All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg
All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg

Anthropic's Generational Run, OpenAI Panics, AI Moats, Meta Loses Lawsuits

23h ago1:20:1114,875 words
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(0:00) Bestie intros!: Friedberg for Governor of California? (2:25) Anthropic's generational run (15:45) OpenAI: getting focused or panic mode? (36:56) AI valuation impacts, moats, and disruption (43:...

Transcript

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All right, everybody, welcome back to the number one podcast in the world, th...

the original. Oh, the cast is back. The cast is brothers and arms, brothers and arms. Here we go, good boys. We've got a big newsweek, David Sachs, it's back, and he's in the great state of Texas. How's it been, Sachs? Has Texas been free so far? It's been great. Although I just got back from DC, I got like three hours sleep last night, so if we had a lot of news this past week. Yeah, so we'll be talking about P-cast and you're really into that and you're role going forward

in the Trump administration. Big news that we'll be talking about today also relates to you. Oh, salt and of science, David, freeberg with your background from the iconic film for those not watching. Looks like the iconic film in the weeds. I wonder if that is something to do with the budget of California, which you've been outspoken about recently, Great Reds, which I read for you. Yeah, great. I read, we did it too. If only, if only, you could be allowed

the time and space to do those kinds of rants on this pod. Yeah, thank you very much, if you tap you, but what did I say to you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you, here he is. He's going again. He's going. There it is, Dr. Doom, Dr. Doom, your mayor,

you're a new governor. Would you consider it freeberg after a hollow running for a governor?

There is no after a hollow. Oh, please do it. Oh, please do it. Wow, that would be so great.

I'm tempted to buy a hollow for like five or six billion so he just could. It's a dirty game

hollow. It's California politics is dirty, man. I don't even know what it does. I'll just have somebody else deal with that. I should be about a hundred millionburg. No, no, no, we get him elected. He would do an incredible job. He would save the fourth largest economy in the world. They would be incredible. It'd be amazing. I would love the cursing apple resource axe, David Frueberg went to a rave in 1919 and stayed up until 10 a.m. We have witnesses.

Once he he got tilted at the poker game stole a bunch of pistachios and lactate and ran home. He did. ♪ To the fans and they just go ♪ ♪ We're easy on them ♪ ♪ We're gonna be West Highs ♪ ♪ We're gonna be the one ♪

♪ We're gonna be the one ♪ ♪ We're gonna be the one ♪ - And, Propk. On it, generational run.

And, opening eye, crashing out a bit, boys.

Let's chop it up here. Just looking at in Propk, pretty major heater this year. January, they launch cowork for business users. You know, with that, those cron jobs, you can connect to your Gmail, your notion, whatever it is.

And then, Opus 4.6, which consensus-wise, everybody thought, this is a major step function. Chancin, Michael Dell, everybody's called it out. Chancin actually called it back in November, an inflection point, and the first agente model.

And, Opus 4.6 has basically, Dell said, hit a threshold that we haven't seen before, in terms of real productivity and teams' February. They dropped a bunch of clog code plugins that caused the SAS populips, not the SAS populips, the SAS software

as a service. - Oh, the SAS populips, too. - Yeah, there was a little bit of that back in board as well. - I mean, as a SAS investor, it was a SAS populip. You were the tip of the spear there, we'll get into it.

- My exit comps were affected, that's all. - Yes. It seems like you may have a divested head exactly the right time.

All right, $6 billion in annual run rate

was added in February alone. Brad referenced a couple of weeks ago here on the pod. Earlier this week, they announced computer use, a new agente system for enterprise grade, kind of open-cloth functionality.

Now you can use the clawed app from your phone to control your desktop computer, really slick feature. Here's the calendar release over the past two months for the team at in Thropic Dario, come on the pod any time.

You've had a couple of flare-ups, and obviously the administration in the Department of War had their peripheral, but just, you know, looking at it objectively, what's your take on the surging anthropic generational run

as I've described it here? - Well, I've been a critic of anthropics products.

I've always been an admirer of their products.

I think last year, I gave them credit for MCP, I agree,

that they seem to be performing very well now. The company made a big bet on coding as the kind of big breakout use case. Whether that was done for business reasons or ideological reasons, I'm not sure.

At Thropic is sort of the most agi-pill to follow the frontier labs. And I think they made this bet on coding as their way to get to recurs itself improvement.

As it turns out, it was a very good business move as well,

because code is the gateway into enterprise and enterprise IT budgets. And so they're able to grow revenue pretty quickly as a result of getting into enterprise. Also, coding seems to be the basis

for these other product extensions. So like you said, they went from Cloud Code to Cloud Code work, the idea being that, well, if you can generate code, you can also generate PowerPoints or spreadsheets,

and you do that by generating the code and create that output.

So that was the first extension.

Now they are extending into agents. This computer use product is kind of like an open claw, knockoff. So it looks like the generational run for Macmini is just about over.

Look, I think they're firing at all cylinders. My issues with them in the past were related to what I have called the regulatory capital strategy. They do want a permissioning regime in Washington

for chips and models.

Meaning you have to go to Washington to get permission

to release new models or to sell GPUs anywhere in the world. I think that's excessively heavy handed. Their motives for doing that may be pure. It may not be regulatory capital.

It may be ideologically motivated regardless. I do think it is a form of regulatory capture because it plays into the hands of the big companies and creates modes that new entrants will not be able to overcome.

So I have, let's say, full soft cool objection to that part of it. But again, I'm not a detractor of their products, by any means. With respect to what happened between them and the Pentagon,

I'm not involved in that. I've stayed out of military procurement. In general, I don't get involved in what are called party matters. I just focus on policy matters,

which affect the whole space. I saw a meal Michael making this point a couple of weeks ago on our podcast that if you as a company don't want your Poxby used in war, don't sell to the Department of War.

It's in the name. But if you do decide to sell to the Department of War,

you should expect it to be used for all lawful uses.

So I think that was a very pragmatic observation. Again, I just have to underscore this again. I'm not involved in that dispute. It's a base of a lawsuit right now. And I don't want someone trying to draw lines

between dots that aren't there. Yeah. Any other large language model? Objectively, they've been treated the same as any other large language model,

even though they're not fans of the administration. They're not doughnutters to the administration.

They have specifically been critical of the administration

as a company. Perhaps cynically freeberg as a strategy to get. You know, it's one of the conspiracy theories here in Silicon Valley is Dario's taking the position of being anti this administration, anti-president Trump.

In order to get all the PhDs, you know, it's like three or four thousand of these highly sort of PhDs, and it's a way to have them, you know, vote with their presence to come work in anthropic. You're a thoughts on that, and then just generally

they're generally actually believes it. And I think they've actually created and fostered a culture of that since the beginning. And I think that they're representing it as a branding. Exercise at this point, but I don't think it's made up.

I think it's directly representation of the people that work there and what they believe. Yeah. And it's a strategic advantage, because probably of those 3,000 PhDs, 90% of them are left leaning,

and wouldn't want to work necessarily. I mean, like most things we see in the world today, and economics today, and markets today, and business today, everything seems to be politicized. And you have a left and a right version of everything.

You have a left and a right version of media. You have a left and a right version of what food to buy. You have a left and a right version of what AI tool to use. So, you know, this effectively may just be the natural manifestation in the AI market of what's going on elsewhere in society.

As we all kind of fracture and hustle over to our side. I trim off before I go to open AI, and their recent moves and he thoughts on anthropic and Dorio's positioning of the company.

Look, I think both are incredible businesses.

We're in the part of the cycle where we're trying to create drama where I don't think drama exists, because they're still fundamentally in very different go-to-market motions. Now, they may converge and compete over time,

but I think it's important to separate where each of them are good.

