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E174: Inflation stays hot, AI disclosure bill, Drone warfare, defense startups & more

April 12, 2024 / 01:26:58

This episode covers the All-In Summit 2024 announcement, inflation trends, AI technology discussions, and the impact of drones in warfare. Guests include David Sachs, Chamath Palihapitiya, and Jason Calacanis.

The hosts discuss the upcoming All-In Summit 2024, scheduled for September 8-10 in Los Angeles, highlighting improvements from last year and an upgraded experience for attendees. They mention the application process and the excitement surrounding the event.

They also analyze recent inflation data, noting that inflation rates have exceeded expectations for three consecutive months. Sachs discusses the implications for the Biden administration and the potential impact on the upcoming election.

In a segment on AI, the conversation shifts to the implications of AI technology on various industries and the introduction of legislation regarding generative AI. The hosts express concerns about the balance between innovation and regulation.

The episode concludes with a discussion on the evolving role of drones in warfare, emphasizing their increasing significance and the need for new defense technologies to counter emerging threats.

TL;DR

The episode discusses the All-In Summit 2024, inflation trends, AI legislation, and the evolving role of drones in warfare.

Video

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all right everybody welcome back to the
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all-in Pod episode 174 almost up to 175
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I believe there are a lot of folks
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getting together next week at the all-in
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meetups around the world to watch the
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show unfortunately jcal had an oral
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incident this week he will not be
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joining us I guess he cracked a tooth
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and couldn't make it so he is sitting
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this one out very last minut decision
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cracked her tooth eating a bison r about
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the Salt Lick in hustin which is a true
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story freir I think we found an image of
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okay let's Jake out at the Salt Lick
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cracking his tooth on a
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[Music]
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rib let your winners
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ride
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Rainman and instead we open source it to
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the fans and they've just gone crazy
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with
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[Music]
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it all right so we are going to announce
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be all-in Summit 2024 back to
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LA we had such a great time in LA it was
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a great location for everyone we really
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appreciated the facilities at UCLA this
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year we're upgrading the experience once
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again for everyone so the event's going
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to be September 8 through 10th in La if
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you haven't seen it please watch the
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recap video from last year we put it up
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on
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YouTube and then there's all the
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interviews from last year are also on
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YouTube we're going to have another
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amazing lineup of speakers this year and
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have a much more kind of upgraded
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elevated experience for everyone
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applications are open today so go to
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summit. Allin
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podcast.co to put an application in to
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join us this year as you know we had way
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more applications last year than spots
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and this year we're going to have all
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sorts of upgrades we're GNA have
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transportation to and from all the
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events for everyone a concierge booking
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service to help you book your rooms and
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get you set up in La for the trip we're
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doing a full day event on the Sunday
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September 8th followed by two days of
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content Dy about town on the first night
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two blowout parties it's going to be
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awesome so we're really excited about it
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we've got a much bigger budget this year
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and we're going to try and really make
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the uh the experience awesome while also
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delivering the great content so really
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excited to do this again in La I
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appreciate everyone's support of that we
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had a lot of debate internally about
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where to take
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it and we settled on going with what we
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know and trying to make it a little bit
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better this year so anything else you
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guys want to say about Summit and
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there's only one kind of ticket this
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year right that's right so we're not
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doing like regular ticket and VIP we're
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just doing one ticket for everyone and
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everyone's gonna get this kind of
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elevated experience she'll be cool sax
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just show up would be awesome hope to
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see you there I want to invite a couple
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of speakers yeah you've got some good
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speakers I saw yeah it's gonna be great
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when are we gon to start announcing the
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speakers freeberg we will do that in a
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couple weeks we already have a bunch
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booked and it's going to be awesome oh
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that's really exciting that's awesome
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yeah I know CP you wanted to take it
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somewhere else I mean we were in debate
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on Vegas maybe going to some other
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country but uh you went to another
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country where'd you go this week I was
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in Paris France what were you doing
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there there's like a important AI
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conference and Jonathan Ross the founder
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of grock and I kicked it off with like a
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fireside chat for like 45 minutes at the
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beginning just to get everybody amped up
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and excited
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cool yeah it was really anything
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interesting come out of
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it I think the sound bite that made an
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impact on me was was from Jonathan so I
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think he did a very good job of
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explaining where Nvidia is really strong
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which is really in learning and where
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Nvidia is trying to build the
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business which is an inference but the
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problem is the features almost compete
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with each other between learning and
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inference and I think that that was a
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good clarification and then the second
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thing is he said that if he deploys his
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road map he'll have 50% of the available
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inference compute by the end of next
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year wow based on all the needs of like
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open Ai and meta and everybody else
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which is a wait but that's a smaller
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physical footprint is that right and
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it's just because they can do higher
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token per second less power higher
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tokens per second across all the major
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models so it would it would be
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meaningfully less power and meaningfully
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cheaper
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so that was a pretty amazing sound bite
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though his his whole explanation was
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actually really good so I mean if you
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listen to the spaces we did I thought it
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was good I thought this was even better
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so I'm trying to get a copy of
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the of the talk because it was taped so
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that we can kind of post it at a minimum
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anybody who's interested in studying
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Nvidia should listen to what he has to
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say because I think the the nuances
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between us and them are really profound
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and they were pretty Stark the way that
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he described them so it was cool it was
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great to be in Paris frankly how does
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Nvidia respond to this movement or this
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notion that there's an entirely
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different chip category focused purely
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on inference do they have inference
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focused chips in development or a
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different road map that they're going to
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have to kick up now I mean I think it's
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very hard for them it's it is a
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structural innovators dilemma and why is
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that because they've made some
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architectural decisions around things
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like hbm which is high bandwidth memory
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or specific kinds of extremely high
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throughput optical cables and why these
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things matter is that they've gone and
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bought up the world Supply and they've
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basically bare hugged these markets as a
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structural part of their design now that
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makes sense and it's very legal the
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problem is that if you architect around
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it and go through a totally orthogonal
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design process we're not subject to any
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of those supply chain considerations and
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I think he explained that really well I
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didn't understand it in nearly as much
