All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E135: Wagner rebels, SCOTUS ends AA, AI M&A, startups gone bad, spacetime warps & more
Episode Date: July 1, 2023(0:00) Bestie intros: Friedberg fills in as moderator! (2:45) Wagner Group rebellion (23:15) SCOTUS strikes down Affirmative Action (51:03) Databricks acquires MosaicML for $1.3B, Inflection raises $1....3B (1:09:35) IRL shuts down after faking 95% of users, Byju's seeks to raise emergency $1B as founder control in jeopardy (1:26:38) Science Corner: Understanding the NANOGrav findings Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://linktr.ee/calacanis https://twitter.com/DavidSacks https://twitter.com/friedberg Follow the pod: https://twitter.com/theallinpod https://linktr.ee/allinpodcast Intro Music Credit: https://rb.gy/tppkzl https://twitter.com/yung_spielburg Intro Video Credit: https://twitter.com/TheZachEffect Referenced in the show: https://edition.cnn.com/2023/06/22/politics/ukraine-counteroffensive-western-assessment/index.html https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/putin-wagner-russia-treason-coup-b2363430.html https://www.statista.com/statistics/896181/putin-approval-rating-russia https://www.levada.ru/en/ratings https://twitter.com/MatreshkaRF/status/1673209794608365570 https://www.csis.org/blogs/post-soviet-post/la-vie-en-rose-why-kremlin-blacklisted-levada-center https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/29/world/africa/central-african-republic-wagner-africa-syria.html https://www.cnbc.com/2023/06/29/supreme-court-rejects-affirmative-action-at-colleges-says-schools-cant-consider-race-in-admission.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Students_for_Fair_Admissions_v._Harvard https://twitter.com/greg_price11/status/1674426520100814848 https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/study-harvard-finds-43-percent-white-students-are-legacy-athletes-n1060361 https://www.wsj.com/articles/databricks-strikes-1-3-billion-deal-for-generative-ai-startup-mosaicml-fdcefc06 https://www.snowflake.com/blog/snowflake-acquires-neeva-to-accelerate-search-in-the-data-cloud-through-generative-ai https://www.forbes.com/sites/alexkonrad/2023/06/29/inflection-ai-raises-1-billion-for-chatbot-pi https://www.theinformation.com/articles/social-app-irl-which-raised-200-million-shuts-down-after-ceo-misconduct-probe https://www.theinformation.com/articles/softbank-backed-messaging-app-irl-says-it-has-20-million-users-some-employees-have-doubts-about-that https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-06-27/byju-s-seeks-to-raise-1-billion-to-sidestep-shareholder-revolt https://techcrunch.com/2023/06/27/prosus-byjus-markdown https://twitter.com/shaig/status/1673836979903950851 https://www.ft.com/content/b8a4214f-7f64-4d3a-97c4-4731f2effb0d https://twitter.com/chamath/status/1674469606746992651 https://pauloffit.substack.com/p/my-conversation-with-robert-f-kennedy https://www.quantamagazine.org/an-enormous-gravity-hum-moves-through-the-universe-20230628 https://physics.aps.org/articles/v16/116 Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is gonna be a feisty episode.
Is it?
Two of us are on Grinich mean time.
Two of us are on Pacific.
Jake Halsdow is sleeping his head.
I'm good, actually.
You good?
I'm good.
All right, well great to be back.
Welcome to the All Conspiracy podcast
where we repeat false statements
and help spin them into tales of struggling
against the establishment, the elite
and the mainstream media.
We will deliver to you the people, the revolution
against the powers of P,
unless it offends.
F**king nice game.
Nice game.
Yeah.
P.
Still trying to get my invite for next week.
We also enjoy it.
We also enjoy it.
We also enjoy sharing with you fantastic stories
of opulence.
Let's be neutral.
Opulence, leisure and benevolent greed.
Here we go.
Joining me today are my co-hosts, General David Sachs,
Commander of the Fourth Battalion of the Internet
Tweet Brigade.
General, welcome.
Joining us from a remote location.
And Moscow.
As there been like an establishment takeover of the pod,
I mean, what's up with this intro?
Yes, it is good to do it.
Yeah.
Every argument they make against us, your basically just conceding is true. I mean, we'll put this in. Yeah. Every argument they make against us,
your base seat is conceding is true. I know. Exactly. From his 12th century Mediterranean castle,
Il Ducce, Tomat Polly Haapatia. Welcome to math. How is the Mediterranean diet treating you?
Blue. Blue. And Emperor Nero Calicanas. R ruler over podcasts, paid events, entrepreneurial universities, and dental SPVs. Emperor, thank you for letting me sit near
throwing today. It's good to be here. Thank you.
Dental SPVs. Shout out to my dentists.
Wait, you say king of STDs?
What you said is PVs.
So SPVs.
Endless PVs. Yeah.
That's the thing with certain STDs where once you are king you're gonna be king for life
That's it. It's going to be easy.
Love you, Wes.
I'm going to be the queen of the king of the king of the king of the king of the king.
That's syndicate.com.
Yeah, thank you.
You've been doing, you said five shows a week lately, your voice is shot.
I thought I was starting to go.
Sorry, I asked you if you'd moderate and you said, you thankfully said yes.
I've got the energy.
I missed last week.
I enjoyed listening to you guys with BG.
Great episode.
Sorry, I couldn't join. but let's kick it off.
That's funny.
I still haven't watched the episode that I missed.
You're not interested, huh?
He's like, I'm not on the show.
I'm not interested.
And I don't have time to participate.
I don't really have time to watch it.
The truth is, Zach, why don't you admit to everyone
that you're in a show.
You probably watch it four or five times.
Ha ha ha.
All right, so let's kick this off. Obviously, you guys recorded right
before the Wacker group attempted coup or potential coup or theorized coup began last
week. So, Sachs, you kind of sent out a text saying, the show is already stale because
you know, kind of missed that, that news cycle by publishing right after it started, but you recorded
right before.
So let's do just a quick recap of what happened with Russia, Ukraine, and particularly
its Wagner, Wagner Group rebellion.
Last Friday, the Wagner Group, which is a Russian paramilitary organization led by Yavgeny
Prigozion, launched what seemed like an armed
insurrection against Russia. Wagner had occupied portions of Rostov on Don, a city of over
a million people, a regional capital, and headquarters of Russia's southern military
district, before setting off towards Moscow and abruptly stopping, I think about 200 kilometers
before reaching Moscow city. At that point, there was supposedly a negotiation
the president of Belarus got involved and a pregozion decided to step down. Putin said,
I'm not going to prosecute you for these crimes. He was given immunity and it was announced
that all the members of the Wagner group were given the option of returning home
or joining the Russian military and the Wagner group was going to be dissolved.
Sachs, maybe you can kind of give us your summary of the events that took place.
And then we'll talk a little bit about the interpretation of what we think this means
for the conflict in Ukraine.
Well, you're right, that this rebellion took place just after we dropped our last
episode. And so everybody, both on Twitter and in the comments, was dunking on me for my
take on last week's episode that the much hyped Ukrainian counteroffensive was not succeeding,
that it was in fact failing. I think there's abundant evidence for that, which hasn't changed
even CNN, had written an article basically supporting the idea that the counteroffensive was not living up to what had been promised and so everyone was in the comments saying that my take had basically aged like milk.
And this arm rebellion or mutiny by progoation was evidence that the Russian regime was about to collapse that Russia was.
collapse that Russia was in fact on the verge of civil war and you saw the exact same people who had oversold the counteroffensive now overselling this mutiny as something that
would bring down the Russian regime and the war and of course that did not happen.
It was certainly a highly unusual event and I've read takes now from every different corner
of the internet about what it was and what took place.
You have people speculating that this was all staged.
I do not believe that.
I do believe that it was an insurrection
or a mutiny by pergusion.
I think the trigger for it was the fact
that his Wagner organization was being merged in
with the Ministry of Defense and the regular Russian Army
and his men were all being made to sign contracts with the Ministry of Defense and the regular Russian Army and his men were all being made to sign contracts with the Ministry of Defense.
That would have resulted in a giant loss of income and status for pregozion simultaneously for months now he's been criticizing.
The Ministry of Defense specifically the the Minister of Defense Shogu and the.
Chief General of the general staff.
chief general of the general staff, Jarrasmov. So he's been vocally critical of them.
And I think that this basically erupted into a mutiny by him where he basically tried
to leverage his position, like you said.
He marched, what they now think are about 8,000 men, which is about a quarter of Wagner
into Rostov on Don.
He then took the Ministry headquarters and sent about 3,000 of his men on a convoy to Moscow. I
think that, although this is probably best described as a mutiny, I think that it
did have coup optionality to it. I think that pregozion was seeking to find out
how much support Putin had and who might join him.
And he had put out a number of statements that I think from the Russian regime's point
of view, it could be described as seditious that morning.
And there's a lot of evidence that he staged this attack on his base.
He claimed that there was a missile attack by the Ministry of Defense, and that's what
launched this march for justice.
And in his comments, he was careful not to criticize Putin directly, but he had a lot
to say about ministry defense and the overall conduct of the war.
And it was, I think, a harshly critical indirectly of Putin.
And I think he was looking to see who might support him.
And what happened is that on the way to Moscow during this convoy nobody supported him in fact all the statements came out
from the other generals including sir viken including all the regional governors of members of the
duma and other important figures in Russian society and there wasn't a single person willing to
publicly support pergusion and that's when put Putin went on TV called this basically an active treason and a stab in the
back.
And at that point, I think, pregoation's options were pretty limited.
And he basically took a deal that was broker by Lukashenko in which he would go into exile
in Belarus, in exchange for basically being allowed to live.
That was basically the deal that was ultimately cut.
And so I think where things stand today is that although I think this wasn't embarrassment and a black eye for
the Russian regime, it never looks good for a regime to have any kind of mutiny or insurrection.
And I think that it does raise questions that Putin's now going to have to answer to his various
allies and supporters about how stable his regime is.
I think ultimately, Putin has ended up in a place of consolidating Russian society behind
him.
Like I said, there were no power centers that supported this mutiny.
