The a16z Show - Scaling Shopify: Tobias Lütke and Ben Horowitz on Building a Global Giant
Episode Date: December 16, 2024In this episode of Web3 with a16z, Shopify CEO and cofounder Tobias Lütke joins a16z cofounder Ben Horowitz for a conversation recorded live at the a16z crypto Founders Summit.Together, they explore ...what it takes to build a breakout startup in a competitive market, the changing landscape of retail, and how to drive workplace change while navigating corporate culture and calls for activism.Tobias shares the story behind Shopify's growth from a snowboarding store to a global ecommerce platform serving millions of merchants, discusses the moral imperative of creating great software, and offers insights on leadership, innovation, and embracing negativity as a tool for progress.The episode also touches on the intersection of AI and crypto, the power of decentralization, and the next wave of technologies reshaping business and commerce. Resources:Find Ben on X: https://x.com/bhorowitzFind Toni on X: https://x.com/tobi Stay Updated: Let us know what you think: https://ratethispodcast.com/a16zFind a16z on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://twitter.com/stephsmithioPlease 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. 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.
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When Shopify was founded in 2006, it was just a year prior to the launch of iPhone.
Needless to say, smartphones were a far cry from the ubiquitous accessory that now billions carry around.
And fast forward to today, nearly 20 years later, where Shopify merchants can accept cryptocurrency,
create immersive shopping experiences with augmented reality, and even use AI to generate product descriptions.
So how does a nearly $100 billion company stay ahead of these trends?
and what will shopping look like in the generations to come.
Plus, why would A16Z never have invested in Shopify in its early day
and why has the CEO of this company chosen to continue writing code?
These are just some of the questions covered in today's episode,
a conversation with Shopify co-founder and CEO Tobias Lukki
and A16Z co-founder Ben Horowitz.
This episode was also originally published on our sister podcast, Web3 with A16Z.
So if you are excited about the next generation,
of the internet, find Web3 with A16Z wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, let's get started.
Welcome to Web3 with A16Z, a show about building the next generation of the internet
from the team at A16Z Crypto.
Today's episode features Tobias Lutka, CEO and co-founder of the e-commerce platform Shopify,
speaking with A16Z co-founder, Ben Horowitz, at our second annual founder summit in November.
They discuss what it takes to build a breakout startup.
up in a crowded category, the changing face of retail, how to affect change in the workplace,
and how to handle individual emotions and corporate culture, including dealing with calls for
activism, as well as the value of embracing negativity. They also touch on the moral imperative
behind creating quality software, the symbiosis between AI and crypto, and more. As a reminder,
none of the following should be taken as business, legal, tax, or investment advice. Please see A6
15Z.com slash disclosures for more important information, including a link to a list of our investments.
Right. So for those of you who don't know Toby, which you probably should know Toby, you can look him up as well.
But he started a snowboarding company in 2004 called Snow Devil. And he prolaid that into Shopify,
which now serves millions of merchants in 175 countries around the world.
How many countries are there, like, in total?
I think that's most of them.
There's 200.
It changes around the margins.
So you'll get them all at some point.
And then he was also interesting for this crowd.
He was one of the first adopters of Coinbase Commerce.
So Toby's been kind of big on crypto for a while now.
But let's get started.
So you started as a snowboarding company
And I always find that funny because of all the CEOs that I know,
you're probably the least snowboard kickback, like, let's hit the powder dude.
So how did that happen?
Like, why did you start out that way?
Yeah.
You know, when you talk to governments, they are always, you know, Shopify is doing a lot about entrepreneurship,
which I love entrepreneurship.
and it's such a brilliant institution.
I know everyone here is a card-carrying member of entrepreneurship,
this good club.
But politicians usually, they're sort of vague on it,
but they want to pass government programs and policies
to cause more entrepreneurship,
which I always think is exactly the wrong way around.
Yep.
There's actually, so the funny story is that,
so I was in Canada at this point.
I came from Germany,
living in Canada, 2004, 3,4.
And I found out I cannot actually get a job.
I was trying to be hired as a computer programmer locally.
But I found out I did not have a work permit.
I didn't know what a work permit was.
So it turns out that you are in Canada allowed to start a company
even without a work permit.
So there's one government program that actually has led to what companies being created.
Well, that's like the best government program ever.
Just like the payoff on Shopify paid for itself.
a million times.