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detail as I did leaving so I think
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that's an important takeaway it's also
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really important for for all the
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hundreds of Chip startups and for these
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Venture investors who are ripping money
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into these companies to know these
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differences because if you are investing
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in a company that is subject to you know
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hbm in their design decisions or these
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specific optical cables or a whole bunch
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of other things you're going to be in a
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really difficult spot because nvidia's
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bought them
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all so I thought that that was a that
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was really interesting the other thing
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that Nvidia does brilliantly is what
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Intel did in the 80s and 90s when they
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wanted to kind of Choke the market for
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CPU competition which is that they were
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able to define a metric that everybody
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started to pay attention to which for
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them was clock speed and if you remember
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Intel would push Moore's Law and they
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would push transistor density and clock
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speed as the measurement of value now
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for a lot of consumers none of us knew
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any better and so every time we saw a
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new chip we would go through the Pentium
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upgrade cycle because we thought that's
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what we were supposed to do it turns out
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that clock speed doesn't really factor
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into speed the way that you think about
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it and experience it as an end user
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using software and it's the same in Ai
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and so we talked about that as well so
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it's an incredibly important company
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NVIDIA is I think they're performing
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brilliantly they're running many of the
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same plays that Intel did to try to
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create total dominance but there's some
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very important nuances
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around power and around supply chain
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decisions and Technology decisions
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that frankly some people would think are
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unsustainable and the more I understand
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them I would be in that camp as
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well so I thought it was a very
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important conversation and hopefully we
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can post it yeah it cool it and by the
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way it's great to be in Paris too what
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do you think of Paris you know I have a
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new appreciation for what's going on in
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these major cities I think that all
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major cities are crumbling I don't and I
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don't mean to be alarmist or very
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dramatic about that it's just that I
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spent aot lot of time with entrepreneurs
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that are in
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Paris and they struggle with the same
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things that the people in San Francisco
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do and then I had couple of
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conversations with some folks that are
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entrepreneurs in London who were
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there and they suffer from the same
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things lots of petty crime lots of
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garbage lots of vandalism lots of
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drugs and so no place is perfect it
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turns out everybody is struggling from a
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lot of experimentation gone wrong and
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how these cities run that was that was
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actually my
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the biggest takeaway outside of the
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actual AI conference itself but that's a
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western City problem you're not I mean
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have you visited many cities in China or
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other parts of Asia and is that like a
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western problem I have not been to China
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in six years I've been to Hong Kong but
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I've not been into China for six years
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so I don't
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know I would say that India has its own
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vagaries so those issues are not the
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same I've been to Singapore a couple
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times my kids were just in Japan for
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spring break so I saw a bunch of the
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pictures those cities look relatively
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the same very orderly well run clean but
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yeah you're right these Western cities
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are a bit chaotic yeah sax is this like
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a western social liberal
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manifestation how cities are being
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challenged generally M like Malay has I
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think Malay said this right he said like
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all these Western social liberal beliefs
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are having lifestyle impact in urban
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centers well it's hard for me to speak
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to what's happening in Europe but we
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know what's happening in the United
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States all the biggest cities are blue
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and they're run by a certain ideology
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and in those cities we've had now a
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decade plus of decriminalization de
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prosecution
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decarceration and the impacts of this
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are obvious we also at least in San
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Francisco we have subsidies for people
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who want to live on the streets and do
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drugs all day I mean it's not prohib to
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do that so all of our public spaces have
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been taken over by people who are happy
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to take the whatever it is $7 or $800
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subsidy and do drugs all day you also
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had this referendum in California that
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essentially lowered a whole bunch of
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felonies to misdemeanor basically if you
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steal less than
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$950 that's considered a misdemeanor now
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instead of a felony and so there there's
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been a huge increase in crime because of
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that you know shoplifting just doesn't
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get prosecuted anymore and misdemeanors
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don't get prosecuted anymore we've had
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all these sour daas who don't want to
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prosecute misdemeanors so I think if
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voters had understood that
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lowering a lot of these crimes from
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felonies to misdemeanors meant that they
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wouldn't get prosecuted at all I don't
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think they would have done it but that's
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kind of where we are but are we seeing a
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rebound from that now Sach is democracy
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working because I know that in San
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Francisco we had an election recently
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and in the ballots it seemed to indicate
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that voters were sick and fed up with
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the the living situation in the city and
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they're putting different people in
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office and have an intention of changing
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the city Charter and
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changing the the laws in the city so
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that we can reverse this trend is that
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not where things are I mean like sitting
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you know sitting where you sit like
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don't you see San Francisco kind of
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trying to write write itself and as a
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result doesn't democracy work over time
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yeah it's just that we live in a one
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party State and that one party has been
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captured by ideologues and so it's very
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hard to to change it is true that in San
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Francisco there was an election recently
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and the more
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radical supervisors were defeated we
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have I think finally a good da in San
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Francisco but these um radicals have had
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a long time to entrench their power and
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the party Machinery helps keep them
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entrenched so yeah I think you can argue
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that we've bottomed out because the
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public has recognized the problem but
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it's still very hard to fix and it's
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going to take a while I think for the
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first time in a long time time I'm more
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optimistic than not given the people
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I've seen that tolerated the conditions
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historically have reversed course over
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the last year and have said we got to
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act and we gotta yeah you know do our
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kind of Civic process well time with
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tell you have to remember like when when
00:12:15
New York City was a chaotic mess in the
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70s and 80s it took two different mayors
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and it took almost a decade for that to
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get cleaned up but it took the strength
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of leadership first David dinkin set the
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framework and then Giuliani really
