happened where it used to be, you know, like Apple manufacturers in China, they have a massive facility there, a huge partnership with Foxconn, there's Apple employees on the ground. And so it's very much like an Apple designed and made product with the help of Chinese manufacturing. Then you go to the next level, which is like, oh, an entrepreneur has an idea. And they're like, I want to just sell t-shirts. And they just call a Chinese factory. They basically do everything.
Starting point is 00:51:38 It's very turnkey. And then they list that on Amazon. it's like China's providing like all the manufacturing. Then Sheen and Timu kind of cut out the middleman and just went direct. And so all of a sudden it went like products come out of the Chinese factory and they go directly to the door of the American consumer. And to be clear, manufacturers like Apple aren't benefiting from this loophole, even if they're selling a $500 product, because Apple is sending, you know, a shipping container with 10,000 AirPods in it. And so the total value, even though the individual product might be a couple hundred bucks, ends up being far beyond the sort of loophole based on, because the loophole is based around the shipment itself. Exactly, exactly. And so Timu is owned by PDD Holdings, a company that I'm sure we'll do a deep dive on soon. They rapidly expanded in the United States by offering steep discounts on a variety of products
Starting point is 00:52:31 for people willing to wait a week or so for delivery because it comes literally from China, from the factory. This is another Chinese linked firm that's in the U.S.'s crosshairs. The popular marketplace, which eMarketer estimates will sell $30 billion of products to U.S.'s crosshairs. The popular marketplace, which eMarketer estimates will sell $30 billion of products to U.S. shoppers this year, became an alternative to Amazon as well as retail chains such as Hobby Lobby, Party City, and dollar stores. Like Sheen, Timu has largely anticipated Trump's decision by expanding networks in the U.S. and moving to bigger bulk orders. Timu didn't respond to Quest for Comment. American shoppers and companies imported about $48 billion of shipments from the world under the de minimis loophole in the first nine months of last year, according to U. for consumer products, just flooding the market. And the scale is honestly unbelievable. And the obvious critique of Timu and the long-term critique of China has
Starting point is 00:53:35 just been that they're manufacturing products at incredible scale, at incredible prices, and just flooding the market. And oftentimes, specifically in the case of Timu, you can, if you want to buy an air filter, you can go buy a Timu air filter. I'm sure it costs like 20 bucks. And the critique is that, yeah, you would have had to spend $200 to get a comparable product that was made by a more reputable firm. And the Timu product is going to just basically evaporate over time, break down and things like that. And so a lot of these products have a pretty short, not shelf life, but just life in general, right? Totally. And so there are two charts in here that will show. One is de minimis exports from China over the last six years from 2018 to 2023. And the top bar there
Starting point is 00:54:30 is going or the bottom bar is going to the United States. But you can see China has wrapped up has ramped up these de minimis exports from about $5 billion in 2018 to $65 billion in 2023. And so this de minimis loophole was discovered and then exploited to great effect. And you've seen, you know, this, this chart, the blue bar is the United States, but the other, the other section and the rest of the bars there are, um, presumably there aren't it's it's maybe, maybe Malaysia, Taiwan, United Kingdom, Vietnam, et cetera, adopted similar de minimis. Oh, yeah, yeah. De minimis is a common construct
Starting point is 00:55:12 because it increases efficiency of trade. And so other is probably all of Europe, Africa, LATAM, like all these different countries combined. And you can just tell that this chart looks like a startup graph, but you don't see types, you don't see graphs like this in global trade. Like global trade typically grows at like 2%, 3%, 10%, not, you know, not 6x or 10x over, you know, 10x over six years. Like that's very, very rare. And it's all driven by just finding this loophole and then just spamming it basically. And so let's go into the Stratechery article. Ben writes, now that tariffs are front and center in the news cycle, you may see some commentary referring to
Starting point is 00:55:56 the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, which dramatically raised tariffs on over 20,000 imported goods in an attempt to protect US industries. So interesting, this stuff is not new. Many commentators feel that it contributed to the Great Depression. One challenge in implementing that level of tariffs, however, was the sheer amount of manpower necessary to inspect every import and levy the appropriate fee, particularly for small items mailed to individuals to alleviate the challenge, the act included a de minimis exception. And so this is what we were talking about. And here's a quote, that the Secretary of the Treasury be and is hereby authorized in his discretion to prescribe regulations for the
Starting point is 00:56:36 administration free of duty articles not exceeding a value $1 imported by one person one day. So that $1 figure, it was originally $1 in 1930. It's been expanded. In 1962, they took it to 10 bucks. In 75, they took it to $25. In 78, there was a lot of inflation in the 70s. They took it to $50. In 1980, it was $100, $288. And then finally in 2016, it went up to 2018. The lesson here, go back in time and buy Bitcoin in 1930. This currency debasement is concerning. Yep.
Starting point is 00:57:24 And so this has been a boon to businesses like Timu and Sheen, which sell Chinese-made products to U.S. consumers and then ship them directly. So now China dominates de minimis shipments. A key part of China's global e-commerce growth has been the expansion of PRC and PRC-tied e-commerce firms into the U.S. market. The U.S. retail e-commerce market constitutes over half of all global e-commerce sales. And so imports under section 321 of the Tariff Act of 1930, and Ben, I don't know if Jordi's not on screen, but you might just want to go to me. Section 231 allows for U.S. imports under a de minimis threshold to enter free of tariffs, fees, and taxes. In 2016, Congress raised the threshold to $800 per shipment, and that dramatically changed the landscape. And so let's go to this, as China is dominating,
Starting point is 00:58:16 this is obviously important, particularly for US e-commerce and its associated ecosystem. But this has also played a significant role in the fentanyl epidemic. Reuters has an excellent in-depth investigation of the relationship here. We will have to read that on the show soon. And so the big question is, how is this affecting Amazon and Meta? And I don't know what happened with Jordy. Let's see. I'm still here. I think my camera battery died. You can probably just switch it over to the computer camera, and I think you'll be good there. And we should be able to see that. So Stratechery, however, is a tech newsletter, and the angle I am most interested in is the effect on U.S. tech companies. That list starts with Amazon, which will likely be affected by this rule. And so the
Starting point is 00:59:05 information reported previously that Amazon plans to launch a section of its shopping site featuring cheap items that will ship directly to overseas consumers from warehouses in China. So this de minimis exception was such a big deal that Amazon was like, well, we have to compete. We can't just get left behind here. So we need a Timu competitor within the Amazon ecosystem. And so those orders, they're not going to be prime. They're not going to be next day. They're going to take nine to 11 days to get to customers, but they will stem the bleeding because it's a directly competitive product with Timu. And so it's not clear if these Amazon shipments will be made using a U.S. trade provision that exempts individual packages worth less than $800 from U.S. custom duties. Sheen and Timu are among sellers that use the provision, which some U.S. politicians and trade groups have criticized as a tariff loophole.