From an enterprise language, which is where I see most of the action, particularly through 80, 90. It's all anthropic all the time. And I agree with Sachs. My philosophical issues with the management aside

around their ideology, and sometimes how they use some of the capital for things other than tech and R&D, I have issues with those things. But in terms of the quality of that technical team and what they create,

it's hadn't showed there's of anything else. It allows us to build a vibrant business now. Do I have issues with how much it costs? Yes, do I have issues with how fast we're consuming tokens?

Also yes.

But I think those will get sorted out, and those are really tactical issues.

So the reason why I think we're all breathlessly

trying to pit open AI versus anthropic is because we want some drama.

But the reality is these are very different businesses,

and Nick found this tweet, which I thought was really interesting. And because even at the absolute highest level, these things are sort of presented in an apples to orange as way. And there's these very basic issues of rev-wreck that are fundamentally different.

And you may say, well, who cares about revenue recognition? Well, the people that are trying to write the headlines that say one is overtaking the other and this are that sort of missed the fact that they're in completely different businesses, which is guided how they even think about growth.

And so if you normalize these two businesses, what you would see is open AI is still the overwhelming revenue generator in this space. And that over time, anthropic is catching up. And so this is this little diagram that tries to explain this. Open AI is three quarters consumer subscriptions and a quarter API.

And anthropic is almost the exact opposite. Open AI is used by consumers overwhelmingly. Anthropic is used either directly or through things like GitHub and cursor. Open AI as a result has a very conservative way of recognizing revenue. Anthropics, they sort of recognize growth's tonnage as their revenue.

And so when you start to hear these things about like, oh, this thing is a 20 billion and open AI is at end billion. They're two totally different conversations.

And I think right now it's more about the press cycle of trying to create clicks

than it actually is about the underlying quality of each business. Both are incredible businesses as this demonstrates. And by the time it goes public, both of these two businesses will have a very clean and I suspect normalized way of telling the story so that you can actually compare. But what I would tell people right now is everybody is running with numbers to try to

create a narrative that I don't think makes sense or applies to either. Yeah. And there's been a lot of strategy change. Open AI. Some people are saying is crashing out in panic mode.

Obviously, they own the consumer with chat GPT. They are the verb, like, you know, taking an Uber or Googling something.

And people consumers always to say, hey, did you check chat GPT?

But obviously other large language models are catching up. Here's a little bit. We say something to that Jason, because like, you mentor tons of startups. Yeah. Sox has done it.

Free break is done it. I do it. What is the one thing we tell folks focus focus focus 100%. Do one maybe one and a half things, but do it incredibly incredibly well. And everything else, you start to bleed and smear.

What was that Brad Garling house term? Peanut butter. Peanut butter. Yeah. You smear the peanut butter too far out.

And so this is a good moment, by the way, if either of these two companies are in the smearing phase to recalibrate and reset because. Yeah. You just can't do everything. Speaking of smears, I couldn't help but notice that a meal Michael was smeared by an article was it in lever or something like that. A accusing him of having a conflict in the anthropic.

Did you guys see that? I didn't. Yes. I saw the article that said that he was an investor in perplexity. And therefore he's conflicted in his negotiation with anthropic.

That's what the article said pretty much.

Proplexity is LLM agnostic. That's a stupid claim. Right. Well, it's obviously heard by people who don't understand anything about AI really. Okay.

Proplexity is a wrapper. You're like you're saying it uses multiple AI models. And I don't think they sell to the Pentagon. They're not a competitor to anthropic. And moreover, as I understand it, a meals ownership of shares in that company was blessed by the office of government ethics.

Nonetheless, I think the timing of this is very suspicious. And it reminds me of what happened to me when I started opposing anthropic. And all of a sudden, there was that hit piece in the New York Times accusing me of having conflicts. And I'll just say that anthropic may pose as this company that's on the side of the angels. But they've hired a number of very seasoned brass knuckle political operatives in Washington.

And you know, members of the Biden administration, Laura Luma actually just had a piece today on one of them. I'm not going to rehash that.

But the bottom line is this is, I think, frankly, a political operation that's willing to get down in dirty.

And they're not always on the side of the angels. I think it'd be quite ruthless. Sacks remember I told you to get one bite and mention a month in 2026. So you just use that up. So I don't want any more Biden Biden.

He's retired. That was not a bad mention. No, with the truth is, these tips, whoever wrote this story, the actual best feature or amongst the best features of complexity, which is actually got a really great cowork competitor.

I've been playing with, I'm not a shareholder to be clear.

It's no book being pumped here.

The model council is like the greatest feature that they have and what is really brilliant about it is you ask it a question sacks. It will go to all three different major models. You can pick which ones including open source. Then it tells you where they differ. And it tries to figure out why they differ.

This is like one of the great features of the product.

I think perplexity is like, could be a really great company as well even without a language model.

But let's talk a little bit more about opening eye here. And they're market share because I think you're correct. But they are getting off their game. Here's what's going on. Quick look at the consumer market.

And obviously they started with 100% market share rate. They created the category in 2023. Dropped down to 85% market share 2024 75% market share 2025. But by how much has the market grown? Precisely.

So the market is still growing. So in terms of number of searches and queries, they're obviously growing tremendously. But they have major, major competitors. And the market share is going down. I had my team over at this week in AI do a more thoughtful analysis of where this is going.

And if you take a look at this. There's three players. And I'd like to get your guys to take on this who really haven't shown up yet. Apple. Meta.

And obviously windows. All three of those underrepresented. If you give them credit for just getting, you know, a half point of market share here and starting to intercept, which I think those three players were here. We'll be here. They're going to be well under 50% market share.

And I think. ChetchEPT is going to have some big challenges there on the consumer side while they're doing this stuff in consumer. They are cutting back on all their side projects. So you probably heard about the Sora video app. That's been shut down.

This is kind of major news because Disney was going to put a billion dollars into.

Open an ass part of it. And they had done a licensing deal. And they were going to integrate Sora this, you know, short video product into Disney plus all of that's now been canceled. The billion is not going in. The billions not going in.

The licensing deal. All of that. And then in addition, they're supposedly at Open AI. A newfound focus on chasing and profit down the enterprise path. So getting off their game, getting a little discombobulated.

Perhaps or maybe getting focused on what matters, which is enterprise.

Apparently in terms of revenue. Open AI also offered private equity investors a guaranteed minimum return of 17.5% as part of a joint venture. That would help PE firms deploy AI and ease the high up front cost of that. So lots of questions here, Chema. I don't know if you've tracked this PE model.

But obviously a lot of people are doing roll ups in services, accounting, legal. Josh Kushner's got a big effort here a bunch of private equity firms trying to. Essentially, I guess and run the transition process and arguably what you're doing with the software factory at 8090. So your thoughts on Open AI and this pivot and this private equity. I think it makes a lot of sense for Open AI to focus on a few things and do them exceptionally well.

I disagree slightly with your first part, which is I think that people like to make new decisions about new experiences.

And I think that Open AI has incredible consumer mind share.

I just see like how my kids use it. They started there and it's very hard to get them to switch even when I say hey, have you tried Gemini? They use Gemini and to your point, the reason is because they stumble into it more. Yeah, but if you give them a cold navigation experience, they rely on chat GPT. And it's the same, by the way, on the other side in the enterprise.

If you give us a cold problem. My default reaction would be to use anthropic. Now, I actually think that that's quite healthy because you're going to segregate the market. And I think, look, if you go into the way back machine when we first started talking about this thing, this is sort of how we all postulated this would work where even if Open AI just won the consumer business,

it is a multi trillion dollar company with enormous scale and value.

And I think that that's okay. So I think that what they probably need to do is say, where are we the strongest?

Where is there the most obvious traction? Can traction in another market like an enterprise bleed into consumer usage? If it's true, then you have to win the enterprise. I think winning the enterprise though is a very different game than winning consumer. Very different set of features, very different set of expectations.

So I think people either have to decide you're going to compete everywhere or pick one thing and just nail it.

