The a16z Show - a16z Podcast: Beyond Zero Sum, Again
Episode Date: July 4, 2019with Marc Andreessen (@pmarca), Ben Horowitz (@bhorowitz), and Steven Johnson (@stevenbjohnson) Continuing our 10-year anniversary series since the founding of Andreessen Horowitz (aka "a16z"...;), we’re resurfacing some of our previous episodes featuring Andreessen Horowitz founders Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz. This episode was actually recorded in 2017 at our annual innovation Summit, and features technology writer Steven Johnson interviewing Ben and Marc about everything from their relationship to creative inspirations. You can find other episodes in this series at a16z.com/10. Stay Updated:Find a16z on YouTube: YouTubeFind a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Show on SpotifyListen to the a16z Show on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The content here is for informational purposes only, should not be taken as legal business, tax,
or investment advice, or be used to evaluate any investment or security and is not directed at any
investors or potential investors in any A16Z fund. For more details, please see A16Z.com slash disclosures.
Hi, everyone. Welcome to the A6 and Z podcast, I'm Sonal. So this week, to continue our 10-year anniversary
series since the founding of A6 and Z, we're actually resurfacing some of our previous episodes featuring
founders Mark Andreessen and Ben Horwitz. If you haven't heard our latest episode with Stuart
Butterfield turning the tables as the entrepreneur interviewing them, please do check that out
and other episodes in this series on our website at A6NC.com slash 10. But this episode was recorded
at our annual Innovation Summit in 2017 and features writer Stephen B. Johnson interviewing them about
everything from their relationship to creative inspirations. All right. I'm delighted and honored
to be here with you.
a lot to cover. And what the kind of architecture for this conversation is, in a sense, we're going
to kind of zoom out. We're going to start on a more personal level and broaden out to think a little
bit about tech cultures inside a given organization and then start thinking a little bit more about
broader social trends coming out of technology and looking into the future a little bit.
But I wanted to start with something actually just listening to your conversation with JJ,
who I don't know at all that I'm going to call JJ. He was talking about that first kind of literally
magical moment going and seeing Universal Studios and then getting into magic and how that was so
transformative as an eight-year-old. And it occurred to me, do you guys have a memory of something
like that with tech at any point where you really saw something? For me, it was late. It was
hypercard. Sophomore year in college where I was just like, oh, there is this whole possibility
that I hadn't imagined could happen on a screen. Do you have similar stories? It's funny.
This is an embarrassing question because I'm sitting next to Mark, but one of the ones I remember most
vividly was seeing Mosaic. Because, you know, for years in tech, there were all these ideas about,
like if you were in computer science, about what was possible from all the things that you ought to be
able to do. But you could never actually quite get them to work. And HyperCard was like that in that way,
but Mosaic was really it. Like, it was all there on it. And when you down it, you were like,
oh my God, the whole world is like right there. I can reach the world. That's the most craziest thing ever.
but I hate to say that with him sitting here
because I'd go right to his head.
Well, it was a really striking point because
up until, certainly for me, and I think for a lot of people,
there was discussion about hypertext
that had been circulating
through different subcultures.
But I would say probably 80%
of the precedent received at that point
was, strangely enough, about hypertext fiction.
It was people who were writing
these non-linear stories.
And when you saw a mosaic
for the first time, you're like,
oh, this isn't some obscure avant-garde
post-moner.
modern literary device. This is the future of media. I have a much better answer than that.
So I actually just mentioned on stage, but like the early PCs really were the mystery box,
the magic box and that really, that just, you know, the flesh and cursor had me from Go.
So that sense of potential was a really big deal. The other, I swear to God that this is true,
Knight Rider. Who remembers Night Rider? Who remembers Night Rider? There we go, Night Rider.
Kit? You're talking about Kit? Kitts. Holy shit. So I was, I forget. So it was 82.
So yeah, I was 10, right? And so this show's on and I don't know. It's this guy in the leather jacket.
and I don't know, he seems cool, whatever.
But they did this very clever thing, the mystery box thing.
And then, you know, no internet, no nothing, couldn't find anything.
You just saw a few commercials.
They did not tell you that the car was like that special.
And if you go back and watch the pilot, it's like 45 minutes in.
And like, it's the whole thing has happened.
He's been shot in the face.
He's had reconstructive surgery.
He's got the new name.
He's got the mission.
He's got the car.
He's driving along.
45 minutes in, the car talks.
And like, I think I fell out of the couch.
Like, I think I just like literally, I was like, the car is talking.
Right?
And then I still remember what that felt like.
And then I remember the screens, like the dash on that thing, right?
It was like being in the space shuttle.
And to this day, when I get in a car that, you know, the modern cars are like that, right?
They've got up to it, including the fact that they've talked to you now.
But, you know, they got all the screens and this and the dash and the Tesla and the whole thing.
It's still, I always still feel like I'm getting behind the dash of kit.
So that is the best answer.
That's great.
So there's a great thing about your, the relationship that you guys have.
It's a long, enduring one incredibly productive one.
There's a line in The Hard Thing About Hard Things in your book.