Starting point is 00:59:57 So it's hard to understand the point of this new offering if it's not leveraging the de minimis loophole. Like that's the only reason that Amazon would do this is because they're interested in leveraging the loophole. The program did launch last fall, by the way, and it's called Amazon haul, which I think is so funny. What a great one. Amazon. Well, this is and that's that's probably a reference to people ordering 100 items on Timu and then doing these sort of unboxing videos, these TikTok videos. I'm sure that the thing is TikTok has been using, they do this warming feature, which we talked about on the show yesterday, where they will show your videos to more people if you talk about specific topics. So over the week, over the last week,
Starting point is 01:00:43 it's been, if you talk about deep seek, you're going to, over the last week, it's been if you talk about deep seek, you're going to get a lot of views. And so I'm sure they did a number of things where if you do Timu hauls, you're going to get a bunch more views. And so just blatant proof that the Chinese companies coordinate to use TikTok as a channel to influence activity in the US,
Starting point is 01:01:04 which is, again, why is the company still operating? I don't know. I'm sure there's deals being done behind the scenes. That's the big reason why Ben Thompson was advocating for Amazon or Walmart to be the logical acquirer for TikTok if there was a divestiture, because that is the ultimate monetization for TikTok
Starting point is 01:01:26 more so than just running ads. And so if you sell it to Meta, is this crazy? It is kind of like anti-competitive. They're building this crazy monopoly. Google doesn't really need it. Microsoft, it doesn't really make that much sense. But Amazon or Walmart could be perfectly positioned because TikTok shop has been so successful. Well, and we learned yesterday from somebody in the chat too, that Walmart had it, took a shot at social media with their WM connect product back in the AOL days. So Walmart is no stranger to, you know, social media. Yeah. And so Ben is throwing some shade here, putting Amazon on the truth zone. He says, I suspect when Amazon says we also hear from customers, they mean we look nervously at Timu and Sheen's rising sales numbers. Hull, interestingly enough, is only available on mobile where Timu and Sheen derive their sales.
Starting point is 01:02:17 In other words, I still believe in my original thesis. Amazon would love for this loophole to be closed. A world where everyone pays the same import duties is one where Amazon's delivery network can be much more effectively brought to bear. day shipping max, like your conversion rate will suffer if you're not offering competitive shipping. They realize, hey, if we can get somebody 50 items for what it costs to order, you know, five items on Amazon, they'll wait, you know, they're happy to wait seven days in exchange. Yep. And so Timu and Sheen are not responsible for all of Meta's growth. We're going over to how this is affecting Facebook and Instagram. But the two companies combined, it's estimated spent just under $3 billion a year to date. Meta's revenue is up around $11 billion year over year.
Starting point is 01:03:17 And so the growth of Timu and Sheen, certainly they're spending more. They're driving a lot of growth. But Meta's growing independently. So it's less of this existential issue. If Timu and Sheen go away, it shouldn't be that much of an effect on Meta. Moreover, this spend is more palatable and potentially sustainable than TikTok's spend was. So when TikTok was spending on Meta, they were like directly stealing users, but e-commerce apps are not a strategic threat to Met, quite the opposite, in fact, and also lack of network effects to make them self-sustaining entities like TikTok has become. So the subsidies could go away.
Starting point is 01:03:52 Macro events could intervene. Meta still deserves credit were figuring out how do we get the small, you know, mom and pop e-commerce engines going again. Well, Timu and Sheen came in and were like, here's $3 billion to like, you know, keep the revenues up and to the right, which is great. And so this quarter did turn out to be the peak of Timu and Sheen's share of meta advertising around under 7% on Facebook and just under 4% on Instagram. And they're down to around 4% and 2% respectively now. Still, to the extent their businesses are impacted by these measures, and notably an important part of their hedging has been building distribution centers in Mexico, there may be some impact on meta's ad prices. I don't think it'll be substantial is what Ben says. And so very, very interesting,
Starting point is 01:04:47 very, very interesting discussion of how the Trump tariffs and changes in regulation are affecting tech. He ends with a little bit about AI and abundance. It's worth pointing out that the de minimis exception
Starting point is 01:05:01 exists for a good reason. We mentioned this. There are a lot of items that are shipped into the US every year, and it's understandably difficult to examine everything. It's also worth pointing out that any item that qualified for the de minimis exception also gets to use what is known as informal entry, which means much more limited paperwork, no needs for a custom bond. Informal entry applies to shipments worth less than $2,500. To that end, it remains to be seen just how much of a difference these Tareks make and exactly how the U.S. Customs Authority handles
Starting point is 01:05:32 the onslaught of packages. So, you know, you're doing doze, you're trying to cut down on the amount of government employees. Well, you know, you might have just 10x the amount of work that's going on if you're trying to investigate and tax all these packages. But he ends by saying, I would also note that this seems like a very interesting problem on which AI could be brought to bear. There's a story here about how the internet scale simply crushes a loophole created for an analog world.
Starting point is 01:05:57 Perhaps there is a solution in which AI's ability to ingest and understand vast amounts of data could make sense of the chaos in a way that preserves the convenience while solving a problem of abundance. Of course, the chasm between theory and reality is a massive one, particularly in terms of government bureaucracy.
Starting point is 01:06:13 But I do think that this is one of the many examples of where AI will have unexpected benefits. And so we got to get Luke Ferretory into the... What is it? Department of Homeland Security? I don't actually... Yeah. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:06:32 Yeah, yeah. At the ports. He's got to go to the port. Yeah, yeah. He's got to open his laptop and set up some LLMs to look at every day minimus import that's coming in. He has a U.S. Customs and Border Patrol is the one.
Starting point is 01:06:46 It's the Customs Department. And so let's move on to our third story of the day. A wonderful deep dive. So that last one was from Ben Thompson over at Stratechery. Highly recommend that you go subscribe. It's a fantastic newsletter in your email three times a week. And you also get a bunch of podcasts,
Starting point is 01:07:05 a bunch of great stuff with it. So highly recommend Ben. Let's go over to Ashley Vance, who now that first piece we read about Luke Ferritore, that was at Bloomberg, but he's no longer with Bloomberg. Ashley Vance has moved over to corememory.com, his new media company. He's independent. He's going direct. And he has a fantastic write-up of the boom supersonic test that happened in the Mojave. And he says, take me to bed or lose me forever in the supersonic corridor. The city of Mojave has a population of about 4,000 people and sits 100 miles north of Los Angeles. Some people might describe it as a dump, I guess, and they would not be altogether wrong. As the name indicates, the city of Mojave is in the Mojave Desert. It gets about
Starting point is 01:07:51 two to six inches of rain a year, experiences extremes of heat and cold, and has gusting winds. California State Route 14 rips right along the city's edge, and if you're not on it or not paying attention, you could drive by Mojave in a flash, missing out on the delicacies offered up at a Denny's, Wienerschnitzel, or Subway, or a fine stay at the two-star America's Best Value Inn. Core Memory has a need, a need for reads. Become a free or paid subscriber
Starting point is 01:08:19 and support our battle against nameless faces' enemy. Let's go. I love reading the calls to action in the middle of a Substack post. So go subscribe if you're not subscribed already. All of this is to say that I love Mojave and go there as often as I can. What drew me this time is this Boom Supersonic launch. And so the airport is flanked by Edwards Air Force Base and the Naval Air Weapons Station, China Lake.