If I was open AI and you had to pick one thing, you would pick consumer becau...

Freeberg, let me pull you into this because my base case here is that all consumer queries are going to be free. Apple is going to make them free.

They're already free for Google. I think Matt is going to make them free and actually have a decent product soon and Microsoft same thing.

Chatchee BT has decided to push off advertising and we're going to put advertising in it. You remember they got mocked by anthropic with their Super Bowl ads. So what do you think is going to happen on the consumer side? Consumers generally don't pay for services. That's usually 5 to 20% of the market is paid services and everything else is free and ad-supported.

It looks like Apple and Google are going to just let it rip. So that could take the revenue oxygen away from Chatchee BT. So what is your thought here on who wins consumer? I don't think that it's going to be free.

I think there's 290 million subscribers for Spotify.

They're paying what are they paying 20 bucks a month or something. Probably less than 1 average because it's global number. Netflix has 325 million paid subscribers. And AI that can book your travel, answer questions for you, track your calendar, do your email, etc etc etc etc. It's likely going to be the most valuable call it meta service that consumers have ever seen.

And I think it's very likely that we're going to end up seeing many more consumers subscribe to a consumer AI service.

Then we've seen even with cable television. I mean, think about yourself on everyone's paying 50/60 bucks a month for a cell phone. Why not pay 80 bucks a month more? More you pay bucks. You pay 100 bucks. And by the way, in the pandemic, remember what we saw.

The two things that people refused to cancel was not your mortgage payment or any car payment. You were willing to go into a rears and into default.

The two things that people would would always keep was the cell phone number one and then electricity number two.

Chat GPT will be there. So I think that's going to be the case with these consumer. I think that they're all going to be like ultra valuable and they're going to layer in services on top of them. Like for example, do you want to watch video embedded in your consumer AI app? Do you want your consumer AI app to, you know, do your finances for you? And it could be that the consumer AI app becomes the new platform much like the iPhone was for the app economy.

There could almost be whether it's through kind of connectors or embedded tools and incredible ecosystem that were traditionally advertisers actually pay to be embedded and show up inside of the AI app. And the consumer can either pay for it or the advertiser can pay for it. So I think there's going to be a very different economic model and still very early days. Sax the numbers right now would be more in my estimation about 50 million people subscribed to chat GPT. They got a billion users or they're trended to a billion.

I think they probably hit it in the next month or two. Certainly we had 900 billion to three months ago. So it's about five percent. Where do you think this winds up? Do you think it becomes, you know, 300, 400, 500 billion consumers are willing to pay 20 bucks a month for this? Do you think it's more free in the data and the ad supported in this of it?

Go with the meta and the Google wrap. I think it's possible that you could get a few hundred million subscribers for the premium tier.

Look, I think most consumers will take the free service and exchange for advertising, right?

Some added supported model, which by the way, I think could be quite successful when touch EBT started displacing Google for search. A lot of people were predicting the death of Google's model because who'd want to look at 10 blue links? I think that's true, but I think you can do something much more compelling in AI chat compared to the list of links. So in any event, I think ad supported models might make it come back here in addition to premium models.

All that being said though, you know, as an investor, I always liked B2B businesses better than B2C.

Because it is hard to monetize consumers, the willingness to pay is not that high and they tend to have high-churn rates. Whereas businesses tend to be very sticky and you can upsell them and you can get more than a hundred percent net dollar retention year over year. So if you could make an enterprise business work, it's always been a model I've liked. But, you know, that being said, obviously some of the most valuable companies in the world are consumer companies. I mean, I think it's a bit more about Google Apple. These are all consumer first companies.

And look, I think ultimately both models can work. Obviously, both can work. Question is which one? I guess it really comes down to how motivated do we think Google and Facebook will be to build that bridge from their ad networks to their AI offerings. Obviously, Facebook is kind of MIA in all of this, but Google is not. And I think that will be the determinant here is.

I think it's going to compete very vigorously for the consumer because it is existential to them.

I mean, it's very clear that search and AI chat are kind of merging into one ...

That means that ad links will kind of merge into being in chat advertising.

So they have to adapt with that. It can be for the consumer. I also think that Google is an outstanding position to do the whole open-call thing. Yes, they already have access to your calendar, your documents, your email. So the agent doesn't really have to earn your trust because you're ready. Trust Google with all of your stuff. Right. So I'm kind of waiting for the Google version of open-call because I don't really want to share all my documents with some new service.

They're the only one that has so much free cash flow that they can almost view it as two separate companies, which it effectively is. You know, GCP over here runs the enterprise play, and then Google consumer over here runs the consumer chatbop play and they can keep them segregated. That's so much harder for start-up to do because on top of just keeping everybody organized, you have the financing problem of constantly having to raise more money. Because you don't yet have a profit engine that spits out cash. They're probably the only one.

And you can see it in the valuations act, which I'm going to get to in a second, but people believe the durability of Google more than they believe the durability of anything else.

And sacks, I think you are in on the pod last week or maybe two or three weeks ago, but Google has announced Google Workplace Workspace Studio to do AI automation. And it's, yeah, it's online and people are playing with it already. So they have joined the open-call party. And by the way, Jay's pal, you asked a different question earlier as well, which is around the PE story. And I think the PE story is a window into the rest of the broader market. The real open question is, what are these companies worth? There's like a very threshold question.

It's kind of like a very important fork in the road right at the outset, which is, do you believe that we're on a path to super intelligence?

There are everything is incredible, where there's infinite abundance where you can magically describe things and beautiful things appear, complex things appear, groundbreaking things appear.

Or do you believe that it's good next-generational software? And the answer to that question is really important because we're financing things like it's the former. And GC has a big move in this, a month was on the program in January when we did the interview show and he's got GC buying up and rolling up accounting firms, et cetera, health care firms, hospitals, et cetera. It seems to be part of the future of venture capital, is taking AI SACs and actually buying out, or I should say, big VC, kind of starting to look like private equity, buying out hospitals, accounting firms, business processing firms in India, putting them all together and then running them with AI.

So any final thoughts on that SACs as a business strategy? Well, I think it's interesting, they're kind of betting on the idea that they can own the change management around AI. And this is the thing is everyone just kind of assumes that you throw AI over a wall and a business disorder medically knows how to use it and draw an efficiency from it. And what we're seeing is it's pretty difficult. Jamoth, you've seen that. There's McKenzie studies showing that like 95% of enterprise pilots aren't successful. There's tremendous value, late in value in AI, but it's hard to know exactly how to deploy it at this point in time.

So I guess what these private equity firms are saying is that we know how to drive value from this and if we own the business and then own the change management, then we'll be able to, you know, create value that way. They're business model makes solving this problem existential. And this was sort of along the lines of this SACs that I wrote. Let me just give you the thought exercise and you guys react.

Today we live in a world where the whole market is trying to debate, what is the PE ratio that you'd be willing to pay?

So Facebook is incredibly durable. I'm willing to pay 30 times. The idea is really durable. I'm willing to pay 40 times. Tesla is incredibly asymmetric to the upside. I'm willing to pay 200 times. And then caterpillar or John Deer, I'm willing to pay 15 times. I'm just using these as an example. And what it's effectively signaling to you is how durable all of these cash flows are. And all we do in the public markets when we make an investment is we're just guessing when do the cash flows run out?

And we try to say, well, here's how much it's worth and here's how much I'd be willing to pay for today. But if you go back to this example and you say, well, what if there's this super intelligence on the horizon?

I think it's fair to ask the question, what is anything worth?

And what is anything worth in your 10 or your 15 or your 20? Because if you have infinite abundance and you have all this creativity, won't all companies be disrupted? And won't we be in this constant churn of everything getting disrupted all the time?

If you were faced with that problem in the public markets, how would you react?

And I think the canary in the coal mine are the sastox. Yes, we jokingly call it the sastoclobs.

But I think it's much more important. I think it's a big societal question.

