All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg - E157: Epic legal win, OpenAI licensing deals, FCC targets Elon, Alex Jones reinstated & more
Episode Date: December 16, 2023(0:00) Bestie intros: Mullets! (2:56) Recapping Friedberg's holiday party (9:29) Jury rules in favor of Epic Games over Google: How to handle the app store duopoly? (23:21) OpenAI inks deal with Axel ...Springer (35:02) FCC cancels Starlink subsidy, dissenting FCC Commissioner says federal agencies are targeting Elon Musk on Biden's orders (58:25) Alex Jones reinstated on X (1:22:59) Sacks receives an unlikely apology (1:27:32) Besties take two questions from the audience Follow the besties: https://twitter.com/chamath https://twitter.com/Jason 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://www.theverge.com/23994174/epic-google-trial-jury-verdict-monopoly-google-play https://www.theverge.com/23959932/epic-v-google-trial-antitrust-play-store-fortnite-recap https://www.wsj.com/tech/google-loses-antitrust-case-brought-by-epic-games-651f5987 https://support.google.com/googleplay/android-developer/answer/112622 https://twitter.com/openai/status/1734940445824937993 https://www.ap.org/ap-in-the-news/2023/chatgpt-maker-openai-signs-deal-with-ap-to-license-news-stories https://www.axios.com/2023/12/13/openai-chatgpt-axel-springer-news-deal https://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/fair-use/four-factors https://twitter.com/Jason/status/1730035957850833023 https://www.theverge.com/2023/12/12/23999070/spacex-starlink-fcc-rural-digital-opportunity-fund-fcc-rejected https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-399068A1.pdf https://twitter.com/HansMahncke/status/1735003655697244308 https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/13/us/politics/hunter-biden-impeachment-testimony.html https://twitter.com/BrendanCarrFCC/status/1734780816599703983 https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1733529033575465381 https://twitter.com/DrJBhattacharya/status/1602052936921939968 https://medium.com/craft-ventures/section-230-mend-it-dont-end-it-e33799a43a5f https://twitter.com/TheChiefNerd/status/1733496554701365582 https://twitter.com/Mark60480727/status/1735335623207038994 https://twitter.com/Jason/status/1735164131806986441 https://twitter.com/MomCooksFS/status/1735341157800915278
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We're going mullet this week in honor of your, your closest to mullet right now,
sex. I see you trying to tuck the lettuce in. It's not going to work. We see it back there.
Well, I need the ponytail. Wow. You went full-knock. Where is this photo? Do you like a secret camera in his room?
What is this? No, my kid's took it. Are you really doing a douche-naught?
One of my daughters is playing with my hair. She wants to see if she can make a ponytail with it.
So she made a ponytail and then took a photo.
So we started into a chat GPT to ask who it looked like.
And it said Thomas Jefferson.
The first question.
Did you do a fit check with Tucker on that?
Did you send him that and say, fit check?
Yeah, not everything has to do with Tucker, Jake.
Hell, the joke's going to be a lot worse.
Well, look at this.
If you guys don't know what a fit check is, as your daughter's.
Oh, wait.
What check? A fit check. A fit check. You, look at this smile. If you guys don't know what a fit check is, as your daughter's. Oh, wait, what check?
A fit check.
A fit check.
You take a picture of yourself, you send it to your fans, you say fit check.
And then they tell you if you look good for the day.
Oh, okay.
It's kind of like, it's kind of like a wellness check, but for how you look for fat.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's like, no freebergs.
Send you, I'm having anxiety about this.
And then we do a wellness check on freeberg.
See he's going to show up for the show.
Or we do a wellness check on you when Alex Jones comes's gonna show up for the show. Or we do a wellness check on you
when Alex Jones comes back to Twitter.
I'm putting it out there right now.
And Alex Jones is on the back half of the show,
just to tease it.
Just like I'm gonna tease these photos,
I pulled the archives.
And here I am in 1984 with my mullet.
That's a J. Calm mullet from 1984.
In Staten Island, on the way to a Boy Scout trip.
But I thought you'd have a little fun.
Sats actually has been working.
He's got his hairstyle list.
Oh.
Yeah, well, the gray looks like a Lord of the Rings character.
Like an Elfin Warrior.