And it turns out Canada's very cold,
so I was doing snowboarding,
so I knew something about it,
and I started an online store for snowboarding.
It's kind of a pretty simple story like this.
That's amazing.
So basically,
the key to your whole career was not being able to work.
Yes.
In fact, you know,
what was in my mind, too,
is like I was like this illusion with programming in this time.
It was like sort of a Java world
kind of was kind of very oppressive.
And I wanted,
to reclaim it as a hobby.
So I was like, cool, if I sell snowboards online,
I can make money while snowboarding,
and I get to do more fun stuff.
And it's been extremely unsuccessful as a strategy.
I basically never had time to snowboard again after I started.
The end of your stubboarding career was the start of your
subboarding business.
That's pretty remarkable.
Maybe I would project more late back at this point of things would have gone in a
counterfactual way.
Yeah.
Now, the other thing that really strikes me about Shopify is that,
you know, and I hate to say this as a venture capitalist
who some people think is a smart person,
but we probably would have never invested in Shopify
when you started it because it was probably the most
over-competed category in the world.
Like everybody had some kind of e-commerce platform.
I mean, there was just so, so many of them,
Magento, this hat, the other.
So did you...
Did you go, oh, no, no, no, like, I'm going to build this thing.
It's going to dominate everything.
Then I'm going to have a network effect.
And I'm going to build, you know, like one of the biggest things that anybody's ever seen.
Like, how did you, like, get all the way to where you are?
Like, what was that path?
Yeah.
No, there's no plan like this.
Just like, I think for every entrepreneur is a useful thing to think about what is your energy source.
right, like what is actually driving you?
Sometimes it's greed, envy, you know,
like the negative emotions channeled into building
actually the most powerful energy sources.
I had this, you're right, like, I mean, Netscape IPO
that you have to explain every platform
in terms of an old platform.
And, you know, online hosted CS catalog with buy buttons
was like kind of a way you and Mark
described even what the internet would be used for.
So e-commerce was like right there from the beginning.
I thought there would be lots of software that I could use.
And I didn't find anything.
I was actually really upset with quality of the software.
And so like I channeled that into building something.
And that was my energy source.
And I just love the building.
That's actually, by the way, one of the best entrepreneurial ideas there is,
which is this stuff sucks so bad.
I'm so mad about having to use it that I'm going to build my own.
Totally.
Honestly, it fuels me to do this day.
I'm just, I still think it's ridiculous
what people are subjected to in terms of quality of software.
It's like, it's a weird,
I probably did some like neurological, like,
kind of rearrangement there,
but like to me,
this is almost a moral issue of,
like, when people are confused with software
and they think about themselves as, like, being inadequate,
it's like, how dare software make humans feel that way, right?
Like, it's just not okay.
So, you want to make it more approachable.
But, like, I think the thing that people might have missed
in e-commerce,
or, like, it's not that I have,
a great insight. I just sort of organically got there.
It's that, yes, there was a lot of e-commerce software,
but it was all built for already rich retailers who needed to move online.
Then that was a phrase people used.
And there was no one started software for starting the entrepreneurial process online.
Like actually, the digital native, what we call it now or so, like if you like that term.
Because there's a totally different set of requirements for people who are just starting out.
And so that's what we did.
So this is a thing, right?
Like, it's like, you, when you talk, that's like, I don't know, 60 words per minute or something.
And you type fast, it's like twice that.
But like if you can do customer consultation in your own brain, the brain runs at like terabytes per second.
But bandwidth, right?
So if you know the use case, if you're building for yourself or your past experience
or some kind of, if you have a really good model of your customers or use cases in your
mind, you can do customer development at high bandwidth, low latency, and you can just build
something that you know needs to exist. Yeah, no, that's incredible. So one of the things, you know,
you're also kind of been a kind of a special kind of, or a different kind of CEO than, you know,
some of the ones, you know, that people read about us such in Adela or Bob Eiger and that
you have a reputation for being extremely hands-on.
including writing code.
You still have the Fury that started the company.
How do you think about that in terms of,
you know, you're not kind of paying attention
to all parts of the company equally.
You're clearly doing certain things and not others.
How do you think about that as an effective kind of management style?
Yeah.
I mean, I imagine the people in my company would disagree
with your assessment web as an effective management.
So, well, it's worked pretty well.