How do you view capital markets? How do you view the health of a company? In a world where we've been told there's a super intelligence on the horizon that makes everything much more fragile than it was before. And the market reaction is to put all these companies on a spectrum and they started here in software and they're re-rating everything down. And they're changing the way that things are being framed from price to equity to a multiple of the cash that you have on hand.

And I think that has huge implications mostly to Silicon Valley and largely to employees because we all sell the dream.

We start a company and we're like, okay, small salary big equity upside.

But that's implicitly saying in 15 or 20 years this thing is going to be worth some gigantic number.

But if instead every business gets disrupted every five or six years, all you're going to end up with is just the cash. What should employees do? The rational reaction from employees will say, you know what? I don't want your equity. Give me more money. And if all of a sudden you do that, the valuation multiples and the complexity changes again. So I had my team put this chart together. Okay, what is this? Took a handful of SaaS companies and took the mag six. And I just said, okay, if you take the market cap and you divide it by the annual free cash.

What that tells you is how many years does it take to get back if you bought a share of stuff. How many years does it take from the free cash flow to come back so that you've earned back the cost of one share. Snowflake in 2023 it would have taken you almost a hundred years. And where is it now? It's been hadn't half service now. It's last year and work that you see it. What this speaks to is the beginning of this re rationalization in the public markets of saying, if super intelligence is coming. We have to be very careful about what we're willing to pay for these things. But if you look on the right hand side and the mag seven, what's so interesting is apple Microsoft meta and alphabet.

The market is completely for the other way. And what they're saying is we believe that these cash flows are essentially monopolistically durable forever. That's the only reason why you would walk them up like this except in video.

Which is the most unbelievably agreed of well-run company highest margins, you know, making $200 billion and they're treating it like they're treating service now and snowflake.

I just think it's so interesting what's happening. I can't explain this, but here this data sort of shows this reset that we're going through a very complicated reset in the country. Freeboard, what you're taking on this reset as chamoff describes it, do you think this is just a flight to the quality of the free cash flow of the mag six and just how much cash they print. And then maybe the other ones are smaller footprints and they're just more disruptable. We had this discussion many years that Google and Apple Microsoft they would all be disrupted at some point Facebook.

And that just simply hasn't happened. They've gotten much more nimble at copying products or incorporating, you know, features and products into their core offering. So your thoughts it's probably generally correct that there will be a decline, but there's also this selective opportunity. Did you guys see the LP slides that went on the internet from Toma Brava's LP conference? Yeah, those are great. Maybe you could find that they kind of highlight that within the broad market scape, there are companies that are not just going to sit idly by and let AI kind of delete their business value.

But they're integrating AI themselves and they've got high quality people to do so and they're reinventing their product themselves. So they've already got to be ched. They've already got customer access. They've already got enterprise users. And in fact, if they can integrate AI into their products and into their tools, there's almost this like selective dispersion that happens in the market.

And so the winners are going to win. I think truly an every market, not just in software, but across every market, including an industrial supply chains on who is going to implement and utilize AI tools and agents to do work.

And it's going to expand the work productivity of that organization, not just creating new features, which is what we focus on when we talk about software companies. But really imagine a complex business being able to do 10 times the output it can do today with the same capital equipment and the same labor force. What do you pay for in a world of super intelligence versus in a world of non super intelligence in terms of the durability of the business? It's hard to say, man, I mean we don't know right and that's why all the discount rates are going through the roof.

And that's why the valuations are collapsing because we just don't know what multiple or what discount rate you apply or what terminal growth rate or which effectively implies what are you doing your PA like you say I don't think Disney land is going anywhere.

You know, I think there's some stuff that you could say is the counter AI por...

Kalo they call it halo high asset low up solicits.

Okay, that's a great. Yeah, I'm not a big investor trader like you guys, but that makes a lot of sense. I mean, I think that's like intuitively to me.

That seems to be an area where people are going to be spending a lot of time and they're going to they're going to have durability in those businesses. I think businesses like NACAS production, you know, I just bought LNG that Sheneer company. Sheneer, given all the craziness in the Middle East and you know I visited there with Doug Bergam.

So the first time I've ever been exposed to this business and I took it out.

That's a great business. And really, I think that's got durability. Obviously unless it gets blown up by some enemy, that would be a problem. So the items, this is that T.K. Yeah, Adams real life mining is a great one. Obviously, I think the space industry is going to be a lot bigger than we recognize. I actually think there's probably a 15 to 30 trillion dollar a year economic opportunity on the moon. That kind of a business like you're going to see what SpaceX is IPO is going to have an insane multiple.

So I think to your point to them out, there's a lot of stuff getting steam rolled here with crazy high discount rates where you just don't know. And there's a bunch of stuff where the pathway over the next 15 to 30 years is maybe independent or unlocked because of the AI. And then there's a bunch of stuff that's just unaffected. And that that starts to get a higher multiple because that's where capital starts to flow.

So there are probably three things that we would agree are great modes for businesses brands network effects and the management team.

Those come into play here as well. Yeah, I don't know if I would consider management team to be a mode. I mean, it's like Warren Buffett says that you want businesses are so strong that they could be run by a bunch of monkeys because one day they probably will be. Well, I was thinking more like obviously you on and Tesla is going to. We're letting this me innovate.

It's a great point, by the way, and it's true, especially in the edge of a gentica.

Yeah, I mean, look, I think though that just upleveling a bit, I think you are right that the key question is modes because I do think that there are still strong modes in a lot of different kinds of businesses and a lot of them are very subtle.

Like you said, some of our network effects, some of them are the the difficulty of producing fiscal products and it's like that. So there's a lot of different types of modes out there and that is the key question as we enter a world of let's call it digital abundance. Yeah, but the network effect of Apple's ecosystem and they have hardware, right? And they've been just on that path of making their own solar function incredibly defensive and they have brand, right? So that is pretty strong for Apple.

Then you'd take Tesla the same thing. You got Elon relentlessly innovating and it's hard hardware stuff.

And then if you look at meta and Google, these are incredible brands with my management teams.

My assumption is constantly innovating. If I had to bet, I'm going to bet that brands go to zero. Really? Yeah, because I think that when you can make things that are as good or better. And you can make them in a cheaper, faster, better way.

People want that abundance more than they want an affiliation to a brand example. So the perfect example is actually what Tesla did to BMW. You know, what Tesla did to Mercedes, what Tesla did to Porsche, what BYD, and Geely have done to the car manufacturing cycle in China. This is a fundamentally cheaper, faster, better product.

Yes, it's got a great brand. But nobody's going to pay a premium for these products. The reason why why has outsold everything else is because the Model Y is priced better, and it's superior on every operational dimension of comparison. That's also true for the cars in China.

So I think it's the opposite.

I think that brands and the pricing power brands other than maybe premium luxury goods.

But even that's a roadie. Like look at the stock, I don't know Nick, show the stock chart of LVMH or Ferrari. This is not a commentary on the quality of the actual product. But what this shows an erosion of pricing power. All of these things are being eroded away.

Yeah, this would be the value, most people in brands would just say value propositioning. So JetBlue is a value brand, a Tesla Model Y, perfect example of a value brand. And if you look at Apple's recent cohort, what did they focus on? The Apple MacBook Neo, which is a value laptop, 600 bucks, 700 bucks. So they're even going down market to try to capture that value.

And to your point, maybe the right word is abundance. Like the brands that bring abundance, that bring more to the table than their competitors. And they're able to bring more at the same unit cost or less captures share. That's probably true. Do you know what's interesting about that, Chema?

As we open up the aperture in this, if you, one of the thesis we talked about here a couple of years ago, say what happens with AI disruption, job disruption, et cetera.