Starting point is 01:08:48 China Lake is a fascinating story we should dig into at some point. That's where they do a lot of crazy military tests. That means the Mojave has an exceptional, sometimes eccentric aircraft doing wonderful things and that the flying stuff is complemented by stuff that goes boom. The event is catalyzed, the event that catalyzed the Mojave's position as a special place incorporated all these
Starting point is 01:09:11 characteristics. It occurred in 1947 when Captain Charles Yeager became the first human to go past the sound barrier in the Bell X-1 plane. In the years that followed, the military bases did most of the work pushing the Mojave's reputation as the forefront of aerospace adventure. Tom Wolfe captured the scene well in The Right Stuff, where courageous manly pilots were turning up in the desert to flex their cojones, and young women were apparently all about it. Wolfe describes both groups mingling at the happy bottom riding club run by the iconic florence low pancho barnes with language that i'm not sure mainstream writers would get away with today although labial piping little birds is evocative i think his writing is uh this is why when ashley
Starting point is 01:10:01 vance started core memory legacy media died because they lost. They lost Apple Star. I think this type of writing makes a comeback with Ashley Vance in the wild. He doesn't have an editor now. He can say whatever he wants. Let's get the flowery language out there. Let's differentiate from the LLMs, the slop. We're not going slop when we're reading Ashley Vance.
Starting point is 01:10:20 It's good stuff. Yeah, OpenAI is hitting refresh on corememory.com waiting to ingest this incredible flowery language. Yeah. And so he's there to talk about Boom Supersonic. Last week, Mojave, the city, returned to its full glory, at least for a moment. Boom Supersonic flew its XB-1 jet past the sound barrier for the first time. And I got to witness the whole affair
Starting point is 01:10:47 and he's making a video about it. So go subscribe to Core Memory. Boom was founded in 2014 by Blake Scholl and he had nothing resembling an aerospace pedigree. Scholl, a computer scientist, had worked at Amazon and Groupon, dear God, before starting Boom. Yeah, so his LinkedIn was getting shared around
Starting point is 01:11:04 because he was a product manager at Groupon right before starting boom yeah so so his linkedin was getting shared around because he was a product manager at groupon right before starting boom yeah so what what an outlier uh bet he would have been nicely pattern matched to go start a some type of uh retail you know app sass company but uh not the guy that's getting pattern matched to start a supersonic aviation aerospace company. Yeah. And so even with his pedigree, he's still, he went to YC. They gave him a lot of coaching on how to get, how to pull forward like contracts and kind of like, not like real revenue, but like if you make it, we'll buy it and that de-risked for investors. And so all of a sudden, I think, I think the combination of the background,
Starting point is 01:11:49 the YC strategy, the demo day, all that stuff got the business off the ground and got the initial funding. And I love that when people talk about him working at Groupon, he's like, yeah, now I'm just trying to do 50% off coupons for how long it'll take you to fly from LA to New York. Yeah. Yeah. That's a great one. He's got a bunch of zingers based on it. And so here we are 11 years later. What a journey. And Boom is still at it. And the XB-1 is not even the aircraft around which it hopes to fly regular folk. Rather, the XB-1 is a single person jet that Boom has used to test out some of its ideas,
Starting point is 01:12:19 materials, and team when it comes to handling the pressures of supersonic flight. The plane that could end up taking people from London to New York in a zip is called Overture and will need a few years and tons more money to create and clear for safe travel. We've obviously been here before with the Concorde, but it had the weight of the British and French governments behind it. The XB-1 has been built on the back of venture capital. And when it went supersonic last Tuesday, it marked the first time an independently developed jet had done so. Yeah, and they did so with a 50-person team. It was a 50-person team on the XB1 project.
Starting point is 01:12:55 They do, I think they have 140 employees. A lot of those people are working on Overture and other stuff. But still, the fact that you can fit 50 people in a shot with the plane is incredible. Crazy. But still, the fact that you can fit 50 people in a shot with the plane is incredible. And coming off the back of a recap that a lot of their investors had to say, hey, we're going to basically double down, triple down on this thing to make it work. Incredible timing. And I'm imagining this success of this latest launch or flight should attract some more capital and allow them to continue to hopefully thrive. 100%. 100%. So after the flight,
Starting point is 01:13:37 Scholl groused on X that neither the New York Times nor the Wall Street Journal had bothered to cover the event. That's warranted grousing calling them out ashley don't let up you uh but then again you know i'm glad that we have core memory you know i don't know if i'm gonna read a new york times write up oh it's annoying that they went fast i don't like it slow down slow down too. Okay, so he says, yes, okay, Boom had already flown XB-1 about 10 times from Mojave at subsupersonic speeds. Scholl will tell you that the company has learned most of what it needed to during these test flights. And there's also a degree to which the XB-1 busting through the sound barrier was simply symbiotic. But also, WTF? There are pragmatic reasons this test flight was such a big deal.
Starting point is 01:14:26 Boom is one of our last best shots at getting supersonic commercial travel. The Concorde retired in 2003 because it was too expensive. Afterwards, people were inclined to deem affordable supersonic flights as an impossibility, which is ridiculous.
Starting point is 01:14:40 We have a couple major supersonic bets going with Boom and Hermes, big fans of both companies, but they're both battling away in a horrifically hard and costly business. And if they fail, we might not see anyone take a swing at supersonic commercial flight for decades. Maybe you like being wedged in a seat for 11 hours going from San Francisco to Tokyo. I don't. I'm with you. Yeah, no, it really, it really is wild to think about just cutting, cutting, even cutting in half, being able to get to Europe from, from LA in the time that it takes to get to New York would be incredible. You're
Starting point is 01:15:19 shrinking at a time when in many ways, you know, looking at the trade war story and, and, and things like that, Peter Zaihan was right in his prediction that we're going through this period of de-globalization, but supersonic flight would, would have an opposite effect in that everything would become closer, right? Being able to get to Tokyo in a couple hours. Very cool. Sam Altman would, would have, would love that. He'd get to go hang with Masa a lot more regularly and go car shopping as well. I love it. I love it. And so Ashley's waxing poetic about the impact of this. He says, on the far more visceral front, boom, doing this test flight was not just cool, but important for all the historical context reasons I laid out earlier. Some of the U.S.'s best engineering achievements have taken place in the Mojave because of the
Starting point is 01:16:11 culture built up in the Mojave. It's a special place and it requires tending and fuel to keep on thriving. The U.S. is a rare country to, the U.S. is that rare country to even have a supersonic corridor and to have supersonic ready objects to shove through it. It's good to test such engineering limits and be reminded of what we're capable of and to maintain the need for speed. One of my favorite Mojave aerospace types is Ben Brockert, who went on to work at Astra Space after a stint at Mastin. I wrote about him in my book, When the Heavens Went on Sale, and include a tribute to Ben from that book here. Having pined to get into aerospace since he was a kid, Brockert bought a $500 very, very used 17 passenger van and drove it to the Mojave Desert to begin knocking on the doors of space startups. It took months to find a gig, living out of his van and trying to fill the days
Starting point is 01:17:05 as best he could. I managed to get a library card and read all the books I had not read, he said. I also spent a lot of time bombing around the desert and trying not to die. Through a stroke of luck, a position opened up at Mastin and Brockert soon established himself as an essential part of the zombie team. He continued reading aerospace books and learned a ton on the job over the course of three years. Mojave is like a new space penance. He said, it sucks, but you put in your two to three years and then you go do something somewhere else if you're good. And so what a fantastic anecdote about just like, if you want to be an AI, you probably got to go to SF. If you want to be in defense tech, you're going to be in the Gundo. If you're going to be in supersonic stuff, you got to go to Mojave. And I love that. It's not so, it's not so bad out there. I'm sure
Starting point is 01:17:49 you've driven through the desert at some point. It's got a kind of a, you know, a super galactic vibe out there. I, uh, I'm, I'm bullish on the Mojave. We should do some on the ground, on the ground reporting in the Mojave. Ashley, next time you go, please invite us. We'll tag along and whatever news you're covering and breaking, we'll front run you a little bit. We'll break the timeline with Patrick Collison, the founder and CEO of Stripe. We reacted to his fantastic post about two different types of phone booths. You might have seen this on a previous show. And he followed up by showing us an image of a beautiful building, which I think he has his eye on, maybe. I don't believe this is the actual Stripe headquarters. It looks somewhat AI generated.