No, he looks like the Elfin Warrior.
Where's my golden arrow?
Exactly.
So we'll punch that up, but you're not actually surprisingly.
Surprisingly, I can't look. That's horrible. Oh, freebear, you're surprised. Surprise.
I can't look.
Oh, free bird.
You're right.
I'm talking to you.
Here it is.
Free bird looks like a birdie.
He looks like Orlando Bloom in Lord of the Rings, right?
Actually, it looks like more like that vampire movie.
What was it on?
He does look like interview with the vampire.
Or he looks like he's teaching
gender studies that Berkeley and his nine non-binary so if you want to take
understanding non-binary as their gender studies 101 it's coming this spring free bird should be teaching on his alma mater well done. I'll find you guys a photo. I'll
send it to you as my I did have a ponytail. I sported it from about age 16 to 19 when I
smoked cigarettes to and I've got photos with the ponytail and the
French coat smoking six. So it fits the, fits the mold.
All right. So in the spirit of Mollets, let's go business first, and we will go to the party at the end. I'm going to win. I'm going to win. I'm going to win. I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to win.
With me again today here on the All in Podcast, the King of ****.
We've retired Queen of Kenwa because David Freiberg is CEO of a startup. He could still be the queen.
This is the main product, Freiberg. No, it's
So he's the king of beef. He's the king of vegetables. Off the record. Wait, wait, is class five what crop you're working on?
Yeah, absolutely. Okay. Absolutely. It's a SaaS company. Like a SaaS company wants to keep it on the DL
Which vertical they're going after finance or sales or whatever. You've got to keep those, it could be carrots.
You never know.
You could be Captain Carrots, you never know.
Just not beats.
Okay.
Freeberg, we don't need more beats in the world.
Yeah, I'm going to say no, panel.
Dude, no delicious.
No delicious.
Beats are delicious.
Yeah, you're right.
No more beats.
Beats with some fetishies, delicious.
Yeah, you're right.
You're more beats when you're more cheese.
Yeah, you're right.
You're more beats when you're more cheese.
Yeah, Brussels sprouts can be very good.
If you're sharp, saute them. Look, you caramelize the Brussels bitch. Brussels sprouts can be very good. You know, if you're a girl, saute them.
Look, you caramelize the Brussels sprouts.
I'm with you.
Very good.
Let's make those cheaper, freeberg.
Yeah, bigger and cheaper and more tasty.
You know what people, people, people dunk on,
but it's a great vegetable is cabbage.
I like cabbage.
I like cabbage.
I like cabbage.
You like shred cabbage into a salad and you put a little
oil, little lemon, little salt, change the salad, like a chinchin in LA.
That's nice. Exactly. Yeah.
Saks, did you like Friedberg's Christmas party last week?
How was it? Did you enjoy it as much as we did?
Oh, it's great. All right, Saks didn't show up.
Do I miss the party? I thought it was next week.
Who does a Christmas party first week?
Jamon, before you tell your story, a very kind gentleman rings the door to my gate.
I open the gate.
The guy drives in.
He gets out.
He's like a big guy.
He kind of says Mr. Friedberg and I'm like, what am I getting served?
And he goes to the back seat and I'm like, oh my God, I'm going to get shot.
He reaches in and he pulls out a beautifully wrapped gift.
He's like, this is from Mr. Sacks, Mr. Friedberg.
Happy holidays.
And then he gave me like a touch on the shoulder or or like he does this thing, or he goes like this,
do a little bow, he got back in his car, and he drove away.
Did a bow.
What is he sure about?
Yeah.
It was like when you go to an online store.
For a wallet?
He did the amount thing that they do.
He should have called right.
No, that wasn't his wallet.
That was his valet.
That's his valet.
He stole the valet from the amount.
The amount is looking for valet.
It was the most thoughtful no-show I've ever had.
I will say sex.
Okay, well, I'm glad to hear that. I'm glad to hear that. Well, what's funny is I just
checked my inbox and my invitation from you is sitting in there because I've been
meaning to go, but I didn't realize I was so soon. So I'm just looking at the date.
It was December 9th. I didn't realize it was five days ago. Sorry about that.
Someone in your household did, so we appreciate it. Okay, someone knew.