They all rallied to Putin's defense and the people of Russia, even though Purgosian
is a popular figure of being kind of a war hero from the Battle of Bokmut, the Russian society supported Putin.
I think he's at something like 80% poll numbers.
So I think where things stand to?
Well, like Lovata Center, which is an independent polling agency, for example, these are not the
Russian regime's own numbers.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, Putin? Well, I don't know how LeVada center with their methodology is, but these numbers when
the numbers are bad are cited by Western sources.
But there are other forms of evidence too.
You may have seen this video that went viral over the past few days of this song that's
now the number one chartbuster in Russia where it's this very patriotic Russian song, where they're basically singing,
I am Russian, that's sort of the main chorus.
Nick, can you pull up the song?
I'd like to see this place.
Coming at you, 95.25.
I love Russia.
Oh my God, this is a serious propaganda.
Wow, yeah.
I mean, that looks like a pretty good party.
If you look up the lyrics to the song,
the English translation of the lyrics,
the gist of it is, I'm basically proud to be Russian,
and I don't care who doesn't like it.
That's basically the lyrics of it.
How do you get invited to that party?
I got so many jokes I'm not going to make a final. You gotta be careful. Be careful here folks.
You gotta be careful here. Why? It looks like a fun party. It's a catchy song. I mean, I love to dress up and show up. Tell me where to show up, Putin. I think the point here is that
Russian society is united behind the state in wanting to fight
this war.
And I think that part of the reason why Pragotian's mutiny was so oversold as an imminent coup
that would bring about the collapse of the Putin regime and of the Russian war effort
and of their front line is because that we since the beginning of this war, we've had
this narrative that if we applied enough pressure
to Russia, that there'd be a palace intrigue
and a palace coup and that liberal forces inside of Russia
would rise up and topple the dictator Putin
and basically get them out of this war.
And I think what's happened is fairly predictable,
but it's the opposite of that, which is the Russian people
are rallying around the flag and rallying around Putin,
the war leader, and they are a patriotic people just like the Ukrainians.
And I think both these countries, that both the Russians and the Ukrainians are a proud
people. And I think they're in a fight to the death. And I think that both countries,
okay, regardless as existential, and we have basically stuck ourselves in the middle
of this fight to the death between these two countries. and I don't see this working out very well. Okay, so look, I will make an admission.
I consider myself a modestly well-read person, modestly well informed. I had never heard of the
Wagner group or pregozion prior to this coup attempt last week. Chimau, J. Cal had you guys
heard of this person before and the Wagner group? Yeah.
Yeah. Oh, well, maybe I'm an idiot or that's just not interested. I think what was so surprising
was like how out of the blue the story seemed to be last week that there was this disagreement
between this person that commanded this paramilitary organization who then turned around
against Putin and stood up against him and marched back towards Moscow.
And it felt to me like it came a little bit out of the blue and was such like a weird
kind of shocking event.
Did it feel kind of like that to you guys that there was surprising instability and the
surprising potential revolution happening locally?
I think stepping back here and just looking at the new cycle.
Obviously, I don't think
many people expected this.
This is a wild card.
And so people could be humble in, you know, their belief of like how much they actually understand
about what's going on there.
The Russian soldiers are not in favor of this war.
This is a war that's very unpopular in Russia actually.
And for the Ukraine, having been invaded by Russia, they're fighting for their land and they're going to, they are much more motivated. I wouldn't believe any of
this propaganda, but this is a bit of a Russia contest. Everybody on the left got on Twitter
and said, this is the end of Putin. Everybody's going to rise up in the streets and they overplayed
that angle of the story. And then, of course, the right or people who are pro-Russian or anti-the-West
backing this war are going to take the other side,
pre-Berg.
They're going to take the side of, you know, oh, everybody loves Russia.
80% of people are voting for this.
It's ridiculous to think that anybody in Russia is going to answer.
Do you like Putin?
Do you support Putin on a survey?
Can you imagine Putin is a murderous dictator who kills all of his enemies and he controls
through violence? Nobody's answering a survey correctly. This you know top song is complete propaganda
Putin has control of the entire media apparatus there
What this showed actually if you step back and you look at go to the party though if you were invited. Well, I mean are there gonna be potential LPs there?
last week
potential LPs there.
Last week, but I
insisted joke folks, but stepping back, if you look at modern day dictators,
they tend to stay in power for about three decades.
Putin's in his third.
And I think we're going to see in the next 10 years,
Putin lose power and he's going to be out of power.
And when we look back on it, it's going to be one of two causes. It's going to be either cancer, which, you know, the speculation is that cancer and that's
why he disappears from view because he might be getting treatment. And we'll look back on us that the
end of his power will be his control of Russia, which he controlling these,
controlling through violence and fear of violence
and threat of violence is exhausting.
You have to be paranoid, and that's why
it generally doesn't last that long,
especially compared to the West, where we have a democracy
and people last about a half decade.
He will look back on his end,
which will be in the next 10 years,
either through cancer or through his invasion of Ukraine.
This is the biggest blender he's ever made.
And this is a really crazy sign
that somebody would actually attempt
or even float a coup is insane.
He's murdered every single person who has ever even
challenged his authority in a minor way.
The fact that his, one of his right-hand men,
this is one of his tight inner circle.
The fact that one of the people in his tight inner circle
would actually start heading towards Moscow is insane.
So to say this wasn't a big deal
and Putin's now consolidated power
and everybody's in the street dancing,
that's just not true.
It's just simply not true.
I never said it wasn't a big deal.
I wasn't talking about you.
I was talking about the mids on Twitter.
I never mentioned your name.
I think that your point, J. Cal, at the beginning, that this doesn't really seem to change
anyone's point of view on the outlook.
Your point of view sounds like it's the same as it was a week ago.
Sack, your point of view is probably the same as it was a week ago.
I think there are a couple of takeaways here.
First of all, they've had polling of opinion in Russia for a long time.
And like I said, when the polls go the way that the Western sources want,
no one questions their accuracy.
Again, I don't know exactly the methodology,
but LaVada Center is an independent pollster that Western publications do trust.
I hear them repeat it over and over again.
And by their methodology, which I assume hasn't changed, I think Putin's popularity before
the war is around 65%, now they're showing it at about 83%.
Jason, you may not like the war.
And I certainly don't like the war, but nobody likes the war.
But I think it is simply a fact that the
Russian people have rallied around the flag and they do support
this war and and poohen as the leader
now i do think he has agonist face here from this progozion uprising in terms of did
did i see this coming no i didn't have this on my bingo card i don't think anybody else did either
however did i know progozion is certainly However, did I know who progozion is? Certainly.
I mean, I've been tracking progozion statements
since around February.
He's been vocally criticizing the Ministry of Defense,
specifically Shorgu and Jarrasmoth,
and increasingly insubordinate,
and you could argue even seditious ways.
I'm really kind of surprised in a way
that he wasn't dealt with before this.
And I'm sure that the Kremlin is kicking itself
for probably not dealing with it sooner.
But in terms of why he's still alive,
I think that Putin had a really tough decision to make
about you quash this rebellion completely,
which would have led to horrific images of violence,
potentially a Moscow war.
Russian killing Russians.
Russians killing Russians.
That might have actually led the Russian front to question itself or collapse.
So I think he did the expedient thing, which is he cut a deal.
He got Lukashenko to help broker and he cut a deal.
And I think at the end of the day, I think that he made the cool headed decision that was
in his and in Russian interest, which was to avoid this to getting to the
point of a bloody violent insurrection.
Okay.
Chimoff, any point of view, shift for you coming out of the pregoation event of the last
week on Russia, Ukraine?
I mean, I want to know how much he got paid to stop marching towards Moscow.
Yeah.
I mean, it is like a mob us, right?
It must have been a lot.
Not bad for a guy that was what Putin's caterer
a few years ago, right?
He started a catering business.
He's been a nine years in jail.
This guy's like, he's been nine years in jail.
It's like the soprano.
He went to jail for nine years
for selling illegal hot dogs or something.
And all of a sudden,
30 years later, the guy got just paid billions of dollars
to basically stop his paramilitary group
from taking over one of the largest countries in the world.
It's not largest.
Nuclear arsenal in the world, yeah.
It's so exciting.
Well, just so you know who this guy is,
I mean, he really is the street thug
that Putin has always accused of being.
He was a street thug, he did go to jail.
He was one of these guys
who came up in Russia as a businessman when to be a businessman, you had to be so tough.
Businessmen were getting murdered left and right by gangsters. You almost had to be a
gangster yourself. Apparently, he made some money in the supermarket chain business. And
that led him to create a catering business, which brought him to Putin's attention. And
he started catering for the Kremlin. He's sometimes called Putin's chef. I don't think he was a chef himself.
He was a guy who owned the business. And then from there, he was given the license to create this
PMC, this private military corporation, Wagner Group. He wasn't the only founder of it. He had a
co-founder who was actually the military man behind it.
But Wagner became this group of mercenaries who do all sorts of business in Africa mainly,
where they are working on behalf of governments there to protect mental resources or oil
wells, sorts of things.
That's a surprise.
He was a soprano's captain who would he be like, Filio Tardo, does like 20 years in
jail, comes out. I think it's sort of like John Gotti going against Michael Corleone. Yeah. I think that Putin is sort of
the very cold, rational guy with everything in his head who's very calculated and doesn't reveal much.
More like a Michael Corleone, whereas I think that... He's a emotional erratic. He's been saying
these statements for months here, which I don't see how they lose canonly.
Lose canon.
And the crazy thing though is that what you saw
on Twitter and social media was unrestrained glee,
really delirium, over the idea that pergusion
might topple Putin and become the custodian
of Russia's thousands of nuclear weapons.
And so my comment on this whole thing is, be careful what you wish for.
Why in the world would Americans want that?
We'd be jumping out of the frying pan into the fire.
You know, I've been saying since the beginning of the war that this fantasy that Putin's
going to be toppled by a palace coup and you're going to replace him with an evolving
or something like that, we're going to get Gorbachev 2.0.
I said that was always unrealistic and what you're much more likely to end up with
is an even worse dictator or a hardliner.
And I think that is what would happen
if it was going to take it over.
I think it would have been much worse for the West.
The final point is, what's the takeaway from here?