Starting point is 01:18:48 I couldn't find it on a Google image, image, reverse image search, but I think he got the right idea, Patrick. I want to see this. I want to see this in action and keep making everything beautiful. Like what you're doing is so important to tech. And I just, I mean, everything from like the blog and the fast, he has a whole like documentation of all the different projects that have been done very quickly. He's an incredible thought leader, I guess you could call him in tech and just an inspiration to everyone who's building and wants to make
Starting point is 01:19:18 beautiful things. And so happy to have a back and forth with them on the timeline. Yeah. And this is a great example of a founder with incredible taste who now has the resources to go out and instead of building, you know, the Apple loop, whatever, what do they call their campus? The spaceship, I don't know. He can build this structure that looks like, you know, what maybe a bank would have looked like during the Roman Empire, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:19:46 It is very funny. It is. I mean, they're not technically a bank, but they do a lot of, you know, FinTech is bank. Financial institution, right? Financial institution. And yeah, we love Stripe. Stripe helped us incorporate Technology Brothers LLC,
Starting point is 01:20:01 which was very helpful. Certainly did. So shout out Stripe Atlas. Give Patrick Collison a call. Tell him the Technology Brothers sent you. Go incorporate your next business on Stripe Atlas today. We love Stripe. And thanks for engaging with us, Patrick. We love to have you on the show. You're welcome anytime. Anytime. Let's move on to some breaking news. Jason Carman has launched his new company, StoryCamp. He's back. He's back.
Starting point is 01:20:28 He took a little break. He was working on just one 90-minute movie. No big deal. No big deal. Stopped posting the weekly documentaries, which were already insane and crazy high production value. In many ways, let's just be honest, in many ways, John Coogan walked so Jason many ways, uh, John Coogan walks.
Starting point is 01:20:45 So Jason Carmen could fly, right. He kind of, uh, he kind of came in and he was like, Hey, John's a little distracted with the podcast. You know, I'm just going to launch a series of highly produced films that will go on to live on. I'm sure Netflix Netflix and Amazon Prime and all these platforms. So it's amazing to see. The guy sprints everywhere and incredible energy, unrelenting drive. He says, this is the company I've wanted to build since I was nine. And I'm so glad he landed here and doing this. Obviously, he had a ton of different opportunities. He was in-house at a startup for a while. This is such, it's just a perfect fit for him. He's going to be able to make science fiction films as well as documentaries, corporate work, you know, stuff on Netflix. I saw his camera. He's able to post behind the scenes now. He's running the Sony Venice 2.
Starting point is 01:21:42 This rig's like 100K. He's beyond the requirements to deliver to Netflix at this point. Like all of his gear is ready to be shown almost in IMAX. Like it's that level of production. And tech has never seen anyone who's this much of an artisan and craftsman care about this type of media in this way.
Starting point is 01:22:03 It's always been a side project, but this guy, this is his life's work. This is clearly what he's doing and he's gone full send and we're happy to support him here at Technology Brothers. Yeah. And it's amazing to see this rise. I think when you think about legendary filmmakers of today, you know, that built their careers across 20, 30, 40 years, you would get to see their films, but you wouldn't get to see behind the scenes in the same way of seeing their journey. Maybe it's an interview with, with the New Yorker or, you know, they do a talk at a Sundance, but you're not getting this sort of daily seeing the progress and seeing somebody build a career, which is, which is amazing to see.
Starting point is 01:22:41 So congratulations, Jason. Congratulations, Jason. Keep up all the hard work and keep making incredible content. Keep posting. Keep posting. We have an update on a post from yesterday. Mateo over at 8sleep. Absolute dog. We both sleep on 8sleep.
Starting point is 01:22:59 We highly recommend 8sleep. The pods were delivered to Doge. I hope this will supercharge Elon Musk and the incredible team to shape the future of America. Let's go. And so they packed these up. They ran them through the metal detectors, through the scanners, the x-ray scanners, and they got them in the building and incredible quick turnaround. I didn't even know how they got them out of the, out of the factory that fast or out of the distribution center, but they were there in DC in less than 24 hours delivered. And so, uh, enjoy it, Luke, enjoy it. The rest of the Doge team. I hope you get high sleep scores.
Starting point is 01:23:34 Luke for the four hours, Luke is sleeping at night. It's going to be the best four hours of sleep of his life. Uh, and, uh, yeah, if you don't have, if you don't, if you can't invest a lot of hours in your sleep, you definitely got to be on an eight sleep. Yeah, I mean, eight sleep also sponsors F1, these elite athletes. You think about Luke, he is an elite athlete of government. The thing too that I don't think people realize about eight
Starting point is 01:23:59 is that the cozy element is crazy. So a lot of people think about the chilling, which is nice. Maybe you get into bed and you want to be a little bit cooler, relaxed. But turning up the heat a little bit in the morning, it's like being next to a warm fire. So it warms my heart knowing that Luke is going to be in the depths of the federal government bureaucracy, and he's going to be able to be cozy if he wants
Starting point is 01:24:23 and maybe even use it as sort of an alarm feature. It's like as you start sweating, he's going to be able to be cozy if he wants and maybe even use it as sort of an alarm feature. It's like, as you start sweating, it's time to hit, it's time to hit, you know, hit the new CSV, pull out a new stack of PDFs, start organizing, digging through the, the, the treasury docs. Let's see. We got, we got some more massive breaking news. Callie means has posted about RFK. Let's be very clear. RFK is the most important cabinet confirmation in American history. Bobby and President Trump have gone up against the largest and most powerful industries in the country and are winning.
Starting point is 01:24:56 That would be the food and drug industries. The result is a chance for a healthier future for our kids. And a good friend with Callie. Love Callie and everything that he's done to popularize health and wellness and spread a lot of just very interesting and contrarian ideas. I'm sure you've met him.
Starting point is 01:25:15 Can you give us some background on Callie and his business partner, Justin? Well, John, Callie is an absolute dog. Co-founder of TruMed, co-founders with Justin Maers, former brother of the week. TruMed makes it easy to use your HSA, FSA funds to buy products that you're already buying, which is super important because HSA, FSA benefits are already cool, but historically it hasn't been easy to spend that money on consumer products.