I went, but this is my, this is my second or third year going. So I
pre, I pre-gamed it. I went and I got protein, pre-gamed. I got meat, a bunch of steak,
and a burger. And then I went and sure enough, I talked to the staff. And the staff said,
after much debate and haranging with Freeberg, he allowed cheese this year.
No, sushi. We had a whole sushi platter thing. No, stop. I didn't have sushi.
Okay, so now that's my turn. To tell the truth. Go ahead. Tell the church more.
I get in the car to drive 90 minutes. 90 minutes to free. 90 minutes for bad sushi.
Okay, that's the poker trip for me by the way. Yeah, I am. And I,
Nattex, Allison, and David, we're on our way.
Chmoth wants to know will there be meat?
Cause I'm driving to like,
I can't test them.
Will there be meat?
And Ali says, oh yeah, don't worry, they'll be sushi.
And then Nattex back, okay, we just got off the highway,
we're going home, we'll see you later,
cause we don't believe.
Says there's gonna be fish, fine, I get there.
Have an eating the thing, I am starving.
Ravani. I start to work my way through the appetizers. There's like sliced green
peppers and red peppers. There's like some falafels. Then there was a Spanish omelet. Not
pretty decent. Okay. And I'm like, where's the sushi? And so Phil Doich says a thousand bucks.
There's no sushi. And I said, no, there's free bird texted me. He said, I've asked all the people working here. They say there's no sushi. So I bet I'm a thousand
dollars. I go outside to where the sushi is. And you know how we used to make fun of
sky for having the filler fruit. Yeah. Cannello, like cannello and honeydew. And that's
all there was. Yeah. There was no sushi, but there was two or three rolls
with four pieces of salmon, strategically cut,
just laying over.
I won the bet, I was so hungry, I was like,
what do I eat?
I'm starving.
So I keep eating the omelette, I keep eating
the vegetarian food, and then I see these
f***ing brownies.
And I'm like, I'll just have a brownie. Then I had two brownies.
And then I was like, okay, I need to stop. I can't, I can't have this. I'm still so hungry. I
walk outside, Jay Cal where I saw you. We're having a cup of coffee and you know what I
I f***ed it? I ate five buckle of ah. And then I was like, this is disgusting. I've had no protein.
I've had no carbohydrates. I've had no fiber. I've had a fucking 3,000 calories of sugar, I grabbed that and I charged home. I was so mad. He did. He Irish
mad. I didn't see him say about Irish goodbye. Free burger, I talked about it yesterday,
we talked it out. I must have had 6,000 calories at his Christmas party. I'm coming over
to Timoth tonight. It's only going to be tried to the whole night, I'm sure. Not a simple
one. It sounds like Jake helped reload at the meat.
He got ready.
Absolutely.
On the way, after last year, I left that party and I just typed in, I just said to my
auntie, you got a Popeye?
Closest in an outburst and I literally got a double, double and then I just had a second
one.
On the way at this time, I literally had a steak for dinner and then I went and then I two had some bon appetit.
Have you guys ever had Popeye's?
Of course.
I had never had it.
My son has to get it last week, last weekend.
I'd never had it.
Can you believe it?
Here we go.
It is the most incredible thing I've ever tasted.
It's a Popeye sandwich.
Wow.
Wait for the out of touch, you two comments.
What's your mom's gonna say to Popeye?
The problem is not the eating of it.
It's how you feel two hours later.
But I mean, I've had Chick-fil-A,
you know, I've done the chicken sandwich
that other places never have.
Popeye's is incredible.
Mm.
Mm.
Incredible.
So then I had Matt almost on the edge
of convincing her to go to Popeye's on the way home,
but we missed the closing time
so we couldn't get it. I got go to starboard or bonchan. Those are two other elite. No bro, not
not. I'm not talking fancy chicken. I've had like the fancy chicken sectors. I'm saying Popeye's
is incredible. I like it. I like it. I'll start it. Chema. Here we go. Have you had a play of fish?
All right. Let's get the show started here. Of course with me again. The King of Beep, the dictator and the rainman.
Let's get to work.
All right, everybody.
Epic, the makers of Fortnite just won a huge case with Google over the Play App Store
on Android phones.
For those of you who don't know, App Store has become an absolutely huge business for Apple
and Google.
