The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - Nvidia Surges Past Amazon's Market Cap and is Creeping on Google
Episode Date: February 12, 2024AI hype continues to drive results in the market. Also on this episode, Google is investing $25m into AI worker training in Europe. ABOUT THE AI BREAKDOWN The AI Breakdown helps you understand the mo...st important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to The AI Breakdown newsletter: https://theaibreakdown.beehiiv.com/subscribe Subscribe to The AI Breakdown on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheAIBreakdown Join the community: bit.ly/aibreakdown Learn more: http://breakdown.network/
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Today on the AI breakdown, Google pledges 25 million to retrain Europe on AI.
Before that on the brief, Invidia has surpassed Amazon as the fourth biggest company in the world.
The AI breakdown is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI.
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Welcome back to the AI breakdown brief.
All the AI headline news you need in around five minutes.
And yes, friends, a crazy new milestone in the AI insertion.
urgency, Nvidia has overtaken Amazon in terms of market value. Basically, during Monday, trading
Nvidia rose just around 3% to reach a new market cap of $1.83 trillion. That puts it ahead of
Amazon's $1.8 trillion, and just behind Alphabet, which is, of course, Google's $1.85 trillion.
The only other two companies that are ahead of Nvidia now are Microsoft at $3.11 trillion and Apple
at $2.9 trillion. You may notice that all of those companies have a fairly significant stake in the AI future.
Now, one interesting note is that this is less about Amazon doing anything poorly and more about
just the excitement around Nvidia. A Saxo Bank analyst said, Amazon was actually among the winners
in the current earning season as Amazon's outlook is improving. Invidia is just riding the first
investment wave of the current AI boom, with massive capital expenditures being deployed in data
centers. Now, of course, Nvidia had a monster 2023 as well, but a lot of its gains came in the
first half of the year when Chad Chipiti hype was at its peak. In the second half of the year,
Nvidia didn't rise as much, but now since the beginning of 2024,
Nvidia is up nearly 50%.
Of course, there has been a lot of semiconductor and AI chip stories in the news recently,
with the big story of last week being reports that Sam Altman was out trying to raise
somewhere between $5 and $7 trillion, in other words, around 8% of global GDP,
for a new network of AI chip fabrication plants.
Well, earlier today, Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia,
spoke at the World Government Summit in Dubai and said that he wasn't sure that it was going
to take $7 trillion to meet the world's compute needs. He said,
You can't assume that you will just buy more computers. You have to also assume that the
computers are going to become faster, and therefore the total amount that you need is not as much.
Payments.com goes on. He said he has confidence that the chip industry will lower the cost of
AI as its components are made faster and faster and faster. Now that said, it's not like he's
saying that Sam Altman is an order of magnitude off here. Quang also said, we're at the beginning
of this new era. There's about a trillion dollars worth of installed base of data centers.
Over the course of the next four or five years, we'll have two trillion worth of data centers
that will be powering software around the world.
Now, I think one of the big differences between Altman and Huang here, in addition to the fact
that Jensen is running a public company, and so all of his comments are going to be radically
more scrutinized by shareholders than Sam Altman's, who has the benefit of going after big
outlandish plans because, of course, he is running a private company.
But still, there's something revealing in this statement.
You have to also assume that the computers are going to become faster, and therefore the total
amount you need is not as much. My instinct, although I don't want to put words in his mouth,
is that the way that Altman would respond to that, is that as the computers become faster,
it won't mean that we can get the compute we demand right now for not as much. It will just
mean that we demand even more compute. This is basically the way that Altman sees everything,
that the unleashing of AI and ultimately AGI will create so much demand for everything,
energy, compute, and all of the things that those produce, that it will require, as he put it at
Davos breakthroughs and energy, that it demands this sort of wild international project to bring
online far more fabrication of AI chips. And optimistically, perhaps, it's also why he doesn't see
ultimately some big lack of jobs because of AI. His argument has basically been that the more
capacity humans have to create and make things, the more things we demand to be created. Ultimately,
that creates a whole new set of jobs to do all that creation, although of course, as I've pointed
out in the past, that doesn't necessarily account for what happens during the transition.