Not to embarrass you, Mark, but I just wanted to quote it here.
This is you're talking about the relationship.
And what you said is, even after 18 years, he upsets me almost every day by finding something wrong in my thinking.
And I do the same for him.
It works.
So first off, is that true?
But more than that, are you guys, is there something predictably wrong?
Are you guys wrong?
Are you finding yourselves correcting each other in ways that are kind of, are there patterns?
to the way in which you disagree?
Do you tend to err on the side, this side, where Mark errs on another side?
You know, I think it's, you know, we're close enough in personality, but different enough
kind of in skills that we often see things from different angles.
And then a lot of it is Mark himself, which is like Mark always likes to take the other side
of the argument, whatever side, like he just enjoys taking the other side.
That's his thing.
And so, you know, it just kind of goes that way.
I think that the real key to it is that we somehow got to a level of trust where we can really go at it in a way that would, for most people, you just go like, if you.
Like, you can't talk to me that way. Like, how, you know, like so disrespectful. Like, you're stepping on me. You're asking me these questions that hurt my feelings. But, you know, for us, you know, it has still like, you know, sometimes like get close to that, but not, not all the way.
I think the big thing is the thing I decided at a certain point,
because we get asked a version of this question by the founding teams that we work with,
or if we bring a CEO into a company, help a founder bring in a CEO,
and they're going to have a partnership that hopefully works something like this,
you know, kind of ask kind of how do you make it work?
Because it is so easy for the conflict, for the emotion to drive people apart.
And so the way I think about it is it's more important to me
that we have the successful partnership than it is that I'm right,
not any particular issue.
And I'm proud to say that Ben, of course, is the exact opposite.
It's far more important for him to be right than it has a successful.
So it meshes perfectly right hand and glove.
I'm joking.
That was a joke.
And so we both will argue it all the way out, but each of us will defer to the other.
At the end of it, if it's an argument, it's over which one, which of us is going to defer to the other one?
With each of us volunteering to do it, most of the time.
And that's really, like, sometimes the argument will not resolve.
Right.
But we'll kind of know who knows more about that thing and will yield in that way.
And that's been super productive.
And are their ongoing?
disputes about where the technology world is heading? Are there kind of senses like, oh, no,
you think this thing is going to be huge, but this is the old argument we've been having for
five years. It's never going to happen. We both believe a lot in disagree and commit, right? And so
it's important. As an example, one version of the question you asked is like, what if we're
arguing about some startup we funded and whether it's, are we going to have some argument about
like that was a mistake or not or whatever? Like, we basically, I don't think ever have those
arguments. And the reason is because we may argue whether, and this is true of our partnership
more broadly, we may argue about whether it make the investment, but once we make it, we're in.
Yep.
Right.
And then at that point, it's important that it's the dynamic,
sort of implicit promise in the team and including between the two of us,
is we're all in this.
We've all committed.
And I think that's really critically important because that's how you maintain.
That's how you don't have, I told you so.
And backbiting and talking about people when they're not in the room and that kind of thing.
Yeah, that stuff's bad.
Do you all have a, I'm actually in the middle of writing a book about long-term complex
decision-making.
So I have my own kind of bias in this question.
But do you have, when you're confronting a decision, say, for instance, like, should we fund
this company or should we follow on this round or other life decisions do you make do you find that
you have a process for that decision-making act that you go through and think about as a series of
stages or is it something that's more fluid and conversational and intuitive yeah so it's interesting
this business is different than our last so running a company you try to be more structured
in how you do this in some ways in that speed is really important so if you're running a company
your output is decisions and you rate it on quality and speed.
And if you have to make the trade, which you always have to,
you generally go towards speed because you have a lot of decisions to make.
And if you don't make them fast, then you freeze the entire organization.
In our new business, basically quality is everything.
And so we'll go around the horn 50,000 times if we have to
to make sure that we've explored every corner and every crevice of the discussion.
and we've not missed something. So I would say in some ways, you know, we have a lot of like a
framework in our minds about how we think of investments and deals and so forth, but we're
willing to go in many loops where we would never do that in a company.
One of the things that I love investigating and talking to people about is their kind of creative
workflow and where they find inspiration. There's a lot of research out there that some of which
that I've done and other people have done about the importance of kind of diversity of influences
in your kind of worldview leading to more creative thinking.
So I'm just curious about your kind of daily information diet in a sense,
beyond the kind of the routine of the meetings that you have with the founders
and the pitch meetings and so on.
Where do you find that kind of outside influence in new ideas?
So we sort of cheat in a sense, which is we have,
we see 2,000 inbound startups a year.
These are, you know, by definition,
and 2,000 of the smartest people in the world in all the domains that they're operating in.
And so, I mean, honestly, after that, it's just, you know, it's hard to pick up like a magazine and open it with any level of enthusiasm.
It's like, you know, you kind of have this, you know, you're kind of seeing this stuff, you know, months or years before it shows up in the press.
And so that's part of it.
Personally, I've been running this year a big experiment.
And I've always been a big reader and sort of information omnivore.
And it just, you know, I've always trying to kind of balance short term, long term, you know, different kinds of different times of different times of material.