Cost coming down on cars with Model Y getting cheaper cyber cab coming in,

BYD, obviously, if you go to any foreign country, BYDs or everywhere in the cost 15 grand, then you look at Apple making the Neo, that's a $600 laptop. Everything getting cheaper seems to be happening. I just think it's very hard to know which these companies going to be disrupted. A year ago on this pod, we were saying that Google was going to be toast or some of us were saying it.

That's what it looks like. Okay, fine, but you know, it looked to us,

like chatting with you is taking massive share from Google search. And the ad words model was becoming obsolete. Now, because the success of Gemini and the potential for personal digital assistance, personal agents, I think we're probably pretty bullish on that company and look at their stock chart. It's reflects that. I mean, I think it's doubled in the last year.

Now, you take something like Apple on the other hand. And I'm not saying this is going to happen, but I'll just throw out a counterfactual, which is what if your personal digital assistance or a personal agent gets so good, that you don't need to check your phone. You just tell it what to do. And you don't need the wallet apps anymore.

I mean, the way that you call a Uber won't be to punch a few buttons. You'll just tell it what to do. So you could imagine the phone operating system getting disrupted if the agents are good enough. You're on to something huge, because what you're saying is I can confirm this to you. In 1989, we sell enterprise software. I'll tell you three conversations with huge enterprises,

ask exactly what you just said. And we jokingly called it strangulation as a service, which is they all say the same thing what you just said. Okay, look, get all this complicated UI out of the way. Get all of these products out of the way. Find a way to create a shim where I can just write what I need.

Tell it what I need it to do. It deals with all this complexity in the background.

I never want to see these things ever again.

And that's what people want to your point. They want to be able to, like, say, okay,

pay this with my Venmo or use my MX in this situation or get me that flight in some way and have all these wonderfully smart agents do all the work behind the scenes. And that's actually tracks with exactly what I've seen with open claw, propuxity computer, clawed co-work instead of going to your notion instead of going into your Gmail instead of pulling up your calendar, you ask it. Hey, what's on my schedule this week?

It brings it to you. So you could, you could have a dumb, you know, flat terminal, you know, chatting for face on the hundred dollar device. And it would do just as good. Just to make the counter argument against myself, I mean, yeah, even though I think that you'll just increasingly tell your agent what to do

instead of be clicking around or, you know, touching the screen, you still need a dashboard or user interface to, like, check on it and just see lots of information. You still need to be able to visualize it. Where is the Uber that I've asked to be sent to me out far away? Is it still want to see it on a map?

So I could imagine that even if, let's say, you know, Siri plus plus becomes the dominant way of interacting with your iPhone, you'll still want that Apple user interface. Hard to say, I mean, I see a lot of people out there tweeting that Apple is brilliant for kind of missing the whole AI wave and not spending a lot of money on

just centers or cap X. And then there's other people who say, wait a second,

they're missing critical capabilities.

Then there's a question of will they be able to make deals for, you know, an AI powered Siri? I don't know, as this is very hard to know at this point in time. All right. And we will be discussing all these hard topics at liquidity. May 31st June 3rd, schmoth. Some big announcements here from you.

You have taken control. This is what happens in the game of thrones. No one has the all in cooperation with partners. The partnership of the partnership, the chaotic partnership, no mids. There literally is chaos. So why are we doing this in California?

I don't know anything. I can go back to the state at this point in time. You can come for 48 hours. Make an hour. I don't know. I don't know.

I don't know. You can do 48 hours. It's okay. Well, Gavin Newsom might meet you at the airport. You can fly up at the airport.

By the way, the airport is about 10 minutes from the venue. You could fly in and fly out same day and you don't have an overnight. No.

That's how it's counted as an overnight in California.

You can come in on Monday. Then fly out to incline sleep at our friend's house and then fly back in on Tuesday and then fly back out. You'll be far. You could fly up to a blackjack run overnight blackjack run. And then you come back in the morning.

We just freshen up. No, just go your fresher. Nice and rusted. Let me announce the next two speakers. Oh my god.

I'm so excited. But just for background. Trim off comes into this thing. liquidity was this little conference. I did.

It's now part of all in. And I start setting up all the speakers. And then Trim off goes. Not good enough. I'm not showing up unless I pick all speakers.

And you know what? Free burger. And I did.

Well, finally, this melon farmer's going to actually do some work.

Great.

What is it called? Melon farmer.

It's a when they play a Quentin Tarantino movie on like TV instead of saying mother.

Effer Samuel Jackson says melon farmer. Oh, I see. So this melon farmer took unilateral control of the 10 speakers. 10 speakers slots. Very coveted.

Okay. So we've announced Danlob. We've announced Sarah Fryer. Incredible. And I'm very, very, very honored and excited to announce that Bill Ackman.

And Andre Carpathy will also be speaking. That liquid is for heavy hitters six to go. Two more goats on the roster of goats. So go to it. And we have a handful of other.

Yeah, maybe some surprise guests. And now it's gas show up. TV. Yeah, cats. TV.

TV. More and now soon. But we're making. Let's get dark. Oh, to show up.

Dario, come to the show. Come hang out with the all in boys. I'm really excited. You know what I'm going to do. What Andre agreed to do is he's going to do like.

Five or ten minutes of slides on like the future of the world with AI. And then we'll do a fire site. Love it. That's going to be tremendous. And you know, he's he's been on a heater himself with his recursive.

Get up. Oh, dude.

Auto research is incredible.

And Bill Ackman has a ton of points of view on all of this stuff. So we'll get a lot of his thoughts. I want to give a shout out to people. Because when we did the interview with Jensen. He said, guys, I was like.

I like had a glass of wine on the Sunday. Like, like, put it in a replacement to my HR. I asked him. I asked all my team to do it. I don't know.

I was like, Oh, my God. This is incredible. So I asked our folks. I'm like, hey, I don't like the website. This is 8090.

And the next day they're like, yeah, we vibe. Could have a new one. We'll have it up.

And then I'm like, well, do you like the CTAs and how it's doing that?

I've never known. We put it in total research and we doubled the click through rate. And I was like. To free breaks point. This was this would have been many man months.

10s of people. And instead, all these recipes by the way, in these playbooks, you know, like the person that runs growth at OpenAI publishes his recipes. Yeah, you've been clawpilled.

That's it. You've been one shot at. It's really incredible. This is why, like, I mean, you commented on my post yesterday. I wake up every day in my head spins.

I'm like, what is what is going on in the world? It's crazy. Like every day feels like a new era right now. Yeah. It's hard.

It's disoriented. Because I think what's really interesting is you pull. What would have normally been something that's called it a period of time out. Like a year out or two years out.

And you can pull it in and say, I can get that done in three days. And I don't need to hire people. All the sequencing and staging that would normally go into

accomplishing something has been reduced.

And then the time rush is in. So all your ideas rush into you. And they're all like immediately accessible. And that's why it's like. So what every day is like, oh, my god.

It's still in. Yeah. That is I have I bought the domain name annotated.com like 15 years ago before grand and I wanted to create a service like a bookmark service. You're like highlight a paragraph from the New York Times and then you write

your comments on it, saves it and you basically have the service.

And I was talking to some developer on making it. And I literally vibe coded it and the Chrome extension this past week. And I was like, okay. I've been sitting on this domain in project for like 15 years. And I did it in a weekend.

It's in a crazy weird. It's like very weird. It's weird. It just makes it feel like a simulation to me that everything can just manifest itself.

It's the Star Trek version of the world. Like remember the replicator sacks. We just say Earl Grey tea at this temperature. That's happening in business now. You're like CRM system, build annotated.com, build this new website for 8090.

And it's a replicator just gives it to you. It's very strange. I've only felt this feeling twice. Once I was on the outside looking in. I was a derivatives trader in Toronto.

I was looking at the first.com wave. And I was like, I got to be a part of this. How do I get to be a part of this? And I got a job and I went in and kind of the rest was history. When am they original iTunes?

But I missed the wave. I didn't do anything for me, but I was in the right place. You got to the beach with a surfboard. That's all that matters.