It's working, but that's like,
it certainly doesn't proxy to what people sort of,
like it's not a CEO job out of central casting
that I'm trying to perform, right?
I tried that on and it didn't work for me at all.
I actually find, like, I value being in all the details
and I ask it from all the people around me
and report to me, like almost everyone,
especially after COVID,
I turned over like everyone but one of my executives
during those first 10 months of COVID.
And now almost everyone reports to me
is actually a ex-founder,
maybe someone would be acquired
or someone who started a company before coming to Shopify.
So because there's like this, like, I just want,
I find it actually really inefficient,
not understanding the details of what we're doing, right?
Because then...
Well, then you're guessing.
Then you're guessing.
And you're like, well, when something goes through,
wrong, now you not only need to fix it, you actually have the first cram for, you have to learn,
like three months before you can actually do a fix. If you understand what's going on or what
ought to be existing, it's much more, it's much faster. And you want to train people on
the company mission, right? Like, because there's a thing that you want to exist, like even if you
don't know exactly what it is. Like, you know which direction you want people to go, right? And getting
everyone aligned to go in this direction is only possible if you can paint
picture of like how does this area
actually sum together or a way to
helping the mission
over all. And so
and
this is sort of a unique thing
about our times right now. It's like the
infrastructure keeps changing. Like here's
crypto, here's AI, here's
I mean I started again almost
like next year, 20 years ago, right? So there was
no mobile phone, like
of the quality that we have now.
Right, that's right. You started
before the mobile phone now. Right. So it's like
That was one of the things that just sort of happened.
And, you know, SaaS software even was new at this time.
So, you know, the platforms' capabilities change,
and you want to adopt them to, like, your mission to what is now possible.
And so you have to be able to understand, well,
but in a counter, like, ideally in your head, in the world where,
I take a very long-term view,
and my biggest fear that I have is that Shopify winds up being a,
fantastic solution to a problem that people no longer have.
Right.
Or no longer solve this way.
So I'm trying to need to keep it current.
And being able to run the counterfactual about this is not possible.
This is what we are trying to accomplish.
But if this would have been possible from the beginning,
we would have built this entirely different thing.
So now our job is to get from here to there.
Because, again, we want to keep a current an idea.
Right.
You know, that's such a great insight because they think that, you know,
when I work with CEOs and you think about the job,
so much of the job is making high-quality decisions
and setting the direction of the company,
and in some respects, neither feels like work.
You know, because you're working on something else,
like how does AI work, what's possible,
in order to make decisions and set the direction.
But what you're doing seems actually removed
from anything that the company needs to do right now.
And I think so many people kind of neglect that kind of thing
for that reason.
The other thing that I always find is at any given point in time,
some things in the company are very important and very high leverage,
and some things are just not important for you to put your time into.
And people often get lost in that.
They think, oh, I've got to talk to this person,
and then that person, and then the other person and so forth.
And it's like, no, no, you don't.
You've got to make good decisions.
You have to set the direction.
And if you don't do that, nobody's doing that,
and then the company's going to fail.
So that's such an amazing way that you've gone about that.
If you're in a small team, like for a new thing that your company needs to do,
and you're in a small team of people who are like, you know, like know or like figure out the shape of it early,
if it's actually as important, it will itself have a gravity to change the way your company thinks about quality of software shipping,
the way the architect things.
And it's also after this comes up as a new thing, you then have the ability to,
a type of legitimacy,
as a founder,
you have a huge amount of legitimacy
in a company already.
But if you also are there
with a new project
that's important,
that needs to be a resource,
and say,
this is what we'll do.
You don't have to have
always conversations.
People love clarity of,
like, this is what we do.
Like, it has a gravity all to itself
that's unlike anything
you can accomplish
by one-on-one consultation,
trying to talk everyone
through the entire decision matrix.
And so...
Yeah.
It's like, what is Toby doing over there?
Oh, that must be important.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
We are doing like in Trump as Cycic now.
And like, then I don't have to figure out.
Like, yes, there's like 15 teams that are already doing AI stuff.
And they ought to be in some kind of constellation.
But now this AI assistant thing is going to run through.
And the company, everyone wants to be a part of it.
And there's just like all these problems kind of disappear.
It's like it's maybe not the most effective.