Is I think this is going to put more pressure on Putin
to conduct the war in a more violent way.
I know that people already think that the war is horrible and violent, but Putin has been
criticized by hardliners on his right for basically making the war a special military operation
instead of an all-out war.
Progozion I think expected to find more support among the sort of ultra-nationalist in Russia
and among the military who have been critical of
Putin for waging the war in what they consider to be to have how hard it or an incomplete way
they would like to see this declared to be a war they would like to see the full mobilization of
russian society and this is the problem that i see now is that i think put an already new but this
has to underscore for him that this war is existential for him personally.
If he loses at the end of not only his regime, but probably his life in Russia and I think
he's going to do whatever it takes to win this war and I think you could see now over
the next few months a full mobilization in Russia and I think that this could lead us
to the next point of escalation in this war.
That is if this Ukrainian counteroffensive actually is successful on some level. Right now it is not succeeding, so there's no reason for Putin to do that.
But if this counteroffensive succeeds, you will see the next level of escalation.
So, Saks, you did a great job stringing six points together. I think my key takeaway
is, which is now 18 points you've made, so you can retire for the rest of the show.
My key takeaway from your series of statements, However, it's an important one, which is to watch the potential escalation
driven by Putin here. Any wrap up, otherwise, I'm going to move forward with this.
There's a famous Sun Zoo quote, the Supreme Order of War is to subdue the enemy without fighting.
This is a big mistake, and we need to make sure that we don't get into a war with Taiwan
and China and China over Taiwan.
So we have to avoid these things.
And that's what's next.
And I are in alignment.
So into Calakinas, we heard it here first.
Let's move forward with peace.
I can only hope that the conflict and soon, as I've always said, I realized over
the last week how little I know about the Russian military conflict with Ukraine, and I
appreciate Saks's contributions super helpful.
I went to Cal, UC Berkeley, 1997, Fall 1997, and it was the last year that Cal had affirmative
action admissions.
And I remember at that time, there was a big case that a guy named Bockey was rejected
by the University of California Davis Medical School.
And he alleged reverse discrimination in 1974 and sued the University of California.
And eventually it became a landmark US Supreme Court case, regents of the University of California, versus Bockey. And in 1995, the UC regents voted to eliminate affirmative action.
So the year that I was at Cal, I think was the last year of affirmative action, admissions,
and it's obviously been a pretty hot topic here in California for the past,, 30 years, this morning the Supreme Court ruled on two
separate cases regarding using race as an admissions criteria in college admissions.
And the votes were 6-3 against affirmative action in the University of North Carolina case
and 6-2 against affirmative action in the Harvard case.
Katangi Brown Jackson recused herself because she previously served on Harvard's board
of overseers.
All the conservative as they're kind of characterized judges voted to strike down affirmative action
and all the as they're characterized liberal judges voted to keep it.
Both of these cases were filed in 2014 by a group called Students for Fair Admissions. And effectively, the court said that at Harvard, at UNC,
the schools were systematically discriminating
against Asian-Americans and violation
of civil rights laws by using their race as a system
for profiling, excluding, and trying
to be more inclusive of a more diverse,
and racially diverse set of applicants.
So, Timoth, I'd love your read, I guess,
on the surprise, or this was an expected case.
I think Sachsen, I mentioned this before,
but I think we both expected this to happen.
I think it's probably important to maybe
set up a more practical explainer.
Friedberg, so Nick, if you want to just throw up that image that I just sent you,
we can sort of explain the genesis of the lawsuit.
So what you can see here is admit rates into Harvard by race, ethnicity,
but also by academic decile.
And so what it basically shows in a nutshell is an African American student in the 40th percentile
of the academic index is actually more likely to get in than an Asian student at the 100th
percentile.
And so that at the core is sort of what was being,
that means that the Asian American student
had better scores than 99% of other applicants
and still didn't get in.
Right.
So you have to go back, I think, to 2003,
when essentially what the Supreme Court said is like, look, we're going to allow this
affirmative action stuff to last, roughly for another 25 years.
But by that point, we expect that the work that needed to be done will have been done.
Again, this is them saying this not me.
And so I think what today does is actually quite important, not just for what it means for
universities, but also what it means for private enterprises.
So just to take a second on this, I think what happens today is the pretty obvious stuff,
which is that you have to change university applications, you have to change all of the admissions
profiling, all of the admissions profiling, all
of the stuff that you would normally do.
You probably, I'm not even sure if you can even have a box where you can declare race,
maybe you cannot, I don't even know.
But all of that changes today.
So then the question is, well, what's the first order derivative?
What changes next?
And I called someone who's a pretty well-known constitutional Supreme Court lawyer on this.
And the next step is probably going to be around athletics-based and legacy-based admissions.
So athletics-based admissions are pretty obvious, which is you don't really have great grades,
but you're really stupendous at a sport that's important to that school. So then
they let you in because they want to compete in said sport for whatever reason. The legacy
one is even more prickly, which is, nah, you're kind of a dummy, but your parents are rich
and or went to the school before. And so then they let you in as well. And his thought on this is that those things will go away. Because if you can't
use race-based admissions to kind of balance the scales, then it'll become pretty quick
where somebody launches a legacy-based lawsuit or an athletic-based bias lawsuit and wins
that as well. So that's the first order derivative.
So, you know, the thought,
are those, because those are constitutionally protected,
whereas equality based on race,
but it becomes a huge headache for these schools, right?
And so you're gonna be fighting these admission standards
constantly changing.
And so if you're not going to let, you know,
a bunch of poor minority black and brown kids in, but you're letting in the sons and daughters
of rich, important people, I think that that's going to paint that school in a very bad light.
So I think that's important. So Shama white, typically white. Typically white.
Like the one would say, the great thing over the last couple of decades is there have been
a lot of minorities that have gotten into these very elite schools, which means this,
their kids would be the first generation that's eligible for legacy, but you're going to
wipe that away.
So I think from just a social stigma perspective, and I have a solution for this, which I'll
get to at the end for those people.
But so I think that's the first order derivative.
The second order derivative is now what lawsuits get launched and what are the implications
for private companies, right?
So right now, this affects any institution that receives federal funding, and that includes
all the universities.
So there's no private or public university really except for a handful that don't take
this money.
So they'll all have to do this.
But the really important question after that
will be what happens to companies like Apple
or Facebook or Exxon who have race-based programs
to try to attract African-American engineers
or Hispanic chemists.
Whatever the program is that you wanna come up with,
will those get challenged and will those companies have to change?
My friends thoughts on that were that yes, that those would also change.
That's going to have a really important impact on private enterprise and how they approach
this stuff and how DEI stuff works.
Frankly, downstream, how ESG works because all these ESG checkboxes now some of them will actually become illegal, right?
So I think the importance of decision can't be really understated. It's going to the changes will be
slow and then they'll be fast, they'll first touch higher ed, but then I think they'll touch private enterprise and so I think it was a
there's a very important
decision in America
that just happened.
Jamal, what is the right ethics and values?
What do you guys, I guess we could just do this around
the table, J-Cowd, maybe you kick it off?
Should we, from your point of view,
do you think that values should include
racial diversity
in admissions and universities.
Yeah, this is like the ultimate.
Or is the values about equality of opportunity
for everyone regardless of race, right?
You're asking the exact right question, I think.
That's because I'm the world's greatest moderator.
But yeah, go ahead.
Doing a solid job so far.
And this creates a lot of cognitive dissonance
for people, right?
Because you really want to believe that the world is a meritocracy.
And, you know, if you were to take other pursuits in the world,
you'd never say like we should let race, gender, age affect people's performance
in the 100-yard dash or their compensation at a company, right?
All of that should be based on achievement.
And so there is a question on what achievements
should be taken into account when you apply to a school.
And it's pretty obvious, the legacy thing, you know,
is, you know, a back door into these schools.
But we want to feel like we're also making progress
because listen, the world has been unfair.
The world was built on slavery and our country has, you know, it's only 150 years past that
and so a rights act was what, 1964 or 65?
Like we really want to see everybody achieve here.
So I think you have to pause for a second and say, well, if the goal is you want to see
you know black Americans perform better and I think that's the
underlying
concern here and it is based on the legacy of America.
Well, how do you do that? And I think we're looking
way too far down in the educational pipeline.
The solution here is really child care. The solution here is really childcare. The solution
here is nursery schools, pre-K, elementary school education, and those things need competition,
and that's where people fall behind. To be looking at this at the end of the academic journey is,
I think, crazy. So, you know, when I'm president, I'm going to have 365 day a year, you know,
childcare and pre-K, and that's where we should, if
we really want to try to make up for some wrongs in the history of this country and try
to have better outcomes, we need competition in schools, which means probably breaking
some of these unions and giving people vouchers and choice. And then we have to invest more
in the earliest stages of education. And I think everybody wants to see a better system here.
DEI to Chimotspoint is, it is illegal to hire people based on race gender, any of those
criteria, obviously.
And the DEI programs are trying to fill more applicants.
So their goal, typically, in the way they don't break the law, is to just
try to, in their best cases, find more applicants. But even that does feel like there's many
times in life when people will say things in corporate America, like we have too many
white guys in these positions. We need, we cannot hire another white guy. So the reality of DEII that I've seen up close and personal when I was at AOL, I've told
the story before.
Somebody said to me, there's no way for us to make you an EVP.
You have to stay at SVP and I said, why is that?
Like, I'm doing all this EVP level work and they said, you're a white guy.
And the entire company is white guys at EVP and we cannot add another white guy there,
but we'll
just give you the same bonus compensation so don't worry about it.
And so there's all kinds of games being played here, but I think it's great that we're having
this conversation, right?
It's a hard conversation for America to have.
I think for me, I've talked about this in the past.
I've always had concern when we make the shift away from equality of opportunity to equality of outcome.
Because we all have this objective that we want to see everyone have equal rights to success in some way in the United States.
The question is at what point do you move beyond opportunity where everyone is given an equal opportunity in this country to invest themselves in transforming
their own lives versus a quality of outcome where regardless of how much you do, how much
effort or your trials, you are given the same as everyone else.
And that ends up looking a lot like socialism.
