The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - The "Most Influential" AI Companies

Episode Date: May 31, 2024

Explore the AI companies featured on Time’s 100 Most Influential Companies list. This video reviews the companies included, why they made the list, and what this reveals about mainstream perceptions... of AI. From AI safety pioneers like Anthropic to the groundbreaking advancements of NVIDIA, discover how AI is shaping the future. ** Join Superintelligent at https://besuper.ai/ -- Practical, useful, hands on AI education through tutorials and step-by-step how-tos. Use code podcast for 50% off your first month! ** ABOUT THE AI BREAKDOWN The AI Breakdown helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI.  Subscribe to The AI Breakdown newsletter: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/ Subscribe to The AI Breakdown on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AIDailyBrief Join the community: bit.ly/aibreakdown

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Today on the AI Daily Brief, a review of Time 100's list of most influential companies and where AI shows up. Before that in the headlines, Mistral releases a new code-focused model and a new non-commercial license. The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI. To join the conversation, follow the link to our Discord in the show notes. Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief Headlines edition, all the daily AI news you need in around five minutes. We kick off today with an interesting, announcement from Mistrel. Mistrel has announced their first dedicated code model called CodeStrol.
Starting point is 00:00:36 I don't know how much longer we can use this meme of the Strails and the name, but we're clearly not trying yet. Now, the first thing to note is that people are very impressed. Nick Dobos writes, first impression, 80 languages is crazy, finally someone included Swift, which a lot of open source models skip. Two, really effing fast, WTF. It's a 22B model and it's significantly faster than Mistral 7B. Are they using Groch to serve it?
Starting point is 00:00:59 Anurag, another developer said the speed difference is insane, doing a side-by-side video comparison of GPT4O to Mistral Still as part of the announcement, Mistral also introduced a new type of license. CEO Arthur Mench writes, with CodeStrel, our newest state-of-the-art code model, we are introducing the Mistral AI non-production license, MNPL. It allows developers to use our technology for non-commercial use and research. It ensures that every actor on the value chain builds successful businesses. What's important to remember here is that Mistrel gained a lot of its momentum by being the open source darling, and so anything that has a whiff of moving away from that is going to trigger a lot of strong emotions. Anianger writes, Mistral won't let you use
Starting point is 00:01:38 its code model for commercial purposes, i.e. the way almost everyone uses it, but they'll happily take your money anyway. Andrew Gao writes, Mistral's new 22B code generation model looks very promising, but unfortunately falls under a new license. No commercial use, only research and testing. Is Mistral heading towards the path of closed source? Then again, Hassan Hayat writes, Companies like Mistral don't owe you or anyone to open source anything. Open source is a gift. Mistral is a business and businesses need to make money. The reality, of course, is that Mistral is going to have to figure out where to draw these lines, and this isn't the first time we've seen them trying to navigate that.
Starting point is 00:02:10 Their deal with Microsoft involved them releasing their most state-of-the-art model exclusively through the Azure platform and for a fee. The best hope, of course, is that the company can find a sustaining business model with some of these releases so that it can continue to support broader open source releases as well. Next up, Perplexity is back in the news once again for a fundraise. The information reports that the company is in talks to raise now at a $3 billion valuation. That would be triple the valuation that it raised at earlier this year. Bessemer Venture Partners is apparently in talks to lead a $250 million investment. And if this comes through, it would be the fourth funding round since March of 2023. Now, all of this is, of course, interesting not just in the context of perplexity, but because of what it says about the cost of competing in the AI space. The information writes last year, Perplexity considered selling it. itself, citing concerns about the cost of training AI models and competing with giants like Google. No deal happened, however, in the latest funding round suggests that perplexity is continuing to go it alone. One interesting note to me is that if it does pull this deal off, it will happen after
Starting point is 00:03:08 Google has introduced AI overviews, which is effectively a perplexity-like interface for Google search. Now, of course, that product has not gotten off to the best start. Recently, for example, telling women that they should smoke two to three cigarettes per day of their pregnancy, that glue is a key ingredient for pizza, and that it's healthy to eat a couple rocks. a day. But still, one has to assume that Google's going to figure that out, and if this type of generative search is important to them, it's going to continue making that investment and using its huge lead to move forward. Then again, moving to a perplexity-style search would absolutely cannibalize Google's core search business model, so there are a lot of really interesting
Starting point is 00:03:42 competing pressures here. In any case, it seems like perplexity is going to have even more money to compete, and as someone who loves the product, I am glad of that fact. over an OpenAI land. A great reminder that even though this week we've been talking about all sorts of open AI controversy, at the end of the day, the company is getting more, not less powerful. It appears that this Apple OpenAI deal is in fact done, which is a huge, huge deal. A couple interesting notes from an information piece about this. One, that it is not necessarily a deal that is in front. For example, the information writes, the Apple deal could complicate Altman's relationship with OpenAI's most important business partner, Microsoft. Altman recently met
Starting point is 00:04:19 with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella to discuss Microsoft's concerns about how the Apple deal might affect the cloud software giant's own product ambitions, said one person who spoke to Altman and one person who spoke to Nadella. The two executives also discussed the servers Microsoft would need to handle Apple's use of OpenAI services. Now, in terms of exactly what the deal is, the report writes, it isn't clear how Apple plans to use OpenAI's technology, but the iPhone maker hasn't developed LLMs on par with those of OpenAI and Google. Apple has discussed potentially using OpenAIs tech and the Siri voice assistant to answer complex questions that Siri couldn't answer by itself. OpenAI has also discussed with Apple the possibility of powering a chatGBT like chatbot app.