It's like a magic trick.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, actually, I think I'm by way.
like everyone here has clearly read your books
and if you haven't done do that
like I think
the best books on leadership honestly
thank you so much for sharing all this
I think in some
somewhere that you described that there's only very few things
ways to do change management one way of doing it
is something super super surprising
and then explain everyone why you did it
it's the fastest way to get a large company
in a shop there's about 10,000 people
much, much, much, much faster way
to do change management than hand-to-hand combat.
It's like shock therapy.
It's like, what the what's that?
Oh, well, this was that, that was.
Oh, okay, got it.
Very, very, very high retention on that.
So let's talk about, you know,
one of the things that has come up, you know,
a lot over the years that you had probably,
you know, maybe the best statement on, I thought,
is politics, activism,
how that's kind of come into companies,
has taken over a lot of the activity of companies.
And how do you, I guess, how do you think about that?
And then why did you say what you said?
And then how is that going?
And then how are you able to sustain it, particularly as things get even hotter now
with what's going on in the Middle East and so forth?
It's gotten even more intense than it was, you know, amazingly in 2020.
That's a complex topic.
I mean, there's a lot of conflicting ideas about what people want companies to be.
And, you know, I think especially 2010 and maybe now again,
a lot of people would like companies to play the role of some kind of phantom limb
of what I think the whole left over by the stories that people are surrounded with,
like maybe with governments or like and so on.
Suddenly people want, like I have gotten tons and tons of petitions
for Shopify to take stances on issues
and I think everyone's feeling the same thing.
This was weird to me, but initially,
but I found myself generally agreeing
with what people identify as the problems
than this happens.
But I found myself,
they really, if ever,
really agreeing with the proposed solutions
to those problems.
And I think it's kind of important to say,
hey, unless we are all aligned on this,
we're probably not doing this.
Because, you know,
at the end of the day,
companies ought to be thought of as a bit of a simpler thing.
It's, you know, real love entrepreneurship.
Entrepreneurship is, you know, liberal values kind of institution of, you know,
you're like reaching for independence, reaching for like to better yourself,
like building something, like enlightened, the ideas of enlightened self-interest.
There is a bit of a political coding in this, people at least think so.
And someone else might take a total different opinion about all these kind of things.
So that's cool.
The cool thing is companies themselves explorations into a set of ideas.
deals, sometimes encode animation, sometimes by the founders.
And if we make every company the same, then we lose that.
That's actually a weird form of diversity itself, if you think about it.
So anyway, I went ahead and just like said, look, we cause more entrepreneurship to exist.
And sometimes there are social causes that are aligned with us.
And then maybe we become active because of our mission.
But outside of that, you know, everyone makes money.
and you can do whatever you want in your after hours,
and that's just a simpler way of thinking about the business.
Of course, that's not universally loved,
but after being very clear about it and explaining it,
and explain, you know, we give everyone when we hire people a letter of,
like, here are the reason, like, before you sign,
here's the reason why you might not want to work for Shopify,
because here's a set of ideas I disagree with.
And again, that's a very important.
clarity is wonderful. We keep everything
so nebless. I think
the world of marketing
and PR has just done a number
on us all to be so
non-committal to everything.
And the problem is if you're non-committal,
you leave a lot of vacuum.
And that vacuum is going
to be filled by someone. And it's
usually the people who are like we want
to fill it with bad faith takes
fulfilled. So if you're just clear
about it, it works.
Sometimes
like this is something I might get into hot water
but sometimes it's actually good to heighten the misalignment
for the kind of people that you don't think should be working in the company.
Like, hey, we work hard and it's kind of an...
Yeah, we have poor work-life balance.
Yeah, yeah.
Sorry.
That's a good...
You are free to work elsewhere.
If it's true, put it up, like light it up on a sign
because otherwise you're going to end up
with the weirdest divisiveness in the company
because of basically false advertising.
So I think it's better to just be clear.
So, I mean, what is it like?
There's a lot goes into this.
Like, again, culture is unstable.
We know from the Internet that every community that anyone likes Reddit,
like, I have a hecker news, if anyone actually likes this page.
You know, like, it's a product of unbelievably dedicated moderators
were keeping this
the discourse well.
I think that's an idea
that I think companies
have started adopting too.
Once you're a couple thousand people,
your Slack channel is the internet, basically,
and you need to apply similar rules.
You need to be able to take people to a sign saying,
hey, here's the thing you're causing.
When you're sending a message to a channel,
there's 3,000 people in it.