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executed Rudy Giuliani and between the
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two of them and I think what people call
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the broken windows Theory they hired a
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lot more policemen and they just really
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cleaned up all of these really bad areas
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and then it had this knock on effect the
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problem is when I'm staying at a hotel
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in Paris or when I was speaking to some
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of my friends who live in London it's
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the same thing it's like the amount of
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knife crime is so egregious as an
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example that they tell you don't wear a
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watch I mean I don't I don't wear
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watches anymore when I go out but what's
00:13:03
crazy is they will tell you that you'll
00:13:04
get stabbed over a phone where it's like
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you don't need to stab me for my iPhone
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here just take the iPhone so there's a
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level of lawlessness and petty crime
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that's affecting
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tourists that to me was like very
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surprising and so even when I was
00:13:19
walking around Paris I was like should I
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really
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feel scared here and my reaction was no
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I've never felt scared in Paris but then
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what's ringing in the back of my ears
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are These Warnings from people that are
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that are that have lived there for 10
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and 20 years who've had this stuff
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happened to them that was really
00:13:38
surprising to me so that stuff in San
00:13:40
Francisco as far as I can tell or any
00:13:41
major city in the west hasn't really
00:13:43
been fixed because you haven't had a
00:13:44
shift in leadership yet where they've
00:13:46
really said okay we're going to double
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down on policemen and policing and we're
00:13:51
going to amp up the punishment that
00:13:54
hasn't happened yet well I was just in
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Vegas this week and it doesn't feel how
00:13:58
was your trip give us the trip report
00:14:00
yeah I went to the Google next
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conference but I will say first off like
00:14:03
no crime in Vegas like Vegas is Vegas
00:14:06
it's it's a very different
00:14:08
environment but I yeah I went to the
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Google next conference I ended up going
00:14:12
out because at ohal we did a partnership
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with uh with gcp so we're moving all of
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our infrastructure and doing a lot of
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model development on
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gcp and it was great I think there was
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30,000 people at this event which was
00:14:25
insane have you guys been to any of
00:14:27
these like AWS reinvent or
00:14:29
the Google next or any of these no I
00:14:32
have not what I didn't realize prior to
00:14:35
going to this was how much of an
00:14:36
ecosystem there is like you go they they
00:14:38
take over the whole Convention Center at
00:14:40
manderlay Bay and there's hundreds of
00:14:42
companies that have built services or
00:14:45
build services on gcp that are there
00:14:47
pitching cios and CTO of other companies
00:14:50
and so it's this real Network effect
00:14:52
type of business model that I hadn't
00:14:54
fully appreciated just how like deep the
00:14:57
network is and and how entrenched it is
00:14:59
I I also got to go to this thing where I
00:15:01
spent a lot of time with c and CTO at
00:15:04
other companies big
00:15:06
companies and a big takeaway for me that
00:15:08
I also didn't realize was how most of
00:15:10
them are not on a single cloud
00:15:12
provider almost everyone I spoke with is
00:15:15
on multiple clouds so they're all on
00:15:18
like AWS and AER and gcp and they use
00:15:23
different aspect of each cloud and
00:15:25
there's a lot of interoperability
00:15:27
between the clouds now which I had
00:15:29
previously my naive concept of this
00:15:31
because I'm obviously not deeply in the
00:15:32
space was that a company picks a cloud
00:15:35
and they move everything over to that
00:15:36
one service provider but it turns out
00:15:39
that they split and then they allocate
00:15:41
dollars based on the services and the
00:15:43
pricing so it was pretty clear that
00:15:45
everyone is it's like a race to the
00:15:48
bottom on pricing for basic
00:15:51
commoditizing services in the cloud like
00:15:53
data storage right and then whoever has
00:15:56
the better higher level Services Whoever
00:15:57
has access to better mod or has a lower
00:15:59
price on running models or on running
00:16:02
things like inference that's where the
00:16:05
money is made and the gross margin on
00:16:07
that is quite different and I think
00:16:09
that's where a company like Google
00:16:11
probably has a much bigger Advantage
00:16:13
because of the uniqueness and the
00:16:15
quality of the models that they've
00:16:17
developed but yeah I just didn't I
00:16:18
didn't really appreciate like how much
00:16:20
there was so so my other big takeaway
00:16:22
was the cloud is a wide open competitive
00:16:24
market right now like there is no AWS
00:16:27
lockin in this market there's no a zero
00:16:29
lock in there's no gcp lock in like you
00:16:31
guys yeah the lock in comes from the
00:16:33
developer services that they provide so
00:16:36
both Amazon and Google and I'm I'm
00:16:38
assuming Azure as well will give you
00:16:41
access to incredibly talented Engineers
00:16:43
who will help you build production code
00:16:45
yeah and the ecosystem on how so like a
00:16:47
lot of the clouds are competing for the
00:16:50
Consultants who actually do the work for
00:16:53
the big Enterprises so Cap Gemini deoe
00:16:56
PWC they have these massive booths
00:16:59
facilities and then go and build tools
00:17:01
for companies is also a key part of the
00:17:03
business strategy and yeah I mean it's
00:17:05
such a competitive market I did not
00:17:08
appreciate just like how much of an open
00:17:11
game this still was sure it was a great
00:17:13
great couple days in Vegas and I got to
00:17:16
see some of our friends we ducked in and
00:17:17
saw helmuth in the poker Go studio for a
00:17:20
minute some big tournaments going on at
00:17:22
the ARA it was fun we had a good time
00:17:24
okay let's move on so you know on the
00:17:26
docket today we were going to talk about
00:17:29
CPI the March CPI numbers came in from
00:17:31
the Bureau of Labor Statistics yesterday
00:17:34
higher than forecast at 3.5%
00:17:37
year-over-year this is up from 3.2%
00:17:40
year-over-year inflation reported by the
00:17:42
Bureau of Labor Statistics in February
00:17:44
higher than expected for three straight
00:17:46
months now let's pull up this chart next
00:17:48
as we all know the FED did 11 rate hikes
00:17:50
in 2022 and 23 and the intention was
00:17:54
that we would see inflation come down to
00:17:56
their target of 2% and they would start
00:17:58
to lower rate rates and obviously we're
00:18:00
not seeing that inflation is remaining
00:18:03
hot things are getting more and more
00:18:06
expensive I pulled together some of the
00:18:09
numbers on year-over-year price increase
00:18:12
housing is up 5.7% year-over-year
00:18:15
Transportation costs are up
00:18:17
10.7% year-over-year and the highest car
00:18:21
insurance is up
00:18:22
22.2% year-over-year
00:18:25
so the expectation has been that the
00:18:27
market will do rate Cuts Larry Summers
00:18:30
came out and said you have to take
00:18:31
seriously the possibility that the next
00:18:32
rate move will be upwards rather than
00:18:35
downwards I guess sax let me let me ask
00:18:38
you first for your commentary on how
00:18:41
this plays into the election cycle I
00:18:42
know Biden was expecting a rate cut or
00:18:46
several rate Cuts going into the
00:18:47
election which usually helps the case of
00:18:48
the incumbent maybe you can comment on
00:18:51
where the the election cycle might be
00:18:53
influenced by this inflation report well
00:18:56
I think it's definitely bad news for
00:18:57
Biden I was expecting fed put this year
00:19:00
and really the whole Market was the
00:19:02
market was expecting three rate Cuts
00:19:03
this year which would have been really
00:19:05
good news for for Biden and I think this
00:19:08
latest inflation print was kind of a
00:19:09
dagger to the heart of of that
00:19:12
expectation and I think the Wall Street
00:19:14
Journal put it best it said here
00:19:16
Wednesday's report had been hotly
00:19:19
anticipated because fed leaders had been
00:19:21
willing to play Down stronger than
00:19:24
anticipated inflation readings in
00:19:26
January and February as as reflecting
00:19:29
potential seasonal quirks but a third
00:19:32
straight month of above expectations
00:19:34
inflation data erodes that story and
00:19:38
could lead fed officials to postpone
00:19:39
anticipated rate Cuts until July or
00:19:41
later so it's not just the fact that
00:19:44
this inflation print was higher than
00:19:46
expected it was also higher than
00:19:47
expected in January and February but
00:19:50
people were willing to kind of Overlook
00:19:51
that saying well maybe it was just kind
00:19:53
of a you know quirky reading but now
00:19:56
we've had three straight months it's
00:19:57
pretty clear that the narrative that we
00:19:59
had going into this year which was that
00:20:02
inflation was on its way down that it
00:20:04
peaked at 9% uh as the official rate I
00:20:07
think in 2022 and then it was going down
00:20:10
every month through all of 2023 and I
00:20:13
think the expectation going into 24 was
00:20:16
it would keep going down we get these
00:20:17
rate Cuts well after three straight
00:20:19
months of inflation being more
00:20:22
persistent and stickier Than People
00:20:24
expected I think that narrative is
00:20:25
basically dead so I think the narrative
00:20:29
now is it's going to be rates are going
00:20:32
to be higher longer and I think Larry
00:20:34
Summers is reflecting that view Larry's
00:20:36
going further he's not just saying that
00:20:38
rates are going to be you know at the
00:20:40
current rates for longer he's saying
00:20:41
they might actually
00:20:42
increase and that's a risk yeah last
00:20:45
summer he said and this was last summer
00:20:47
so almost a year ago he was saying the
00:20:49
Market's got it totally wrong we're
00:20:51
actually going to need much higher rates
00:20:52
than the Market's anticipating for much
00:20:54
longer as well than the market is
00:20:56
anticipating and so did Mario drogy both
00:20:58
said the same thing no one paid
00:21:00
attention to him everyone ignored it and
00:21:02
assumed that this was going to be a
00:21:03
quick rebound to normalization it's
00:21:05
clear that you know once again Larry has
00:21:07
proven himself to be fairly
00:21:09
preci understanding where are headed
00:21:11
Larry Summers has for the most part been
00:21:13
spot on from this on this whole
00:21:15
inflation question going all the way
00:21:16
back to 2021 remember 100% 100% in q1 of
00:21:20
2021 Biden's first quarter in office the
00:21:23
big legislative push was for the $2
00:21:26
trillion covid relief bill this the so
00:21:28
called American Rescue plan and Larry
00:21:30
Summers said that it was it risked
00:21:32
inflation it was an inflationary bill it
00:21:34
was stimulatory yeah too didn't need it
00:21:37
the the economy was already coming back
00:21:38
and we didn't need it and Biden was
00:21:40
risking inflation but of course
00:21:41
inflation was only at 2% at that point
00:21:44
so the administration kind of poo pooed
00:21:46
Larry and said you know that's is Larry
00:21:48
Summers being Larry or whatever and sure
00:21:51
enough we were at 5% inflation by that
00:21:54
summer and you have to wonder if Biden
00:21:57
had listened to that advice
00:21:59
would he be in a different position
00:22:01
right now going into the election I
00:22:02
think probably he would have been and
00:22:04
you got to wonder for what I mean what
00:22:06
are that two trillion dollar accomplish
00:22:08
I mean covid was winding down I mean
00:22:10
these were the last bit of stimy checks
00:22:13
and payments to these Pharma companies
00:22:17
and I mean it was basically a grab bag
00:22:18
and it was passed on straight party
00:22:21
lines and it was just totally
00:22:22
unnecessary I mean the economy certainly
00:22:24
didn't need it and so here we are and I
00:22:26
think that a a lot of people including
00:22:29
the markets thought that Biden was kind
00:22:33
of out of the woods that this year we'd
00:22:35
see the final leg of inflation going
00:22:38
back to normal but that's not going to
00:22:39
happen and I think you know going beyond
00:22:41
the political ramifications I think
00:22:43
there could be several other knock on
00:22:45
effects that we should talk about I mean
00:22:48
one is for the
00:22:51
consumer this means that the cost of
00:22:53
borrowing is going to be higher for
00:22:55
longer that makes it harder to buy a
00:22:56
house mortgage payments are higher
00:22:58
that also means if there's fewer home
00:23:01
sale transactions that means the price
00:23:03
of housing could come down so there
00:23:05
could be a correction in that market
00:23:07
second if you want to buy a car your car
00:23:09
payment's higher and if you have loans
00:23:11
uh your your personal interest is going
00:23:13
to be higher and this is why I think
00:23:15
consumers feel like they're worse off
00:23:18
than the economic data would otherwise
00:23:20
reflect and Larry Summers actually had a
00:23:21
tweet storm about this about a month ago
00:23:24
where he calculated that if you included
00:23:26
the cost of borrowing in infl
00:23:29
that inflation was much higher than
00:23:30
people thought and that it actually
00:23:32
peaked not at 9% but at 18% so Larry had
00:23:36
an excellent tweet storm on that and he
00:23:38
said that the cost of borrowing which
00:23:40
used to be calculated in inflation but
00:23:42
is not anymore was the reason why
00:23:44
consumer sentiment about the economy was
00:23:47
depressed he said that that accounted
00:23:49