And so I've been running a big experiment this year, which is I've been trying to do a barbell.
I've been trying to polarize it.
And so I've stopped.
completely reading newspapers, magazines, basically anything that has a time horizon,
basically greater than, let's say, five minutes to, you know, anything basically between
five minutes and five years, which is to say I basically only read social media on the one hand,
and then only books on the other hand, right, and just polarize it and gap it way out.
So what's interesting about that is, of course, being on social media, like that process,
you know, necessarily you end up consuming a lot of news and a lot of what's there,
notwithstanding the false reports of the death of the web, a lot of what social media is,
is links to things that are interesting, right?
People who you're following are interested in.
And so, you know, I do end up reading basically everything.
One of the experiments was, does it matter?
Like, if you don't see the homepage of the newspaper,
do you miss things?
And it turns out if you follow the right people,
you really don't because they surface all the interesting stuff anyway.
And you get to see a lot of stuff
that you wouldn't necessarily see looking at the homepage.
But the other side, honestly, and you know,
you're very accomplished book author.
The other side of it is just books, you know,
books have probably become the great underestimated source of information relevant
to our daily lives that just gets, you know,
as there is just such a surplus of kind of near-term information.
and consumption. And let's just say, as the real world is getting continuously more interesting in
real time, you can spend all day long just following the ins and outs of what's happening in the
political scene or what's happening in the sports scene or what's happening in, you know, the business
world or whatever. And so you can really get, you know, let's talk about myself, I can get really
trapped in the present. And so the ability to at least have some time to be able to go back and
be able to read things that were written five or 10 or 50 or 100 years ago that have stood the
test of time in the form of books has been, I think is very valuable. It has been very interesting.
I mean, the book business is actually quite healthy and people are reading, you know, reading print
books. There's a kind of return to print books. And it does feel as if I think one of the things
you don't realize until you write them, particularly with nonfiction books, but it's true of fiction
as well that when you meet someone who's read one of your books, they have been living inside your
mind for 12 hours, 20 hours, depending how long the book is. And so it is still an unrivaled way
to get complicated ideas into other people's minds. And so it's been, I think, a sign of health
in the culture that books are actually thriving in the midst of all this kind of minute-by-minute social
media. And also, by the way, as you will know, like audiobooks, right? I think there's a renaissance
and audiobooks, which is just having the smartphone and now the wireless, you know, AirPods,
makes it so much more convenient for it to consume audio content, long-form audio content.
And podcasts obviously are a big part of that. But audiobooks in the course of drive time and wait time
and this time and, you know, morning time and so forth.
Completely fit into my life in a way that books didn't use to.
I also wanted to ask you, Ben, about music. Can you talk about a little bit about that in terms
of your own kind of creative view of the world? Yes. Well, it's interesting and it's very specific to
hip-hop for me, and hip-hop is an unusual music form in that it's a very kind of capitalistic form of
music, which is completely kind of unheard of in popular music, in that the main theme of hip-hop,
if you go through all the great rappers, is like, how do you build something out of nothing?
You know, how do you compete these kinds of things, as opposed to R&B, which was maybe love
songs and like rock and roll, which is more communist. But it's perfect, it's a perfect
analog to entrepreneurship. It's kind of the exact kind of motivational soundtrack for
entrepreneurs. And that's really how I started with it because any theme I wanted to write about,
like it was a great way to find inspiration. But it led to, if you say I made a contribution to
the management literature, it actually came out of rap music in that. The big thing that was different
in my book was that the logic of management is not very complicated. And you can understand all
the management theory. It's just not that hard. But the emotional
psychological complexity of doing it is incredibly difficult. And, you know, we see tremendous fallout
from brilliant, brilliant people who can never get over that. And so the big challenge for me was,
like, how do you communicate the emotional part of the lesson? And hip-hop is great for that,
because it carries the emotion and it's all about kind of the capitalism. So, you know,
I wrote a post, how do you handle politics in a company? And I went through, like, all the things that
cause politics and the subtle things, you know, like how somebody asking for a raise can do it
and how you deal with that technique and so forth. But a lot of it is the attitude of the manager.
And so the rap quote that I used was Rick Ross, who do you think you're fucking with?
I'm the fucking boss. And like, once you get that, then you know how to do it.
That's good. That's great. Okay, so let's zoom out a little bit now. You were asking
JJ Abrams about L.A. is the kind of epicenter of the movie business. So with all,
all the changes that we've seen in the tech sector and all the volatility, the one constant, really for half a century, has been that the Bay Area and Silicon Valley have been the epicenter of the technology world, really, without any near rival, probably for 50 years, I think it would probably be fair to say, despite the fact that it has gone through all these different revolutions and you had big computers and then personal computers and then the web and then social media.
So really two questions, I think, why? Why there?
Like, what was it about that particular configuration that rooted tech in that world?
And do you think we're going to look back in 30 or 40 years and it's going to have the same concentration?
Yeah, so the why is, I think, it's history, right?
And so just the fact that it's been a network effect, right?
It's been a snowball rolling down the hill picking up momentum now for 50, 6.