Starting point is 01:25:43 We got a chance to hang out with Callie and Justin at Hereticon a while back last year. And Callie even then was spending hours every day working on the Maha movement, which is an interesting, make America healthy again is something that we should all be get behind. It clearly was politicized in many ways, but I'm glad to see this get through. And there's so much more to, you know, this is not a political move. This shouldn't be political at all. Right. We're trying to make the average, you know, American healthy. There's a lot of aspects of, of our sort of way of life that, that simply aren't. And, and yeah, I mean, what they went up against here is insane. The, um, you know, the, the pharmaceutical, uh, the drug, you know, uh,
Starting point is 01:26:31 industry is, is, spends billions of dollars on advertising, uh, with legacy media. They spend, um, tons of money, you know, lobbying pretty much every single politician in, in Washington, um, and at the state level. And so what they went up against to get this done is absolutely incredible. And, you know, personally, you know, we don't talk about politics on this show, but I firmly believe it's not a political issue at all. It's just this will be good. You know, Americans will get more information and hopefully we can create some uh guard rails to help uh everybody be uh healthier so i think it's a huge win for sure for sure congratulations one one interesting note um uh i'm gonna potentially butcher the details here
Starting point is 01:27:17 but just uh i didn't realize you you remember seeing like uh we pretty much spend all of our time on X, but, uh, if you've ever watched, you know, CNN, you'll get like three ads back to back for drugs. And, and you're thinking to yourself, this doesn't seem like a very good ad, right? Because it's like quick shot of a guy like driving his truck and then like wave into his wife. And then it says, this drug will kill you. This drug will put you into a long-term coma. Like this drug will do his wife. And then it says, this drug will kill you. This drug will put you into a long-term coma. Like this drug will do all this. And so, so, so I was always so confused. I was like, how is this actually good advertising? Because I come away from this being like, this could, this could maim me for life. You know, like it doesn't seem like an ad.
Starting point is 01:28:00 And, um, one of the, one of the reasons that, uh, the pharmaceutical industry has had such a chokehold on legacy media is because they're simply spending so many dollars. It would be almost financial suicide for someone like a CNN to ever put out negative coverage of the pharmaceutical industry. And the pharmaceutical industry does many, many important innovations that help us live longer, better lives. But for a really long time, the legacy media just hasn't been able to talk about some issues with the pharmaceutical industry having so much incentive to not have this happen, uh, just shows, um, that, that this, the time to make America healthy again has really come around. So congratulations to, uh, RFK and Callie and everybody involved in the movement. And I mean, that point like that you just made sounds very political, but, uh, it's been that, that exact point has been a major talking point of the left for
Starting point is 01:29:06 generations. Like Noam Chomsky has the concept of manufacturing consent and it's exactly that. And so like you, you, you could be quoting RFK in the modern era where he's a Republican. You could be quoting RFK from a few years ago when he was a Democrat, you could be quoting, you know, one of the biggest socialists, Noam Chomsky. So this shouldn't be as much of a political football as it is, but unfortunately it has become one. I hope people withhold judgment and understand that there's a very positive intention
Starting point is 01:29:36 with this movement around health. And let's see how things go, right? And at the end of the day, every American should be able to make decisions for themselves around their health. It's like one of the greatest personal freedoms that we should we should always have. So I'm excited to see what comes of this. Yeah, it's undeniable that life spans have flatlined. America is getting unhealthier decade by decade. Everyone kind of agrees on that. Clearly, that's a reason to try something different. This is different. And hopefully,
Starting point is 01:30:10 it's the right move. So I'm optimistic. Let's move on to Nico over at Default. He had some press for his company written by Brendan Short. And I love this because included in this is a fantastic quote. He says, Nico has moved to New York City and has an office with a bunch of cracked engineers, a hungry team of go-to-market folks who are at the bleeding edge. And to use Nico's words, enough Lucy and Celsius to topple a sub-Saharan warlord.
Starting point is 01:30:39 The team is building their company in a way that I wouldn't want to compete with. And so thank you, Nico, for the shout out. I love default. We need to put it to use on the show. Get some outbound going. Yeah, we need our own outbound guys just dialing on the phones all day long, cold calling people, say, hey, have you heard about the Technology Brothers?
Starting point is 01:31:04 Exactly. We're asking about you. They want you to listen to the show. the phones all day long, cold calling people, say, hey, have you heard about the Technology Brothers? Exactly. We're asking about you. They want you to listen to the show. Yep. Give us just three hours of your day every single day. We don't ask for much. Just three or four hours a day.
Starting point is 01:31:15 That's all. Yeah, exactly. Totally free. It's hand-to-hand combat. Every single listener matters. We need SDRs that are convincing people to install the RSS feed. Hey, we'd love to upgrade you from just a listener to live stream watcher as well. Have you looked into this? Oh, have you left five stars yet? You know, really develop a relationship with them. It's a relationship business. This podcasting is relationship business. Yep. And so it's fantastic.
Starting point is 01:31:41 Let's move on to the timeline. Uh, We got a funny post to kick it off with. Apparently, over the last decade, the purity of cocaine has increased significantly, while the price of cocaine has remained the same. And the question is, what other industries slash products has this happened in? And Hunter says, it's worth noting that private equity has largely avoided the industry. And the interesting thing here is that this has actually happened. This trend has happened in a lot of industries,
Starting point is 01:32:14 specifically tech industries. Google search has gotten better while remaining free. Like YouTube has gotten more content without changing the price. And there's a lot of- TVs are basically free. But I mean, so this reminds me, I posted yesterday that Pablo Escobar might be the greatest CPG founder of all time. And I'll just read out some of the stats. So Pablo obviously, you know,
Starting point is 01:32:35 contributed to this, this trend and and private equity was actually the counterparty to this trade that Pablo was making in many ways, he was, you He was dominating the market in the 80s. He had about 80% of the TAM at the time. So just to get some ideas of the scale, Pablo bootstrapped to annualized revenue of $22 billion. He didn't really have access to the private markets the way certain entrepreneurs would. Global operations of sales and distribution hubs on nearly every continent. Developed an Amazon-style logistics division. He had his own trucks, boats, planes,
Starting point is 01:33:12 fulfillment centers, ports, et cetera. He expanded margin and improved deliverability and traceability. And this is one of my favorite ones. He actually built a prison for himself so he could lock in and really sort of inspire himself to grind harder. And then he escaped from it just to prove that he could lock in and really sort of inspire himself to grind harder. And then he escaped from it just to, just to prove that he could. Um, and, uh, he even had a run at politics too. He, he became elected to the house of representatives. So, um, so yeah, uh, I'm sure
Starting point is 01:33:36 that private equity is bummed that they couldn't get into that, uh, market, but, um, but yes, other people took advantage. And Escobar is the one that's chronicled in Narcos season one. Is that correct? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Great show. The last good show that Netflix made. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 01:33:53 It's been a rough couple of years. But I remember watching that five, six years ago. It was great. Highly recommend it. Well, let's move on to Vittorio. He says, Be Trump. 4D chess grandmaster,
Starting point is 01:34:05 slap 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico, secure the border or else drama ensues. Canada and Mexico are losing their minds. Canada screeching about retaliation. Mexico sweating, concedes first and agrees everything. Tariffs are paused. 24 hours later, Canada folds two. Total victory.