Then the second wave I crushed and then moved to mobile and social.

But this wave feels like a hundred times bigger than that. It's a tsunami by comparison. I had three of these. It's probably what it's like to be at Nazarene. Unfortunately.

You guys ever see those clips of that crazy place? It's like a 100 foot wave. And you're just towed in and you're like, okay, let's just go. This could add one of two waves. Let it go.

Let's do it. Goodbye. No, it was like, literally when I first saw a PC. When I first got on the internet and then saw a mosaic. Like those two moments in the early 90s.

And then seeing the iPhone.

I think that like those three moments was very special.

All right. Rough week for Zock two verdicts went against meta in two days. They were first found libel for allowing child predators to access minors on Facebook and Instagram,

New Mexico, jury ordered meta to pay $375 million in damages.

The AG's office there ran an undercover investigation. They created fake child profiles. Facebook Instagram. These accounts were contacted by predators. People showed up.

Yati Adiata, a whistleblower and former meta engineer testified that is own 14-year-old daughter received sexual solicitations on Instagram. Then on Wednesday and LA, jury found meta and YouTube negligent for designing addictive platforms. That harmed a young user's mental health. Basically, the plaintiff in this case, Sachs said they started using YouTube at age six and

Instagram at age nine. And she testified that features like notifications, algorithms, made the app so addictive that it caused depression and anxiety through that compulsive use. You have some thoughts on this. And we had Jonathan Hate, right?

Didn't we do an interview together? Wasn't that one of the first joint interviews? Free book? You had it. Yeah.

Incredible book. Yeah, these things are obviously a very important point, which is to try and keep kids off cell phones and social media until they're 16. And he was kind of cheerleading this verdict. But I'll take a little bit of a contrarian to the popular kind of sentiment on this.

And I'll just talk broadly about this idea of port litigation.

Port litigation, you know, cost our economy $900 billion a year in the United States.

$900 billion a year.

That's how much is spent on the litigation costs, the settlements, the judgments.

It's 3% of GDP and it's growing roughly 10% per year. And these civil penalties decided by juries like they're, you know, going against big companies like meta, YouTube, but it's also food companies, restaurants, everything. And anytime there's a window to sue someone and extract value from them, tort firms are all over them.

You know, it's called the tort tax now in America. It's not just losses paid by the companies because fundamentally when a big company pays out these tort taxes, they're going to invest less, there's less R&D, less product development costs stay high. There's fewer new product launches and there's all these crazy restrictions on stuff. So, you know, look, I agree.

Social media causes immense harm, particularly causes harm for kids. Kids should not be on social media until they're 16. Absolutely agree. Media adults shouldn't either be on end, you know, as adults. But fundamentally, I think there's an important question that we often ignore,

which is who is fundamentally responsible for that harm. You know, should the sugar beat and sugar cane farmers be responsible for diabetes in America? Should the soda companies be responsible to retail or selling the soda? The FDA for not stopping at all?

And fundamentally, I think we have to ask the question, what role does individual choice play?

An individual responsibility play in this equation? If everything is a liability, what do you say? Because anything, any, I think we have to take personal responsibility. I think the parents that are absent taking care of their children are responsible for harm to their kids. You shouldn't let your kid play with a gun.

You shouldn't let your kid go to some sketchy neighborhood after hours by themselves. You shouldn't let your kid play video games 100 hours a week. You shouldn't let your kids eat nothing but soda and potato chips. You have responsibility as a parent. And I think parents should keep kids off screens and keep kids off social media.

Once the harms are known of excess use or the harms are known of exposure to this sort of thing, I think there's responsibility that sits with the parents. What about things like tobacco or processed food? Yeah, this is the key. Yeah, I mean, the same is true of alcohol.

I mean, dude, like alcohol is terrible for you. There's nothing good about alcohol. But I think I should have a choice on whether or not I want to consume alcohol, whether or not I consume tobacco, whether or not I consume processed goods.

And the recognition that it's bad for you should be publicized by the government.

Should be publicized by the government. If I summarize what you would say is product liability law makes no sense. There should be human liability and human responsibility expectations in a society.

We never talk about responsibility.

We always talk about where the government failed us and where these companies f*** us. And we never talk about what did we individually do wrong? How did I individually choose to eat 100 f***s so does a week? How did I individually choose to get my kids addicted to social media? Where the f*** was I as a parent?

Like we don't talk about our responsibility. And by the way, this fundamentally addresses this point about human agency, which I think is more critical in this era than ever, because AI is going to flood us with f***ing everything. All the time, nonstop.

What we choose to do in a world where we're already getting everything, and how we choose to not take everything that's being offered to us. I think it's a critical part of what's going to do with human success from human failure. And it's going to become more apparent in the future. And not everything is about liability and not everything is about the government failing us.

It's about people making choices. And we don't talk about it.

That's my counter.

I agree. Personal choice. Super important.

What you're probably leaving out here,

which is definitely leaving out here, is when these companies know they're doing something damaging. And they do it anyway. That was the key to the RJR. The whiskey company.

What about a whiskey company selling whiskey? To an alcoholic. So... I don't have a company selling potato chips to an obese person. I'll put those two aside because I don't think we've seen major cases about that.

But I will say the auto industry new for a long time about sea belts.

You remember that, and they didn't deploy them.

RJR Nabisco. They knew that these were addictive. And they designed the cigarettes to become more addictive. And they didn't tell people about the health risks. Asbestos, same thing, lead paint, same thing.

This is happened over and over again, where corporations subvert the release of information to make additional profits.

So the question here with Facebook is,

did they know how addicted these were? Did they know kids were being assaulted sexually? And they could have done something about it? Or didn't they? And so, agree that there's too much legislation.

That's absolutely true. The kids being assaulted absolutely. Not releasing information about the level of addiction if they had it. That's certainly bad. Should the product be legal?

Number one. And if the product is legal, who's responsible for using it? And where do we draw the line? And if we don't want to ignore this, it doesn't matter.

But if you as a corporation know it's dangerous, and then you lean into that, if you know, as the case with Facebook, that this is super-addicting super damaging to young girls, and then you lean into making it more addictive,

and you don't put safeguards in place, and you can prove that like RJR, like Asbestos, like-- What are the safeguards on whiskey? What are safeguards on whiskey company put?

What's the casino put? Hold on, you asked the question. Which is what I'm not, that's why. Yeah.

Second, after age, which is what we're really talking about with kids,

and Jonathan Hate would agree that they shouldn't be using this until it's 16. So I think that's a perfect analogy. Age gating and then labeling. And then if they know of something that's really damaging, releasing that.

So there was a whole thing about alcohol and pregnancy, and they covered up in the alcohol industry, or didn't disclose exactly how damaging it was, to drink alcohol on a fetus or developing fetus,

and then remember all those signs went up in bars in the 70s and 80s?

Yeah. That was the right key because of that. So labeling, information, and age gating would be the logical things to do for social media, and that's what's happened in the past.

So that's the answer to your question. I don't know about age gating, but I think informing parents about the risks is fine, like that should be our responsibility. But the tort lawyers are one of the largest donors in political elections in the United States.

They donate largely to Democrats in local elections and Republicans in national elections, and then they are the largest donor class to elections of judges. And it's a business,

and I think we don't talk enough about the business of court law, the business of litigation in this country, and we often ignore this question about choice, and I don't want to live in a world jakel, where the government and companies are telling me what to do,

and what not to do with my life, et cetera. Sadly, jumping here, personal freedom, and personal responsibility versus, hey, corporations may be knowing only parental responsibility jakel, for answer responsibility on there as well.

Yeah, what do you think, sex? Well, like there's no question that the trial lawyers want to turn meta into RJR into Bisco, and the cigarette companies, and try to fit their fact pattern around that.

I just think that the activity is fundamentally different than smoking. I mean, smoking is manifestly harmful to you, regardless of what your age is, and the only reason we allow it is because of assumption of risk

at the free country.