Actually, it turns out 50, 60, 70, 80 years.
In a lot of ways, it goes back to the 1920s, 1930s, the early defense contractors.
Right.
Steve Blank has a whole series of videos called The Secret History of Silicon Valley.
and he traces it all the way back almost 100 years.
Yeah, they're fantastic.
Fantastic.
And the point of it is, it's just this kind of network effect that's just kept rolling, right?
And so it's been this place where it's just like it's the place where the next really smart
engineer programmer or, you know, equivalently salesperson, marketing person,
want to store, contact, whoever they are, a finance person, on the margin, right,
is more tempted to move to the valley than many other places, which isn't to say that
there aren't many capable people all over the world.
It's just on the margin, many of the ones who are super ambitious end up in the valley.
And, of course, I'm an example of that.
And as a consequence, right, it's a story of import.
right. And so another thing just to read of people interested, Tom Wolfe, the great novelist,
journalist wrote a piece in the 80s in Esquire about literally Bob Noyce, who was the original
CEO of Intel, one of the fathers of Silicon Valley and literally grew up in Iowa, grew up in the
Midwest and was the Silicon Valley import. And actually Wolf ascribes a lot of modern valley
culture to literally Bob Noyes importing, interestingly Midwestern culture, right, including, by the way,
egalitarianism, right? So the whole open floor plan thing, stock option ownership, everybody
anyone who's a share in the company.
He traces that actually back to Midwestern culture.
And so it just got established and it developed this ethic.
And it's probably not an accident that it's the frontier.
Right.
It's probably not an accident that's where the gold rush happened.
It's just kind of this frontier ethic and mentality that's continued.
So that's the good news, right?
The bad news is, as I discussed with JJ, like it's just number one, we're just bursting at the seams.
Like it's just become a hard place to do business.
And the number two is there's great people all over the world and like why on earth.
So the joke in the valley is, you know, help wanted, right?
Software company puts up Silicon Valley.
Software company puts up a help wanted out on the internet or whatever and says.
You know, help wanted, you know, software engineer to work on new collaboration software tool,
online collaboration software tool that will enable people to work together, independent of geography all over the world in real time.
P.S. must relocate to San Francisco to apply. And so it's this really congruity, which is we're building the technologies that in theory should let this stuff spread.
And yet, for some reason, in the last 10, 20 years, it's actually been concentrating more and more.
And so I've come to believe it's a, maybe this is obvious to some people, but I would come to believe it's a human dynamics question.
it's a psychology and sociology question, not a technology question in a lot of ways,
which is it's just like how do people best work together, right? And it just so happens that,
at least for the form of traditional companies, which you just see over and over again,
is it's just when you can get everybody in the same room, physically in the same room,
right, with the level of, say, fidelity of communication interaction where we're sitting,
you know, by the way, it's why we're all physically here. And there are a few successful
distributed companies, but there really aren't very many is a consequence of that. And so my hope is that
we're going to get there in the next, let's say, 10 or 20 years. My hope is that we're going to get
telepresence, right, in the form of video conferencing and telepresence robots and VR and AR and all
these things to collaboration software and workgroup software and Slack and GitHub and all
these amazing technologies are building for collaboration. My hope is we're going to get it to the
point where it's just going to be obvious that we don't all have to be in the same place. If that happens,
you could say it's, quote, bad for the Valley in the sense of like maybe Silicon Valley's not
central anymore, but it would be so good for the world for that to be the case. And we would all benefit
so much from that. I think it's a very worthwhile thing to pursue and something I'm very fired up
about. How much do you think, just to go back to the point about Noise in the early days of Silicon
Valley and the history of it, so I've written about this a little bit as well. How much do you think
that the participatory option granting culture, which is very different, there were very few
kind of East Coast firms that were doing that. So you had much more traditional kind of top-down
equity systems in those corporate entities. How much do you think that is,
part of the success.
This is something I think
that would be interesting
to go back and look at
just economically.
So I think it ends up being
very important
because of the nature
of technology companies.
So if you look at,
there are other kinds of companies
where the people
are much more interchangeable.
And this kind of gets
into why the network effect
is so important and so forth.
And in like a tech company,
there's lots of people
who are extremely valuable.
And that innovation
as a way to get them
their kind of proper compensation for their contribution.
The great conversation with Mark and Charles Koch where he talked about,
you have to be rewarded for what you contribute to others.
And that really is key to any business and any incentive system.
And particularly in technology,
because there are so many people in the company who are so valuable
and so fundamentally critical to the company's success,
it really is one of a very few kinds of compensation systems that would work.
And certainly, you know,
a lot of the systems on the East Coast would never,
work for tech companies to be kind of world-class competitive.
So it's been six years since Mark, you wrote the Software Eats the World essay.
I went back and looked at it and reread it.
It was a great piece.
It reminded me of, I'm sure a lot of people have seen this, there was a great thing
that was circulating on social media a couple years ago.
It was an old kind of single page flyer for Radio Shack from like 1988 or something
like that.
It was a list of like 30 products that Radio Shack sold.
And it was the answer machine.