Google App Store generates $50 billion of revenue
a year. Now that's about 17% of Google's total revenue. Apple's App Store and services
85 billion in annual revenue. These are on top of their franchises of hardware and search.
The Juran San Francisco unanimously found that Google violated California's federal antitrust
laws through
sweetheart deals and annoying workarounds.
That's type of competition.
For example, Google got spooked that other game developers would follow Epic's lead and
launch their own app stores or route people directly to their websites to avoid the 30%
take rate.
So Michael attacks.
Google calculated they would lose 2 billion to 3.5 billion
in revenue annually if the other major game developers followed Epic. So they created a program.
Codename project hug where they basically pet up bribes or incentives to discourage large
developers from building their own competitive app stores. They also gave Spotify a sweetheart deal of 0% and Google paid activation $360 million
to keep in the play store.
And the discovery in this case was absolutely wild.
According to testimony in the trial, Google had deleted some employees' chat logs and
the judge told the jury to assume that the deleted information wouldn't have been favorable to Google
Jury only deliberated a few hours and Google plans to appeal the verdict obviously
Epic isn't seeking damages. They just want Google to change their practices
They want to basically let people plug in their own billing system to avoid the 30% tax. We'll see what happens next freeburg
These stores clearly have monopolistic characteristics, but in Google actually
allows for third party half stores.
Maybe you can explain why you think Apple won their case
against Epic, but Google lost.
These are pretty different cases.
The Apple case was a judge.
This one was a jury of citizens in federal court.
I think it's worth just backing up a minute and talking about the history of apps on
phones and how Android came to be.
Prior to Google acquiring Android, you guys may remember there were a few companies that
were the dominant OS providers, operating system providers to mobile phones.
There was Nokia, there was Microsoft,
there was Apple, and there was also Blackberry. And at the time, a lot of the telcos, the
Verizon's and AT&T's of the world, prior to this, were trying to make money by charging
for people to install apps on phones. So that was the first business model in the mobile
internet. Was the telco would make money and everyone fought
against it.
All the open internet providers said this is ridiculous and it was clear that that was not
going to be allowed.
So ultimately these operating systems became the play and which operating system was on
which mobile phone and what did that operating system then allowed to control what apps were
allowed and so on.
So the reason Google bought Android is they wanted to make an open source alternative to all of these closed app and closed systems. So Google bought Android 2005
made a huge investment in growing the team and allowed anyone to use the Android OS,
fork it, make their own versions of it, install it on their own hardware, run it however they
wanted. Meanwhile, Google made an internal version of Android that could be used on any mobile
handset company's phone as a pre-installed OS.
Now why did Google want to do this?
They wanted to do this number one to make sure that the internet was still open and it wasn't
going to end up being closed from a user's perspective.
And number two, so that anyone can install any app they wanted.
And the commercial interest for Google, which is number three, is so that Google could
make Google search the default search engine on that phone and have YouTube installed and
all these other tools that Google makes money on, including their own App Store. Now, in
Android, anyone can install any app they want on the phone. And so there's no restrictions
unlike in Apple. In the iOS, if you try and download an app off the internet and install
it, it has to go through the App Store, it has to be Apple verified in order to be allowed
on the phone.
The whole point of Android was that it could be open, anyone could install anything.
What Epic claimed in this case was that Google's Android OS gave people security warnings.
If you ever have tried this, you download an app from a website on Android. It says warning
warning, this may cause a virus on your phone.
Are you sure you want to do this?
This app hasn't been verified by Google, et cetera, et cetera.
So it gives these warnings that scare consumers off
of doing that.
So Epic can install Fortnite direct on your Android phone
today.
And you can do it by downloading it from Epic's website.
You don't have to go through the Google Play Store.
And you can enter your credit card,
and you can pay for stuff.
So it is an open system that allows that. What these guys are claiming is that because Google can default
the Google Play Store on the phone, it's basically what most consumers are going to use anyway.