And it's very concerning because I think it limits progress and opportunity for everyone.
The real challenge with this particular topic is college admissions about outcome or is it about opportunity.
It's outcome in the sense that you spend 12 years going to elementary school and high school and working hard to get yourself into college.
and working hard to get yourself into college. So it's the outcome of all of that effort, and some people aren't given the opportunity to have success during those 12 years.
And it is an outcome. What do you think we should do?
And it's an opportunity because it's about going to college,
because without having a great college cycle, you may have a more tougher time getting into the workforce.
So that is why it's a hard value question for me. I I don't have a great answer on this, but I'm just pointing out it's it's a lot like the abortion
argument where both sides have some value oriented point of view that feels like it's negating
the other person's point of view. But at the end of the day, they're they're both coming from either
this is an opportunity or it's an outcome decision, and that's what makes it so challenging. The National Bureau of Economic Research did a study
in 2019 that they published, and what they found was that 43%, so 43% of white students admitted
to Harvard were athletes or legacy students or children of faculty and staff or had a relative that were
donors to the school. 43%. Wait, it's rigged. And then they found on top of that that 75%
of those white students admitted from those four categories would have been rejected
if they had been treated as a normal applicant. So I think for all the people that are looking at all the black and brown kids that may not get into a
place like Harvard, if you don't look at these other categories, it's a bit of a gross injustice
quite honestly. So I think that these institutions have to evolve. And if you're going to be forced
to be meritocratic, then actually be meritocratic. And by the way, I actually am fine with legacies and donors, but I think what should happen
is you should just publish a rate card and you should make it hyper transparent.
And so I love it.
For the rich guy who's got an idiot son or daughter, let's just be upfront and honest
with everybody.
It costs $50 million to get into Stanford.
It costs $80 million to get into Harvard.
We all know these numbers. so we should just publish them.
You should pay the price and be done with it.
And for Harvard and Stanford and Yale and all these schools, having an extra 10 or 20
dummies, but an extra 2 or 3 billion may be a reasonable trade off, but at least it
would be transparent and fair.
Right.
This is an important free market question as well, because these are private institutions.
They're privately funded. Not if they take federal dollars or not. Agreed. Yes, but if they take
federal dollars, they're not. And then it becomes a government processing. It's government influence.
It's a state school. All those, is there a separate category here, just like country clubs
or any private membership club where the members of the club get to decide who they want to admit
to the club? And is that they want to admit to the club.
And is that un-American and should the Supreme Court and should our Constitution have a role
in defining how private institutions make decisions about who gets it? No, Harvard could absolutely return all the federal funding, the billions of dollars a year they get.
That's totally reasonable. They can decide to just focus on legacy admits.
That's totally reasonable. It's what's in their rights.
to just focus on legacy admits. That's totally reasonable. It's what's in their rights.
Sacks, right? We got to hear. I know that I know that you used up your quote, your speaking quote already. Well, yeah, I didn't want to, I didn't want to butt in.
I'm going to give him four of my points. I want to hear. I just want to get four of J. Caldsman.
Let's go ahead. I give you four minutes. Okay. So yeah, two points, I guess. So on the legacy
thing, I agree with Jamal that we should get rid of it. It's not meritocratic. I think that if they did publish a rate card that would be more
honest, but there'd be two embarrassed and ashamed to do that. But I think making that argument
exposes the hypocrisy of it, I've already told my kids I'm not helping them get into college.
So they're gonna have to do it on their own. And so look, I think the legacy thing is the best
thing. By the way, that's the best if you can give kids that perspective. Sorry, go ahead, sex. I mean, so that's that's that's point number one. Hopefully agreed think the legacy thing. By the way, that's the best if you can give kids. Yeah. That perspective, sorry, go ahead, sex, I didn't mean it wrong.
So that's my number one, fully agreed on the legacy thing.
With respect to the decision itself,
the, can I just clarify that?
Do you believe that the legacy thing should be like,
in federal law?
I mean, is that a government thing?
Or do you think that that's how those institutions
should behave?
Because those are different.
I mean, I'm asking, are you suggesting that the law should be involved, that the government should
be involved?
I don't know if it's illegal thing, because I don't know how to implement that law, but
I think it's something they should stop doing one way or another.
Maybe it should be a law, but I think it should stop.
So I think that's point one.
Well, I can see things.
For private membership.
For private membership.
So just, let me just double click on that.
Do you think that should extend to private membership clubs, like country clubs as well, that
they shouldn't be allowed to decide who they let in and don't let in?
What makes it different that it's Harvard?
Is it because it's education versus any other private membership?
No, because it takes federal funding.
It takes tax credit.
Okay, well, as you may know, I should not pay for some person to be able to get into
a school they don't deserve to get into just because their parent went there or just
because their parent wrote a check. That's unreasonable. And if they don't deserve to get into just because their parent went there or just because
their parent wrote a check that's unreasonable.
And if they don't take federal funding?
These schools take so much federal funding that they're quasi-public institutions, even
the private ones.
So that's the distinction, that's the distinction for you just to be clear.
Yeah, and also there is a strong meritocracy opportunity argument on this.
And I think it's why that whole parents college admission scandal was such a big deal is
that for a lot of people in this country, the ability to have your kids advance themselves
by being the first to get into college or going to college or going to a better college.
That is a big part of creating opportunity in this country.
So for people to try and defraud that, I think created a huge backlash. So look, I think that the legacy thing just needs to end one way
or another. I don't know exactly what the right legal implementation is.
I have two questions for the panel. Number one, should you be able to say by geography,
hey, listen, we're Harvard, we're Stanford, we want to have a representation of people from around the world.
So we're going to have the top three students from each country, or a bi-population, however
you do it, mathematically coming.
So a little bit of geography, because I did hear from one of these coaches that cost
like six figures to get your kids into the college.
They said the best thing you can do is like move to Kentucky.
You know, and then Harvard and Stanford are looking to get
a certain number of students from each state.
I don't know how true that is, but they said that's like
one of the top ways to do it.
And then...
Well, do you remember Jason just to build on your point?
I don't know if you guys remember, but a few years ago,
the in fashion thing to do was to learn to play squash.
And I remember all these parents telling me that and
They had kids that were older than my kids and they were they were hiring full-time squash coaches
Because apparently squash was like yes, so English shots. Yeah, I think like stop with the angle shooting guys
Yes, the gun should go off you should run the the race, and your time is your time, and you
should go to whatever the best school is that you deserve to get into based on your academic
ability. Now, going back, the big problem, and I think Jason, you really nailed it on the head,
trying to fix it with affirmative action at the university is still quite unfair in the sense
that there are so many black and brown kids, I think, with tons of potential that don't even get there.
And so the real question is, what are you doing at the grade school and at the high school and at the pre-school
so that you actually get more of these kids to the starting line?
Because fixing it when they're 18, I think, is a little too late, right?
Fixing it for three, four, and five years old,
that's when they deserve and need all the help in the world.
Two years old.
That's why we need school choice.
We need charter schools.
We need to break them monopoly that the unions have over the
schools running it, running it for their own benefit.
And off of the kids.
If you define institutional racism as conditions that trap
people and conditions of poverty across generations,
I'd say the
abysmal quality of our public schools are number one. Number one, two and three. And the reason
is because there's no competition in the unions run it for their own benefit. They have
one. Do they shut down these schools for in California? Because they didn't want to work
as they were afraid of. Don't know. Don't see the sea where we just got a label. God.
Beep it out. We're going to out. That was not for the benefit of kids
and it wasn't even medically necessary.
That was a benefit they saw from themselves.
Yeah.
Jake, you come from a family that were members of unions
because they worked for fire, for police.
Yeah.
Is that right?
Yeah.
We speak negatively about the effects
of the teacher's unions on our public education system
and I think it's absolutely correct.
But how do you share the point of view from the other side? If you're a teacher and you're a member
of the union and the union takes care of you, what's the argument? Yeah, sure.
To say this union is damaging public education and the teacher that's working in the union and
the member of the union says, this is necessary for my livelihood to protect me for my benefit.
Help us here at the point of view because we all have the strongly help point of view that the
unions are destroying and eroding public education. But what do you have there?
People have the right to form unions. But what we all do is we are forced to be consumers of one educational product because of how we pay taxes.
We pay taxes in. I think in my, in California, we each pay $16,000 into the educational system.
And so if you're a parent, you should get that 16k back and be able to choose what you do with it.
So there's competition. So the unions can have protection, but there still should be competition for these services.
And I think there are two separate issues. unions can have protection, but there still should be competition for these services.
And I think there are two separate issues.
Yeah.
There's one other thing, which is I just want to give a shout out to a nonprofit that I
support called Smash Academy, Smash.org.
It's done by Mitch and Freda Kapoor.
The Mitch Kapoor founded Lotus 123.
If you're under the age of 40 you may not know them.
And what they do is they realize that a lot of the students who do get into good colleges,
it turns out a lot of the black and brown students they get accepted and they're behind in math.
And so what Smash has done is they have a three year program and I go speak at it sometimes and I donate money to it.
And I encourage you to do the same. They have this intensive summer program.
So before you go to college, Jamoth, if you were one of those students, you know, you
might get into college and then they drop out or even worse, they switch from a STEM
to a non-STEM degree because they're two years behind on STEM or a year behind on STEM.
And so the Kapoorur is found this little opportunity
to kind of catch people up.
And I think that's what we have to do.
We have to address this much earlier
and not put a bandaid on it.
Yeah, and the system, the Ivy League system
needs to be-
Well, not just Ivy's, right?
Well, sure, sure.
Not just pick on Harvard, but it's like,
it's like all the state schools.
It's like the elite institutions,
which we talk about. All institutions, all institutions that receive federal funding.
They need to take a deep look in the mirror and say, are we doing the best thing for society?
The second question I had for the panel was, well, I'm not getting a view of academics.
Point of view, by the way, but yeah, but our pure academics, the best way to accept people into a
college, or should there be some blend of it, like putting sports aside, because that's an obvious one.
But you know, is there's academics, but then there's also creativity. You know, if you, you might be terrible on your SATs or status test and you might be an incredible
virtual or so pianist. So I think what is the criteria and making that criteria fair is
what we all want. And it feels tremendously unfair.