It was a VCR, an alarm clock, like a TRS 80 kind of descendant, you know, a game console,
something like that.
And literally, without exception, every single one of them is now an app on your phone, right?
The whole thing had gotten swallowed up by software, which is, of course, a measuring productivity problem because all those things, an aggregate, cost $30,000 in 1988.
And now they're free on a phone that costs $600, which is actually progress, but doesn't sometimes look like it.
So obviously I think that that was a very prescient forecast to make.
Has anything kind of surprised you six years later looking back on it?
I mean, in it, you say the next big stages are health and education.
And I'm wondering, you know, particularly on those fronts, has it lived up to that kind of promise you saw back back then?
Yeah, there's sort of the overall concept of software rates a world.
But then there was a specific framework that I proposed in the piece, which is sort of a weak form, a semi-strong form and a strong form of this hypothesis, right?
And so the weak form was every product that can, right?
every physical product will become a software product, right? And that's exactly your radio check.
Example, things go from being physical products to being apps. The second sort of semi-strong version of that was,
therefore, any company that makes a product that can be turned into software will itself,
therefore, have to become a software company, right? And in fact, I would think you could,
you could see this, for example, playing out right now in the car industry, right, where all the car
companies are spinning up software efforts, they're buying software companies, or spinning up
software R&D as fast as they possibly can because they see what's coming with autonomy and all these
other software advances. And then the strong and sort of audacious slash, ambitious,
slash arrogant, hubristic version of the thesis is in any industry as a result of this dynamic,
in the long run, the winning company in the industry will be the best software company,
right, which is a provocative statement, right, because in a lot of these industries,
and again, cars are a great example, you have incumbents who are really good at making
cars trying to become great software companies, and then you have great software companies
that have no idea how to build a car, right, who are going to start making cars, right? And then
you're going to have basically, right, this giant collision between companies coming from two
totally different backgrounds. And so I think that you're seeing lots of that first stage, that
week stage, lots of products transitioning. You're seeing lots of companies becoming software
companies. I think we're just entering, in a lot of industries, we're entering that third stage
where there's sort of this very interesting structural battle that's forming up.
The other thing I says, yeah, I think you exactly nailed it with health care and education, right,
which is there are these giant sectors of the economy in which not only is there no productivity
growth, like overall in both health care and education, there is no measured growth.
There is no measured results in the application of technology in those fields.
And in fact, probably it's negative productivity growth, right?
Like the typical university has been going backwards in productivity, right?
You just look at the charts.
The number of administrators that they hire, right, per student is just skyrocketing.
And that is literally negative technological productivity.
And so those industries are extremely enticing to Silicon Valley because they're so big.
They're gigantic, right?
Healthcare.
Healthcare is a sixth of the American economy.
Right. And left unchecked, it will become a fourth and then a third and then a half and then two thirds and the three quarters. Like it's just left on check. It's just going to keep growing. And so it's so much money. It's so big. It's so important. It's very enticing. And the incumbent structure of, there's many smart companies in that industry. But the incumbent structure of how the industry works is just is wired to go the wrong direction. And so there's this huge opportunity to insert into it, which obviously we're going after hard. But that's still like super early. Yeah. And education? Ben, do you have thoughts on that front? I mean, there's this.
Interesting point we're at where there seems to be a growing backlash to the presence of screens,
particularly in younger kids' school classrooms, that it hasn't lived up to the potential.
And maybe the kids already have too much software in their lives as it is.
So, you know, it's funny, or it's not funny.
It's sad that we've not applied technology that well.
And a lot of it has to do with the kind of structure of the kind of political regulatory structure of schools.
and we have a company, Udacity that's worked hard on this,
and their final conclusion was to kind of run outside of the school system,
but it's very powerful.
I'll tell you a quick story about that.
But, you know, obviously, very obviously,
if you could have, like, any teacher or the best teacher in the world,
teaching a math class, if students have to study and then be tested.
Like, when do you take a test outside a school, like, ever in life?
Like, what the hell skill is that?
Does this create, like, tremendous anxiety and, like, give people,
of complexes. But you ought to, with technology, you ought to be able to measure how people are
learning every step of the way, give them harder problems if they're going very fast or get them
help if they're going slow. And there's a lot of things that ought to be able to be done.
But then I think the more kind of pressing thing and the thing that Udacity really addresses is
the four-year education, general education, doesn't work that well in the modern economy
because people are switching careers very, very often every two, three years sometimes.
And, you know, like four years, and then you never go back to school for the rest of your life,
doesn't make any sense at all, because people need to get retrained jobs, get displaced.
And so what Udacity has come up with is this thing, the nano degree,
which is two months, three months you can learn to program an Android phone
or build a self-driving car or learn to do technical marketing.
And those degrees are connected right to the job market.
you can roll right in with a skill and a certificate that says you understand the material and you're
ready to work. And that is a great innovation and something that we're really excited about.