And so they're saying it's not fair and because they also have influence over the OS and
they're putting the security warnings, it's inappropriate because now it's scaring people
from downloading stuff of the internet. So that's the big claim epic making. So Google has
already said they're going to appeal this case because fundamentally, again, if this
were really true and there really was deep antitrust issues with this, you would likely have seen
a federal agency come after Google, not a private company suing them in a civil case. This would
have been a much more significant action if there really was antitrust behavior. But it's a lot
easier to win a jury trial, party to party where Epic can go to a court and say, hey, let's go after Google, they're awful, we make
Fortnite and all this sort of stuff. So they do have a bias in that sense of being able
to do this. Google's going to appeal. They feel very strongly they'll win on appeal.
And the market obviously did a, you know, voted with the fact that Google stocked in really
move anywhere. And the market said, hey, this is a, this is a nothing burger. Google's 40 billion in annual Play Store revenue. Worse case scenario, like you said, if it gets
impacted by $2 billion, that's $2 billion out of 300 overall. Doesn't really matter.
And likely they're going to win on appeal anyway. So, you know, I think the saga will continue.
But I think Google's got a pretty strong case on appeal. And it seems like, you know,
that's going to be very hard to kind of see a massive change in App Store behavior as a result of this case, even though it's been
hyped up to be that.
That's my take on it.
Yeah, great take.
Chimoff, what do you think about this jury shopping and maybe the fact that this isn't
Lena Conn, this isn't the FTC, you know, it's company to company.
Do you think that the claims here were valid?
Do you think the jury shopping impacted this in a significant
way?
Probably. I guess the simple thought exercises. What do we think the outcome would have
been had this trial happened in Dallas, Texas? Probably different. And so I think
Freeberg's right, what does it materially prove? Nothing with respect to the body of law.
It just goes to show that if you pick the right place to
convene these trials in the right format, you can give yourself a slightly better probability
of winning.
But the question is, what will you win?
It's not clear to me what happens now.
Is there going to be a damages portion now of this trial?
Is that what happens next?
They're not seeking damages.
They want changes to how they operate.
And they're trying to get a settlement.
And they want people to settle out with changes to the absolute policy.
That's what they're asking for.
And then what about the epic versus apple lawsuit?
Is it being done in the same way?
No, they lost.
They lost.
And they appealed.
And there's one element that's being appealed to the Supreme Court now.
But basically, they lost and that's over.
And was that convened in California in a jury trial as well in San Francisco?
No, that was not a jury trial.
It was a judge.
But it was California.
It was a bench trial in California.
Yeah, it was also in Northern California, that's right.
Yeah.
So, Zach, let me bring you in on this.
Do you think that these stores are monopolies?
And do you think if they change their behavior,
especially Apple, you know, allow other third party stores, it would impact that with that
have on the startup ecosystem, because the 30% tax is significant. And we see that every
day with our startups. I mean, if you have to give way 30% of your revenue to Google and Apple,
it's brutal. And then you're advertising on Apple and Google and Facebook. That's another 30% of your revenue
or 50% of your revenue. Yeah, no, I agree with that. So first of all, these app stores are absolutely
monopolies within their ecosystem. And Apple and Google Android are absolutely a duopoly within the
mobile space. My experience with these types of monopolies or gatekeepers is that they exercise more and
more control and extract more and more of the value over time. It's an iterative process in
which they just keep extracting, keep taxing, keep imposing more rules on the ecosystem for their
benefit and to the detriment of innovators. And so I do think they have to be controlled and I
think Epic is doing the ecosystem of favor.
For example, on this 30% rate that you're talking about,
to you, Cal, that level of rate
might have been appropriate for certain types of apps,
like a hobbyist app, where it's literally 100% margin.
Okay, you pay 30% to the app store.
It doesn't work for SaaS companies.
I mean, I can tell you that.
That mean this would be like half of their gross margin
or something like that. It doesn't work for a lot of companies that
spend a lot of money on content creation, like Epic, which spends a lot of money on R&D
to create. It gives life for a nice Netflix.
Exactly.
You're going to break their models immediately.
Or Amazon with Kindle. And so what happened is it used to be the case that Amazon could
have a link in their app,
at least directing the user to go to the amazon.com website and you could buy the book there and you could circumvent
the the the rake in the app and it was inconvenient for the user but at least there was a way around it.
Then Apple banned those links, then they banned the ability for the app to even message
to the user what was happening. So if, for example, if you use the Kindle app on iOS, which I do all the time, you can't buy a book in it. And the reason
why is because Amazon doesn't want to pay the 30% rate, but they can't even tell you that.