for about 70% of it so people should be
00:23:52
feeling better off because GDP growth is
00:23:55
good and unemployment is low but they're
00:23:57
not because inflation is so high and if
00:24:00
you include cost of
00:24:01
borrowing the inflation's even higher so
00:24:04
I think this is really bad news for
00:24:06
Biden but it it's a story that's been
00:24:07
going on now for three years it's not
00:24:10
just this one inflation print right it's
00:24:13
funny yesterday Biden said during a
00:24:16
press conference with Japanese prime
00:24:18
minister kashida that he's sticking with
00:24:21
his prediction of a rate cut before
00:24:23
Year's end but there might be a delay uh
00:24:25
which I think is obviously
00:24:28
you know based on what the data is
00:24:29
showing and what folks that seem to know
00:24:32
and have been pretty good predictors are
00:24:34
saying is unlikely we were supposed to
00:24:35
get one in April yeah and we were
00:24:37
supposed to get one in June oh yeah
00:24:39
remember the fed the FED Open Market
00:24:40
Committee in December stated that they
00:24:43
expected three rate Cuts this year and I
00:24:45
think the market in some cases we're
00:24:46
predicting as high as four or five right
00:24:49
and now we may not have any and we may
00:24:51
actually see a rate hike if you were to
00:24:54
follow some well if we if we see a rate
00:24:55
hike before the election I think Biden
00:24:57
is toast
00:24:59
yeah but I mean I think Summers gave
00:25:00
that maybe a 15 to 20% chance which is
00:25:03
it's still not the most likely scenario
00:25:05
but uh possible but possible no one's
00:25:08
counting on that in December chamat if
00:25:10
you're a Fed
00:25:11
governor and obviously the the the
00:25:14
Federal Reserve Board of Governors sets
00:25:16
the uh rates they meet and they they
00:25:18
make these decisions how influenced are
00:25:21
they politically how how influenced are
00:25:23
they by this election cycle and you know
00:25:25
historically this is meant to be a
00:25:26
fairly independent board but there's
00:25:28
been a lot of consternation over the
00:25:31
last few years that this board acts like
00:25:33
almost a political apparatus
00:25:35
particularly an election yours you mean
00:25:38
when they're not
00:25:40
plagiarizing well tell us what you're
00:25:42
talking
00:25:45
about it turns out that before I answer
00:25:48
your question that that was a joke Nick
00:25:50
you can please show the Tweet but there
00:25:52
was an article that came out that said
00:25:55
one of the FED Governors has apparently
00:25:58
massively plagiarized most of the work
00:26:00
that got her to the position of being
00:26:02
fed Governor yeah so the same thing that
00:26:04
happened to the president of Harvard so
00:26:06
TBD what happens to that fed Governor
00:26:08
but it seems you know my observation
00:26:10
there was just more that it's like the
00:26:12
preferred method of defenestration now
00:26:14
of academics and the appara right before
00:26:17
if you had right leaning views or
00:26:20
Centrist views you get run out of town
00:26:22
and get fired now all of those folks are
00:26:25
using these search engines to basically
00:26:28
f fig out really quickly that you
00:26:29
plagiarize large quantity of your
00:26:32
academic work and that your scholarship
00:26:36
is is a little bit more speculative
00:26:38
which then brings into question why do
00:26:39
you get the right to to help set the
00:26:42
policy of the most important economy in
00:26:43
the world well anyways so that that was
00:26:45
that joke but so I think that you're
00:26:48
asking the absolute right question I
00:26:51
think that the FED has become
00:26:53
increasingly
00:26:55
politicized and I do think that there
00:26:59
are actions that foreign governments
00:27:02
take to influence the election but I do
00:27:04
not think it's what most people think
00:27:07
when I say that most people ideas goes
00:27:09
to like some dark room conspiracy theory
00:27:12
and misinformation and I think that's a
00:27:15
little bit naive I think the more
00:27:17
obvious way in which other
00:27:20
governments can impact the US election
00:27:23
is exactly how Sac said which is they
00:27:25
know that if inflation ticks High and
00:27:28
interest rates are up and consumers are
00:27:29
under pressure and meaningfully
00:27:31
displeased with the economy they'll vote
00:27:32
out the sitting
00:27:34
Administration and so what can other
00:27:36
governments do they can do what they're
00:27:38
doing so
00:27:40
Nick I I love this like explanation in
00:27:43
three charts Nick chart number one
00:27:45
please what is this so this is a core
00:27:49
driver of inflation which is the price
00:27:51
of energy and what you see here is that
00:27:54
since the beginning of the year oil
00:27:57
prices have gone up which ultimately
00:27:59
will translate to into a higher cost of
00:28:02
doing business right running your
00:28:03
factory keeping the lights on keeping
00:28:06
your home warm getting from point A to
00:28:09
point B all of these things go up which
00:28:11
that ultimately get reflected in prices
00:28:13
which is what inflation is and so that's
00:28:15
a very bad Trend obviously we had a lot
00:28:18
of really good stuff happen through the
00:28:20
course of last year but it's largely
00:28:22
reversed itself so it's important to
00:28:24
double click into this and figure out
00:28:26
well who's driving this is it just a
00:28:29
random act or is it a systemic set of
00:28:31
decisions and it turns out it's systemic
00:28:34
so if you go to the next chart what this
00:28:36
shows you is what the US has been doing
00:28:39
so the United States has clearly created
00:28:42
an incentive to flood the economy with
00:28:45
oil which the laws of supply and demand
00:28:48
would say prices should go down and by
00:28:52
bringing prices further down they would
00:28:54
have further brought down inflation and
00:28:56
they would have pulled forward these r
00:28:58
cuts that we had been expecting from the
00:29:00
fed the problem is that the rest of the
00:29:02
world actually said no hold on and
00:29:05
that's what you can see on the next
00:29:06
chart so for every time we were trying
00:29:08
to increase production all of these
00:29:11
other countries have been cutting
00:29:13
production and this is the change in the
00:29:15
OPEC plus crude production targets of
00:29:17
2024 so what you see here is for every
00:29:21
barrel of oil the US would pump out of
00:29:23
the ground more than that one barrel of
00:29:25
oil would get actually restricted by all
00:29:27
of these countries on this list which is
00:29:29
just to show you that these countries
00:29:30
have a very specific view about how they
00:29:32
want that energy Market as and that's
00:29:35
just one market but it's an input a key
00:29:38
input into inflation and rates to work
00:29:41
so you're saying that the the OPEC has a
00:29:44
price per barrel price Target and
00:29:46
they're able to manipulate production to
00:29:48
maintain that price Target so while the
00:29:49
US is trying to lower the price per
00:29:51
barrel these other countries are are
00:29:53
able to have a stronger influence and
00:29:55
balance out production to get when you
00:29:57
when you make these Cuts Like This
00:29:58
prices will go up because OPEC plus is
00:30:00
meaningfully bigger the sum of all the
00:30:02
parts of OPEC plus is meaningfully
00:30:04
bigger than just the United States on
00:30:05
its own yeah and so the United States
00:30:08
May amp up a few hundred thousand
00:30:11
barrels a day but if OPAC cuts by a few
00:30:14
million barrels a day you see what you
00:30:16
saw in that first chart which is the
00:30:17
price will go up and that's largely why
00:30:19
prices have gone up so I think why this
00:30:21
happens is because when they see the
00:30:23
United States trying to manage inflation
00:30:27
and manage Global rates right because us
00:30:29
rates are not just for the United States
00:30:31
they're the they're the trends Setter
00:30:32
for everything else I think that in part
00:30:35
there's a decision that this rate
00:30:37
philosophy the economic philosophy the
00:30:39
political philosophy if they wanted to
00:30:42
support that what they would do is
00:30:44
actually also keep prices where they
00:30:45
were or increase production but by
00:30:48
reigning in production what you're
00:30:49
essentially doing is voting against that
00:30:51
entire apparatus right so OPEC and all
00:30:55
of those countries and those decisions
00:30:56
are not made by an oil Minister let's be
00:30:58
they're made by the leaders of those
00:30:59
countries whose decision then gets
00:31:01
reflected by the minister of petroleum
00:31:04
or oil in all of these countries is a
00:31:06
vote against Biden and the United States
00:31:09
government and the politicization
00:31:10
potentially of the fed and then the last
00:31:12
comment is just that when you look at
00:31:14
the reverse repo rate which is a
00:31:15
fundamental measure of liquidity what
00:31:17
you also see is liquidity very quickly
00:31:20
getting sucked out of the system which
00:31:22
is also generally a system health check
00:31:25
that the FED uses to make sure that the
00:31:26
system is operating as required so in
00:31:29
totality what I see is that there is a
00:31:35
structural disillusionment with the
00:31:37
current Administration and where people
00:31:41
can make decisions in their own best
00:31:43
interests versus the collective
00:31:45
interests of the United States in a
00:31:47
broader framework that the US may
00:31:49
represent are voting against it and so
00:31:52
this is why the idea of a persistent
00:31:54
inflation rate is a lot more credible
00:31:57
than it was six months ago and I and I
00:32:01
think sorry just the last point and I
00:32:02
think it's just what sa says which means
00:32:04
that we're probably now unbalance 5050
00:32:06
between a hike and a cut and I think if
00:32:09
you don't see this thing change in the
00:32:10
next three months you're going to see
00:32:12
7525 for a hike of at least 25 basis
00:32:15
points and I do think David's right I
00:32:18
don't see how the sitting Administration
00:32:20
in any
00:32:21
government will be able to withstand the
00:32:24
onslaught
00:32:25
of electoral displeasure
00:32:28
if rates are four and a half five and 6%
00:32:31
going into November Toth if that is I
00:32:34
think everything you said makes sense
00:32:35
going into this election rates are high
00:32:39
and Andor going higher what does the
00:32:42
Biden Administration do the fact is they
00:32:45
are very likely going to come up with a
00:32:48
strategy to try and win votes that will
00:32:51
likely involve some sort of stimulatory
00:32:53
process would be my guess and that
00:32:56
stimulatory process may look something
00:32:58
like more student loan forgiveness more
00:33:00
debt
00:33:02
forgiveness she had a whole speech about
00:33:04
debt forgiveness and here's here's the
00:33:06
irony the actions that the
00:33:08
administration is likely to take to
00:33:11
support themselves in the election cycle
00:33:14
are likely going to further fuel
00:33:16
inflation and that's the biggest concern
00:33:18
and worry I have is that there's almost
00:33:20
this inevitable set of behaviors that
00:33:22
are coming down the pipe here over the
00:33:24
next few months because of the inflation
00:33:25
report that are actually going to make
00:33:27
things worse not better I mean to to
00:33:29
your point Biden just announced a new
00:33:31
student loan forgiveness plan remember
00:33:32
the Supreme Court invalidated his last
00:33:34
one so now he's trying again and it
00:33:36
would potentially give loan forgiveness
00:33:38
to something like 30 million borrowers
00:33:40
so yeah they're going to try and buy
00:33:42
votes but I think it's already very late
00:33:44
in the game to be trying to do that I
00:33:46
think that's what they've been doing
00:33:47
over the past few years I mean Biden has
00:33:50
been a huge spender you know he passed
00:33:52
the the covid relief bill he passed the
00:33:54
inflation reduction act which was a
00:33:56
ridiculous name for was it 750 billion
00:33:59
of of more
00:34:00
spending and uh there was the chips act
00:34:04
which yeah and there was the chips Act
00:34:06
and the infrastructure Bill and then
00:34:08
remember he wanted four and a half
00:34:09
trillion of build back B on top of that
00:34:12
and he wanted even more he didn't get it
00:34:13
any event I think that this is a classic
00:34:16
case of Biden spent the last three years
00:34:19
making his bed and now he's going to
00:34:20
have to sleep in it and if in fact
00:34:23
inflation is persistent and sticky and
00:34:26
not going away and he doesn't get rate
00:34:27
cuts
00:34:28
again this may cost him the election but
00:34:30
but look I want to move beyond the
00:34:31
political aspect of this and just talk
00:34:33
about some more of these KnockOn effects
00:34:35
because we talked about the impact on
00:34:37
the consumer there's also an impact on
00:34:40
investors there's an impact on the
00:34:42
government and there's an impact on on
00:34:44
the banks so let's just deal with the
00:34:46
banks for a second we've talked about on
00:34:49
the show how commercial real estate
00:34:51
developers are hanging on by their
00:34:53
fingernails right now you know they they
00:34:56
basically borrowed huge amounts of money
00:34:58
to buy commercial real estate when rates
00:35:00
were really low and they did so at high
00:35:02
valuations now there's been a huge
00:35:04
correction on that market and they
00:35:05
cannot pay back those loans and they
00:35:08
can't get refinanced so what's happening
00:35:10
well they're working with the banks to
00:35:12
restructure those loans to tack on the
00:35:14
interest they can't pay now to the end
00:35:17
of the loan and then the bank will hope
00:35:19
and pretend that they'll be able to get
00:35:21
paid back one day it's called extend and
00:35:23
pretend well the extend and pretend
00:35:25
strategy could work if you believe that
00:35:27
r cuts are coming really soon because
00:35:29
you just need to hold on until the rate
00:35:31
cuts are here and then you can get
00:35:32
refinanced at lower rates but if rates
00:35:35
are going to be higher longer that
00:35:36
strategy is not going to work and you're
00:35:38
going to see more and more real estate
00:35:39
sponsors throwing in the towel and banks
00:35:42
are going to end up foreclosing on these
00:35:44
properties and you're going to see more
00:35:45
and more fire sales there's a really
00:35:46
dramatic example just the other day in
00:35:48
St Louis a building that was bought a
00:35:51
few years ago for $200 million just fire
00:35:53
sailed at $2 million I mean 99%
00:35:56
reduction this is like like crash level
00:35:59
that's for the equity right yeah no this
00:36:01
is like the price of the deal I mean I
00:36:03
asse the equity was completely wiped out
00:36:06
yeah I guess they sold it for three and
00:36:07
a half million are you sure that's not
00:36:08
the equity that's got to be the equity
00:36:10
there's no way that's the no it's just
00:36:11
the price of the
00:36:13
building okay I don't know I mean with
00:36:15
the debt it's got to have the debt
00:36:16
attach way look I mean either way it's a
00:36:18
total wipe out for the equity holders
00:36:20
yeah but it's also going to be a wipe
00:36:22
out for the bank that made that loan
00:36:24