Starting point is 01:34:21 Economy saved. Border secured. America first. How does he keep getting away with it and it is it is funny like trump the deal maker he knows how to come in and put the hurt on someone and really expose the leverage and it's interesting that he you know presumably chose to do it over the weekend when the markets weren't open yeah and so he if if that was intentional to try to minimize some of the chaos, you know, it worked well. It was interesting to see how quickly everybody went from, you know, you can't
Starting point is 01:34:54 just stop the flow of fentanyl. It's impossible, all the stuff to Trudeau saying, yeah, we're sending choppers and the military to the border and we're going to, we're going to stop the flow. Um, and so anyways, um, hopefully it has a positive impact. Uh, fentanyl is, is, uh, you know, our, our, our version of the opium wars. So, um, yeah, so let's get it out of the country, but hopefully, you know, no market turmoil and less illegal drugs. Like that's a win for everyone. I think everyone should be happy about that if that's the outcome and that hopefully it will be. Well, let's move on to Aaron Levy, founder and CEO of Box Cloud Storage Company. He says, can confirm OpenAI deep research is quite strong. In a few minutes,
Starting point is 01:35:42 it did what used to take a dozen hours. The implications to knowledge work is going to be quite profound when you just ask an AI agent to perform full tasks for you and it comes back with a finished result. What is your experience with deep research been so far? So we've used it for a couple projects this week that are relevant. So yesterday we did a deep dive on Mary Meeker, absolute legend, icon of the bubble, and more recently a venture capitalist. I thought it was very competent at researching Mary Meeker. And the reason for that is that the project was basically collect information from the entire internet, try to rank and get the highest quality sources and then organize it in a sort of linear storyline and help
Starting point is 01:36:33 me understand her strengths, her vision, what was her impact, things like that. It did a really good job at that. Today you tried to use it for Luke Ferretter to try to get a better understanding of his background. And I think it was much weaker, the output. And that's obviously because there's just much less information about Luke online and sort of super high quality sources. I think, yeah, my thoughts on it are like, I can't tell if I'm, I'm probably some combination of bad at understanding the correct way to prompt deep research to get great results. I noticed I was dumping in whole text exports of PDFs and it was kind of just breaking and like bugging out. And so there's probably a better way to interact with it to prompt it. And I'm sure we'll learn these patterns. And I kind of need to unlearn some of the patterns that I learned
Starting point is 01:37:29 when I was using O1 Pro or GPT-4, because for a lot of those, with some of them, they have the ability to pull things from links. So I would dump a bunch of links. It would pull all those in. Other ones, PDF upload. So I would upload a bunch of PDFs and then it would have that as extra context. With the deep research, it does a lot of it by itself. So I think with just a simpler prompt, you can get a better result, but I think like doing too much handholding might actually be a problem for it. And so there's still the question of how do I get it a source that it doesn't have access to that's maybe behind a paywall or, or some arcane scroll that it doesn't know about. And I want it to be in the research report. Um, and then also there's just a question of like, for a lot of these, uh, for,
Starting point is 01:38:13 for, for some of the really popular topics, like there might already be a deep research style report out there just in the form of the Wikipedia page or in the form of some sort of podcast. Somebody was posting that it's basically a new form of Wikipedia that you can sort of slightly customize and prompt. But yeah, it's interesting that OpenAI made a huge effort to hype this launch, right? They have a very good network of investors, team members, Sam, et cetera, that can create a lot of hype around a launch. And a lot of people have been working on the same idea using LLMs for research, right? And so there was a bunch of different product layer companies doing this previously, but just goes to show that
Starting point is 01:38:58 OpenAI, I do think they're feeling the pressure around the model layer, commoditizing and potentially good models going open source. And so they're just needing to innovate more at the product level and say, Hey, we're actually not just the model layer. We're, we're, we're operating at the app, the product layer as well. I mean the easiest win and I don't know, maybe I'm being playing like armchair product manager right now, but the easiest win I could imagine would be just, there's only a text box. And when I prompt it, in my prompt, I say, I'd like you to deep research
Starting point is 01:39:34 this, or I'd like you to go online, or I'd like you to use a PDF upload. And then it routes me to the correct model for that. And it intelligently knows, Hey, this prompt is perfect for deep research. Let's go over here. Oh, three high. Oh, three mini is actually best for this instead of putting that on me because now, now I'm wind up with, I write the same query in five different tabs with all the, well, here's, yeah, here's, here's how, uh, here's how the workflow will actually work, right? As you go into XAI and you say, hey, I want to do this thing. How should I do it? And it says, well, I can route it here if you want and then bring it back.
Starting point is 01:40:09 Or I'll try this and I'll try it in a couple of different places. And so it's interesting to think about how you might use a model to help you better understand how to use other models and just get the best output. 100%. Yeah. There's already a version of this happening with like the open router system where a lot of the programmers who want to use an open source model will, instead of just saying like, I want to use DeepSeek v3 hosted by DeepSeek,
Starting point is 01:40:39 they will say, I just want to use this model at the lowest possible cost and all of the different servers and companies that serve these models are out there competing on price. I just want to use this model at the lowest possible cost. And all of the different servers and, and, and, and companies that serve these models are out there competing on price and whatever load balancing is going on,
Starting point is 01:40:51 whoever has the lowest cost of energy or GPUs that day, low demand will price their model dynamically and route you to that. We just need kind of like a new layer, a new abstraction layer maybe, because I mean, it'd be very cool to have like, you know, there's one place where I go to prompt, oh, looks like you want to upload a full book,
Starting point is 01:41:09 a million token context, Gemini for that. Oh, looks like you want to do some deep research, chat GPT deep research for that, go here, do this, and just kind of route that intentionally. But I do think all of this will be solved very quickly. It seems too obvious to not be already in the works. And this is one of those things where we're talking about it now. They're probably putting the polishing touches on it right now.
Starting point is 01:41:30 It'll go out. Like once it's a meme, the company knows, especially if it's like, you know, a fast moving startup with a founder mode CEO and all this other stuff. Like it's not like, you know, talking about Google where people will say for years or Apple, people were beating the drum of like, Siri doesn't work for years. And it took them so long, uh, open AI, like they're, they're moving fast. They got, they got it. Okay. Look at Apple today. Everybody's saying your, your photo app is the worst app that I've used in, in forever. And they're like, okay,
Starting point is 01:42:00 we heard you loud and clear. We're going to launch a part of full, uh, competitor now. Uh, it's just like, please just, just fix the, uh, the photo app. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, anyways, let's move on to, uh, Nikhil, uh, Krishnan. He says, if there's a market map, you're too late. Do you get this reference? Is this, is this a Kanye? Oh, it's Drake. It's Drake. Okay. It's a cover art. Okay. I don't know. I'm out of touch. You just outed yourself as not being a Drake fan, which is not the worst thing to be outed as.