That is basically the same as you spending a day typing
individual text message
to any person in the channel.
And would you do that?
If no, probably don't put it in the channel.
this kind of stuff.
Yeah.
You know, it's such a great insight that you had that,
hey, actually, I kind of agree with the intentions that people have on most of this,
just not with the ideas on how to achieve those attentions,
because that's where politics gets really dangerous in a company.
And I have a funny story about this.
So my great-uncle, Harold, my grandmother, didn't speak for 20 years, brother and sister.
And I asked my father a few years ago, I said, like, what happened there?
Why didn't they speak?
he's like, oh, well, because your great-uncle Harold was a Trotskyist.
And I was like, well, what was grandma?
She was a Stalinist.
They're two slightly different kinds of communists.
And they didn't speak for 20 years.
And that's kind of what happens inside a company.
You know, it's not like you're a good person, you're a bad person.
This is a moral issue.
It's like, well, yeah, we all want way fewer people to get killed in this current conflict.
But how you achieve that, that gets very complicated, very fast.
and so if you let people attack each other, shut down conversations,
intimidate each other inside your company around that,
you know, it's just all bad.
Yeah, the fighting gets the fiercest when the stakes are the lowest.
Yeah.
You know, like when people almost agree
when they become mortal enemies.
Right.
It's a very funny effect.
I mean, you can...
Right, in a way, the closer they are, the...
Closer they are, the more...
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
It's not the way you would think.
I think at the end of the day,
but basically what you have to avoid is divisiveness.
See, we have a no-ass-who-in-a-compan.
Like most companies, I think,
or many companies choose.
I think it's actually a valid opinion to choose the opposite
and, like, say,
we are perfectly fine with brilliant jerks.
Like, that's actually a stable equilibrium you can choose as well.
But, like, you have to be all in on that.
And, you know, I think it's actually useful
to reframe,
like active divisiveness as like othering a part of the same company as a act of Nassau.
And I think that just, that actually kind of transcends a lot of these conversations because
it gets away from the issue.
It's never about the issue.
It's actually about the behavior by people around the issue.
That is the problem in the company, right?
So, so just say, make it, if you manage to make it a norm to say, this is just simply not
what happens on company funded.
internet servers such as slack.
Everything gets simpler.
Take that outside.
Outside the virtual building.
One last point.
One book that really helped me figuring out was Thomas Sowell's
conflict of visions, which is an underappreciated book.
It's a very, very good.
Even if you read the first three chapters,
suddenly you realize why everyone's actually kind of right
except comes from a different sort of philosophical prior.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No question.
Actually, so let's, you know, you were into crypto very, very early on, and why?
And then, you know, how do you think, you know, given kind of how things have unfolded,
how the technologies developed, how the kind of regulatory uncertainty has played,
like how are you thinking about it now kind of in the context of Shopify in the world?
Yeah, a couple of angles to that.
first of all,
I make a habit.
So growing up in a very small town
in Germany,
not being,
like I didn't know anyone
who was into computers
where I was,
like until late in my teens
and I moved away, basically.
I think I built some skills around
like outside observation.
Just sort of monitoring.
I tried to figure out everything
that's going on
in, you know,
the Silicon Valley,
then I figured out what that was.
But I downloaded the Linux kernel source code
and mailing lists back in most day use net,
so I could study it all.
So I'm like, it's weird because I'm clearly an insider now,
but I've sort of lived and built skills around outside observation.
So I make it a habit to like find the areas where there's the most passion
and most, yeah, highest stakes and the most talent
and people are just having a brainstorm about what the future is like.
I find that, this is, to me, like, watching television.
It's so great.
So, crypto is such a wellspring of brilliant insight into, like, just, like, you know, amazing
technologies and so on.
So because of that, I studied, I find, like, consumer Internet, like, mobile apps in
China around 2010, 2015.
So, times, like, there's these pockets.
So that was sort of my angle.
I did make a Ruby implementation.
in 2012 of a blockchain paper,
of Satoshi's paper.
So it's been on my mind,
and just because I also love decentralization of,
I mean, just like giving people power.
But entrepreneurship, Shopify,
is just like give people.
It's actually the true power to the people is decentralization.
Exactly.
And the false one is communism, by the way.
So there's a hundred of,
hundreds of ways that draw me into this,
which are my personal ones.