originally yeah or that bought that loan
00:36:26
when is packaged into cmbs or whatever
00:36:29
it was so I would expect that if rates
00:36:32
stay higher longer that's going to
00:36:34
create tremendous stress on Commercial
00:36:35
Real Estate and and therefore on the re
00:36:38
Regional banking system that made all
00:36:39
these loans to commercial real estate
00:36:42
developers so that's knock on effect
00:36:44
number one knock on effect number two is
00:36:46
is the government's cost of borrowing
00:36:48
the 10e rate's already risen to 4 and a
00:36:50
half% now and if rates stay higher
00:36:53
longer as more and more of the
00:36:54
government debt rolls it's going to end
00:36:56
up getting refinanced at higher rat
00:36:58
and the need to refinance all this
00:36:59
government debt is going to continue to
00:37:01
put pressure on the bond markets and I
00:37:03
think this is why Larry is fundamentally
00:37:05
pretty bearish on rates going down is
00:37:08
the government's financing costs are so
00:37:10
huge and they continue to grow we're
00:37:12
adding something like a trillion dollars
00:37:14
of new debt every hundred days there
00:37:16
have been some reports of this yeah 7.6
00:37:18
trillion is getting refinanced of old
00:37:21
debt in the next 12 months right 7.6 is
00:37:26
sitting around 2%
00:37:28
and now it's going to get bumped up to
00:37:29
close to 5% right which adds which adds
00:37:32
an incremental $210 billion a year of
00:37:36
Debt Service expense just on the debt
00:37:39
that's getting refinanced in the next 12
00:37:40
months not to mention the deficit not to
00:37:42
mention etc etc so right so the
00:37:45
government was extending and pretending
00:37:47
as well I mean they were hoping that
00:37:49
rates would go down fast enough that
00:37:52
when all of those massive government
00:37:53
debt rolls and needs to be refinanced
00:37:55
it' be done at lower rates so the
00:37:57
interest costs wouldn't swamp us we're
00:37:59
already I think at over a trillion
00:38:00
dollars now of annual interest expense
00:38:03
for the federal government we are yeah
00:38:04
and it's going to get it's going to rise
00:38:05
to 1.6 trillion so it's going to be 60%
00:38:09
greater than our defense budget just
00:38:10
servicing the old debt we're basically
00:38:12
in a classic debt spiral where we're
00:38:14
borrowing our annual deficit is we're at
00:38:17
2 trillion plus now so we're not paying
00:38:20
back the principle on the debt we're not
00:38:22
even paying back the interest on the
00:38:24
debt we're borrowing money to pay off
00:38:26
all the interest
00:38:28
and then some on top of that so that's a
00:38:31
huge problem for the federal government
00:38:32
and then I think the the last piece of
00:38:34
this is investors if you pull up this
00:38:37
Fred
00:38:38
chart on the FED funds rate over the
00:38:41
very very long term so what this chart
00:38:43
shows if you just zoom in on this is the
00:38:45
Fed funds rate basically over the last I
00:38:48
don't know like 75 years and you can see
00:38:51
that it peaked in the early 1980s when
00:38:55
vulker decided to break the back of
00:38:57
inflation by jacking up interest rates
00:38:59
to like 18% and it was very painful we
00:39:02
had a pretty severe recession and I
00:39:05
think it was 81 or 82 but then the
00:39:08
economy came roaring back by 83 and
00:39:10
Reagan got elected in ' 84 in any event
00:39:12
that began a period of declining and low
00:39:16
interest rates for investors again
00:39:19
starting in the mid 80s and it continued
00:39:23
all the way through I mean especially
00:39:25
through I think the post GFC period and
00:39:28
then this Co period where we had zero
00:39:30
interest rates for a long period of time
00:39:32
and you can see the last Spike we've had
00:39:34
was when the FED decided to jack up
00:39:37
rates to 5% in response to inflation so
00:39:39
the fact that we've got this persistent
00:39:41
sticky inflation suggests that this
00:39:44
whole you could call it really a almost
00:39:46
a 40-year period of declining in low
00:39:49
interest rates maybe over and when
00:39:51
interest rates are going down it creates
00:39:53
a huge Tailwind to the stock market and
00:39:57
the bond market because the discount
00:40:00
rate is lower so stocks and bonds are
00:40:02
going to be more valuable well if we're
00:40:04
in a in a long-term environment that's
00:40:07
more inflationary and rates have to stay
00:40:09
higher longer that's not great news for
00:40:12
investors it hurts the stock market and
00:40:14
it creates in in the private investing
00:40:17
world like VC and real estate it creates
00:40:19
a much higher hurdle rate so it's harder
00:40:22
for for private investors to justify
00:40:25
fundraising so you know I think think
00:40:27
it's too early to say that this 40-year
00:40:30
trend is over but I think it could be
00:40:33
and um and and the reason for that is
00:40:35
just the huge pressure of government
00:40:38
borrowing crowding out private investing
00:40:40
and this sort of everpresent need to
00:40:44
keep issuing more and more debt at
00:40:46
higher and higher rates to make it more
00:40:48
attractive is going to create I think
00:40:51
just very bad conditions for for
00:40:53
investors so Chim let me ask you if you
00:40:56
concur
00:40:57
given that today where we're sitting as
00:40:59
of recording right now towards the end
00:41:02
of market on Thursday April 11th the
00:41:04
NASDAQ is sitting at an all-time high
00:41:07
and the NASDAQ is up 1.6% today
00:41:10
following this inflation report
00:41:12
yesterday what's the disconnect in the
00:41:14
market on why investors are buying
00:41:18
equities given that we're likely going
00:41:21
to have persistent higher rates and as a
00:41:24
result multiples should compress
00:41:26
particularly in growth stocks
00:41:28
and why the nasdaq's kind of firing
00:41:31
up I think it's important to look at
00:41:34
what stocks are actually lifting the
00:41:35
NASDAQ just like what stocks are lifting
00:41:37
the S&P 500 and we've seen this there's
00:41:40
a massive dispersion there's like seven
00:41:42
or eight companies that matter and 500
00:41:44
odd companies that don't matter
00:41:46
much and so the reason why things go up
00:41:49
in an environment like that is
00:41:51
irrespective of the economy money
00:41:53
managers are paid to deploy money and I
00:41:56
don't know if you guys saw this but Nick
00:41:58
maybe you can find it I linked to it in
00:41:59
my newsletter last Sunday which was an
00:42:02
article about the fact that the global
00:42:04
amount of total available equities to
00:42:07
buy is
00:42:08
shrinking right so if you think about
00:42:11
that what that means is that the number
00:42:13
of dollars is growing right linearly and
00:42:16
in some years it seems exponentially but
00:42:19
then the and so then a certain
00:42:21
percentage of that Finds Its way into
00:42:23
the equity markets but when the equity
00:42:25
markets continue to shrink and there's
00:42:26
few and fewer things to buy prices will
00:42:30
still go up irrespective of the
00:42:31
underlying justification so I think that
00:42:34
the the thing is you can't look at these
00:42:36
things as a sign per se you know if you
00:42:38
look at Commodities as a different
00:42:40
example Nick I sent you
00:42:42
this Commodities are up broadly speaking
00:42:45
30% since the beginning of the
00:42:47
year the I think the reality is the
00:42:51
following countries are feeling
00:42:55
increasingly uncomfortable
00:42:58
with the decisions that the United
00:43:00
States are making whether that's its
00:43:02
position to keep funding the war in
00:43:04
Ukraine whether that it's the continued
00:43:07
instability in the Middle East whether
00:43:09
it's posturing with China whatever it is
00:43:12
and so every country is now making a
00:43:14
very different calculation about what
00:43:16
they want to do and I think how it gets
00:43:17
reflected is that they're optimizing for
00:43:19
their own economies and what that yields
00:43:22
is each of them trying to make as much
00:43:24
money as they can in the short term and
00:43:26
as as a country that is a net importer
00:43:30
we are going to feel the price of those
00:43:32
decisions as inflation and I think saaks
00:43:34
is right like that's where we have to
00:43:36
start figuring out how we rebalance
00:43:39
these decisions from a foreign policy
00:43:41
and economic perspective because if you
00:43:43
don't change something here all of these
00:43:45
countries are basically going to be like
00:43:46
we're on our own we're going to optimize
00:43:48
for ourself they're these countries are
00:43:50
basically voting in a way that says we
00:43:53
are not being led in a way that we trust
00:43:55
and that unfortunately Falls at the feet
00:43:56
of the sitting president yeah well look
00:44:00
I'm
00:44:01
hopeful as we all are that work in the
00:44:04
tech industry that new tools and Ai and
00:44:08
other Technologies would have a massive
00:44:10
driver on productivity which netn net
00:44:13
could help even this out that's the one
00:44:15
last great hope sitting here AI
00:44:19
obviously viewed as being highly
00:44:20
disruptive by non- technologists and
00:44:23
deeply concerning and particularly in DC
00:44:26
what is but what is that thing that Bill
00:44:28
Gates says things are overestimated in
00:44:30
the short term and deeply underestimated
00:44:32
in the long term I think that that's
00:44:34
that's what AI that's right that's right
00:44:36
and so AI is a bunch of no offense
00:44:39
probabilities and statistics today okay
00:44:42
and so we talked about this last time so
00:44:44
we should debunk this whole thing of
00:44:45
like there's some glowing brain
00:44:47
somewhere that's capable of doing
00:44:49
everything doesn't mean that we
00:44:51
shouldn't underestimate it being capable
00:44:54
of this in five or 10 years which is
00:44:56
probably the window in which we have
00:44:58
some form of AGI but today it's not that
00:45:00
and so the the great leaps in
00:45:02
productivity freeberg that you're
00:45:03
talking about are probably a 3 to five
00:45:05
year phenomenon not a three to five
00:45:06
month so what saak says is Right which
00:45:08
is how does the sitting Administration
00:45:12
buy votes today stimulatory be it'll
00:45:14
have to make a ton of promises the
00:45:16
problem is it can't really work its way
00:45:18
into the economy fast enough come the
00:45:20
November election and so that that's
00:45:23
where I think they're in a really tough
00:45:25
spot which means that then
00:45:28
and and I hate to B it bear or bad news
00:45:29
but this is where you have a lot of
00:45:31
these Wag the Dog kind of scenarios that
00:45:34
come to mind because then the only way
00:45:36
to really Galvanize a populace is to
00:45:39
distract them yeah well look let's talk
00:45:41
a little bit more about AI because I do
00:45:44
think that regardless of the near-term
00:45:48
and longer term implications there is a
00:45:51
peing of fear peing of Interest both
00:45:54
different spelling of the word Peak Adam
00:45:57
shiff yesterday proposed a bill sorry
00:46:00
earlier this week called the generative
00:46:01
AI copyright disclosure act in response
00:46:04
to I think over a hundred musicians
00:46:07
signing a letter saying they're
00:46:09
concerned that their copyrighted works
00:46:12
are being used to train AI models and
00:46:15
Nick if you'll pull up the text from the
00:46:16
bill that I pulled out here real quick
00:46:19
we can take just a quick look it's a
00:46:21
very short bill it's only five pages
00:46:23
long and it defines a generative AI
00:46:25
model uh that's a combination of
00:46:28
computer code and numerical values
00:46:30
designed to use artificial intelligence
00:46:32
to generate outputs in the form of text
00:46:35
images audio or video and that it
00:46:38
substantially uh incorporates one or
00:46:40
more models as a system and it's
00:46:42
designed for use by consumers and what
00:46:45
the bill then asks is that anyone
00:46:47
developing these models has to submit to
00:46:50
a register run by the federal government
00:46:54
a list of all of the data that they used
00:46:57
that might be copyrighted to train the
00:46:58
model and that this becomes a precursor
00:47:02
to being able to legally develop and use
00:47:04
AI models that you actually have to
00:47:06
register the training data so I have a
00:47:08
rant on this which I'm going to preserve
00:47:10
for the end given my rights as moderator
00:47:13
here today but I'd love the reaction
00:47:15
from saaks first on shift's proposed
00:47:17
Bill Jam moth and we'll run this one
00:47:19
around the horn pretty quick well I
00:47:21
first of all I think it's just it's too
00:47:23
soon for this legislation I mean the the
00:47:25
first thing that needs to happen is we
00:47:26
to get the question of fair use
00:47:28
arbitrated by the courts we've talked
00:47:30
about this before people publish lots of
00:47:33
information on the internet and I guess
00:47:36
technically it's copyrighted but it's
00:47:38
been published in a completely public
00:47:40
way and humans are obviously allowed to
00:47:43
read it and and use it to generate their
00:47:45
own work I think there's a question
00:47:46
about whether AIS are allowed to learn
00:47:49
from it as well and I would argue that
00:47:52
they should be to some degree under fair
00:47:54
use maybe if you're talking about
00:47:56
copyright write of songs I don't know if
00:47:57
that's different anyway these questions
00:47:59
need to be arbitrated and once we know
00:48:02
that then we'll know whether there's a
00:48:04
need for a rights Clearing House of some
00:48:07
kind which may not be a bad idea I
00:48:09
actually got pitched by a Founder
00:48:11
recently to create a rights marketplace
00:48:16
with copyright holders on the on the one
00:48:19
side or rights holders could be
00:48:20
musicians could be movie studios could
00:48:23
be anyone who owns content and then AI
00:48:27
on the other that want to license that
00:48:28
content for training purposes and I
00:48:31
actually thought it was a pretty good
00:48:32
idea
00:48:33
so my point is just that there are
00:48:36
entrepreneurs working on solving this
00:48:38
problem as well and I guess what I'm
00:48:40
saying is I'd like to see fair use
00:48:42
figured out and i' like to see what the
00:48:44
private Solutions are going to be before
00:48:46
we try to legislate this problem away
00:48:49
from really a point of ignorance because
00:48:52
we're so early in the development of
00:48:53
this market now I think one of the
00:48:55
questions you have to ask here is why
00:48:57
did Adam Schiff introduce this bill and
00:49:00
who is Adam Schiff Adam Schiff is a
00:49:02
powerful California congressman who is
00:49:05
the candidate for US Senate right now
00:49:08
and he's expected to win he's he's ahead
00:49:10
of Steve Garvey who's the Republican
00:49:11
candidate by like 30
00:49:14
points Schiff is in addition to being a
00:49:18
vicious partisan who's known for for
00:49:20
rushia gate he also is a prodigious
00:49:23
fundraiser and when he's not in front of
00:49:26
the camera he's very effective in closed
00:49:29
doors appealing to the key special
00:49:31
interests in California that matter and
00:49:34
my guess is that he's not carrying water
00:49:36
here for the hundred musicians who
00:49:37
signed that letter he's carrying water
00:49:39
for the big studios the big Hollywood