It just looks like it's broken functionality. So those of us who know go to Amazon.com
through the browser and we buy the book there and then it magically appears in the Kindle
app. We've all had that experience.
So I just think that these do-op please have to be controlled.
I think that it'd be good if the government could figure out better ways to do it.
I don't think M&A is the right way to do it.
We've talked about this before.
I think that restricting anti-competitive tactics is really the way to stop it.
And like I said, I can't speak to the details of Epic's case, but I do
think they're doing the ecosystem a favor here by pushing back on these monopolies and helping
to keep them under control.
A hundred percent agree with you, Sacks, and your take. And I think actually other people should
join them and the industry should really force this issue because you are absolutely correct
that they're boiling the frog. Now they did make some cuts under a million. I think they
charge 15% on the first million.
So they try to be nice to the smaller developer.
But it'll pull it up.
That's not, look, it's actually the larger ones, too.
Pull up the link I just said.
So you'll see here, Google charges
through the Play Store, if you want to have distribution.
I mean, think about the Play Store as being like a retailer.
You make clothing.
You need to have a retail store
that someone can go to and buy stuff.
The retail store has to make money. You're not going to have a retail store that's can go to and buy stuff. The retail store has to make money.
You're not going to have a retail store that's free.
So how does the retail store make money?
Well, they charge 98% of apps, as you can see here are free because they don't make any
money on that.
But then if you start to charge subscriptions, it's 15% take on automatically renewing subscriptions
where it's easier for the-
It's a second year.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's easier.
No, each year.
Look at the second time. No, no, no, it's for renewing. So, right, I know this because of calm. So in the first year of calm,
it's for renewing subscriptions, subscription products. So all subscriptions that have an
automatic renewal feature to them are instantly at 15%. And as a result, you know, you can think
about the, what is it worth to get a user to not have to enter their credit card info?
You know, plus the credit card fees, It's like 15% is not too crazy.
Honestly, I'm just, you know, I'm not trying to be a super Google advocate, but I'm just
saying like, I don't think that's too crazy.
And then they've got this like negotiated tier where if you are a very large app developer
and you want to go and negotiate with Google, they have a biz dev team like Spotify and
others get where they'll negotiate fees down and you can actually go and like argue for
better economic.
So they've tried to be commercial, which I'm guessing is probably why Lena Khan and
others haven't gone after them for antitrust and monopolistic behavior because they've
tried to find the comfortable place where it's not going to be too crazy.
At least that's my read on what's gone on because otherwise, obviously folks would be
all over them.
You know, if it really was monopolistic.
But the boiling of the frog issue is the one for me because then they want to charge
you now for placement in the app store and get revenue from you there.
Oh, yeah.
That's Amazon too.
Amazon's got that.
Like, everyone's gotten, every D to C company in the last five years has gotten obliterated.
Their unit economics are upside down now.
And we've talked about this.
Both Google's taken out the margin, but Amazon forces you to buy ads in order to get
proper placement.
Yeah.
And then they force you to pay ads in order to get to the right place. If you want to write a placement. Yeah.
And then they force you to pay all the extra fees for inventory.
Amazon squeezed everyone way more than any of these digital apps.
This is the perfect place for LUNICON to get active, I think, and the settlement's super
easy.
The entire industry should come at them in unison, tons of lawsuits, group lawsuits, until
they allow, when you turn on your Apple phone, the ability to load
Amazon's App Store, Epic's App Store, whoever else wants to have an App Store, that should be
your right. If you buy a hardware device, it should be your right to load these and they shouldn't
be angled in any way. And that's the other thing. Androids does all kinds of
angling to make those with those pop-ups and hey, this isn't safe, etc. They should have a
verified App Store program. Amazon's App Store, app X app store, they should be verified or something and maybe they pay 5% to have a
verified app store. But this is going to be an ongoing issue and we'll see more of it
I think. So let's go on, anybody else have thoughts on it? No. Okay. So in other news,
OpenAI is started to cut licensing deals. If you remember,
we had a big debate about this back on episode one, 15 in February.
And I was saying, hey, this content is owned and the opportunity to create LLMs
or derivative products, you know, is the right of the people who make that content.