What I was hoping for is like something more practical,
because my favorite thing is if people that I think that I find super interesting
end up like coming sort of in the vicinity of commerce
at which point I get to play with like I can do it from workday
rather than in the evening.
So, you know, I love from technology perspective.
I love it from a sort of philosophical perspective.
You know, obviously at some point people like want to use it for clearing
like buying products and so on.
We've supported this in any way
we call it for as long as we could have.
The demand has been low
for using it for physical products
because there's
from a merchant's perspective,
there's some advantage of credit cards.
But it is crazy to me that at this point,
the internet just doesn't have native currency.
We will get there.
I think people in this room,
hopefully will play a leading role in this.
I, you know, again, from a personal philosophical perspective,
I, you know, I was on the Internet in the 90s
and of course used Netscape and it came along a mosaic actually before that.
It was just this incredible experience of like in the future,
like everyone will be able to contribute and this is going to distribute power
in a way that is like unanticipated and not understood.
Shopify itself is a little bit stuck in this sort of 90s view of the internet.
I know it's hosted software,
so it doesn't conform directly to everyone has their own server,
but you have your own website.
It's like something you can own.
Like you can own a domain, you can own the design of your system.
You can retrain the pens as important.
And then I think this is like, people have, like,
my one criticism to the previous sort of wave of crypto,
has been that this idea of decentralization is too technical.
Like, it's like, I know people in the community care,
but like no one else cares about that definition of, like,
what we need to figure out, like, crypto needs friends,
and the best angle to find friends is to find the fellow travelers
who are trying to move power to individuals again
so that people can just, like, are not relying on, like,
a central marketplace, for instance,
It's somewhere that just has its own gatekeeper of rules
or where the fees move to exactly what your margin is
and eradicate your ability to actually have a sustainable business.
And so that's really, really attracted to that.
Yeah, so it almost needs a campaign like kick the ass of the tech overlord.
It's like we're going to give the power.
We're going to give the technology back to the people.
We're going to take it from...
Well, yeah, the Internet.
And Google and meta and Amazon and etc.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think what started with everyone start your own web server,
everyone write your own HTML,
is actually alive and well if you just change the framing away
from the exact technical implementation.
Right.
And so that's a better, I think, more larger group.
You can build a movement around that.
You can't build a movement around.
It must be using the yakmei.js.
Right? It's like that's not how you start a movement.
Excellent point.
One last question, then we'll go to audience questions.
So you've been doing a lot of kind of experimentation now with AI.
And then interestingly, you know, kind of as with crypto,
there's this huge push to regulate AI.
You know, what do you think that means for kind of the industry and the world?
and it's a good idea, a bad idea.
I think regulating AI at this point is a bad idea.
I think regulation around crypto, I might not be quite so.
I think regulatory clarity is what you should want.
I don't think you can get that by having no regulation
because it's just a regulated field,
but it should be extremely permissive and for experimentation.
I think we found out some of the things that the financial system had,
are things that are deeply desirable
in crypto as well, one by another.
I'm sure there's, like, everyone can take a different position on this.
But, like, that's there.
In an AI case, man, like, I just, like,
you got a, like, you can regulate institutions
or, like, ground rules for markets.
But regulating technology is, like,
that seems like a crazy position to take.
Like, suddenly floating points are, like, illegal
after you do too many of them.
It is so weird.
You know, I had a conversation with the policymaker,
and I was like, so if this was nuclear, you want regulate nukes,
you'd regulate physics.
That's your idea.
Like, physics is now illegal.
Yeah.
It's actually, I guess you...
Throw away those textbooks immediately, please.
Yeah.
So, again, I think maybe even some of the things
that people have identified as potential problems in the future,
I guess we could agree with.
but like again, the proposed solutions to this are crazy
because we get into these insane places
where like, cool, maybe analog computing is actually better
for training neural nets.
So that is not floating point operations anymore.
It's like, we're doing that now because of regulations instead of
because of pragmatism or, you know, it just, I don't know.
It just seems too early.
And I think that it's a very, very bad idea right now
for any governments to,
set ceilings and rules
that are especially onerous for
startups. Because I think all
you're going to get out of that is just
you're going to get the
place where it's going to be all
behind four pay APIs that are going to be
all controlled by the very few.
I mean, that's
strictly better than it doesn't exist
granted, but like
clearly we need open source.