00:49:41
Studios including music labels but also
00:49:44
the movie studios and he's an LA based
00:49:47
Congressman yeah I mean that's who he's
00:49:49
representing now at the same time my
00:49:51
guess is that he's run this by the big
00:49:54
tech companies and he's probably got
00:49:55
their blessing some degree because like
00:49:57
Bill Gurley always points out they like
00:50:00
rules like this because of regulatory
00:50:02
capture they can comply with them but
00:50:04
the little guy the entrepreneur who's
00:50:06
trying to create something new has a
00:50:07
much harder time complying with these
00:50:09
regulations so this is basically a big
00:50:12
special interest group sort of deal that
00:50:16
I think he's he's putting forward do you
00:50:18
think this becomes law not yet but it's
00:50:21
Paving the way for something and it's
00:50:23
more like his promotional effort during
00:50:25
his campaign effectively well I
00:50:28
mean his they'll still try to move it
00:50:30
legislatively but yeah I mean the the
00:50:33
big La powers that be like this and they
00:50:37
love this yeah
00:50:40
Jam any reaction to this bill I
00:50:44
think there was an article in The Verge
00:50:47
that I
00:50:48
posted it turns out that open AI
00:50:50
transcribed over a million hours of
00:50:52
YouTube videos to train
00:50:55
gp4 my take away when I read this was
00:50:58
well if Google's not going to sue open
00:51:00
AI then this is a mood
00:51:04
point because you're talking about one
00:51:06
of the most valuable companies in the
00:51:08
world with one of the most valuable
00:51:10
sources of training data in the
00:51:12
world and so if if that if it's true
00:51:15
that there was a copyright violation and
00:51:17
Google just lets us go what's anybody
00:51:20
else supposed to do what chance does
00:51:22
these group of singer songwriters have
00:51:24
and you know no offense to Adam shift
00:51:26
but he's not going to be able to do
00:51:28
anything so if this multi-trillion
00:51:31
dollar company doesn't draw a line in
00:51:33
the sand then none of this matters and
00:51:36
everybody's going to train on everything
00:51:38
I think like my big Takeaway on all this
00:51:42
is that there's a real deep
00:51:48
misunderstanding on what
00:51:52
these models really are and what they're
00:51:55
doing the assump
00:51:57
I think
00:51:58
naively is that they take in a buch of
00:52:01
data and then they spit that data back
00:52:05
out and in some cases maybe slightly
00:52:08
transformed but the truth is that the
00:52:10
models don't actually hold the data that
00:52:14
they're trained on they develop a bunch
00:52:17
of synthesized predictors that they
00:52:20
learn what the prediction could or
00:52:23
should be from the data and this is
00:52:25
similar to how humans operate
00:52:27
can you pull up the article Nick that I
00:52:30
posted this article is from last May and
00:52:33
you guys may remember this case I can't
00:52:35
remember if we talked about it on the
00:52:37
show but Ed Sheran was
00:52:39
sued by the estate of the writer of uh
00:52:44
the Marvin Gay song Let's Get It On for
00:52:48
infringement in his song Thinking Out
00:52:50
Loud and he actually prevailed in court
00:52:53
where he went through with the jury how
00:52:56
he comes up how he runs his creative
00:52:58
process how he came up with the song and
00:53:01
how he does his work and as you know Ed
00:53:04
Sheron and nearly every musician or
00:53:06
every artist listens to other people's
00:53:08
music looks at other people's art and
00:53:11
they synthesize that data they
00:53:13
synthesize that knowledge and that
00:53:14
experience into their own creative
00:53:17
process to
00:53:19
Output what in their mind is a novel
00:53:22
creation and I think that AI Works in a
00:53:25
similar vein in that it's not actually
00:53:27
storing the images it's not actually
00:53:29
storing the music of third parties it's
00:53:32
learning from that process we all like
00:53:35
musicians learn on classical music they
00:53:37
listen and play other pop artists music
00:53:40
and then they learn things that they
00:53:41
like things that they don't like things
00:53:43
that fit together well certain
00:53:46
intonations syncopations and that's how
00:53:48
they develop their own tracks and so I
00:53:50
think that the um assumption in AI is
00:53:53
that it's almost guilty until proven in
00:53:56
inent is what's going to really
00:53:58
challenge this technology getting
00:54:00
Mainstay appeal and being useful uh in
00:54:03
the way that it could and should be that
00:54:05
the de facto is that it's learning and
00:54:07
training is copyright infringement I
00:54:11
don't buy that you that stores the data
00:54:15
no that that just because you're
00:54:17
learning like a human it's not copyright
00:54:19
infringement and I'm sorry let me let me
00:54:21
make my last statement which is that I
00:54:23
do think that similarity is measurable
00:54:25
and that is copyright infringement so I
00:54:27
would rather than focus on how you train
00:54:29
the model I would encourage legislators
00:54:32
to find as Saks points out a better
00:54:35
process to Define what makes one thing
00:54:37
distinct from another run that analysis
00:54:41
and then use that analysis to determine
00:54:43
uniqueness and that analysis is
00:54:45
ultimately what should determine whether
00:54:47
there is copyright infringement versus
00:54:49
the how was the model trained exercise
00:54:52
which is rought with challenges as you
00:54:53
guys know how do you determine
00:54:55
weightings how do you determine whether
00:54:56
this was even relevant to the model we
00:54:58
don't even know if the models ignore the
00:55:00
data or use the data in their synthesis
00:55:02
or in their waiting it's all very opaque
00:55:05
and so it's almost like hey here's a
00:55:06
list of stuff that I read but I may not
00:55:08
have even paid attention to 95% of it
00:55:11
when I was reading it we don't know and
00:55:13
so I'd rather focus on is there
00:55:15
copyright infringement in the output
00:55:16
does the output mimic an original
00:55:19
copyrighted source and if it does then
00:55:21
that's where the infringement should lie
00:55:24
not on the how did you do it I think
00:55:25
that you're creating an impossible
00:55:27
standard is it 5% the same is it 8% the
00:55:29
same is that 14% where's your threshold
00:55:32
is it how that different than training
00:55:34
how's that different than training if
00:55:35
I'm JK rling am I not allowed to read
00:55:37
other authors copyrighted books for fear
00:55:40
that by reading it I will now use their
00:55:41
copyrighted material in my novel
00:55:44
book okay stick with that example but we
00:55:46
can also use the Edge shear an example
00:55:48
Nick can you play this video I could
00:55:49
play you every song in the pop charts
00:55:51
right now over four chords you name any
00:55:53
song and I'll play it in the four chords
00:55:55
so these These are CS fcgn messenger um
00:55:59
that's your friend um uh cuz you only
00:56:02
need the light when it's burning low
00:56:04
only miss when its starts only know you
00:56:07
love when you let her go I'm walking
00:56:10
away CRA David uh C David I'm walk
00:56:14
away the in last one Let It Be Beatles
00:56:19
when
00:56:23
I why is that important obviously it's
00:56:27
not illegal for Ed to have learned these
00:56:29
four chords but if he tries to produce
00:56:31
those songs and calls them something
00:56:33
else that's clearly somebody else's IP
00:56:36
similarly I think that if you don't give
00:56:39
people the right to say yeah of course
00:56:41
the letters AB c d e FG all the way to Z
00:56:44
are not my invention it's the alphabet I
00:56:46
don't control that I don't control words
00:56:47
and their meanings but when I put one
00:56:49
word in front of another in front of
00:56:51
another purposefully and I create
00:56:53
something that has value to me I should
00:56:55
have the right to protect protect that
00:56:57
and I think that's the fundamental
00:56:58
question should you not have a right to
00:57:00
protect it should you allow somebody
00:57:02
else to take that and in some opaque way
00:57:06
and undefinable way make a system that
00:57:09
could compete with that thing and have
00:57:11
no repercussions I think that that's
00:57:13
what people need to decide and I'm fine
00:57:15
by the way one way or the other yeah in
00:57:17
the Ed Sheran case he was saying the
00:57:19
exact copyrighted lyrics and he was
00:57:22
singing the exact copyrighted Melody he
00:57:24
was just playing the harmony with four
00:57:25
chord I that was kind of the point he
00:57:28
Wasing in the case of all the the
00:57:31
copyrighted material you're stating I
00:57:33
want to protect it from showing up in
00:57:34
the end product of someone's creative
00:57:37
process I shouldn't care about them
00:57:39
listening to my song in their creative
00:57:40
process everyone always references how
00:57:42
Oasis sounds like the Beatles right they
00:57:44
those guys love the Beatles they listen
00:57:45
to The Beatles so much of their music
00:57:47
mimics and and sounds like the Beatles
00:57:49
but the Beatles aren't going to file
00:57:50
infringement suits against them they
00:57:51
were inspired by The Beatles that was
00:57:53
part of their creative process and so I
00:57:55
would argue that the output should
00:57:56
really be where we assess this stuff and
00:57:58
it's going to take a lot of cases you're
00:58:00
creating an impossible standard where no
00:58:03
any individual person will have the
00:58:05
economic wherewithal to fight this and
00:58:07
so it's basically seeding all creativity
00:58:11
to the board and I don't think what is
00:58:14
what is the standard of measuring how
00:58:16
someone is training their creative
00:58:17
process your standard is I gotta go I
00:58:19
don't think I got to go listen I got to
00:58:21
go you got to tell me every time you as
00:58:22
an artist listen to a song and then I'm
00:58:25
going to deter determine whether or not
00:58:27
you are listening to copyright music and
00:58:29
making your own music that's basically
00:58:31
what we're asking for here with this
00:58:33
bill that's not I don't I'm not talking
00:58:35
about the bill I'm talking about this
00:58:36
idea that if you train a system that can
00:58:39
actually automate a task for you based
00:58:41
on some learning That's Unique you
00:58:43
should be able to uniquely protect your
00:58:46
ownership for example we have a
00:58:48
different set of ways in order to
00:58:50
protect processes that are unique to you
00:58:52
which is you can have a patent or you
00:58:54
can have a trade secret but if you R all
00:58:56
of this stuff away where some system can
00:58:59
in an automated way do anything for you
00:59:02
and replicate a whole bunch of work that
00:59:04
it sits on top of to be able to do that
00:59:07
without any repercussions I think that
00:59:09
that's a very important explicit
00:59:10
decision and what I'm saying is you
00:59:12
cannot expect individual people to go
00:59:14
and fight these little battles against
00:59:16
these big multi hundred billion dollar
00:59:18
companies if the big multi hundred
00:59:20
billion dollar companies and trillion
00:59:22
dollar companies don't fight the other
00:59:24
multi hundred billion dollar and
00:59:25
trillion dollar companies what they're
00:59:27
effectively saying isone of this is
00:59:29
worth anything copyrights are worth
00:59:30
nothing and I'm okay with that decision
00:59:33
but it should be an explicit one and
00:59:34
it's not going to happen the other way
00:59:36
where some five-page law from a guy
00:59:40
who's trying to get elected is not the
00:59:41
thing that's going to make a the
00:59:43
difference the difference is if Google
00:59:45
doesn't Sue open AI it means copyright
00:59:47
is worthless and by the way that article
00:59:49
didn't just point the finger at Google
00:59:51
it pointed the finger at meta where
00:59:53
there were explicit decisions to say
00:59:54
yeah no let's just violate the copyright
00:59:56
it's it's okay and if it's okay then
00:59:58
it's okay sax you're the independent
01:00:02
Arbiter here any summary well somebody's
01:00:06
going to litigate it somebody's litig
01:00:08
GNA litigate it you're you're right it'd
01:00:09
be surprising if Google didn't want to
01:00:12
given how valuable all their YouTube
01:00:13
content is and a competitor you know
01:00:15
slurped it up to train their model but
01:00:18
somebody will will litigate this it
01:00:20
could be these songwriters who knows and
01:00:22
then we're going to we're going to get
01:00:24
some messy arbitration fair use and it's
01:00:26
probably going to work its way up over
01:00:28
the different circuit courts you'll
01:00:30
probably get different judgments and
01:00:32
finally the Supreme Court will resolve
01:00:33
it and then we'll kind of know where
01:00:35
things stand and then and then there'll
01:00:37
be a legislative
01:00:39
fix I I don't know where it's going to
01:00:41
end up I mean I know what Jal would say
01:00:42
if he were here I'm sure he's like
01:00:44
chomping at the bit be part of this
01:00:45
conversation he would say that creators
01:00:48
deserve to get paid for their AI rights
01:00:52
and that if you want to make money
01:00:53
training a model on their cont you got
01:00:56
to compensate them I also I I I buy I
01:00:58
buy your argument too which
01:01:01
is you're not really violating their
01:01:04
their rights for the AI model to read
01:01:08
their content and analyze it which is
01:01:10
what it's really doing as long as it
01:01:12
doesn't output a violation of their
01:01:15
copyright and that's what all artists do
01:01:18
that's what all humans do the creative
01:01:20
process is one of initially synthesis
01:01:23
you learn from other people's works you
01:01:25
you learn from the environment around
01:01:27
you you learn from the world that you're
01:01:28
exposed to but there was compensation in
01:01:29
those other bottles there was not you
01:01:31
don't oh Oasis never paid the Beatles to
01:01:35
listen to their music they the radio no
01:01:37
that's not true they listened on the
01:01:39
radio they may not have paid but some
01:01:41
Advertiser paid for an ad the radio
01:01:43
station had to pay ASCAP and BMI there
01:01:46
was publishing rights there was all
01:01:47
kinds of other rights so that's not true
01:01:49
what you're saying I'm not what I'm what
01:01:51
I'm saying is it's not copyright just
01:01:52
because I train my process somebody got
01:01:54
paid so that singer songwriter did get
01:01:56
paid they may not have getting paid by
01:01:58
the listener but in this example
01:01:59
nobody's getting paid look I think
01:02:02
there's three potential outcomes here
01:02:03
okay outcome number one is that freeberg
01:02:06
wins and the courts decide that this is
01:02:09
fair use and these AI companies aren't
01:02:11
in violation copyright infringement is
01:02:14
measured in the work of art that is
01:02:16
produced not in the process by which it
01:02:18
is generated right okay so that's
01:02:20
solution number one I think solution or
01:02:23
outcome number two is that the courts
01:02:26
throw a big wrench into it or a bill
01:02:28
like shift bill which is largely
01:02:30
punitive throws a big wrench into it and
01:02:32
I think what happens then is new AI
01:02:35
companies have a really hard time
01:02:37
accumulating training data and so the
01:02:39