Starting point is 01:42:34 Kendrick all the way, baby. Kendrick all the way. Anyway, it's a great graphic. I mean, this is, I mean, the original album, for those that aren't uh drake enthusiasts or didn't pay attention to pop culture like 10 years ago at this point um uh is if you're reading this it's too late implying i i'm sure he had some sort of beef with somebody and he was dropping the album and you know you know was saying if you're reading this uh you know i already dissed you or something like that um in this case i do think it's true
Starting point is 01:43:10 a lot of the best companies get started before there's a market map you look at andrew and palantir you know these these uh yeah maybe you could go back and look around when they were incorporated and make a market map but it's really more like by the time the market maps are being shared publicly on X, uh, you're, you know, that is not the right point to try to start the company. Right. Uh, and it's not to discourage entrepreneurship or getting excited about a category and making a bet there. But, um, usually by the time the markets map, there's a bunch of super, super talented people that are already tackling different areas of it and maybe have a two, three, four, five year head start, right? Sometimes even more than that.
Starting point is 01:43:55 There are two notable exceptions I can think of. First would be Google, because there were a lot of search engines and they were definitely mapped in Mary Meeker's report, XSite, Lycos, Yahoo. It was very clear that there was a defined market, and maybe it wasn't a market map on Twitter, because Twitter didn't exist at the time, but it was clearly understood. And then the other one would be Facebook, actually, because LinkedIn had already started, and there, I believe, one of the early investors, maybe it was Reid Hoffman or somebody in Peter Thiel's network had actually started a company called like socialnetworking.com or something like that. And, and a lot of people were circling and Peter has
Starting point is 01:44:35 said that like, he knew that there was going to be someone that cracked the code. And so he went, when he met Mark Zuckerberg, he was like, I'm in. And so there are some exceptions, but yeah, I mean, once it's a full market map and there's like hundreds of companies, it's a little bit rougher. It's more just like, okay, if there's a few competitors and they're doing something really fundamentally wrong, there's probably still innovation opportunity. But if you're just like looking at a market map, it's going to be a rough go. Anyway, let's move. Let's stay with meta actually and move into a news article from the wall street journal meta in talks to reincorporate in Texas or another state exit Delaware potential step by social media giant
Starting point is 01:45:17 follows similar move by Elon Musk who moved to reincorporate his companies in Texas and Nevada. And so she'll Monat says, Delaware probably lost its status as a place where most companies choose to incorporate. Huge hit to the state budget. 40% of general fund comes from franchise taxes and corporation fees from companies who choose to incorporate there due to the business-friendly approach.
Starting point is 01:45:39 And so it'll be interesting to see like YC and Stripe Atlas. They still kind of recommend Delaware. It's like the standard thing, but these things change over time. Yeah. How, uh, hopefully I'm not lagging too much. It seems like my connection's dropping a little bit. Um, but, uh, but yeah, so, so give some people some backstory here. So, so, uh, obviously every venture-backed startup has been incorporating in Delaware. I've invested in over 50 companies. I don't think I've invested in a single company that wasn't incorporated in Delaware originally. And yeah, you can register in other states where you kind of operate.
Starting point is 01:46:15 But the actual incorporation happens in Delaware because there's so much case law there. It just makes sense to do it. Sort of been the default, and Delaware has really benefited from that. Now, what happened and why Meta is making this move is that there was a very high profile lawsuit. I think we covered it at different points where there was a Tesla shareholder who had something like seven shares or something like that, or maybe it was a very small number of Tesla shares. He basically partnered with a law firm or a group of law firms to bring a very aggressive case against Elon's pay package, saying that it wasn't in the best interest of the company and ended up being. I don't know where it's shaken out today.
Starting point is 01:47:01 I think it was the judge like ruled in favor of the shareholders and said no this is not right even though it had been approved uh you know back in the past and then um they they did a vote to overturn it and elon was sort of rallying the troops and saying like hey i had um and originally the pay package was set up in a way where elon had to hit the world's most aggressive you know sales and growth targets to hit the world's most aggressive sales and growth targets to achieve the pay package. And he basically did the impossible to do that. And then you had this hyper sort of political judge in Delaware who struck it down. And what that means is every CEO now is saying, look, I don't feel comfortable operating out of Delaware if judges there are going to get involved in basically the internal decision making at the company, right? It just doesn't, it really doesn't make sense. And so now you have people moving to Nevada, some people moving to Texas, and we'll see what shakes out. But huge cell phone from Delaware. Yeah. And so I just looked it up.
Starting point is 01:48:06 The story was Elon calls his shot and says, I want more equity in Tesla. And you will benchmark my performance to the stock price, which is the purest essence of shareholder value creation for a CEO. It's perfectly aligned. He's not talking about revenue or deliveries. He's just talking about if the value of the company goes up, this will be accretive for everyone. You will dilute yourself because you're giving me more shares, but your shares will be worth so much more. And so during that time, he like 10x or 100x the stock. It went way up, generational run. And so he hit all of his targets. He was ready to get that package. The Delaware court struck it down. And then Elon did a shareholder vote. All the shareholders were
Starting point is 01:48:55 like, yeah, this is great. Like this guy's putting up insane numbers. Let's give it to him again. And then a judge struck that down again. So as of December 2024, the pay package has not been approved. But if they reincorporate in Texas, they can try and go approve it again. And then the Delaware judge would not have the authority to block it. And so. Yeah. And to be clear, the real devil in all of this is the law firm that, that I believe made hundreds of millions or billions of dollars in fees, uh, as part of this lawsuit, even though the original, uh, uh, plaintiff in the case, the shareholder who brought the case, uh, had, had something like seven shares or something like that.
Starting point is 01:49:42 It's a total sort of mism. In terms of the person who... Yeah. I need to dig into more of where that money for that law firm came from because the money had to come from somewhere. It clearly couldn't come from the plaintiff if they just owned seven shares or something like that. So maybe the Delaware court awarded it. I wonder if that's on hold as Elon's fighting back. It's all very unclear, but certainly worth a deep dive and certainly reshaping how large tech companies think about where they're incorporating. Because I don't know if Zuck wants to do some sort of similar pay package. He already owns so much of Meta. I don't think it's that big of an issue, but it's certainly scary thinking that the shareholders collectively
Starting point is 01:50:29 could want to do one thing and then a judge could say, hey, actually, we don't want you to do that, even though it's massively popular amongst the shareholders broadly. Anyway, let's move on to Gary Tan. GT's on the timeline again with a low-tam banger that I thought we should highlight here because we love cars. He says, if you like cars, watch this space. And he's quote tweeting Bubz, who says the car community for the car community, it's going to be fire. And he posts a logo for something called Rides. I couldn't find any more information on this, but I wanted to track it because it seems like maybe it's a YC company. Maybe it's some sort of ride sharing or car community. Maybe there'll be the ability to buy and sell cars on there. All seems very interesting. I've always thought there was
Starting point is 01:51:18 an opportunity to build like a Strava like app for car enthusiasts because people are constantly doing, you know, I'll meet up with friends to go for a drive. I'll share that drive with other people. There's little rallies that happen. There's car meets, there's things like that. And then, so I'm just totally sort of extrapolating what something like this could be. But I do think that you could use a social network to bootstrap a, uh, actual like mark, you know, secondary marketplace for cars. And some of these car marketplaces can be extremely lucrative. Um, and so anyways, cool opportunity there. We'll have to, uh, Gary, uh, send us some more information and we will, uh, we'll use that and talk about it on, uh, an upcoming show. Uh, Let's move on to Ryan Peterson.