And just a quick story on that. So one of the huge problems we have in this country is prison
and the need for prison reform because we've got, you know, 75% recidivism rate where people
who go to jail and come out, go back to jail. And the reason they go back to jail is they
can't get jobs. And the reason they can't get jobs is because two things. One is we've outlawed
like college in prison. And then two, once they come out, their record follows them wherever they
go. So, you know, I've got a friend who came out of jail. And I said, go to Udacity. He goes to
Udacity and he's coming up on his technical marketing degree and he's already got job offers. And it's like,
that's what we need. Yeah. And I think it's almost as if school, particularly, you know, high school,
I have two kids in high school,
so I think about this a lot.
It's kind of trapped in this middle zone
that doesn't really work.
In a sense,
it's much more effective
to have those kind of nanoskills,
where you can actually kind of apply them.
Or the skills should be broader, right?
I mean, when you read through,
again, a book like The Hard Thing About Hard Things,
I just think about how there's so many skills in there
that no one ever thought to teach me in high school, right?
I mean, skills about decision-making,
skills about kind of emotional intelligence,
dealing with, you know, difficult decisions.
My kid, actually,
high school to its credit is doing a kind of design thinking class. And they're basically learning
how to brainstorm ideas, interview a customer, think about different possibilities, do mockups.
And it was like, this should be the default. This should not be an elective. This should be the
thing you learn. And then if you want to go off and do advanced chemistry or do advanced calculus,
that's fine. But those types of skills that are just everyone is going to have to know on some
level, but it's very rare to encounter them. Very dated curricula. There's no question.
I'm on the board of trustees at Columbia. And there are, you know, there are.
certainly people who are going to go to like an elite school and become a scholar, a PhD.
And I think the system works reasonably well for them, but for, you know, the kind of bulk of the
population who goes to college to get into the workforce, it's really difficult.
It's exactly as you say, it's kind of neither here nor there.
Let's talk a little bit then.
We're kind of segueing a little bit to the job and automation question anyway.
In general, I think we all agree that there has been this growing and now kind of reaching
crescendo backlash against big tech and the tech sector that the last year has particularly
brought to the fore. And I feel it very strongly going back because I live part of the time in
Bay Area and part of time in New York. When I'm back in New York, you know, nine out of ten kind
of opinion like pieces written in East Coast media are negative pieces. Is it only nine out of ten?
I mean, so I want to get into some of the specifics about why that is happening, how you guys feel
about it. But how much in general do you, and how much recently have you found, do you, do,
Do you find itself taking that seriously and how much do you feel that people just don't understand
what's going on here?
We might give two different answers.
Yeah.
So I would first say there's a huge difference between what gets written in opinion pieces
and the actual opinions of the public.
So if you look at approval ratings of tech, they're incredibly high.
Like they're the highest of any industry.
And like Amazon's approval raising, which is one of the biggest targets is like 80.
Whereas Congress is like 20 and the press is like 20.
And so like the guys at 20 are saying the guys,
at 80 need to be stopped because everybody hates them. So there is that dynamic and I think it's very
real. This is the concept of false consciousness, right? So literally the whole problem with the
communist revolution was the business weren't signed up for it. And so and the intellectual leaders
were like, well, but we got to take down the capitalist. The other thing is, I think there's
something else going on that this is a side effect of. And I think it's the rise in the last several
years, and in particular after the 2008 crisis, credit crisis crash, I actually think was the catalyst
for a lot of this. It's the rise of zero-sum thinking in both economics and in politics.
I say zero-sum as opposed to positive sum, right? Which is, this is sort of game theory, right?
Zero-sum game is, I win, you lose. And by the way, if I'm winning, it must mean that you're
losing because it's zero-sum. It's only a question of how we slice up the pie, right? Whereas
positive sum is, we can all win together. It's actually a great book called finite and infinite
and infinite games that actually goes through. If you go back historically, basically, economists,
and so forth thought the politics and economics were zero-sum, and there were huge battles over resources,
this was colonization, all these other horrible things that happened over years were fought
through mercantilism, trade wars, right? All these things were fought based on zero sum. And about,
you know, 300 years ago, Adam Smith and a whole bunch of other really smart thinkers figured out,
no, you can actually gain from trade. You can actually interact with more people and it's good for
everybody. And politics can be positive some. Just because I'm doing well might mean that you're
also going to do well. Because again, we're able to culturally trade. We're able to educate each other.
We're able to contribute to each other's thoughts. And we're all able to succeed. And so in the wake of
the credit crisis, I think zero-sum thinking kind of came snapping back. And it was
interesting is you see that on both the political left and on the right, right?
But the anti-attack, the Ludditesv tends to come out of the left.
And Marx actually was shot through with Luddism.
Like, that's one of the things he didn't understand was the positive sum nature of productivity,
growth, and time.
Anyway, so you get that on the left.
You also get it on the right, right?
And you get it on the right, you get it in the form of populism, right?
Which in the form of opposition to trade and opposition to immigration, right?