Now, the other comments from Jensen Huang that made news from that summit were a repeated call,
something he said before, that countries have to be investing in their own sovereign AI infrastructure.
He basically said that countries that allowed all artificial intelligence to come from outside
were going to not only miss out on significant economic potential, but also potentially
lose elements of their culture as AI becomes dominant.
He said simply, you cannot allow that to be done by other people.
It is really up to you to take initiative, activate your industry, build the infrastructure as fast as
you can. Now, he also used this appearance to tamp down on fears of AI. He said there are some
interest to scare people about this new technology, to mystify this technology, to encourage other
people to not do anything about that technology and rely on them to do it. And I think that's a mistake.
We're seeing a little bit more of a feisty pushback against some of the AI Dumerism out there.
Sam Altman made what appeared to not be a particularly veiled reference to Gary Marcus when he tweeted
over the weekend, you can grind to help secure our collective future or you can write
substacks about why we are going to fail. Now, if you've listened to this show, obviously you know
that both accelerationism and dumerism have a place in the conversation that we're facilitating here,
but I too understand the frustration around folks who make it their career to be the poop in the punch bowl.
At some point it gets hard to tell where someone's genuine concerns end and their financial
interest in being the loudest critic begins. Now, moving over to another very topical story.
Yesterday, of course, was the Super Bowl. The Super Bowl is the biggest advertising event of the
Indeed, it's the one time that Americans actually want to be advertised to.
This year, as we knew, AI was going to show up in a number of different Super Bowl commercials,
and that is exactly what happened.
Microsoft Copilot's Watch Me Ad, which we profiled last week,
played during the fourth quarter, which, for what it's worth, as someone who's bought
Super Bowl ad time before, means that they didn't make the decision to buy this spot until
relatively recently, at least compared to some of the other advertisers.
Still, as I said last week, I loved the tone of this particular commercial,
reintroducing AI to the world as something not to be scared of, but is something that is fundamentally
about empowering people and giving them superpowers. Another AI-related ad that just showed AI being used
was for Google's Pixel 8. It showed how someone with visual impairment could use Google's new
guided frame AI feature to tell them when and how many faces are in a frame. In addition to telling
the story of a particular AI product, it continued Google's trend as being the only company,
and I mean the only company to be able to pull off heartwarming consistently without veering into the realm of cringe.
In Etsy's big game ad, the American political establishment used Etsy's AI-powered gift mode feature
to figure out what to send France as a thank you for the Statue of Liberty, of course coming up with a cheeseboard.
And then there were a couple ads that were making fun of AI.
The sports drink body armor used tropes around AI producing extra fingers and weird images
to eventually get to the hook line. Nothing in sports should be artificial, before lauding the real
sweeteners and real flavors of the body armor drink. There is also a despicable me for ad that
showed the minions as behind famous AI glitches like too many fingers, but doing it for a laugh.
Now, Ad Week wrote, despite having its moment, 2024 is not the year of the AI Super Bowl, and despite
everything I just said, that's absolutely true. However, you have to remember that the frame of reference
for that is what was widely called the Crypto Bowl a couple of years ago, but whereas there was
a ton of attention paid to the crypto ads that year, AI's place in the Super Bowl ads,
time was much more cross-cutting. It wasn't just ads for AI features and AI tools, although there
were those for things like copilot, but instead it just showed how AI was starting to make its
way into the culture. I think in many ways that reflects how much more significant AI has become
in a very short period of time, at least when it comes to regular people's lives, than crypto
was even at the peak of its hype. Ultimately, if you were someone who is excited about the future
of AI, I think you have to see the Super Bowl as a good showing. Between a shift in the messaging from
someone like Microsoft, to really try to make it feel empowering to the individual, to just the
subtle poking fun of it that came out in a number of other ads, it all had the net effect
of normalizing it and making it feel less scary, perhaps, than it did coming into the game.