Starting point is 01:52:06 Can't believe this app is only $8. Absolute banger, 40K likes. He says, dear Doge, please look into the US Mint in San Francisco. It occupies an enormous block of prime commercial real estate. And all it does is produce special commemorative coins for collectors. The coins aren't even cool. And Elon says, noted. Noted. And bad day to be a commemorative coins for collectors the coins aren't even cool and elon says noted noted damn bad bad day to be a commemorative coin i gotta say if you're seeing that post get 40
Starting point is 01:52:32 i might have to take the other side of this i i'm very pro pro physical commemorative coins generally anti the meme coins i i i i think these are the the commemorative coins are lindy maybe the designs aren't cool that's an easy fix let's get a flexport coin let's get a spacex coin made from the mint but yeah i was i was pro crypto until i bought uh the client at the official kleiner perkins oh did you lose it all yesterday i think i lost it all the market cap last time i checked his went from 10 grand to something like zero. And so I'm going to have to talk with Everett about this and see, you know.
Starting point is 01:53:11 You should send him your tokens. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, honestly, it's like a commemorative token for me. It is. Leave it in the wallet. Everyone will know. You bought Kleiner. I bought it. I was early. Do not buy Kleiner. It was a hacked early um but uh Kleiner it was a project by
Starting point is 01:53:27 the way in case you're just tuning in for the first time uh this was a hacked meme token on pump.fun we do not support this and it's not financial advice that is correct anyway let's move on and and it's worth noting that that app would cost negative $8. You know, negative, like Ryan Peterson is actually printing money. If you're getting 40K likes on a post, you're definitely making your $8 back by being a premium subscriber. So shout out to Jacoby and Tyler and all of our friends at X for making X usage profitable for posters. Yeah, for posters. Let's go to Willem. He says, our children will romanticize the last era of pure human creation in ways we can't imagine. And he posts a screenshot that
Starting point is 01:54:15 says cultural memory has a certain rhythm. Every generation romanticizes the era roughly 30 years before its own. Gen Z clings to the pixelated naivete of the 2000s. Millennials buff the 1980s and 90s into a yuppie golden age. Gen X yearned for 1960s idealism. But the 2020s will mark a rupture in this continuum. When an AI-generated song hit the billboard charts in 2023. The prior century collapsed into legend. The last time creativity wasn't a dialogue with silicon. I think that's very well-written, very interesting. Well, lock in, brothers, because this show is not a dialogue with silicon in any way.
Starting point is 01:55:00 Yeah, it's cool because even, so Willem is an investor in a company called Visual Electric that makes it so far to me, it's an amazing alternative to stock photos because you can just go in there and it's similar to Mid Journey, but it's more oriented around designer use cases. of assets i used it to create an asset for pmf or die super powerful but ultimately i don't i think it's still like the idea that um we've been romanticizing every art form forever we romanticized you know hitting hitting a stick at the right tempo against another stick right and we moved sort of up the chart um and uh ultimately the the the power of combining the human mind with, you know, new tools creates beautiful things. So it reminds me of that. I think it was was a Grimes that was just absolutely dunking on the guy who was doing the AI song generation tool who said, Oh, it sucks to learn music, You know, why even learn when you could just generate
Starting point is 01:56:05 songs with AI? But ultimately, I think these new tools are just going to introduce more people to the process of creativity. And then as you get, as you fall in love with the pure process of creation, you realize that, you realize that, that, that the pure act of creation is so enjoyable and so stimulating that you'll use the tools and then you'll take them to new places that they haven't been. Then you'll combine them with your own genius and cool things happen. Yeah. Study chess. Chess has been solved by computers for decades. It's more popular than ever. People like watching people do things. And this is not going away, even as the computers defeat humans in all of the evals.
Starting point is 01:56:51 The entertainment will continue on. Let's move on to David Ulovich over at A16Z. He says, for the 12,589th time, revesting is usually the founder CEO's friend. The email below from counsel explaining to CEO why the departing co-founder is basically fully vested. I explained this all to no avail in the series B. And the email says,
Starting point is 01:57:19 closing the loop on this for the rest of the thread, the revesting concept was proposed early on in the series b negotiations but dropped in the final term sheet so it was not included in the series b docs best rough best brutal clearly some sort of co-founder dispute somebody leaving and the vesting uh they they did not revest and so uh yeah so nothing to negotiate. Yeah. Just for some context, if you go on Stripe Atlas today or you do a standard incorporation with a Goodwin or a Cooley or someone like that, they're going to set the founders up on a four-year vest.
Starting point is 01:57:56 That's four years is a long time, but oftentimes it takes many, many, many, many years to build a company far beyond four years. And so especially now when a company can go from zero to a series B or even further in a few years, you end up in these situations like David is highlighting where a founder is able to leave after three years and they've fully, you know, almost fully vested their shares, yet there's so much more work to do. And in that situation, they could have the same amount of equity, or close to the same amount of equity as the CEO and the team that's going to continue to work, work on the business. And so, so yeah, I think it's always an opportunity to extend, extend out the vesting period. And it's usually
Starting point is 01:58:43 in the benefit of the person who's, you know, going to continue working on that business day to day infinitely. Yeah. Yeah. And I mean, that's what the negotiation during series B was clearly framed around was, Hey, look, we're going to go bigger. We're raising money. We are going to be in this for another four years, another eight years, decade. So let's revest to make sure this is the team that's like staying on board. And because like refresh grants just aren't going to be anywhere near what the initial founding grant is. And so, but it can often be seen as a very adversarial between the co-founding team and the investors. And so the co-founding
Starting point is 01:59:23 teams is like, we don't want to revest. Like what if you fire us all? Or what if we leave? Like, then we won't have our equity. We started this company and it becomes this big debate. But even I think the happy medium here can be just extending the unvested portion at the series B. And so maybe you're halfway through a four-year vest.
Starting point is 01:59:47 You take the second half that has invested and you extend that to a new four-year vest. So you're not actually losing the shares that you vested on the original schedule. You're just extending the unvested shares. And that's kind of a happy medium that can work out sometimes, but it's always tricky because, yeah, I mean, you could not be doing your job, get fired, and you're like, ah, I didn't get my full stake, which I wanted, and that would have been awesome. But then, you know, like what's fair to the team? What's fair to the people that are going to go build this company for the next decade? You know, you got to have equity for those folks. You got to have them aligned. Anyway, we will end it there. Thanks for tuning in. Thanks for dealing with all the
Starting point is 02:00:28 technical difficulties. We are still ironing things out, but, uh, that's what comes with being the number one live show in tech. You know, you just got to figure things out sometimes. So you got to wrestle with, you got to wrestle with tech. It's not, uh, it's not always autonomous. Sometimes it acts up and you gotta, you gotta just figure it out. So thanks for bearing with us. Uh, we're trying to get, uh, we're trying to get a hundred percent every better every day. You know, a lot of people say, I want to be 1% better every day. It's not enough for us doing our best to hit a hundred every single day. Um, and, uh, soon we'll be, uh, at the top of the charts. I love it. Uh,
Starting point is 02:01:08 leave us five-star review, Apple podcasts and Spotify, leave an ad in your review and we'll read it on the show. Thanks so much for tuning in and we'll see you tomorrow. Thank you folks. See you tomorrow. Bye.

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