Sacchew told me I was going to get rolled over. But here we are. Iacks You Join Me, I was gonna get rolled over.
But here we are.
I wouldn't say I said you were going to rolled over.
What I said is the ecosystem's gonna figure this out.
Okay, let's play the tape.
If ChatGPT takes a Yelp review and a,
a Condaness Traveler review and they represent it
based on the best content that's out there
that they've already ranked
because they have that algorithm
with PageRank or Bing's ranking engine. then they've republished it and then that
jeopardizes those businesses that is profoundly unfair and not what we want for society
and they are interfering with their ability to leverage their own content is profoundly unfair
and those magazines and news by person need to what's up?
You're not getting a steamroll too.
Okay, there it is. Man, is my hair worse now or then?
Yeah, I think it's bad cut back then.
I think you were like post COVID back then.
Yeah, I think it looks much better right now.
My hair looks like a toupee.
Nick, can you just show us a picture of that?
It looks like a toupee.
You get a par with a common era.
That was like an early AD.
This is like the common era now.
You know what I'm saying?
That's a toupee. That's a toupee. It does look like a toupee. It looks like an early AD. This is like the common area now. You know what I'm saying? That's a two pay.
That's a two pay.
It does look like a two.
It looks like a raccoon.
Okay, J.Kale, I'll get some comments on this
because I think your fluffer has fluffed too much
on the upper parts and unfluffed the bottom parts,
which I think I'm gonna listen.
Don't criticize him when he was in an in-between phase.
We all go through an in-between phase with our hair.
It's part of the process. Now I know what we're talking about this topic, could J.K an in between phase with our hair, it's part of the process.
Now I know why we're talking about this topic,
at J.Cowell's, because you think you,
it's a total non-story, or I shouldn't say it's a non-story.
Okay, well, let me finish.
Let me finish it off our topic.
Okay.
So just so we know what's going on here,
OpenAI announced a licensing deal with Axel Springer
to bring real-time news from Politico
and the fake news from Business Insider to Chappy Tuti.
Thank you.
You literally sound like Alex Jones. I mean, thank you. Thank you for playing all your fake news from business insider to Chappie TT. You literally sound like Alex Jones.
I mean, thank you for playing all your fake news product.
That is actually great.
He is right about that.
I got one thing right.
As part of the deal, Axel Springer can use Chattche PTA
to improve their products, includes all their European sites.
This is on top of the deal that Open Eye did
with the associated press, but most importantly, the most just most importantly, I'm going to throw it in a second.
Most importantly, when chat GPT relies on these sources, it'll include a summary and a link
back.
Other examples of licensing are happening all over the industry.
Adobe is using stop images for theirs and stable diffusion, as you know, that brazenly
used Getty's images are being sued.
So freeberg, you thought this was unrealistic,
but here we are.
No, I don't agree with your framing.
And I think that I think it's unrealistic
for you to frame this as validating
or justifying the fact that these companies
won't be able to access and utilize open data
under fair use to train models.
So that's what's going on historically, right?
So the open web, you know, we talked a little bit about where folks can get content from
the open web.
You can browse the internet and you can download all this content.
It's all freely available.
It's readily available.
It's in the open domain.
And then you can train models and then the models can ultimately make stuff based on
all that training data.
What this deal is is it's actually a content integration deal,
and I'll read this with the partnership
ChatGPT users around the world will receive summaries
of selected global news content
from Axel Springer's media brands, including Yadda Yadda,
including otherwise paid content.
So what ChatGPT is doing is they're accessing content
behind a paywall, and instead of training models on it,
they're able to fetch that data as a retrieval aspect
of the chat GPT service.
So now you as a user want an update on,
hey, what's going on with Donald Trump,
it can search not just use its training data,
but it can recognize that, hey,
there's a current event news question embedded in this query,
and I can go fetch that current event news answer from this content that I've now paid for.
It's not a training data set that's now being unlocked,
which is what the complaint was before,
that all the open web data was being used for training.
But it's behind paywall data that cannot be fetched and integrated.
I think it's more interesting because it really speaks to a new model for how the internet will work,
which we've talked about, which is that there may be these sort of new chat interfaces that cannot just send you
to another page and link you over somewhere, but can fetch data for you and present it
to you in an integrated way in the response it's providing.