incumbents who already have all the
01:02:41
training data they may have to pay a
01:02:43
fine there'll be some slap on the wrist
01:02:45
but now you've created a real moat and
01:02:46
barrier to entry and so secretly they're
01:02:48
going to love it and it's going to be a
01:02:50
big problem I think for the open source
01:02:52
movement so that's outcome number two
01:02:54
and then outcome number three is you
01:02:56
create some sort of Rights Clearing
01:02:59
House kind of like uh exists in the
01:03:02
recording industry where if you want to
01:03:04
cover somebody's song or perform
01:03:06
somebody else's song there's already
01:03:08
predefined terms on which you can use
01:03:10
those rights and then there's a
01:03:12
compensation mechanism for that so you
01:03:14
don't have to go negotiate every single
01:03:16
deal that you want to do you can just
01:03:18
use the song you can use the rights and
01:03:20
there's again compensation for that that
01:03:23
would be like the compromise I could see
01:03:25
that alter
01:03:26
number three existing in which case the
01:03:29
incumbents probably like that because
01:03:31
they again they want there to be a
01:03:33
barrier to entry they want to make it
01:03:35
hard for the guy in the garage to Pony
01:03:38
up the the capital necessary to create a
01:03:40
new model but at least that would be a
01:03:43
somewhat functional system it wouldn't
01:03:44
be outcome number two which would
01:03:47
totally put the kabash on the use of
01:03:48
training data so in any event I don't
01:03:50
know which one of the three it's going
01:03:51
to be but those are the three potential
01:03:53
outcomes that I see Happening Here have
01:03:54
you guys seen UD
01:03:58
udio uh no it's like a new music geni
01:04:03
system it is frakin unbelievable is that
01:04:07
vod's thing or vod's another thing I
01:04:10
think vod's another thing this one just
01:04:11
came out it was apparently rumored for a
01:04:13
while ex deepmind employees started yudo
01:04:17
it's been this kind of like hot stealth
01:04:20
company
01:04:22
for a couple of months people have been
01:04:24
talking about it as rumored to to be the
01:04:26
best music AI but here is someone that
01:04:28
said Dune the Broadway musical and this
01:04:31
is what it outut go ahead of AR the
01:04:35
greatest leader we've ever seen they say
01:04:38
that he's a listen
01:04:42
gu
01:04:44
and onand back that's crazy you can hear
01:04:49
the layers of Music the layers of the
01:04:51
tracks the
01:04:53
smoothness the tempo obviously like
01:04:56
there's just so many layers to this Nick
01:04:57
can you pull up another one some of
01:04:59
these are just incredible because it
01:05:00
spans genres it spans Styles it's like
01:05:04
so beautiful like the way it's put
01:05:06
together every every piece feels
01:05:08
somewhat emotional it's Unique it really
01:05:11
doesn't feel like you're just listening
01:05:13
to someone printing copyright
01:05:17
music funky dance pop
01:05:20
[Music]
01:05:22
song create a birthday song for my
01:05:25
friend Irvin
01:05:31
create an Irish folk tune with violin
01:05:33
and
01:05:35
[Music]
01:05:41
instrumental it's pretty incredible and
01:05:44
I think it shows the
01:05:46
state-of-the-art is such now that this
01:05:49
is going to become a real challenging
01:05:51
question from a legislative point of
01:05:54
view given how far ahead these
01:05:56
technologies have gotten and I think
01:05:58
that musicians artists consumers are
01:06:00
going to start to use these tools in a
01:06:01
really prolific way given how good they
01:06:04
are now I heard from someone that just
01:06:07
sat for hours creating tracks that they
01:06:09
listen to on udio the other day and so
01:06:12
you're basically just playing your own
01:06:13
music all day long it's really
01:06:15
incredible anyway exciting time
01:06:17
hopefully all the lawsuits and the
01:06:19
legislators don't get in the way of all
01:06:20
this Innovation cuz it's moving really
01:06:22
fast and we should just kind of see
01:06:23
where it goes before trying to clamp
01:06:25
down totally mhm guys I want to talk
01:06:29
about as you know this like emerging
01:06:31
Trend that we've been talking about
01:06:32
offline about drones in Warfare recently
01:06:35
we saw small drones controlled by the
01:06:37
houis attack cargo vessels in the Suz
01:06:40
Canal it led to rather large scale
01:06:42
Supply disruptions economic value
01:06:44
destruction we've seen
01:06:46
videos I think you have one we can pull
01:06:48
it up and take a look of Ukrainian
01:06:51
controlled drones flying in to destroy
01:06:53
tanks and large warehouses and Russian
01:06:55
held territories causing tens of
01:06:57
millions of dollars of damage I think
01:06:59
we're seeing the acceleration of the
01:07:00
changing face of warfare technology lots
01:07:03
of these small form factor lowcost
01:07:05
autonomous physical agents and I think
01:07:08
there's a bunch of implications both
01:07:09
with respect to war but also how we
01:07:12
spend money on defense and how Silicon
01:07:15
Valley is involved in response um sax
01:07:18
I'd love to hear your your points of
01:07:19
view maybe you can highlight for us some
01:07:20
of the things you've been seeing in the
01:07:22
utilization of these new technologies in
01:07:24
in the war given you're our in-house War
01:07:27
correspondent and you obviously had do
01:07:29
some work in Silicon Valley go ahead
01:07:31
I've heard a lot about the impact of of
01:07:33
drones just by watching the coverage of
01:07:35
the Ukraine war I was listening to an
01:07:38
interview with an American mercenary
01:07:40
who's fighting on the side of Ukraine
01:07:42
and he described how ubiquitous these
01:07:45
drones were on the battlefield now he
01:07:46
said that you literally can't get out of
01:07:48
a trench to go to the bathroom because a
01:07:51
drone will basically uh get you and he
01:07:53
said they're buzzing around they sound
01:07:55
like mosquitoes because they're kind of
01:07:57
just everywhere on the battlefield both
01:07:59
Ukraine and Russia have them and several
01:08:04
months ago going into this year zalinsky
01:08:06
said that this would be the big game
01:08:07
changer for Ukraine they're going to
01:08:08
make a million drones I don't think it's
01:08:10
worked out that way it turns out that as
01:08:11
many drones as ukrainians have been able
01:08:14
to put on the battlefield the Russians
01:08:15
have even more because they're able to
01:08:17
mass produce them in factories they've
01:08:19
got bigger drones better drones and I
01:08:22
think the most important variable in in
01:08:24
the war so far with respect to drones is
01:08:26
that the Russians have pretty Advanced
01:08:28
electronic warfare and so they've been
01:08:31
able to jam a lot of the Ukrainian
01:08:33
drones whereas the reverse has not been
01:08:35
true for the ukrainians so I would say
01:08:38
that drones have been a huge factor in
01:08:40
the war but so
01:08:42
far the balance there is tipping towards
01:08:45
the Russians as it is in so many other
01:08:47
areas as well but to your larger Point
01:08:50
there's no question this is the the
01:08:51
future of warfare and you're seeing that
01:08:54
it's cre creating a lot of opportunities
01:08:57
for asymmetric Warfare so for example
01:09:00
with the hoodies they've been firing
01:09:03
cheap missiles and drones at our at our
01:09:06
ships in the Red Sea and we've been
01:09:08
having to spend $2 million air defense
01:09:11
missile shooting down $2,000 drones so
01:09:13
if if that continues and we don't have a
01:09:15
good response to this problem it's going
01:09:17
to really change the balance of power I
01:09:19
don't know if this was at our Summit or
01:09:21
if I heard it this later from some
01:09:22
senior person in the military who said
01:09:24
that aircraft car
01:09:25
are outdated technology like they don't
01:09:27
make sense anymore and we're going to
01:09:30
see a shift towards lots of small
01:09:34
autonomous drone like systems on the
01:09:37
battlefield taking out targets and as a
01:09:39
result if you Game Theory this out the
01:09:41
necessity for defense systems against
01:09:44
large amounts of swarming drone like
01:09:46
systems and then you know what do you
01:09:50
actually have to do with your existing
01:09:52
military architecture to play into this
01:09:56
kind of new Tactical system and then
01:09:59
that's going to require a massive
01:10:01
evolution in technology and is the
01:10:04
United States
01:10:05
prepared they should Silicon Valley play
01:10:07
they should be we should I maybe Nick
01:10:11
you can throw up this the first link
01:10:12
that I sent you but eight years ago I
01:10:16
came to this conclusion and I invested
01:10:17
in this company called s drone which is
01:10:19
autonomous drones in the Seas our
01:10:22
customers include the US Navy the
01:10:23
chairman of our company actually is is
01:10:25
Admiral Mike Mullen who is the former
01:10:27
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
01:10:29
but these drones are capable of going
01:10:32
into some of the most dangerous places
01:10:33
in the world and collecting enormous
01:10:36
amounts of surveillance data and
01:10:38
information that otherwise
01:10:41
takes the United States government lots
01:10:44
of time and lots of money and is pretty
01:10:47
scattershot and instead with these
01:10:48
things you can
01:10:50
be constantly in hotpots and if you go
01:10:54
to the next one so much that you know
01:10:55
we've deployed some of these drones in
01:10:58
the Middle East and there was a point at
01:11:00
which the Iranian Navy intercepted two
01:11:02
of our drones and picked them up and
01:11:03
this was kind of like a a global thing a
01:11:06
few years ago but I really believe in
01:11:08
this trend and I think that we have an
01:11:10
enormous responsibility to be funding
01:11:13
these things these are really
01:11:14
complicated systems to build obviously
01:11:16
and they take lots of time so these are
01:11:18
not overnight successes freedberg and
01:11:20
they take lots of money which is hard to
01:11:22
come by as well but these are absolutely
01:11:24
the right kinds of businesses because
01:11:26
eventually at a minimum you Building
01:11:28
Systems that can measure and collect
01:11:30
enormous amounts of really critical data
01:11:32
so that people can make better decisions
01:11:35
which hopefully is measured in Saving
01:11:38
life right and then over time you
01:11:41
actually get to a military that should
01:11:43
be much cheaper much safer and has fewer
01:11:47
people in general on our side and on our
01:11:49
enemy sides on the front lines which
01:11:52
means fewer casualties and I think that
01:11:54
that's the whole value of this entire
01:11:56
movement it's cheaper it's way better
01:11:59
it's much more useful and it gives the
01:12:03
respective armies that use these things
01:12:05
or militaries rather a fuller picture so
01:12:07
that you can make decisions that have
01:12:09
enormous consequences yeah and in
01:12:11
February the Department of Defense on a
01:12:14
panel in Arlington Virginia briefed
01:12:17
reporters and Industry folks on their
01:12:21
interest in growing their Partnerships
01:12:22
in Silicon Valley to access the
01:12:25
necessary technologies that are going to
01:12:28
rewrite the face of warfare I don't know
01:12:31
about you guys but I've seen kind of two
01:12:34
sides of this in Silicon Valley a good
01:12:36
number of venture capitalists and
01:12:38
entrepreneurs and technologists think
01:12:41
that it's morally incorrect to support
01:12:44
warfare technology and then there are a
01:12:46
few that are going blazing ahead with
01:12:49
supporting this new Evolution and these
01:12:51
Technologies do you guys see the same
01:12:53
and is there going to be kind of this a
01:12:55
big step to weaponize these things right
01:12:57
so s drone we have a very good big
01:13:01
thriving successful business these
01:13:03
machines aren't weaponized by any
01:13:05
stretch of the
01:13:06
imagination and so I think that
01:13:09
that comment is more
01:13:12
genuflecting and virtue signaling than
01:13:14
it is real because in order to even be
01:13:18
legitimately considered for some kind of
01:13:22
like armed
01:13:23
unmanned product you have to be deep
01:13:26
inside of the bowels of the dod and
01:13:29
Pentagon and have been working with them
01:13:30
for years to even be taken seriously so
01:13:33
the startups that are like assing those
01:13:35
deals are not even close to those deals
01:13:38
and the startups that are close to them
01:13:40
are probably being much more quiet and
01:13:42
thoughtful and Hush Hush because the
01:13:44
path to do that isn't legitimate unless
01:13:46
you've been in business with these folks
01:13:48
for 10 plus years yeah I think
01:13:51
it's it's more a commentary on the fact
01:13:53
that if this is where
01:13:56
an organization the Department of
01:13:58
Defense that has a trillion dollar
01:14:00
annual budget is going to be allocating
01:14:03
resources that technology is going to
01:14:05
need to come from somewhere and the
01:14:08
investors in Silicon Valley that are
01:14:11
making these Investments are likely
01:14:12
going to outperform those who are not
01:14:15
does that sound reasonable to you saxs
01:14:17
that there is this shift underway and
01:14:19
that again who have sh shied away from
01:14:21
defense technology are you know
01:14:24
necessarily going to be left out of a
01:14:26
you know kind of a new industry that's
01:14:27
emerging in Silicon Valley well I guess
01:14:29
the way I put it is that the US
01:14:31
government spends over $800 billion
01:14:33
every year on defense and it's not clear
01:14:36
what we're getting for that money
01:14:38
because in Ukraine for example we've run
01:14:40
out of artillery shells we've actually
01:14:41
we've run out of Patriots we've run out
01:14:43
of javelins we've run out of stingers so
01:14:45
we're spending all this money we're not
01:14:46
getting a lot for it and part of the
01:14:48
reason is because the defense industry
01:14:50
is Consolidated down to these five Prime
01:14:53
defense contractors who are basically an
01:14:56
oligopoly and we have this Cost Plus
01:14:58
procurement system where they just raise
01:15:00
their prices every year and the
01:15:01
government pays it
01:15:03
so I think all of us want the United
01:15:06
States to have an effective defense I
01:15:07
mean I want us to use our military power
01:15:09
more wisely I don't like all these
01:15:10
stupid Wars we keep getting in but I do
01:15:12
want the United States as an American to
01:15:15
be the most powerful country I do want
01:15:19
us to get the best value for our defense
01:15:21
dollars and the only way that's going to
01:15:24
change is if if the defense industry
01:15:26
gets disrupted by a bunch of startups
01:15:28
doing Innovative things and there's no
01:15:31
question that I think drones are the
01:15:33
future of warfare so your point about
01:15:35
autonomy I think that is where this is
01:15:37
going next is that right now the drones
01:15:40
are typically controlled by you know
01:15:43
somebody with like a VR heads called
01:15:46
teleoperated teleoperated and they're
01:15:49
fpv this firsters Vision drone and you
01:15:52
basically strap some sort of explosive
01:15:55
on to it and then you drive it into
01:15:57
whatever your target is yeah those types
01:16:00
of drones are easier to disrupt by
01:16:03