Starting point is 00:04:54 Confirming a suspicion that many people had, they also write that, quote, OpenAI's recent public demonstration of its AI voice assistant was aimed in part to show Apple how its technology could be used to make Apple's Siri voice assistant more responsive and engaging, with the ability to quickly translate languages, search for useful information, or entertain users. Separally, the other thing that this piece gets into is how Sam Altman is trying to restructure OpenAI. According to the information, quote, Altman has discussed turning open AI into an entity that more closely resembles a typical company. One possibility is to turn the nonprofit into a for-profit corporation, although it's not clear whether Altman will eventually decide to go in that direction. Another option would be to emulate other AI developers such as Anthropic and XAI that were formed as for-profit benefit corporations,
Starting point is 00:05:35 which means they can prioritize having a positive impact on society over its obligation to shareholders. Benefit corporations are legally protected from minority shareholders who might sue the company for making decisions that don't necessarily prioritize shareholder. turns. Meanwhile, though, as all this happens, more and more OpenAI deals quietly get announced. The Atlantic, for example, announced a product and content partnership with OpenAI, which they say, quote, positions the Atlantic as a premium news source within OpenAI. This is the same type of thing we've talked about before, where, as I've mentioned, my contention is that OpenAI is turning its entire chat GPT experience into a search experience and is interested in these deals with premium publishers not for their training data, but so that it can feature
Starting point is 00:06:11 results in a new type of search interface. Publicly listed Southeast Asian firm Grab, which is a ride hailing and delivery app, has also made a big announcement around its partnership with OpenAI, and this sort of thing is just what we're seeing every single day. So, ultimately be wary of reading too much into all the controversy surrounding this company. It is still moving extremely fast and with extreme force. For now, though, that is going to do it for today's AI Daily Brief. Up next, the main episode. Hello, friends. Before we get back to the episode, I want to tell you about something special I'm doing on Super Intelligent this June. Super is, of course, our platform for AI learning, and I've heard from a lot of you that you really want something for a true
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Starting point is 00:07:21 See you there. Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief. Today we are discussing the AI entrance on Times 100 most influential companies list. The goal of this is absolutely not to reify this time list as somehow definitive or really in any way authoritative. Instead, what's interesting is the slant that it takes as an example. extremely mainstream consumer-facing publication when it comes to attitudes about AI. So what we're going to do is review the companies on the list in the order that they are presented, talk a little bit about why they're here, and what it might say about how the world that's
Starting point is 00:07:58 outside of the AI industry is looking in upon it. First off, we should note that Anthropic is one of the headliners. In fact, the company's CEO Dario is featured on one of the two commemorative covers of this alongside Selena Gomez. Here's what time says about how the list is made. To select the list, our editors request suggestions and applications from across sectors, survey our contributors and correspondence around the world, and seek advice from outside experts. No single data point or financial metric makes a Time 100 company.
Starting point is 00:08:24 Instead, we are looking at a mosaic of qualities, studying impact, innovation, ambition, and success, all in the many different forms that take shape today. Time 100 companies is more than an index of business success. It is an argument for what business influence looks like in 2024. At a time when leadership in other sectors is battered, surveys suggest that many look to corporate leaders first for direction. The point being here that even time itself is saying this is a highly subjective list and treated as such. They organize it into five sections, leaders, disruptors, innovators, titans, and pioneers. As you'll see, I think those sections are fairly meaningless, but what are you going to do?