My point of view is if the government is funding these schools, then
the government certainly has to have a point of view on what's the reasonable model for
admissions. The government's not funding the schools. I love a diversity in a marketplace.
I love having different schools, having different admissions criteria that allow different
people to find their path through different institutions.
To your point,
Juilliard does not care perhaps as much what you did
on your SAT and chemistry.
And art schools do not care as much how well you did in math.
And STEM schools don't care whether or not
you want an our competition.
And I think that that's the important thing that we need to preserve.
We need to preserve optionality for institutions to define what sorts of
individuals they want to try and recruit and progress and frame and get ready
for the workforce and the path in life that they then choose versus trying to
create a cookie cutter model
for what the government says it's fair for everyone.
And as much as we can take government funding
out of these institutions and out of these systems
and give them the freedom to set their own admissions criteria
and create differential educational systems,
I think that's gonna create the best diversity of a workforce.
And I would kind of be more excited about that sort of an institutional
system than one that is standardized by the government.
You know why that will never happen?
Because the profit motive of these universities is really to be shadow organizations for their
endowments.
And the thing with endowments is that the people that work there very much want to get paid and behave like
profit generating organizations and I think
The issue is that if their sole job was to really fund the
Operational expenses of the university then the endowments would be run very differently.
Like, again, I just looked up on the internet, but Harvard has about the operating expenses
are roughly $5.5 billion a year, but the revenues are about $5.5 billion a year.
So, if instead you had to basically fund, there was essentially no revenue per se.
There was very little tuition, and you didn't take any federal funding.
You'd have to come up with $5 billion a year, so you just basically take that as a draw
from your endowment.
The endowment would be run very differently.
It would be a don't lose money endowment that would generate very low-volve returns.
I think the problem with that is that that's not how the endowment at Harvard works. They wouldn't necessarily make risk seeking
investments in things like private equity and hedge funds adventure capital
into the extent they did. They would just make much much fewer or much much smaller
or both. So I think what you're saying could be possible, but the problem are
probably the endowments at these universities. Okay, we'll look at three billion dollars by Harvard's endowment now. So yeah, it would be 10%.
Can anyone tell me who the largest real estate owner is in San Francisco?
You see the king on the internet. Oh, no, I know, I know it's that our institute.
The Academy of Art University. I knew this because they kept buying things and using them,
I think she used all the profit over the years to buy more real estate
And she accumulated the largest real estate portfolio
Who is she the founder? I forgot her name
This is a for-profit university or private or I mean a non-profit university
Yeah, there's a lot of artists that come out of Academy Art and they work in a lot of different industries including industrial design
Including animation
Actually, what I'm saying is it like RISD or is it like actually in art school? Oh, no, it's a great art school. Yeah Academy of Art
Anyway, let's keep going. So look speaking of STEM
making a big pivot away from art
To AI couple big news items, you know, the AI friends he continues here in Silicon
Valley, all the way from early to growth stage funding through to M&A events. We saw
this week, Databricks, which is a privately held data infrastructure company announced
that they were acquiring Mosaic ML for $1.3 billion that headline number is based
on a cash and stock purchase price,
where the value of the stock that was being used
to acquire Mosaic ML was based off of the last round
valuation for Databricks, which was $38 billion
from a fundraising that they did in 2021.
So arguably the valuation should be lower
and the overall purchase price could be considered lower.
But that's besides the point.
Mosaic ML, as you guys may remember,
is a company I mentioned a number of episodes ago
led by the founder of Nirvana, which was an early AI business
that was acquired by Intel.
And then he started Mosaic ML.
He offers open source models and I shared the performance
data of their most recent announcement on the show
a few weeks ago.
There's rumors.
I don't have any confirmed reports,
but there's rumors that Mosaic ML saw their ARR grow
from $1 million to $20 million since January.
There was other rumors that said they were only
at $6 million of revenue. Regardless, Datab rumors that said they were only at six million of revenue.
Regardless, Databricks is paying a pretty hefty premium.
And I think it begs the question,
what do data infrastructure, database companies
end up looking like in the future,
if AI has to become part of the core infrastructure
of every enterprise, and this is creating a big shift.
So, SACs as our enterprise software investor expert, maybe you can share
with us what this means for the sector. Does this buoy excitement for AI infrastructure startups?
Does this change the investing landscape? Is it just reinforcing what folks are already doing?
I think it's a reinforcement. I mean, the space is probably the hottest space where you're talking about like AI
infrastructure for enterprises.
I think it's probably the hottest space right now in venture land.
We actually looked at this deal.
We had a small allocation there next round.
They had a term sheet for a series B.
Emergence was actually going to lead it and this is mosaic ML.
Yeah. Yeah.
I don't know if it's just me telling you all this, but.
Oh, you know, I've done that.
Oh, Brad, yeah, go ahead, Brad.
Yeah, Brad, that's what I'm talking about.
This is great.
This is why people say it in.
Breaking news.
Breaking news.
Yeah.
That a term sheet from Emergence to raise 50 million at 400 posts.
Wow.
And yeah, and we were going to have a small allocation in that.
And as I recall, the valuation was somewhere around 30 to 35 times
ARR, which actually is not that insane for a very fast-growing company in a hot space.
So that implies about 10 million of ARR. I don't remember the exact figure,
but I think that's sort of the ballpark, but growing very, very quickly.
I mean, up from like one or two at the beginning of the year.
Right.
very, very quickly. I mean, up from like one or two at the beginning of the year. Right. So I actually understand why someone would want to acquire or invest in this company,
like I said, I think we wanted to invest. And while we were sort of, you know, trying our best
again, you didn't say anything when I talked about them on the show a few weeks ago. You were just
sitting there, mom's a word or... Actually, I knew that this deal was was basically in the works
because the founder called us up and he had already promised us a small
allocation around. Neveendit and he called up and said actually I've got this
deal so we're putting the round on hold and so I didn't think I should say
anything because obviously it was still ongoing but yeah we knew about this
deal that was kind of coming down the pipe I didn't know for sure that it
would happen but but yeah we heard it was in the ballpark
of this like 1.2 and 1.3 billion dollar number, which like you said, because Databricks
is a private stock.
Maybe it's only half of that or 750 or something like that, who knows.
It's still a great deal, but you know, a lot of people are saying it's a crazy deal.
I don't think it's a crazy deal because before this happened, after Navin signed the term sheet for the Series B,
an investor came over the top to invest
at a $700 million valuation.
So people were kind of going crazy.
Now, I don't think that's necessarily
a rational behavior.
I think that's more of evidence of a maniac going on,
but I think that what he got offered
is obviously a fantastic deal.
And I think what it's evidence of is that these big enterprise-infra-accompanies are going
to try and build an end-to-end toolchain here.
And I think Mosaic ML had a very, very important part of the toolset, which is training up these
models.
Basically maximizing GPU efficiency, because GPUs are basically the scarce item
right now.
We have a GPU shortage and it's probably not going to get better for a year or two if
that.
So, this is a very important part of the stack and I think it's probably a smart acquisition
for both data breaks.
Yeah, it needs to be, I mean, remember snowflake which compete with data breaks also acquired Niva, which was founded by one of my colleagues, a guy I work with, and a new really great guy,
sweetheart, for $150 million last month, that deal was announced.
And the pattern recognition that seems to emerge here is that if you're in the data infrastructure business, it seems like it's becoming critical to level up. That it's not just about storing and moving and manipulating data,
but the interpretation of data through models and the tooling to build
those models becomes a critical component of all of
these toolkits that these software companies have to provide to their enterprise software companies.
It's a big leveling up that's necessary,
which seems to me there's other companies out there like them that are also
going to need to strap on tools like this to make themselves competitive in this market scape,
which means that there are more acquisitions still to come. Yeah. Jamal,
Jay, Cal, you guys agree or have a different point of view. Yeah, I'm looking at it. It's a big
number, the headline number, but I agree with SACs, the actual numbers half the number. So if you look at the number of engineers they had,
based on LinkedIn data and pitch book data,
probably 60, 70 employees, 80 employees,
and then 40, 50 of them are engineers.
So that puts it at $30 million per engineer.
And that's one way to look at these acquisitions.
And I think probably three to 1010 million per engineer for like really
high-end engineers is more of a going price. But if this is half that amount because they
bought it with monopoly money, in other words, their 2021 price for their company, it's
great. And then they get nailed at freeberg. What's happening is this layer of natural language on top of any service, whether it's something
as simple as Yelp or something as complicated as a giant financial company with tons of
transaction data, being able to talk to it and understand it and then have your machine
learning team build tools.
So business owners don't have to hire a data scientist.
The actual business leaders can talk to the data
and get back answers or just say,
hey, tell me about our customers.
How have they changed over the year?
And then, hey, that's pretty interesting.
Tell me more about our customers.
And how are they reacting to these three new products?
And you will get back intelligence
that previously was unable to be accessed.
And so I was just at Sequoia yesterday with,
or two days ago, with the latest seven graduates
from our accelerator, we bring them to meet with SACs
and his team, we bring them to meet with Sequoia.
And when we were at Sequoia, I realized that of the seven companies, four of them would
not have been possible before these machine learning APIs were available.
And OpenAI is but one, there are now in the companies I'm talking to, they're trialing
freeberg on average, six, seven, eight language models before they pick one and they're not
picking OpenAI every time. Putting that aside, these businesses were not possible before this technology was
introduced and available via API in the last six to 12 months. And I think there's a bunch
of businesses that economically would not work, that now work. I can give one example.
There are countless meetings that are recorded over Zoom, right? Think like
a local school board meeting. Well, nobody could ever make a database of all the discussions
going on at local school boards and then analyze all of them. But now, because all of those
are saved on Zoom and they occur on Zoom and they're available for public record, you can
ingest every single one of those and then build a Bloomberg terminal of every
discussion happening at every school board, everywhere in the United States.
And do that with chat GPT or any of the language models and then get really great insights
from it.
That would be too costly to transcribe at, you know, $100 every hour or two and normalize, let alone to analyze.
And so I'm looking at businesses as an investor, what I'm looking at right now is businesses
that were previously not economically viable before this technology.