electronic warfare because if you can
01:16:05
disrupt the signal from the T operator
01:16:08
then the Drone basically doesn't know
01:16:10
what to do and so you're right the next
01:16:12
step here is autonomous systems that can
01:16:17
be programmed with a Target and can find
01:16:21
it on its own make decisions on its own
01:16:23
and then they also build in some
01:16:24
shielding against some of this like
01:16:26
jamming technology or this ew electronic
01:16:29
warfare technology so that's where all
01:16:31
these things that's where the
01:16:33
battlefield is of the future is headed
01:16:36
and in a in a weird way if you think
01:16:38
about humans becoming a smaller and
01:16:40
smaller piece of the battlefield and
01:16:43
autonomous drones becoming a larger and
01:16:45
larger piece of it these wars become
01:16:48
resource Wars and basically technology
01:16:50
Wars that's right which which may or may
01:16:52
not be good I don't know but by the way
01:16:54
so so this is the point I wanted to make
01:16:55
if you pull up this chart if if that is
01:16:57
where Warfare is headed is a large
01:17:00
number of small autonomous systems that
01:17:03
go and find a Target and try and execute
01:17:05
a mission and you know in the case of
01:17:08
Ukraine saying they want to have a
01:17:09
million China might say I want to have a
01:17:12
100 million all of these systems are
01:17:14
dependent on lithium ion battery systems
01:17:16
today 79% of lithium ion battery
01:17:18
production comes out of China the US is
01:17:21
only 6.2% of global lithium ion battery
01:17:24
production and China has talked about
01:17:27
scaling up drone manufacturing to a
01:17:30
level that the US simply cannot even
01:17:32
contemplate in its industrial
01:17:34
architecture today so it seems to me
01:17:38
that if that is where Warfare tactically
01:17:40
is headed that China has a huge leg up
01:17:44
and is going to become a critical point
01:17:45
of dependency for the United States to
01:17:47
develop an
01:17:49
Arsenal necessary to be competitive in
01:17:52
this this kind of next evolution of
01:17:54
warfare I will say that like if you then
01:17:56
Game Theory this out like how do you
01:17:58
defend against these autonomous
01:17:59
electronic systems there's a technology
01:18:01
called EMP or electromagnetic
01:18:04
pulsing where as you guys know if you
01:18:07
run a very high current electric field
01:18:09
you can actually send out and emit a
01:18:11
pulse that then when it hits electronic
01:18:14
circuits far away induces a high
01:18:16
electric current in those circuits and
01:18:18
short circuits them so
01:18:21
emps are a defense system that allow you
01:18:24
to take electronic systems and this has
01:18:26
been you know kind of a a part of
01:18:28
warfare since probably the 1960s 50s but
01:18:32
targeted emps and targeted systems for
01:18:34
eliminating all of these autonomous
01:18:35
systems becomes a new defense
01:18:38
technology that I know several startups
01:18:41
in Silicon Valley that have been funded
01:18:43
with a lot of capital by folks that we
01:18:45
all know very well that are kind of
01:18:47
pursuing this we don't have a choice
01:18:49
because I think the point is that if you
01:18:51
nick you just post this photo we have an
01:18:53
enormous human capital problem with the
01:18:56
military which is there's just not
01:18:57
enough folks in listing anymore so we
01:18:59
don't have any choice except to automate
01:19:01
and become drone dependent just tell us
01:19:04
these numbers Jam this is a chart from
01:19:06
the Department of Defense that shows
01:19:08
military enlistments looking back from
01:19:10
about the 1970s through today and these
01:19:14
are two lines that are just going from
01:19:16
the upper left to the lower right and so
01:19:19
we're at alltime lows with respect to
01:19:20
the number of people that actually want
01:19:22
to join the military and so if we are
01:19:25
supposed to as saak said be this very
01:19:29
sharp fighting force then all of the
01:19:31
money that we're spending needs to get
01:19:33
allocated into things that can be
01:19:35
remotely
01:19:36
operated we don't have a choice yeah I
01:19:39
mean so freeberg you you asked the
01:19:40
question how do we defend against these
01:19:41
drones yes there's EMP technology if you
01:19:46
want to use an EMP you better make sure
01:19:47
there's not any planes nearby because it
01:19:49
will take them out of the sky you better
01:19:50
make sure by the way there are now
01:19:52
there's you can Target emps in a narrow
01:19:54
cone which is part of the the technology
01:19:57
you better make sure you don't hit any
01:19:58
of your own stuff because you'll fire
01:19:59
the electronics on those unless you EMP
01:20:01
Harden them which by the way will happen
01:20:03
I mean if if the US gets really good at
01:20:05
at sending out EMP pulses then our
01:20:08
opponents will start EMP hardening their
01:20:11
drones but any event yes it's a category
01:20:13
of Defense so is electronic warfare the
01:20:16
the one defense investment I've made is
01:20:18
actually in this idea of how do you
01:20:20
defend against drones and it's a startup
01:20:23
where I led the seed Dr called Allen
01:20:25
control systems and they have a product
01:20:26
called bullfrog which is a gun turret
01:20:29
that uses a standard m240 machine gun
01:20:32
but it's got a scanner next to it next
01:20:35
to the machine gun that is searching the
01:20:37
sky for enemy drones and it uses
01:20:41
computer vision to recognize them and
01:20:43
then it just shoots them down like very
01:20:45
quickly and it seems to me this is it's
01:20:48
maybe not the only way of doing it but
01:20:49
it's a really good way of doing it
01:20:51
because uh you can mount these things to
01:20:54
uh a vehicle I mean imagine in the
01:20:58
future that we have these autonomous
01:21:00
drones everywhere that are basically
01:21:02
assassination drones how you going to
01:21:04
stop them I mean how do you move the
01:21:05
president of the United States around I
01:21:06
mean in his Caravan you're going to have
01:21:09
to have you know his Caravan is going to
01:21:11
have to have some sort of electronic
01:21:14
warfare system on it to basically
01:21:17
prevent drones but it's going to need
01:21:19
some sort of last line of defense where
01:21:20
you can actually shoot a drone out of
01:21:22
the sky or stays in his b
01:21:25
so SX you don't you don't have any moral
01:21:27
trepidation around investing in defense
01:21:29
technology just to be clear well you
01:21:31
know I'd have to think twice about
01:21:32
investing in a in a weapon this is more
01:21:34
of a defense technology this is
01:21:36
defensive in nature where you're trying
01:21:38
to take out a drone that would be
01:21:40
attacking one of our bases or
01:21:42
installations or
01:21:43
convoys so this is fundamentally
01:21:45
defensive in nature and look I want
01:21:48
America to be the most powerful country
01:21:50
I'm an American I'm patriotic so I don't
01:21:53
want our troops be able to be hit by
01:21:56
enemy drones so no I don't have any more
01:21:58
problem with this I do have a problem
01:22:01
with all the stupid Wars the United
01:22:02
States gets into but that's on a policy
01:22:05
level I feel like that's separate right
01:22:07
from the question of do we want our guys
01:22:09
to be protected yes we do and chamat you
01:22:12
don't care you would invest in defense
01:22:13
technology companies no I care I think
01:22:16
that I would probably have to think
01:22:17
twice about making weapons and I'm not
01:22:19
sure that I'm really interested in that
01:22:20
but like I said eight years ago my
01:22:22
thought was we need to move to just
01:22:24
looking at those Trends we need to move
01:22:26
to an entire surface area of unmanned
01:22:29
autonomous vehicles and I really like
01:22:32
this idea of a class of machine that's
01:22:35
there to surveil and collect all the
01:22:38
important data so that you can make
01:22:39
better decisions and it's taken us eight
01:22:42
years but we're firmly entrenched now I
01:22:44
think the fact that both of you
01:22:46
highlighted degree of trepidation and
01:22:48
you guys are like fairly outside of the
01:22:51
middle bounds of how Silicon Valley
01:22:54
would think and make decisions indicates
01:22:56
like why so much of Silicon Valley has
01:22:58
deep concerns about investing in defense
01:23:00
technology and the US despite having the
01:23:03
best technology may be challenged by the
01:23:06
fact that our Silicon
01:23:08
Valley technologists and investors
01:23:12
are held back on
01:23:15
pursuing these Evolutions because of a
01:23:18
moral suasion and I think it is
01:23:20
something that the Department of Defense
01:23:21
has highlighted is that iar it's never
01:23:25
like we've been faced with that choice
01:23:27
and the reality is like if the choice is
01:23:30
stay small or scale up and be really big
01:23:34
you know it's hard to turn away from
01:23:37
that decision but that choice isn't a
01:23:40
realistic one this is why I was saying I
01:23:42
think it's you you can come into it with
01:23:44
the moral framing but I do think that
01:23:45
sax is Right which is if you believe
01:23:48
that America should be the most
01:23:50
important country in the world and you
01:23:51
have the ability to help it be that
01:23:55
eventually some of those decisions will
01:23:57
come in contact with this kind of
01:24:00
decision and usually though it takes
01:24:03
many many years before that's realistic
01:24:05
and to be honest from what I've
01:24:09
seen the opportunity to pursue that is
01:24:13
generally so financially remunerative
01:24:15
that everybody's like okay I think we
01:24:17
have to do it you know I don't have a
01:24:18
problem with investing in a company like
01:24:20
andrel I mean America needs defense
01:24:22
companies in order to maintain its
01:24:24
defense and the problem right now that
01:24:26
we have is there's these five Prime
01:24:27
companies that are Antiquated and really
01:24:31
expensive and we need startup disruptors
01:24:34
to that so I'm not like morally opposed
01:24:36
to it and in fact I think it's probably
01:24:38
a good thing I think my concern would be
01:24:40
I don't really want to be part of the
01:24:41
military-industrial complex I feel like
01:24:43
it
01:24:44
might like corrupt my views on things
01:24:47
like I don't want to you want war you'd
01:24:49
be Gering for war yeah like I don't want
01:24:50
to be I don't want to feel that's your
01:24:53
demand gen that's I right I don't want
01:24:55
to feel an incentive to be like these
01:24:57
generals who go on CNN and Fox News and
01:24:59
justify every single War that's my
01:25:02
biggest fear as well it's like it's one
01:25:04
thing to be investing in a bunch of
01:25:05
companies where we're sitting around
01:25:07
hoping for cheaper clicks on Facebook
01:25:09
and Google it's an entirely other thing
01:25:11
to sit on the board of a company and
01:25:12
hope for war that's a horrible place to
01:25:14
be I think on that point that's a great
01:25:16
point to wrap on guys this has been fun
01:25:19
a little more flat than it would
01:25:20
normally be with jcal we miss him we
01:25:23
wish him well we hope his tooth
01:25:25
recovers and um we will be back with
01:25:27
your it's like that scene in Dune where
01:25:30
he eats his tooth and releases that
01:25:32
poison gas that's right that's right get
01:25:36
better soon jcal please uh if you're
01:25:38
interested in the summit summit. Allin
01:25:41
podcast.co click subscribe on YouTube
01:25:43
I've been given notes to say that for
01:25:45
the chairman dictator chamath poopaa The
01:25:48
Raid Man David Sachs I am your sultant
01:25:51
of science Dave fredberg we will see you
01:25:54
guys next week love
01:25:55
you you
01:25:58
byebye let your winners
01:26:01
ride Rainman
01:26:05
David and instead we open source it to
01:26:08
the fans and they've just gone crazy
01:26:10
[Music]
01:26:18
withen besties
01:26:21
are that's my dog taking Drive wait wait
01:26:25
oh man oh man myit will meet me at we
01:26:30
should all just get a room and just have
01:26:31
one big hug orgy cuz they're all this
01:26:33
useless it's like this like sexual
01:26:35
tension that they just need to release
01:26:37
[Music]
01:26:42
somehow we need to get merch
01:26:48
[Music]
01:26:52
our I'm going all man

Episode Highlights

  • Insights from AI Conference in Paris
    Key takeaways from an AI conference, including Nvidia's strong position in inference.
    “If he deploys his roadmap, he'll have 50% of the available inference compute.”
    @ 04m 04s
    April 12, 2024
  • Cloud Market Insights
    The cloud market is highly competitive with no lock-in, emphasizing the importance of developer services.
    “The cloud is a wide open competitive market right now!”
    @ 16m 24s
    April 12, 2024
  • Larry Summers' Inflation Predictions
    Larry Summers has consistently warned that inflation would be stickier than anticipated, challenging market expectations.
    “Larry has proven himself to be fairly precise in understanding where we are headed.”
    @ 21m 07s
    April 12, 2024
  • Biden's Economic Challenges
    Biden's spending and inflationary pressures may cost him the election as rates remain high.
    “The actions that the administration is likely to take to support themselves in the election cycle are likely going to further fuel inflation”
    @ 33m 16s
    April 12, 2024
  • Debt Spiral Dilemma
    The federal government is facing a classic debt spiral, borrowing to pay off interest.
    “We're basically in a classic debt spiral.”
    @ 38m 12s
    April 12, 2024
  • Interest Rates and Market Impact
    A long-term environment of higher interest rates could hurt investors and the stock market.
    “Persistent sticky inflation suggests a 40-year trend might be over.”
    @ 39m 41s
    April 12, 2024
  • AI and Productivity
    AI is viewed as a potential massive driver of productivity despite concerns.
    “AI is deeply concerning, but also a massive driver of productivity.”
    @ 44m 04s
    April 12, 2024
  • Legislating AI Copyright
    A proposed bill aims to regulate AI models and their training data usage.
    “The assumption in AI is almost guilty until proven innocent.”
    @ 53m 53s
    April 12, 2024
  • The Future of Copyright
    The conversation highlights the challenges of copyright in the age of AI, emphasizing the need for explicit decisions on ownership.
    “Copyrights are worth nothing and I'm okay with that decision.”
    @ 59m 30s
    April 12, 2024
  • Drones in Warfare
    Drones are changing the battlefield dynamics, becoming a crucial factor in modern warfare.
    “Drones have been a huge factor in the war.”
    @ 01h 08m 38s
    April 12, 2024
  • China's Dominance in Lithium Production
    79% of lithium ion battery production comes from China, while the US only has 6.2%.
    @ 01h 17m 16s
    April 12, 2024
  • Investing in Defense Technology
    The discussion highlights the moral dilemmas faced by investors in defense technologies.
    @ 01h 22m 01s
    April 12, 2024

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Summit Announcement02:06
  • Cloud Market Dynamics16:24
  • Market Predictions21:07
  • Biden's Spending34:16
  • AI Productivity44:04
  • Copyright Challenges59:09
  • AI Music Revolution1:06:15
  • Moral Dilemmas in Defense1:22:01

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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