Look at everything that happened just now
after
you know, AI became available first
and then thanks to matter
and releasing the amazing llama models,
we know so much more about what neurons do.
We know so much more about how to accelerate this.
You need to rescue these things sometimes from the ivory towers
and you have to give them to the tinkerers
and the people who remember how to memory align things
and how to get the most out of a hardware.
That's a different crowd when people who are writing Python neural properties.
And it's, we need everyone on this.
And then we're going to get the best outcome
because it is foundational for a future.
Also, we need to figure out how to make crypto closer line with AI
because it's a natural way for how to pay for micro payments and tokens and so on.
And this is really, really important now.
Well, and solve so many.
I mean, it's interesting, crypto solves so many AI problems
and AI solve so many crypto problems.
Yeah, they're natural.
These should be symbiotic.
just the signways of excitement of these two areas
just happen to be a dissonant right now
and we need to make them harmonious.
Partly because of the bad, big companies.
Sorry.
Well, that's great.
So we are ready to take questions.
Any questions you may have?
Yes, sir, back there.
If crypto plays out in exactly the page
or decides about, what could it look like to stop?
It's like, I think, very naturally,
the browser will just be able to move value around
and you will want your value in a way
that can be addressed by the browser.
You can get pretty close to that,
but you would have to squint and you have to deal
with poor U.S and you have to deal with hard on ramps.
I don't think anything kind of magical happens
other than that people will need more utilitarian ability
to use money.
Again, I think if you run the counterfactual
and say open AI just for whatever reason
couldn't work for Stripe and just decided to, I don't know,
like use some level two blockchain and to pay for tokens
as an initial MVP.
People would now move incredible amounts of money around
and build startups that might have these kind of ideas
that Sam talked about on stage about people, you know,
sharing value of creating GPs and like all of the, you know,
the blockchain, like if you look at the Open AIA-DF days,
especially the last 20 minutes
and you open at the same time
via code to an Ethereum contract
you can basically write it out
while he's talking
it's like so the behalf is
incredible infrastructure but we can't use it
because of fees, partly because of speeds
because like you gotta solve
the infrastructure problems which I know we are doing
like this is people are building through this particular winter
in a way that is like seems utterly ideal
from my perspective.
So that's great.
we need to bring killer use cases
we need to have people want to use this
unfortunately there is like
the focus on these kind of things
especially once you need culture and social things
is annoyingly not linear
and that really trips everyone up
it's like it's nothing nothing nothing nothing everything
and we have to get
we have to like toil in
obscurity to build up the infrastructure until it can support the kind of way that people want to use it,
and then we need to catch lightning in a bottle.
Yes.
Thanks, Debbie.
I had a question.
So Shopify works with a lot of merchants and brands that might not be as tech savvy or might not understand everything that's going on in like AI or crypto.
How does Shopify think about messaging to those merchants and saying, hey, this is the future.
these are things that you should be using.
Yeah, I think people actually hire us, quote,
for helping them be ideal for whatever the internet is
and for whatever, however their buyers.
Like, they want to continue buying.
Like, again, we start before mobile phones,
and so, like, just making sure that everyone's stores available
on, like, just on mobile phones back in those days,
responsive, whatever, just helped tremendously
because their colleagues who didn't have that,
like just started doing poor and poor as money moving.
moved to the small form factors,
and they started out competing their peers in the industry.
So, like, this is a super old and probably dumb example.
But, like, what I'm saying is, like, the demand has to come up.
Like, the merchant's offering, like, you can't solve this problem
just simply by bringing the supply side up.
The demand side needs to go.
The bias should want to spend on the blockchain.
Now, that is...
Here's beauty.
you have 3% to work with here.
Like, the credit card fees are high, right?
Like, there's a lot of interesting incentive systems that you can do.
But what I found was the most amazing thing about sort of when I came back to crypto,
paid more attention, smart contracts if you're,
is that I actually think even the practitioners in the crypto space
are under appreciating this as a talent is there's never been a field of such applied,
widely distributed and high-quality
for applied game theory, right?
Like, it's the amount of the constructions
and the incentive systems
that are being built in this community
are, like, tremendous.
Like, you know, the artists
that have done really, really well for NFTs,
like such a good example.
This is the first, and now this is like,
like, man, this was the first business model
of the arts that we've gotten
since patronage times.
There's a huge breakthrough
and we'll make a comeback.