And then that are now economically viable.
If that makes sense, and I'm just looking at each company under that
lens right now, and I'm finding a lot of interesting startups, and they seem to have that in common.
Timoth, similar, news supporting this very quick evolution further up the value stack. So we were just talking about these
companies that are providing effectively tooling as infrastructure. A little bit more up the value stack is inflection AI, which was started
by Mustafa Saliemann and Reid Hoffman, who was a co-founder while Mustafa was working
with him as a venture partner at Greylock.
But Mustafa, as you guys know, was the co-founder of DeepMind, which Google bought for $400
million, really created the core of Google's AI capability and is considered one of the kind of preeminent thought leaders and entrepreneurs
that has built in this space.
He started in flexion and the business just announced today that they've just closed
a $1.3 billion funding round led by Microsoft, Reed Hoffman, Bill Gates, Eric Schmidt, in video with an intention of building the largest AI
cluster in the world, 22,000 in video H100s as part of the buildout.
But I think you've shared Schmoth historically that these big funding rounds for these AI
businesses that haven't necessarily been launched product yet don't make sense.
Is this still kind of reinforce your point and, you know, what's your read
on the inflection funding?
Well, the list price of an H100 is about 30,000, but the street price, so it's very hard
to get it.
So if you go to the, if you go to like eBay and try to buy an H100, it's like 40 or 45,000.
So if you have a 22,000 cluster of H 100s, that's about
900 million dollars of capex just that and then you know all the sundry stuff around it call it roughly plus or minus a billion dollars
And so of the one and a half billion they've raised let's say a billion goes into building this 22,000 node cluster
you have 500 million for SGNA.
And so what that leaves behind is basically two and a half billion of enterprise value
for their chatbot.
So I don't know.
I mean, I've never used pi.
Has any of you guys used it?
Do you guys know if it's good?
Jake, I'm sure you've experimented with it.
Have you experimented with it or not really?
Which one?
Pi. That's what their chatbot is called, pi.
I think it's like, hey pi.com or something.
I think I did try it once and it was not memorable.
Oh, Po.
You mean Po?
No, not Po.
No, no, no, that's a horror.
That's a horror.
This is part personal one where you talk to it and ask, hey, how are you doing?
Their concept is you have this one relationship.
It's like one chat thread.
It's not kind of how I like to work with the I use threads and I share threads with my
team.
I'm not a fan of this.
You have one relationship with one assistant.
I think the thing is, it's interesting to note that very rarely when you invest money in the billions of dollars, does the catbacks
or purchase of one specific form of equipment
take up literally 25% of the enterprise value?
That's atypical, at least for a startup.
If you're buying a fixed plant
of a slow cash for generating business
then maybe a bunch
of that has some value.
That's what stood out to me.
All of these things, ReBurg is, again, increasingly, this is all just a pass through to Nvidia.
It's probably in some ways a pass through to the big cloud providers.
Whenever I see a chip maker and a cloud provider come together to put in a lot of money,
it's essentially round-tripping cash. They're giving them money, which then they use to buy their services and then,
you know, you're just pumping revenue. So I hope it works.
Jim, I'm giving Wish in the best, but you know, that's the capital.
We just talked about where the infrastructure companies that are
increasingly looking like more commodity service providers, if they don't up level with AI
tooling, acquiring Mosaic ML and acquiring Niva, do you think that that's an
indication of more M&A to come? And if so, doesn't that justify the increased
funding, the increased valuation and the activity that we're seeing in the
early stage with some of these businesses.
I think for sure there's going to be more M&A and I think the valuations will be high
not because these companies have a lot of revenue yet but because it's very strategic
for these big and for companies to assemble.
You can come up.
The end to end tool chain.
I think we should explain to folks what that means.
Enterprise software companies provide software to businesses that are not traditionally
technology companies. They also provide software to businesses that are not traditionally technology companies
They also provide software to other businesses to help them build new tools to help them build out their business
So an enterprise software company can sell to United Airlines or consult a visa or consult a Ford and that software
Can then be used by that company to build tools that are powered by the database or powered by the data analytics or
that are powered by the database or powered by the data analytics or increasingly powered by AI tools.
And so they can build AI applications and AI capabilities into their business, whether
it's United Airlines or Expedia or Visa or whomever.
And that's why these companies are so critical in terms of enabling the transformation of
industries with AI tooling and why getting AI tooling into
their capability set is so critical right now.
It's important to note, though, guys, that whenever you have the emergence of a new sector,
SACS, I think you are right, that M&A goes up, but it tends to be that the valuations go down.
Peak M&A froth happens at the beginning of the cycle when hype is at maximum, and facts
are at the minimum.
And that's okay. That's good for the startup.
It's marginally negative for the existing shareholder of a large company.
And then over time, it gets itself sorted out when the facts are more obvious.
So, you guys remember when the optical networking craze?
Oh my God, had these multi-billion dollar acquisitions.
Where did they go?
They went nowhere.
They just disappeared.
We actually have like a market map that we did that I think can explain this concept
of a end-to-end tool chain.
So this is a slide that our growth team shut out to Mike Robinson and Kimmigabura.
They put this together in preparation and part of the investment memo for Mosaic.
And I think to explain the point
you were kind of making freeberg like,
why do enterprises need the services?
One really simple way of thinking about it right now
is that every enterprise would like to roll out
its own chat GPT.
They would all like to have their own internal version
of chat GPT where the employees, for
example, could ask questions and get answers.
That's where all the action is right now.
Every enterprise would buy that tomorrow if it existed in the way that they want.
They would be the example of what they have sex.
Yeah, give it an example.
The idea would be that any employee in the company could ask questions to the AI model,
the way you can ask chat GPT questions, and would have all the enterprises data, and
it would also understand their permissions, and have all
the security settings, so that only the right feel can
get the right information. That's the kind of intelligence
they were on lock. I mean, there are lots of other use cases
as well. So like a corporate oracle. So I can, if I'm in HR, I
can ask, hey, tell me about our, you know, compensation.
Yeah. Totally copilot for the CEO.
I think there's going to be lots of these.
I think the sales team is going to have their own co-pilot.
I think the marketing team is going to have their own co-pilot and support.
Costume support has it already.
Customer support will have it and cheers on their own co-pilot.
So there's going to be a lot of these.
But I think enterprises want one at the level of the, call it the company intranet, where
employees could just ask questions.
Right. But they do not want to share their data with OpenAI.
That's very clear.
They want to roll out their own models.
So the question is, well, how do you roll out your own model?
And what the show's here is the different piece
of the stack that you have to have.
So first, you capture all of your data,
you got to label it to be classified right for the model.
You got to store it somewhere.
Then you need to get one of these open-source AI
models off the shelf, and there's probably the most prominent site for this called Hugging Face,
which already has something like, I think, a $2 billion valuation. That's another really crazy
valuation to ARR multiple, but Hugging Face has all the open-source models. It's very active.
And so people grab the latest open-source model, that's the best fit for them, and then they need
to train that model.
That's really where Mosaic played.
There's a ton of activity right now in this last mile problem of how do you customize
a model to make it suitable for your use, whether you're an enterprise, whether you're a customer
service team, whether you're a SaaS app that wants to incorporate AI capabilities into your app.
That's where all the action is right now
is customizing these open source models.
That then leads to basically being able to get the right
inferences and then there's a sort of a separate
category around hardware that is,
we don't play there.
But this is kind of the end-ten tool chain.
I think these big tech companies are gonna be racing
to put this whole thing together.
To fill it out, yeah. Yeah. And that's so there'll be more emanates your prediction, which means more startup valuation boomay more capital deploying. There was a
couple of articles this week and Chimoff, this is your red meat as much as Ukraine is, Saks is,
because you've talked about this at length. Social messaging startup, IRL, is shutting down after a board investigation found 95% of
its claimed 20 million users were actually fake.
This is a company that in June of 2021 raised $170 million series C at a valuation of
over a billion dollars, making it one of the many proclaimed unicorns of Silicon Valley,
led by SoftBanks Vision Fund.
The investor who was sitting on the board said that they didn't know if we've ever given an investment
term sheet to a startup faster than Softank gave to IRL at the time. At the same time,
different story, but in the same week, a company called Bayju, which you have talked about in the past,
was once valued at $22 billion and claimed to be India's most valuable startup is in turmoil turmoil as shareholders and creditors are seeking to dilute the founder and he's rushing to find
Capital and raise a billion dollars to try and buoy the company process one of the investors mark the company's valuation down to
5.1 billion so down 75% I
Guess the question is overall are we still seeing this kind of
I guess the question is overall, are we still seeing this kind of turmoil in Silicon Valley from dessert era funding of startups in stark juxtaposition to the excitement of the friends
here on AI?
It's a characteristic of the exact same thing, meaning if you replaced AI with crypto,
it's the exact same thing. If you replaced AI with co-working, if you replaced AI with, I don't know, synthetic biology,
if you replaced AI with SAS, this has all happened before.
I think it's important to identify what this is.
What this is is that there aren't enough checks and balances and there are fundamentally
people who are deeply inexperienced who are in the wrong job.
And in the few key moments where the venture capitalists is supposed to add value, that
person is ill-equipped and unprepared.
Why?
Because they were the VP of X, Y, and Z at some start up. And they
got hired to no fault of their own into a dynamic because these venture funds wanted to raise larger
and larger amounts of money. So what happens? You don't even know how to ask the basic questions
or even more insidiously, you don't have the courage to say the hard thing.
And so these things happen that are frankly inexcusable, right?
So in the case of one of these companies, and I've mentioned this before, they approach
just for financing.
And when we asked for a data room, we got a Google Doc link to a spreadsheet.
Now there's no reasonable world in which a company
is that unsophisticated when it comes to understanding their business, right? A data room should
include an enormous amount of operational and financial metrics that you can use to come to
your own conclusion, so that you can present it transparently to the investor. The idea that
boards wouldn't even hold these companies accountable is just a sign that the board members themselves are pretty fundamentally
an experienced people. And I think the thing that we do, which is a mistake, is we say,
oh, well, X, Y, and Z firm, led this deal. Yeah, that may be true, but really what it means is that firm in a grab to get the money,
hired some person that checks some boxes, put them in the job, that person let around,
and there just wasn't any infrastructure to either teach that person, or then that person
to have the courage to hold the founder responsible. That will play out in AI as well,
it's just that we're at the beginning of the hype cycle, right? Because we replace AI again, as I said with any of these
other things, we sat here a little bit hand-ranging when we saw these crazy valuations for these NFT
projects. Where are those now? Right? So you name them. This is about fundamentally inexperienced people
doing a job that seems pretty easy from
the outside, but in practical reality, there are only a few legends in our business.