I think in the case of social networking,

it's much more unclear what the harms are and what the benefits are, and I think it's much more subjective, and it's much more personal choice for adults, and also for parents. Freeberg, we're in one area where I disagree with you a little bit,

as you said, the harms of this are immense, and well known and understood. If that's the case, then let's just ban it for under 13 or under 16 or whatever it is, but I don't think that's the case,

and because it's unclear, I think it's up to parents inside what's appropriate for their families, and at the end of the day, I think the right way to deal with this is personal empowerment. You give parents the controls to set screen time limits

or to decide what apps or kids install. Now, the debate has now moved over to AI apps, and there's a lot of parents' groups that want to ban kids or teenagers from be able to use AI chat apps,

because there was a couple of cases of self-harm. Now, my reaction to that is, look, I've got a 10 year old, and if he starts using chatGBT to get answers to questions, I would consider that to be a good thing.

I mean, I'll keep an eye on the usage,

but I want him to be an AI native.

I want him to be able to do research. You know, I want him to be able to know how to use these tools. I want him to get the right skills to be successful in the 21st century. In China, they're incorporating AI into K through 12 education.

Are we going to ban it for our kids and teenagers? I think that'd be a terrible mistake.

So, I think when it comes to AI and AI chat apps,

it has to be up to the parents, because there's too much manifest good that can come out of kids learning how to use these apps. Maybe social networking is in a different category, but I got to say,

I do think that the harms have been exaggerated because the trial lawyers have an incentive, and just to give you some facts about that LA case. So, just so you understand, in this LA case,

they were sued by a 20-year-old woman

who claimed that she became depressed

because of using social media. And she apparently suffered body image issues because of social media, and she was able to win this judgment for millions of dollars. Look, I think there's big causation problems

with that case. In the case of that plaintiff, the evidence showed that she came from an abuse of home her father had abandoned her, her own mother had body shamed her.

So it was very unclear where her body image issues were coming from.

I think it's possible that social media contribute to them,

or could just be that social media was a scapegoat. I also got to say that I do think it's a dangerous precedent. I mean, are we going to allow plaintiff's lawyers to sue Spotify, because you created a playlist of sad music

and that music contributed to your emotional distress? I mean, that's kind of what we're saying. You got to remember, these are free services that people have a choice whether to use them or not. And if social media is making you feel bad,

if listening to the wrong playlists is making you feel bad, then stop doing it. But what's going on here, I think, is the trial lawyers are trying to create the next big tobacco,

and their goal is to try and sue these companies into oblivion. And I don't think that's the right answer either. The consensus, Chimoff, is kids who use this two or three hours a day. They've been across many research studies,

is that it's massively correlated with depression and anxiety, and eating disorders specifically in young girls. If you get to two or three hours a day of this, so that correlations, I think pretty well established,

you pretty famously said, hey, and you worked at Facebook, so you saw this coming, but I think at Stanford 27, 2018 timeframe, you actually had some comments on this.

We could either play the clip or you could just describe it, I guess. I said, what was obvious to me then, I lost a lot of friends at Facebook when I said it, unfortunately, but essentially what I said was,

I don't let my kids use it, and I don't think that this is a constructive part of a developing child's diet. I do think that sacks is right that I view AI chat differently. There are different guardrails that are required,

so that if you go down some sort of dark corner, but that's possible to understand and the product is architected in a way to create cul-de-sax, so if you're thinking about self-harm

or you're thinking about these other things, social media is very different. It's an incredibly fast which algorithm and that's the optimization. And until the incentive for that optimization changes,

these outcomes will continue to compel.

I think the interesting thing is that the LA lawsuit

was an individual lawsuit. The young woman,

I think, was awarded three or six million dollars.

Yeah. The other one though, that they lost this week was in New Mexico, and that was for three hundred and seventy five million dollars. And that was more around, I think, child exploitation. Yeah.

The thing that I'll note is that these trial lawyers, which I'm not a fan of either, have been trying, as Sacks said, to make these folks a target because there's so much money on the line. And they'd been bad at back pretty successfully.

But this was the first time where they were able to navigate the section 230 protections that Facebook and Google have typically used to protect themselves, because Google was a part of the LA lawsuit.

And they were able to go down the pathway of product liability language. Now, to freeberg's point, I think he's generally right. I think it's my responsibility as a parent

to take care of myself and my children. But to the extent, we don't change these product liability laws that are on the books. I think the door has been opened

and a map has been drawn, which is this is how you navigate around section 230, and you can get a decisive lawsuit in your favor against these large companies

with enormous cash flows. And so I expect that this will be

A death by a thousand cuts kind of scenario

where folks are just going to rally around this. I don't think it's right, but I do think that that's the rational reaction to what just happened.

I mean, look, six million dollars

to an individual 20-year-old girl or three hundred and seventy-five million dollars. These are huge numbers.

And the reality is that I think we've opened the floodgates.

I do think there should be a better response. And I do think that parents should take a lot more responsibility, but I do hope that these products allow us a kill switch

for when our kids are under the ages of 16. Frankly, I would love a kill switch under the age of 18. And there has to be simpler ways to age validate. You know, we used to work around this thing called

Copa Compliance. Copa's bullshit. It's nothing burger. Like a six-year-old can vibe code their way around Copa.

So it doesn't do anything. And so age verification is completely broken. It's harder to get age verified

for a porn site than it is to get

un-age verified for face. Same word, Chumoth. How'd you get around? How do you know that? How do you know that?

That's just for uploading. You're uploading at the time, Chumoth. This is not your only band proof of a face. We actually deal with this in our new AI framework

that the administration released last week because the number one issue is around online child safety. Which I think again is mostly about social networking but it touches on AI and so it's kind of gotten lumped together.

And I think we're, I mean, I'm referring now to the White House has said it's willing to support some form of age assurance technology and parental controls. So look, I think there needs to be a conversation

around how true it is that social networking is just a fountain of ills for young people.

If that's true, then why wouldn't you just

disallow it, right? But if it's unclear and I think it's more on the side of unclear, this is me. Then it's up to the parents and what you want to do is again, have the age assurance technology

and the parental controls. I don't think that the parents decide. I don't think that social media is net bad broadly speaking. But I will tell you that if my child uses it

for two or three hours a day from multiple days in a row, they become returning. Yes, they act weird. And so I don't know what course I do. Except I would love a kill switch until these kids

turn 18 on all these products.

Well, you can, you should just have to do with dopamine

by the way. These, what I do instead is I use apples, family sharing, but it's hard and I'll tell you how why it's hard. Our schools give our kids from books

and say, use these Chrome books because that's the way you're going to access your LMS, your information, your content, your homework and you know what's an integral part of that YouTube. And then now it becomes a back door.

So even when we take the devices, I take my devices, we lock them down, you can't bring them to your room. The whole thing. But if they need to do homework and I catch them. In a little break, I'm like, what are you doing on YouTube?

They're looking at shorts. Of course. That's what they do. Yes. And so it is a whack-a-mole problem for parents.

I think I'll just give myself the final word here on behalf of the group. It's obviously a deck thing. It's obviously the industry has not police itself nor would they police themselves

because they want to get people addicted now. So they're addicted when they're adults. The rest of the world has realized this. Australia now has 16 enforced, Malaysia, 16 other countries are right behind them,

Spain, Germany, UK. And what should happen here in the United States is this should be done with the handset manufacturers. If Android and Apple show leadership with Facebook and said, we're going to buy default when you buy a phone,

you're going to have to age verify kids under a certain age, which you kind of do already when you create a family plan like it did. We could solve this problem and then parents would opt in to giving their kids access to this. No good comes out of kids under 16 using social media.

And Jonathan. By the way, in our interview,

said you should be putting phone lockers in and

our school is doing that. Other schools are doing it is the greatest thing ever. Kids are school and then they like it. I don't think it's that great. I'll tell you why.