Starting point is 00:08:56 The first company we're going to mention in this is actually not an AI first company, but is in fact Reddit. Why would Reddit qualify as something to talk about on this AI show? Well, of course, the context for time including them in this list is that the company went public this year, one of frankly very few companies to do so. Indeed, as time points out, they're the first major social media company to go public since 2019. In its write-up, Time pointed out that, quote, Reddit's continued forays into artificial intelligence, including licensing deals with OpenAI,
Starting point is 00:09:21 and Google to use Reddit data to train and build their AI systems, could be key in determining the platform's future. Now, I would go farther than this. When Reddit was doing its roadshow before the IPO, they were heavily touting these AI deals as an indicator of how much valued Reddit's data had. They were presented as something that could sustain the company and grow the company in the future outside of,
Starting point is 00:09:40 of advertising. The market seems largely to have bought that message with a better than expected pop and continued performance as more deals have been announced. So even though Reddit isn't an AI company, the fact that it's showing how AI can help business models is, I think, something significant. From there, we move from the leaders section to the disruptor section, and an AI-related entrant there is CoreWeave. Time writes, amid the chip shortage, Corweaves' horde of high-powered graphics processing units made it one of the largest GPU specialized cloud service providers, said co-founder and CEO, Mike and Trader, if you're using AI in any part of your life,
Starting point is 00:10:12 whether it's Chad GPT or Microsoft co-pilot, there's a good chance you're using CoreWeaves' AI infrastructure. CoreWeave's flexible infrastructure is built to be more efficient for AI purposes, giving it a leg up on larger companies outfitted for general computing. The company also recently did a funding round at a $19 billion valuation, and is also poised to potentially go public this year. As you'll see, many of the companies on this list that Touch AI are touching it through the chip space. Over in innovators, we start to get a higher concentration of AI-related companies.
Starting point is 00:10:38 companies. Being a cover story, Anthropic has a much bigger piece than some of the others. Time called Anthropic the, quote, AI company betting that safety can be a winning strategy. In many ways, the piece sets up Anthropic as the alternative of OpenAI. They talk about how in the summer of 2022, the company had finished training a new chatbot, but because they were worried about the potential consequences didn't decide to release it, whereas, of course, their rival, OpenAI did a few months later in chat GPT, which set off everything that we've seen subsequently. Time writes how both Open AIs and Anthropic CEOs have made war. warnings about the risks of AI, but that many felt that Anthropic had greater credibility,
Starting point is 00:11:12 quote, viewing Anthropics' decision to withhold Clawed as a signal of its commitment to prioritizing safety over money and a claim. Time writes, Anthropic is in the curious position of having a reputation as the most cautious AI company while also owning and selling access to one of today's most advanced versions of the technology. Three days spent at their headquarters made it clear they don't see that as a contradiction. Anthropic frames what they're trying to do as spark a, quote, race to the top when it comes to AI safety, said CEO Dario Amade, we're not trying to say where the good and the others are the bad guys. We're trying to pull the ecosystem in a direction where everyone
Starting point is 00:11:41 can be the good guy. Now, let's actually jump around to OpenAI's entrance on this list. They are there, but they're listed under pioneers. Basically, the whole write-up felt like it was written by someone who didn't really like Open AI and who wanted to use this to critique them, but felt that it would hit their credibility as a list if they didn't include Open AI. The lion's share of the couple hundred-word write-up is about recent Open-AI controversies, including the dust-up with Scarlett Johansson, as well as the leaders of the of the super alignment team leaving. So if you are wondering where time sympathies lie as it relates to questions of AI safety and specifically Anthropic versus OpenAI, I think this piece makes it pretty
Starting point is 00:12:18 clear. Of course, as you would expect, Nvidia is here. With time writing, the AI boom has had many winners, but Nvidia is the winningest. The company's value has surged by more than 450% since the AI race kicked off in late 2022. Also on the list is AMD, which they characterize as the chipmaker Challenger. And basically it frames them as the big competitor to Nvidia, but certainly not the only one. While they are, of course, doing something slightly different in the chip space, they also call out Cerebrus systems, writing, as AI systems proliferate, the demand for computing power to crunch large datasets has become monstrous. Cerebrus, founded in 2015, has responded with the largest computer chip ever. Said CEO Andrew Feldman, we didn't repurpose a graphics processing device.
Starting point is 00:12:58 We said, what would we do if this was the only problem, the full purpose of our existence? Time writes, while planning an IPO, the company is building the third of nine $100 million supercomputers that will be connected by Emeraldi AI firm G42 to build the world's largest supercomputer for AI training. Now, Google and Microsoft are also on this list largely for the way that they're interacting with AI, but the last company that I wanted to specifically reference was Mistral. Mistral is framed by time as influential in two specific ways. First, as the standard bearer of European AI, but also as the standard bearer of open source AI. They write,
Starting point is 00:13:30 Mistral's co-founder and CEO Arthur Mensch has been vocal in debates over the EU's landmark AI law, arguing that rather than regulating general-purpose AI models like Mistrels, lawmakers should focus on regulating how others use those models. He also opposes limitations on AI developers freely sharing their creations. He says, I don't see any risk associated with open-sourcing models. I only see benefits. So taking a step back, what's interesting about all of this is certainly the fact, A, that all of these different companies make this top 100 list,
Starting point is 00:13:56 but also B, just how diverse the reasons for that are. Even this mainstream publication in the form of time is seeing how many dimensions to this AI industry there really are, from chips to open source to the big frontier labs. I think this reflects a growing understanding of the importance of AI in the shape of the future of the economy and societies writ large, and I'm interested to see how this changes between now and the Time 100 Most Influential Companies 2025. For now, though, that is going to do it for today's AI Daily Brief. Until next time, peace.

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