Most people, and I think it was shy Goldman that did the math on this.
Most people do not know how to run these businesses well.
Nick will find that fleet you can show.
I think it's like 2.5% of all of the funds that are in pitch books
over 800 of them have ever generated more than three acts in two funds.
So this is a hard business.
It turns out you can't just wake up and be an investor.
It turns out and that's what we're finding.
So I don't know.
It's not very surprising in the end.
None of this is surprising.
Good.
Shemop had a really good point in the middle there is that there is a generation of venture capitalists
who were added during the boom, who were operators,
but they've never been taught to have the discipline
of capital allocators.
And one of those key pieces of discipline
is asking uncomfortable questions
and doing uncomfortable diligence.
And you can trust people, but you need to verify.
That is a key part of the job.
You can trust the founders, but you have to verify that the data you have is correct.
The fact that SoftBank did this, that incredible evaluation and the person who did this deal
never checked that the customers were real
is makes you unfit to serve in the job.
And I will do diligence and during that time period,
Freeberg, I had many founders say to me,
you're asking for more diligence than the lead.
And this deal is closing, and we are oversubscribed.
And I said, okay.
And they said, okay, so you're not gonna require,
I was just gonna say, oh no, we require this diligence.
We wanna see your, you know, very basic stuff,
your bank statement, your PNL.
We want to talk to you, once you give us a list of your first thousand, give us a list
of 500 customers from last month, we'll give you five numbers.
We're going to talk to five random customers.
Like, people did not want to do this stuff.
We do that, this work at our firm when we start to own 5, 10% of this and we train our
founders to do, to be ready for proper diligence.
All that diligence is happening now.
Now, in the early stages, there's not much to go on, but you can check stuff.
During this period, founders used the hot market to not participate in the due diligence
process.
And when you look at companies, a lot of times people will suspend disbelief.
This company buys you, I don't know a ton about it, but it seems to have an educational
app, like a company brilliant.org that Chemaht and I are early investors in and Chemaht
think you bit it.
Great, great business.
But then their business and their revenue seems to be based on a series of like Kumon,
like in-person instruction.
That's not a high gross margin business.
Sorry, if you have to have a storefront, you're not a software business anymore.
And so people started giving valuations, and this is the second part, and I'll just wrap
on this.
People started giving valuations to these companies that were real-world businesses, that were
low margin businesses, direct to consumer, whatever it was, they suspended disbelief,
and they gave them valuations for high
growth,
high gross margin businesses and that was another mistake. You put those two things together,
not doing diligence and then just misvaluing of actual assets, that's the cleanup work that's
that's going on right now and it takes years. I mean, it took decades for them to pinch Bernie Madoff. It can take 10 years for these frauds to come out.
There was a guy who kept telling the SEC
about Bernie Madoff.
I think he was like nine years since the first time
he let them know that the perfect returns
were just not possible statistically.
So it takes time, but they're picking these folks up everywhere.
Doke Juan got picked up in Montenegro, the guy from Luna.
It's going to take a decade to clean up all of the fraud in our space.
I think this was sort of mentioned by Jamal, but I think it needs to be a bigger point,
which is the influence of fun size on these decisions.
I mean, crafts funds are in the 6 to 700 million range, so when we write a check, it's usually ten, fifteen, twenty million dollar check in a
series A company.
That's like a big check for us.
We're really going to sweat that decision.
For soft bank, it tends to twenty million dollar check in a hundred billion dollar fund,
which is what they had.
It doesn't even make sense.
It's a waste of their time.
It's not even a rounding error.
For them to basically make a decision. It's like a of their time. It's not even a rounding error for them to
Basically make a decision. It's like a $2,000 check for you. Yeah, exactly. So for them They had to write $200 million checks
To justify their time managing a hundred billion dollars and so the mistake when they make a mistake is
20 times bigger than it should be that should have been maybe a 10 million million mistake, not a $200 million mistake, but their
fund size forced them to basically write these gigantic checks, and they were writing them
into companies that were effectively seed stage or series A companies.
If it was into a growth stage company, I think that's fine.
There's a lot more data and there's a lot more customer references that you can check
at a later stage company.
By the way, the number one part of the diligence I I'd say for us, other than looking at metrics,
which is anyone can do, is the off-sheet references.
Talking to customers from a list
that you figured out yourself,
not from the company itself,
is probably the single most important
qualitative part of diligence.
So I don't know what happened here, but.
It's not stated explicitly, but I think it's important.
David, you have credibility.
So when you say something, sax people listen, because you have bonafides that are undeniable.
Same thing with J. Cal, same thing with you, Freiburg.
I think, you know, and this may sound mean, but it's like most of these people are just
XYZ middle-level VPs from a startup.
And that's a great thing, but it's not necessarily going to give you the gravitas, especially if that's not what
you are forced to do to help build that company.
And when push comes to shove inside of a boardroom or in the middle of diligence, there
has to be conflict.
I think it's a necessary feature of good decisions.
And that conflict arises internally within your investment team,
but it also has to come externally
with the executives of the startup
and with the CEO themselves,
because when you're prosecuting a good decision,
it's unbelievable that you agree on 100% of things,
and there has to be certain things that are controversial,
otherwise by definition,
that company isn't really even pushing the boundary.
So I just think that these are all skills that are poorly
taught while you are building a business. It is not the reason why you should have been
in charge of allocating $50 and $100 million checks into companies. That is just crazy
talent. I love your point, SACs, though, about fun-sized dynamics, fun-sized dynamics are
destiny. Right. It really is. And the optimal fun size for venture is somewhere between
250 and 600 million according to everybody who's been doing this for, you know, more than a decade
or two and who's successful. Whether it's-
When the costs are coming down. So as the input costs come down, whether it's for engineers and
co-pilots and hardware and abstraction layers, then theoretically, greater outcomes should be
generated with fewer dollars in, which would, again, tell you that fund sizes should actually
go down, not up.
But the reason they go up is because you get paid an annual management fee.
And so obviously, the way to make more money is to get 2% on a larger fixed number every
year versus 2% on a smaller number.
Or, you know, for example, what we did was we were like,
we're going to go and hit grand slams.
And so I traded off management fee in return for 30% carry.
And that turned out to be literally a multi-billion dollar smart
decision because I gave up tens of millions of dollars up front
for back end.
Now the back end could have gone to zero.
And maybe it still can, so who knows? But most folks wouldn't do that. Most folks take the sort of risk-adjusted
bet and say, you know what, I'll just take the 2% and I'll raise a 200 million, then a 500 million,
then a billion, then a 2 billion dollar per lap. Yeah, and they stack them all and they get
the 2% and all of a sudden the profits don't matter, which means the outcomes don't matter, which means the diligence is perfunctory and it becomes a theatrical expose that you can use,
this sort of thin fig leaf, you can point to LPs and say, we did our work here,
give us more money for this next fund. That's the rat race that the venture community is in,
and it's going to get played out in companies like IRL and buy Jews and a lot of these AI companies,
quite honestly.
Right, and the chickens have come home
to risk for all the crap down in the mess.
This time is not different.
Is I think what I'm trying to say?
This time is not different.
Did you guys see there was some article
that reported that fundraising for late-stage funds
is just like cratered.
Dead.
So insight was trying to raise a $10 billion fund
and they've only been over raised to. I don't know, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, it was 22 down10 billion fund and they've only been raised to a quarter
of the Sarticle.
No, no, no, it was it was 22 down to 10 and average they've raised to.
Okay, so 10% and then Tiger was trying to raise 12, they cut it to 6 and then they can
only raise to.
Makes sense.
So basically that's like a whatever, 80 to 90% reduction in the size of these funds.
Yeah, I mean, we're out of the sovereigns,
the sovereigns where they were going for this money
are buying sports teams.
They're like, you know what?
Instead of tech, let's just buy sports teams.
And they're buying series A.
And they're buying Manchester United
and they're buying distressed portfolios.
Yeah.
But there's a huge crunch.
There's a huge, we've talked about it before,
but there's a huge crunch in late-stage financing.
It's only going to get worse over the next 18 months.
I asked Brad last week, like, how many of these army coins do you think there are?
Out of the 1400, he said 30 to 40%.
Yeah.
I think he might be, you know, it could be, look, out of 1400,
I think it could be 700 or zombie coins.
I think it's at least 700.
I think it's, I think it's probably 60%.
Yeah.
It's, and then the other 40% let's say how many of them have a down-round coming?
I think 60% go to zero of the remaining 40% half of them probably return money.
And then of the remaining half, half of those maybe get one and a half X.
And then you get a geometric distribution from there, which means the blended return
of that entire stream
of unicorns will be about 1.1x,
but it will be very massively distributed.
I think that is exactly right, Tim.
I would, I would, I would, I would,
I would, I would, I would,
Everybody's getting their money back,
except if you don't have diversification.
Yeah, it's, it's,
The, I think the market is sending a very clear message,
which is these,
These are,
Sorry, you said,
But he's getting, no, no,
Most people won't get their money back, but money back but on average it's gonna be one extra turn yes not even
the district correct.
Well I'm glad that the term zombie corn has held guys we are coming up on our time do you guys want to do science corner or do you want to
yeah that we have us need to use the bathroom breaks go ahead and just go go do it. We're going to take a leak and
we'll come back and make a hearing joke. You know, I'm okay. I'm going to wrap. So look, it's been great.
It's been great being your host. Be Christ yourself. Give us a science. Give us a hug.
You don't hug me. You don't embrace me. You don't love my interview.
Freeberg. Freeberg. I actually, I posted a clip of RFK talking about vaccines. I'd love for you to listen to it and actually give us the critique.
Yes. I will.