However, that is going to do it for today's AI breakdown brief. Next up, the main AI breakdown.
Welcome back to the AI breakdown. One of the things that we're starting to see happen quite
frequently is the companies that are most involved in artificial intelligence, the big AI labs,
are starting to share their commitments to helping retrain and re-skill the workers of the world for a
new AI future. The latest example of this story comes from Google, who has pledged 25 million
euros to help European workers learn how to use AI. There are a bunch of different ways that they're
going to come at this. First, apparently they have opened applications for nonprofits and social enterprises
that can help teach audiences, particularly who might not otherwise have easy access to that training.
In other words, there is an equity portion of this where they're trying not just to train folks at
the top of the economic period, but anyone who might be impacted by AI.
Reuters also reports that Google is going to run a series of what they call growth academies
that will help companies who are implementing AI scale their operations, and they're expanding
their free online AI training courses to now 18 languages.
Said Adrian Brown, the executive director of the Center for Public Impact, who is coordinating with Google
on these nonprofit and social enterprise applications, research shows that the benefits of AI could
exacerbate existing inequalities, especially in terms of economic security and employment.
This new program will help people across Europe develop their knowledge, skills, and confidence
around AI, ensuring that no one is left behind. Now, of course, part of the reason that companies
like Google are investing in this sort of local support is that they're also investing in local
infrastructure from a business standpoint. For example, last month, Google announced that it was
investing about a billion dollars to build a data center outside of London, meaning that
this is all part and parcel of a larger plan. You might remember that recently we heard from Microsoft
CEO Satya Nadella that the company was planning on helping train 2 million Gen Z workers in India with
tech skills as well. Now, this is obviously not just corporate philanthropy and it's obviously not just
PR. Having a more informed public, especially one that is familiar and has adapted to your
particular tool set is quite in the interest of these big companies. Now, big tech is a bellwether
for the AI space in a number of different ways right now. Obviously, on the one hand,
everyone is watching the products that they're actually putting out. There is an AI arms race between
these companies. Microsoft and Google, for example, both as we just discussed, had AI-related ads in the
Super Bowl last night. Google has Gemini, and they've just rolled out Gemini Advance, which is the
first GPT4 class model that isn't from OpenAI. And so one way in which the world is watching what
these tech companies are doing is just what the state of the art is when it comes to the technology itself.
However, another part is that they are a leading indicator, at least they appear to be,
of how different industries are going to adapt to the AI revolution.
And that includes the scary part of people losing their jobs.
The Financial Times published a piece this morning,
tech companies axed 34,000 jobs since start of year in Pivot to AI.
The data comes from layoffs.fyi and shows that a total of 138 tech companies have laid off staff
this year, including Microsoft, Snap, eBay, and PayPal.
Now, this continues a trend from 2023.
where 263,000 jobs were cut across the tech sector in that year.
The big question when it comes to these types of layoffs is what's driving it.
It is very easy to get scary-sounding headlines that say it's just because AI,
but there's also clearly other things going on as well.
First of all, there is a recalibration after pandemic-era growth.
During the pandemic, many companies thought there would be bigger fundamental changes
to the ways in which people lived and workers worked than have actually shown up.
There was also a glut of cheap money as interest rates crashed to zero and monetary and fiscal
support were hugely forthcoming, which led to an overall period of overinvestment and overhiring.
So one part of the shift over the last couple years is a recalibration to that post-pandemic
world that is different in terms of expectations and how much is actually shifted, but also
in terms of the financial reality of a new post-ZERP-era financial world.
What investors are valuing both private and public looks different than five years ago.
The growth at any cost technology era of startups, for example, is increasingly a thing of the past.
So, to some extent, part of these job losses can be traced back to that.
Now, a second part of this does have to do with AI, but not necessarily in a negative way.
What I mean by that is that many of these companies are shifting what they spend their time focusing on.