And so I just think as a culture, as an economy, as a country right now, if you think
that the formulation is zero sum, you will then do things that will cause it to get
worse. For example, on the right, you'll want trade barriers, right? And so you'll want to cut trade
under the theory that that will make your people better. In reality, cutting international trade makes
your people worse. You're dividing up a smaller pie. Yeah, you're shrinking the economy for everybody
for no reason other than that you're just mad at other people because you think it's their fault,
that you're not doing well. And so it's zero-sum thinking. And then on their left right now,
it's this anti-tech sentiment where like if those tech people are doing well, then somebody else must be,
you know, suffering, somebody else must be eating it. And it's just, it's the same sort of extremely
reductionist thinking. And of course, the risk is that is that sentiment builds that
leads to policies that actually impair the ability to be able to make progress, make progress
in the economy, make progress with productivity growth, make progress with job creation,
make progress with wage creation. And so there's a pretty big risk, but this is all going
to go pretty seriously sideways for the wrong reason. Right. Well, let's take the tech backlash
argument from a slightly more, maybe sympathetic level, which is critiques that have come from within the
tech sector that the original vision of the web that inspired so much of us, which was going to
to be this decentralized platform that was going to distribute the kind of power of self-publishing
and voice to far more people and it was going to kind of topple this big, top-heavy mass media
model. That's what inspired a lot of people to get involved in it in the first place.
At the end of that process, we've ended up with, you know, four or five companies that
in terms of their command over people's attention probably are the most powerful companies
that have ever been on this planet and also some of the greatest concentrations of wealth.
So inside the tech sector, people say re-decentralize the web,
and then we need to look at technologies that will enable us to have a more even distribution
in terms of the companies, in terms of people's attention and so on.
And blockchain is part of that.
There's some argument that people have been making along those lines.
How sympathetic are you to that side of the case,
which does align with some of the critiques that big tech is too big
that are coming from people outside the tech sector?
Yeah, so there's a technical argument for decentralization,
and then there's the kind of other thing that you're getting at,
which is should there be some policy answer to the big tech companies?
And I think that, you know, you have to be very careful there
and look at specifically what's going on.
Well, are they kind of harming, are they suppressing innovation?
So do people like us no longer want to fund anything
because, you know, Facebook or Amazon will wipe it out?
If you look at the numbers, there's probably more startups
than there have ever been.
And what we're seeing and what we're funding
is like super interesting.
And, you know, for the most part,
isn't existentially threatened all the time
by those companies.
Once you introduce policy,
the potential side effects are,
you know, really scary.
Chronism, corruption,
the people who have the best relationship,
get the best deal and these kinds of things.
And that has knock on effects
that are very difficult.
And, you know, if you compare it to the early
90s when Microsoft was super strong, that was really actually a far bigger suppression of innovation.
There was way less venture capital. There were far fewer companies being created. But like the
technology took care of it over time. And I think technology is changing at a faster rate now than it
was then. And there's blockchain and there's quantum computing. And there's many technologies
on the horizon that could rejigger the playing field, you know, without a policy intervention.
One other question about the blockchain possibilities. I've been really enjoying reading Chris
Stixon writing about this over the last year or two. And there is really an interesting new way
of incentivizing and compensating people, both inside a technical organization, associated with an
open protocol, early users of the service, where all of those people are participating in the
value that's created with it. And thinking back to the early stock option participation of noise,
I wonder whether this suggests maybe that there's a new model here that might be as
revolutionary as those kind of option plans were. So the good news is the tech industry has had two
models for making forward progress. One has been what you might call pure capitalism, which is
corporations, right, which is startups, C corporations, employees, stock options, all the things
who you can take companies public with that traditional structure. And then there's been this other
structure all the way over on the ideological spectrum, right, which is open source, right,
which is basically a tribe, right, of developers that are interested in having something happen
coming together, by the way, geographically distributed all over the world in a lot of cases, right?
and great examples. Linux and the web itself was an example of this and so forth.
Actually, the internet itself, TCIP was an example of this, right?
Or the new project at MIT was an example of this.
And technical people coming together and volunteering, right?
Literally with metaphors like barn raising, right?
It's just like come together and make sort of breathe life into these projects without a financial incentive
and generally without, you know, at least direct financial rewards.
So sort of is polar opposite of corporations you can get.
Blockchain is the first new third thing in, I don't know, probably 40 years.
free software open source is like 40 years old.
It's the first new structure in 40 years.
And it's an interesting one because it's a hybrid.
It's to your point, it has the decentralization of open source, right?
These are protocols.
These are things that run internet wide.
These are things that are not necessarily developed by a team of, you know,
100 people in a building in the Bay Area.
They have that kind of open source characteristic to them.
And they are decentralized.
Like their protocols are inherently decentralized.
But they've got capitalism wired in.
They've got money wired in, right?
In the protocol.
Right, right.
Into the protocol, right?
in a way where there is a direct reward and incentive for the people who actually create the thing.
There's a reward and incentive for the people who use the thing.
And then there was a reward incentive for the so-called miners,
the people who actually run all the computers all over the Internet that make these things work.
And it's just been so fascinating to watch because this is one of those kind of moments where people walk up to this idea.
And if they walk up to it from the right, they're like, what on earth is this decentralized hippie?
Like what on earth are you people doing?
If they walk up from the left, they're like, oh, my God, it's got money in it.