Can we do it next week?
That's going viral right now. He did such a good job explaining his position on that.
He did such a good job.
Yeah. Look, did you guys read the office piece? I forwarded to you and I said, please read this.
If you guys read that piece, I'll watch his clip and let's talk about it next week.
Is that cool? So, he says that. Yeah, he is a vaccine scientist who RFK junior references
often as someone that he met with and spoke with and says, I caught him in a lie. And often,
basically, he said, here's exactly what happened. Here's the conversation. Here's the data.
Here's the fact. Here's the science. And I would really, really, really encourage you guys
to read that, please.
And then I'll watch his clip and let's
have a real analytical conversation about statements
that are good questions to ask and good things to interrogate
and things that are being said that maybe aren't factually
correct.
And I think that we need to kind of really,
as a service to ourselves and to people that listen to us,
really do that work
So let's do that and come back and talk about it next week if that's cool
But I encourage everyone to read off it. He put it on substack
Nick will put the link in the notes here
Let's continue. Yeah, I'll continue exactly. I think that's the most important you want to talk about that certain senator that all of a sudden just basically
Gave us the Heisman. No, we've had a lot of those by the way.
So let me just be clear, that's not the only Heisman we've received on the All-in-Summit.
I will say that the speaker list for the All-in-Summit is extremely...
...is looking fan-tastic.
We're gonna have a great time, and I'm really excited for the conversation.
But you're saying some folks Heisman does because of our support of RFK.
That did happen.
And specifically the fact that you
actually open-minded.
Yeah.
And then there were other folks who were insulted
by things that were said about them
by people on the show.
Oh, so soft.
Do you guys want to hear about the NanoGrav?
Yes.
They came out, you have to do it.
Okay, I'll cover this one real quick.
What about this slow hammer that we're all getting?
What is that?
That's it, it's a slow hammer, exactly.
So, go tell us.
Are you talking about the new H3 EV,
but it only goes up to 50 miles per hour?
What is that?
The new hammer, the new HV, you know, the.
They have an EV?
They're coming out with an EV of that.
Oh, you're kidding.
It's hilarious.
It's like a great troll.
I remember when Schwarzenegger got the hammer back in the 90s and everyone was like, you're kidding. It's hilarious. Yeah. It's a good great troll. I remember when Schwarzenegger got the Hummer back in the 90s, and everyone was like,
oh my god, he's amazing.
He's the anti-invac.
And then the Hummer was the cool part of DRAW.
You've got to need a coupon.
Yeah, I'm in a free game like this.
And he's mini-coupons.
And that of Melika.
Okay.
So yesterday, a paper was published by an international scientific consortium.
This group is called NanoGrav.
And they've been using a series of instruments
to measure pulsars, including a 500 meter radio telescope array,
which allows them to see what's so funny.
No, I just, I'm like, three or eight of each other.
What's that?
It's an idea to stop myself.
Get him out of there.
I'm beauty, I'm beauty.
The NanoGrav data that was released is 15 years of data from pulsars. You're ready, Shurgs. What's that? I had to stop myself. Get him out of here. I'm beauty, I'm beauty.
The nanograph data that was released is 15 years of data from pulsars.
And pulsars are neutron stars, which are stars that have collapsed on themselves and are
basically super dense and start spinning.
And then these pulsars, you know, you basically like a lighthouse, you can see the light.
So it looks like a, almost like a strobe light.
And we can see thousands of these across the universe, and we can observe them. And the rate at which the pulsing is coming out of these
pulsars tells us a lot about what is happening in the space between earth and those pulsars.
And when you collect enough data over a long enough period of time, which is what these folks
have just released, is 15 years worth of this data. You can start to see really interesting patterns in the data that support the theory that
space-time itself is slowly vibrating, being stretched, being compressed, being pulled apart,
being pushed back together, because of very large gravitational events happening around the universe.
And what that means is you guys have all seen, you know, that kind of two-dimensional image of a black hole,
and Nick, if you could find one online and pull it up, where it looks like, hey, at the middle of a black hole,
space itself collapses in and it collapses down. And what happens is space and time get significantly elongated when they're really close to gravity. Gravity actually pulls space, sucks it in, sucks in time,
and it becomes distorted.
And so when you have large black holes
around the universe spinning and running past each other,
they're actually pulling and stretching space time itself,
and that sends out ripples throughout the universe.
Ripples that are slowly undulating, space and time itself.
So by observing all of these pulsars around the universe
and the rate at which these pulsars are pulsing and seeing
slight variations, we can start to measure and actually see
those waves, those very slow waves of space time itself
undulating and being pushed and compressed.
And so it supports Einstein's general theory of relativity,
which indicated that space time itself can be warped by gravity.
And it provides a really interesting picture on the universe itself
that all around us,
we have large masses that are many, many millions or billions of light years away,
that are creating waves
in space and time itself that we as humans will never kind of observe, realize or feel ourselves,
but as part of the fabric and the underlying nature of our universe, with space and time being
slowly worked and slowly elongated, slowly compressed, and it's a really fascinating picture of
the universe. Over time, a scientist gather more and more of this data.
It will provide insights into where in the universe, these massive black hole events may
be occurring, and also provide insights into the early picture and the large scale structure
of the universe, which helps us better understand how everything started and where we're all
coming from.
So it was a really fascinating data release.
I think it's a really kind of profound thing
if you take a little time and think about it.
It's super exciting.
It's getting a lot of press coverage today
and encourages all to pull our heads out of the Ukraine war
and Silicon Valley and money and all this stuff
and realize that there are things of extraordinary scale
and structure that are happening around us.
Let me ask you two questions.
Number one, why does it matter?
And number two, any theories here of what we might discover,
or if this goes 10X or 100X in terms of the information
we're getting?
Many years ago, it was theorized that there's
what's called a cosmic microwave background radiation,
the CMB.
And what that is, it's the leftover heat
from the formation of the universe,
from the universe when the big bang happened.
And the scientists figured out how to create
really sensitive radio telescopes
and put them in orbit and they started to observe
the background radiation.
And what that showed us was the fingerprint of the universe,
the original structure of the universe that created ultimately all the galaxies, super galaxies, and then ultimately all the stars,
and then the planets, and everything that came from that. This could be the beginning of seeing
a gravitational background of the universe, where we could actually start to see perhaps the
fingerprint of the space time of the whole universe, of what the actual
structure of space itself and time itself looks like throughout the universe, with the perturbations
being driven by some very large massive, supermassive black holes. There was a black hole discovered
this week that's 30 billion times the mass of our sun. There are these massive objects
out there that are actively distorting space time, and
we're going to start to get a fingerprint of that with this sort of data.
And over time, that just gives us a better sense of what the overall structure of the
universe looks like, not just from the heat energy that we're collecting, but also the
gravitational waves that we're now able to observe through the inference of this data
collection.
This just makes deepens our understanding of the universe, but there's not like the
universe. Yeah, which not like the universe.
Yeah, which is amazing and interesting.
And it validates and proves the general theory of relativity, which if you think about the
application of that down the road, that may lead to things like close to or as fast as
light travel or things related to time travel.
There's a lot of things that people have theorized for decades about
You know black holes and the warping of space time itself. I'm not saying that any of this stuff is you see the three-body problem trailer
Yeah, looks amazing. It looks amazing. It looks amazing. What a great. What a great We have to wait so long. I hate it when they put out trailers. So how long is it when is it coming out?
Like next year. Oh wow. Yeah. Oh, I still haven't seen your movie.
Either guys your movie that you want to be to see. Which movie to try? Oh, everything everywhere.
All at once. I got a better movie for you. I got a great pull for you. It's on paper. You're right
now. The blog a movie called about Blackberry. It tells the story of Blackberry. It's like an independent
film. It is awesome.
I just reviewed it on this week and start ups.
It's called.
It's just on his Blackberry.
Called Blackberry.
Let me know.
I think it will guys.
This has been episode 135 of the All In Pod.
I really appreciate it.
Oh my god.
I think we've seen just enough time to get you back
to your Nirvana concert.
Leo. What's the background on this one? Is that a rival? What is that? What's that background?
What movie? That's a black hole. That's a black hole. Just a black hole. Okay.
I think that from
might be a bit. It might be a good one. I was sax's hair because he looks like did you get it cut?
Sacks. He got a cut. Did you cut it? No, you broke our
Heart Sacks I got a mild sloughing
Show a show is the flood let's go. Let's see
Oh boo. I mean it's still crazy
What's good? You gotta just keep grounded out man. Jake. How you want to take us out? You do a better outro
I never bought it for David sacks. We architect coming at you
You do a better outro. All right, everybody for David Sacks,
the architect coming at you.
Z 100 Board of Zoo,
Chimouth Polyhopatia, two for Tuesdays,
tears for fears coming up,
and free bird with the science project.
All right, traveling back in time with David free bird,
two for Tuesday, Jackson Brown.
To load out, here we go.
Gotcha. That's the way we're exerting his moderator. I'm We're in greatest moderator.
Jason Galgok.
Out of the world's greatest moderate.
I can do my MPR voice if you like.
Dude.
All right, closing us out here, episode 135, PCRW 92.3,
the sound of Santa Monica, this Sunday at the Venice
Farmers Market, two for one on the organic milk,
go check it out.
And we'll see you all later on the politics of culture, David Sacks chiming in on the
Republican GOP position, which we did consider Friedberg deeply going into science and
Chimouth Polyhapatia on wealth disparity.
For everybody, I am your host here at KCRW.
Jason Callaghan is the world's most moderate moderator.
We'll see you next time, KCRW.
I can do any of these radio bits.
Bye bye.
Love you guys. I'm going to the beach. Rainman David's acting. I'm going to the beach.
And it said we open source it to the fans and they've just gone crazy with it.
I'm going to the beach.
I'm going to the beach.
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
What?
Besties are gone.
I'm going to the beach.
That's my dog taking it away. She's driving away. She's in the sex.
We're at all.
Oh man.
My ham is the actual meat.
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug.
Because they're all just like this sexual tension that we just need to release that.
What?
That beat.
What?
Your beer.
Beer.
Beer.
Beer.
We need to get merch.
I'm going on leave
I'm going on leave