They're investing increasingly in generative AI as an area, and that means they need to bring in
different types of talent, different types of skills and different types of expertise.
In many cases, that's going to mean less focus on other previous things.
For example, as Spotify CEO Daniel X said earlier this month,
we need to become more efficient by deprioritizing some of the existing things,
but we also need to invest in some of the new.
Now, of course, deprioritization showing up at layoffs is very difficult for the people
who are affected, but it's not AI disruption in the sense that we normally talk about
of AI taking people's jobs,
is that the shift to AI is putting a premium on different types of skills
and making other things that people had previously been working on,
relatively less valuable to those companies.
There is, however, another part of this which is much more the big concern around AI,
which is people's jobs becoming redundant because of the application of AI.
This is happening, for example, at Meta and Google,
both of whom see a huge portion of their revenue come from advertising
and who are, in fact, increasingly seeing efficiency gains
by having AI do things that humans used to do,
particularly in these self-serve ad platforms that both of these companies offer advertisers,
AI can be used to things like help with copy and help with visuals that previously were someone's job.
And so in that way, AI really is impacting the nature of the jobs that are available,
and tech is sort of acting as a canary in the coal mine for where that might come to bear in other areas.
You see this showing up all over the media.
The Wall Street Journal, for example, wrote a piece this morning.
AI is starting to threaten white-collar jobs.
Few industries are immune.
The piece points out something that we have discussed extensively on this show.
quote, unlike previous waves of automation technology, generative AI doesn't just speed up
routine tasks or make predictions by recognizing data patterns.
It is the power to create content and synthesize ideas.
In essence, the kind of knowledge work millions of people now do behind computers.
That includes managerial roles, many of which might never come back, say corporate executives
and consultants.
Now, some people have tried to actually figure out how many of these job cuts are actually
directly related to AI.
One firm Challenger attributes more than 4,600 job cuts to AI, with the majority of
of those happening in media and tech. That said, they also think that the actual number is probably
higher, since companies aren't necessarily super keen on tying layoff announcements to AI adoption.
Now, at the same time, the use of generative AI by professionals is also going up. For example,
the share of employees who use generative AI at least once a week by industry has jumped up
massively between June 23 and November 23. In the technology field, it went from around 55% to 75%,
in financial services around 35% to around 60%,
in healthcare and life sciences from around 30% to over 50%,
so clearly a lot of bottom-up adoption happening.
Interestingly, people's self-assessment of AI
also tells the story of a technology
which could have a huge and dramatic impact.
Once again from WSJ, according to an Oliver Wyman study,
more than half of senior white-collar managers surveyed
said they thought their jobs could be automated by genitive AI,
compared with 43% of middle managers and 38% of first-line managers.
All of those numbers are extremely,
high, given that people are talking about their own jobs. Now, one of the things I think to watch for
this year is where some of these issues actually show up. So far, they've been largely theoretical,
but as these layoffs actually happen, they will start to give us a little bit of a picture of which
roles are being automated away versus which types of tasks are being automated away, and what the
consequences of those decisions are. Last week, I shared with you another study from Rutgers University,
which found that while three and ten workers in the U.S. are worried about their job being eliminated entirely
by AI? Seven and ten are very or somewhat concerned about employers using AI and human resource decisions.
In other words, AI deciding who gets hired, who gets fired, and who gets promoted. Al Jazeera wrote a piece
today that also shows how this is starting to come up more and more. It's called as corporate
America pivots to AI, consumers rejected for loans and jobs. Now, this isn't about human resource
decision making, but it is about AI-based systems without easy human recourse, making very critical
decisions for people's lives without the ability for them to go appeal those decisions.
My guess is that we're going to see a lot more of this type of story this year, as companies actually start to adopt AI and put it into these particular areas.
No matter what, this is going to be a key theme of 2024 and beyond, and so I will continue to share when interesting news about it comes up.
For now, though, that is going to do it for today's AI breakdown.
Until next time, peace.