Our school does the phone condoms. I don't know what they're called. But like you put them in the bag and whatever. The real problem is that there's enormous social pressure when you're in high school to use these products.

I'll give you a specific example. Our rule is you cannot get Instagram or TikTok until you're 16. I would love it to be 18. But we all agreed 16 and were able to maintain that rule. But then high school comes around and I have two kids in high school now.

Oh, we need Snapchat. No, you don't. No, yes, we do. No, you don't. Okay, great.

We'll have no friends. Thanks a lot. We'll just sit here in our room dark and there. And you know, there's an enormous amount of social pressure. So when you talk to the other parents,

it's like, hey, guys, can we all agree that we don't need Snapchat?

You just can't get uniform agreement across all parents

because everybody views this problem differently.

And so I had to change the rule. Now when you get to high school, you're allowed Snapchat, but not Instagram. And you know, when you're 16, you get Instagram. And that's the best we could do.

And TikTok all of us though. Yeah. It's an impossible task for parents. I find it indispensable to be able to do eye message with my kids. And also, I like the location awareness.

You can track location. You compare eye message. Those features to snap. Is it really that different? I don't think it's that different.

Well, the problem is you're going to.

You're going to bounce snap. No, I can't. My point is, I had to give them snap. But you're right. I was like, why can't you use eye message?

They're like, dad, don't be a loser. Yeah. No, it's not our snap account. So I could eye message them where they are, where they're messaging. I prefer if they're just on eye message.

message, but anyway, that's the reality.

So you're talking about banning all these things, but again, I think you're on a slippery slope.

And I got it. I got it. I got it. I got it. I got it. I got it. I mean, as a parent. Yeah, and I'm saying, me as a parent. Yeah, you're setting guidelines in my house. This is the rules when you become a freshman. I'll give you snap. And when you're 16, I'll give you Instagram and TikTok. Otherwise, shut the fuck up, put your head down. By the way, I also have a tip for parents. You know, this

issue with like kids in headphones, where they want to be listening to stuff all the time. And your kids walking around like zombies with headphones. I replaced their headphones with over the these brand called shocks or something. It goes over your ear, but your ears open. So you can listen to an audio book or music, and still be able to talk. And so since we did that, it's like much less drama around the over the ear headphone issue. Man, people are zooming

in. Well, again, it sounds like you're exercising parental supervision. Is it really makes sense that later when your kid turns 20, they could sue these companies for, well, to your point. I just think it has to be real emotional distress. It doesn't make sense. You're right, because to your point, that girl said she was using it from the age of like six and 10. Yeah, one product six, and yet that's crazy. Crazy. I agree with you. So that's crazy. Where were

the parents? All right. We got time for, I think, one more topic. Be amazing.

President Donald Trump, 47th president of the United States announced his council of advisors on science and knowledge. It's called peak ass. Sachs, you have now, am I correct in saying, moved from the ZAR of crypto and AI to now the leader of peak ass, is that the correct way to frame this? Well, the president has appointed me to be a member of his council of advisors on science technology and to co-chair it, along with Michael Cratsios, who's the director of OSTP. I'm still

an AI advisor, but I do it on behalf of peak ass now. So you remember, last year, I was next to E, we got up to 130 days. I used that time up in the president of point meet to the school, allows me to continue being a technology advisor. In fact, on a wider range of issues, so before it was AI and crypto, now it's whatever peak ass wants to study or talk about or make recommendations. I think in addition to AI, other areas that are interesting are nuclear power, quantum computing, advanced semiconductor

is all these different areas. I think we got some biotech. Thank you, freeberg. And we have some

incredible people who are now on peak ass to kind of run with us. Yeah, I'm looking at it, Mark and

Jason, Sergei, Michael Dall, Larry Ellison, David Friedberg, Jensen, Lisa Sue, Mark Zuckerberg, and some other folks there that maybe not as recognizable by the audience, how were they selected tax, the only criticism I've seen of this is lots of business leaders great, lots of technology great, but maybe a little light on the scientists. I don't know. We have people who've won a Nobel Prize for physics on there. We're talking about people who are experts in, like I mentioned,

quantum computing, fusion, nuclear, biotech, pretty much everything across the board. I would say that one difference between this peak ass and previous ones is you have more doers, more builders, people who've actually created products or companies. We think that's a good thing. Why would it be a bad thing? I mean, is it a bad thing that Mark and Jason invented the first internet browser or Jensen invented the GPU? If you're going to make recommendations about advanced semiconductors,

don't you want to have someone who actually invented some of the key products in the space?

The big question of course, Axes, as we've seen here with science corner, is how do you plan on staying awake for these meetings if it's going to be like all science is usually when you dig your bio-break with others as science and technology. So you'll be able to, I'm going to face this on the tech stuff. God, and then we got free work to focus on the science stuff. God, so free work,

This is incredible.

to be invited and appointed by the President, and I appreciate Sachs and Michael Crattio's. You look back at Pcast. It's kind of rooted in FDR when he formed this council of advisors on science when nuclear physics and quantum mechanics was starting to kind of reinvent what was possible in the world. We're sort of at a similar era today because arguably AI is reinventing

what is possible in the world. I think there's this kind of acute moment that we find ourselves in

in this extraordinary race against China. I'll give you a statistic 10 years ago, China published 50% of the number of scientific research papers and peer reviewed journals as the United States. Last year, they published 50% more than the United States. This is across all disciplines and domains including physics, material science, chemistry, biochemistry, broad life sciences. There's this moment that we're in right now. We're both, the world is being reinvented by AI, but there's this

extraordinary race with China, not just in fundamental research and discovery, but in the industrialization of new discoveries and new technologies. You could feel it in DC this week. I was at the Hill and Valley Forum, but literally everyone in Silicon Valley, everyone in DC is like absolutely honed and focused in on what is going on in China. It used to be in biotechnology, for example, that China was kind of a copycat and me too, or they were really good, for example, in manufacturing, but it is now the

case that in many sub-domains, China is becoming the scientific leader in biotechnology and in

life sciences. That is a scary thought because ultimately China could end up engulfing the entire

pharmaceutical industry and basically becoming the leader in things like medicine, but most importantly foundational things like AI. I just wanted to defend and speak for a moment about the choice of that putting what I would say are like industrial science and technology leaders on this commission because this is a moment where there's an industrial race, not just a discovery race underway,

and that's why this moment is so critical. Anyway, I'm very appreciative to have an opportunity

to serve and thankful to David for his leadership and related news support. We'll be joining the president's advisory council on bomb pots and wagering for joining that. And when I saw this

axe, I saw PC and I was like, oh, is it podcasting? I'm in. Finally, I've been invited to the president's

council on podcasting. So big, big news coming. I don't want to tip anybody's cards. Well, let's you know when that happens. Yeah, absolutely. When the president's council on podcasting emerges, me and Lex Freedman will make our way to Washington, but I want to also think the president is well, and that's a great honor to be named to co-chair this. It is like Freedberg, we're saying

this is a fairly august body that's goes back a long time. I think the modern incarnation was

created in 1990 by George Herbert Walker Bush. This has been around for over 30 years in its current formulation. I think we have a slightly different take on it, which is we're going to have these builders and doers on there. Like Freedberg said, we got some catching up to do on our industrial policy. We have named 15 people. There's still nine more slots. We can have up to 24. So I think it's possible that at some point they'll be a second round and for missing some expertise they can be

filled in. Obviously that's up to the president he can decide later, who else might join this.

All right, everybody. What's another amazing episode? The number one podcast in the more

off, the all went podcast. Bye bye. Love you guys. Bye bye. , I'm going to the world. Besties are gone. Besties are gone. Besties are gone. That's way on dog taking a mission right away. I'm going to the world. I'm going to the world. I'm going to the world. I'm going to the world.

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