It must be evil.
right? It's sort of this weird. You've got to kind of wrap your head around it. And so what we see is like it is fundamentally a third model for innovation. And I will also say this, the thing that we see that I think maybe other people are missing, many of the smartest and mathematicians and economists and theorists and systems builders in the world and photographers in the world are obsessed with this. Like they're just magnetically drawn to it. Not because of the money or this or that or the hype or whatever, but because of the technical innovations that aren't underneath this that are making this possible and what can come out of this. And we just think like that.
That's the most positive sign you can possibly see.
We just have about five minutes left.
So I want to just cover a couple of other giant topics.
Artificial intelligence and the super intelligence debate.
Can we solve that in about two minutes?
Can you give me, is this a legitimate concern?
Is it appropriate to be worrying about the threat from superintelligence now?
Of the really scary things in technology, I would have that one pretty low on my list.
I mean, I think that one, like I think it's a little bit of a miss.
You know, intelligence is a funny word, right?
like what is intelligence?
And it's not one-dimensional.
And there are a lot of things that we have considered intelligence,
like doing hard math problems.
Computers are already more intelligent.
Like playing chess, computers are already more intelligent.
But there's a lot of dimensions of intelligence
that computers are nowhere on.
And AI, nobody is demonstrating anything in AI that says,
like, it's going to get comprehensively more intelligent.
And certainly nothing along the lines of free will yet.
So, yeah, maybe.
Maybe it'll happen, but of all the things, it's a very theoretical.
So I think it's a little overblown.
I do think also there's a motivation of technologists to, it's a very kind of, it makes you seem very intelligent when you can talk about the robots taking over the world.
So it's a great thing to talk about.
The thing that drives me with bananas is the freaking physicists.
And it's like, I'm a computer scientist.
I don't have like crazy conspiracy theories about black holes.
You know, I guess I could.
You know, like, in theory a black hole could open up here in this room to swallow us all.
like, I don't have crazy theories about dark matter.
Like, I'm not worried there's dark matter in the glass.
I'm not going to go around telling everybody it's going to eat it.
It's just like, I don't know why.
Yeah, it's hard to find an AI expert who goes, oh, yeah, this is a big problem.
Well, in fact, and the AI experts, of course, tend to be worried about the opposite,
which is they're like, oh, shit, expectations are getting set off.
Yeah, like, we're never going to build that.
We're never going to build the robot apocalypse.
I'm still trying to get the thing to play Mario Brothers, right?
I'm like, oh.
Okay, so last question.
I'd love to hear what you think looking forward to the next kind of,
of 20 years. What's the thing that you're most curious to see how it turns out, right?
Where you think maybe it's going to this way, but you really are just dying to fast forward
20 years and be like, ah, that's what happened with that? Like, what's the biggest kind of
question mark that you have over the next, say, two decades? So the thing that makes my brain melt
is this, now that we can program biology, so that kind of, or we're getting to the point where
we can program biology, you know, the first step is, you know, one kind of dimension of that is, you know,
disease, you know, in a much, much better way. You know, another aspect of it is creating better
humans. And I'm very fascinated to see how that comes out and what it ends up meaning and, you know,
whether it goes horribly wrong or incredibly right. What does that even mean better humans?
And how will, like, are humans even suited to, like, figure that out? So that, from a curiosity
standpoint, I would say that for me is probably it. Yeah, yeah. The thing I think a lot about is,
So through all of recorded history, and this is why I just think that a lot of the tech
credit systems are just misguided, through all of recorded history, most people have not been,
I would say, most people have not been plugged in to what we would consider to be modern systems,
right? So most people have not been literate. Most people have not been healthy. Most people have
not been fed well enough to be able to reach fully health maturity. Most people have not been
educated and still aren't, right, to the level that we consider modern. Most people don't have
access to economic opportunity that we would consider to be, you know, modern jobs.
Most people don't have access to what we consider it by high quality health care.
Most people don't have access to high quality housing, transportation.
You just go right down the list of all these things that we've been lucky enough in this country
to enjoy, you know, a large percentage of the population for a long time.
Most people in the world have not had access to those things.
And I know that the existing systems, existing education system, the existing
health care system, the existing transportation system has had, you know, 50, 100, 200,
200 or 500 years to get to the 7 billion people on the planet.
It's only gotten to a fraction of the people.
And now we finally have the way to get, right, to everybody.
We're at the point now,
three billion smartphones on its way to six, seven billion on the planet.
We're going to be able to connect everybody.
We're going to be able to get over time.
We're going to be able to get everybody all the things that I went through,
starting, by the way, with education, right,
as sort of a foundational one.
And so what is it going to mean for the planet
when everybody around the planet all of a sudden starts to,
I would say, become part of the systems that we know and understand.
And we literally have 10, 20 times a number of people around the planet
who are contributing in all these different areas.
And I just don't understand how people can be possibly,
pessimistic about the future knowing that that's the potential. And I think we're going to see that.
And I think our kids are going to see that. And I think that's very exciting.
That is. Okay. So we covered Knight Rider, Carl Marx, and universal education for the planet.
I think we've done our job. Thank you guys. That was great.
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