This thought, this quality
of thought has to be applied, I think, to all
sorts of other areas and in different
ways. And we can use
the infrastructure that's been built
to do something way better than
cashback credit cards, like
with those extra 3%.
Now, it needs to also meet the world
where it is. We require
some kind of escrow systems for
charge back. There is real distribution.
There needs to.
to be, like, not everything has to be trustless. We should bring trust brokers into the systems.
Like, it's called a wallet, which I think is a good name. But in my wallet, I don't think I've
cash in my wallet. It's all cards. It's like licenses. It's like driver license and so on, right?
Like it's attestations that I'm, who I say I am. And bringing in trust brokers into the
system through the primitives we have now and saying, yeah, that person is, um,
who they say they are.
Yes, that person can be shipped to.
Like, if you write this thing on a package destination, FedEx,
now is going to uncloke this into an actual destination address.
We have to build this with the industry,
and then at some point, like, we're going to just have a much better environment for commerce.
And much, like, it's not slightly better than using credit.
It can actually be 10 times better.
People move around more since COVID, right?
like how often have you gotten a package to some other address that you're no longer there?
Like it would be wonderful to make addresses pointers that can be updated in the background and so on,
so on, so on.
So like work with the actual infrastructure of the world and modernize it on these new systems.
And so that all that wants to accrue to people who want to take out one,
like who actually live in a real world and not just like behind some synonymous, you know, abstraction.
I think that's absolutely doable.
But man, do we have to get fees down?
It's never going to happen if we go back to $50 a transaction.
We've got time for one more question.
Yes, right in the front row, as I saw you first.
So Shopify has a really successful partner program
where engineers are building themes and plugins and apps.
Could you talk a bit more about some of the challenges starting that system up?
And then also as you see more and more people speak the language of NFTs and the EVM,
how that can evolve as we get more interoperability.
This is definitely, like, you're sort of hinting at how cool would it have been,
how to have these pieces of infrastructure primitives,
and we could have governed the entire partner system on a token economy, right?
Like, that's totally true.
It would have been, I think this is, I really hope someone is going to explore
how to build systems like the shop for ecosystem.
Because there's a lot of sharing and a lot of, like, sharing and a lot of,
multi-border transactions,
which we are all doing with ledgers in the background.
Putting it up,
putting up any two-sided marketplace is tricky.
Here, you have to overcome a chicken neck problems.
It's tricky, but if you manage to do it,
this is also really, really self-sustaining afterwards.
We have, you know, one of the greatest things.
It's like we have about five different customers
with merchants who start on Shopify
who are now IPOed and are public companies.
we now have one who is built an app
with their own private company Claibor.
So, public company Claibu is now
and they're successful, which is awesome.
Again, this is a wonderful thing of what you can do.
Companies are estimated to produce about six times more value
than they capture to the world,
like the enlightened self-interest in all this.
the constrained vision in so well's terms is real.
And there's so many ways to build,
like so many businesses lend themselves
to being turned into platforms later.
The problem is everyone tries to build a platform first,
and that's really, really, really, really hard.
It's much better to extract a platform
out of a working piece of software
people are already using.
And so that helped us.
People were already trading themes as zip files.
and they are like, okay, well, we can help with that.
And people are already building things for themselves on the APIs
for integrating their own EOP systems.
And then building this to the point where, you could list this EAP connector
and build it like our SDKs made it so that it can be in so many stores.
But before, we gave you a right, like we hinted people
and helped them into the right direction.
And all these kind of things ended up being incredibly valuable for the community.
and I mean, it's definitely one of the coolest aspects to build.
But again, it's what at the end of the day, what all of this is,
is you build really good software that solves real problems very, very quickly.
And then you build a bit of a game theoretical system on top,
in which people being selfish about wanting to build something
accrue a huge amount of value to the community,
to Shopify, to the merchants, and so on.
I mean, I feel like the most sophisticated thought along those lines on Shopify
is a fairly amateur sort of baby's first incentive system
compared to some of the things that were built on, you know, Ethereum and like the
blockchains in terms of sophistication, except everything in the world of crypto
was so pointed at financialization and finances,
that I think people might have missed what could be done
if you think more about products rather than financial products.
And I think that's hopefully going to be next wave,
crypto is going to be more products
and solving real problems with people.
I'm that amazing insight.
I would love to please join me and thanking Kobe.
Thank you.