And these services have to pay for access to that.
So, you know, open AI, it's a three-year deal.
They're paying tens of millions of dollars to Axel Springer to access their close content
and present it to the user.
So I think it's quite a bit different than, you know,
using training data, which is what, you know,
the complaint was the first time around.
And it's more of like a really interesting front-end feature
for what chat GPT is becoming.
–Saxch, you wanted to add to that?
–I don't label lots after that.
I think Fiber did a great job explaining that issue.
I mean, look, I think Jake, how you've had a little bit of a session to add to that. I think Fribert did a great job explaining that issue. I mean, look, I think Jake,
how you've had a little bit of a session
with this copyright issue.
And-
Well, protecting rights holders, I do believe in,
I don't know, some sessions.
Fribert makes a really great point,
which is there's a difference between copying somebody's
copyright and work, which would be a violation
of copyright and using content that's available
on the open web to train a model to create
entirely new content.
And I do think that AI models should be able to use the content that's available on the
web under a fair use doctrine to train their models for the benefit of consumers.
And I don't see a reason to try and tie that up in a bunch of copyright lawsuits.
If chat UBT is producing a plagiarized result, then you may have grounds for a copyright
infringement claim.
So what I would say is, you know, when you look at that fairiest doctrine, I've got a
lot of experience with it, having done this in blogs and other content companies.
Here to the fourth factor test, I'm sure you're well aware of this, is the effect of
the use on the potential market and the value of the work.
And if you look at the lawsuits that are starting to emerge, it is Getty's right to then
make derivative products based on their images.
I think we would all agree.
Stable diffusion, when they use these open web, that is no excuse to use an open web crawler
to avoid getting a license from the original owner of
that.
Just because you can technically do it, doesn't mean you're allowed to do it.
In fact, the open web projects that provide these say explicitly, we do not give you the
right to use this.
You have to then go read the copyright laws on each of those websites and on top of that,
if somebody were to steal the copyrights of other people, put it on the open web, which
is happening all day long, you still, if you're building a derivative
work like this, you still need to go get it.
So it's no excuse that I took some site in Russia that did a bunch of copyright violation
and that I indexed them for my training model.
So I think this is going to result.
Freebr.
Freebr, can you shoot me in the face and let me know in the segment.
Okay. All right. free bird. Free bird, can you shoot me in the face and let me know in the segment.
All right, so the segment is now over. I was about to throw it to you.
Code now is, I mean, like stop with this naval gazing nonsense. We're in inning one.
And nobody knows anything. And the most important thing is that this will get sorted out through trials. That's where you are right, Jason. It's going to go to court. And I think we should just not opine
on this stuff because it's esoteric at best and it's kind of like whatever.
Well, some of it will go to court. Other ones will be done in the free market. Like we
see here, another thing.
You care about this more than most people because you are a journalist and you think this
is going to put people out of work.
I am a content creator. I'm also an author, as you know, and a podcast or any kind of content.
I do think that you should get permission before you leverage people's work to create
derivative products correct. And actually, you're starting to see this in
Dolly. And chat GPT seems to be getting ahead of this because of all the incoming lawsuits.
Check this out. I started asking Dolly to make me star wars
characters of Bulldogs and I said make a Jedi Bulldog. It did that no problem.
Then I asked it to make a version of this using and make a Darth Vader. And it said,
I'm unable to generate images based on your request due to our content policy for other ideas
and concepts you'd like to fulfill free to share. So I said, make me a sick board cat, and it basically made me Darth Vader.
And so it's very clear that the team over at OpenAI is now taking prompt engineering.
You're like a clever prompt engineer, though.
Well, yeah, I got a round copy right here, right?
And so it's very clear.
But this shows how silly like all of this stuff is.
This is just a drag coefficient on development of AI because and on users,
because now you've got to like word
you're prompt exactly the right way.
Well, I think what they're doing is they know that marvel
and all the Disney characters,
all the Star Wars characters,
they're very protective of their IP.
Disney is going to launch their own Dolly type
stable diffusion product where you can do this,
put yourself on a Star Media Star Wars character.
Does it make any good at this?
It doesn't matter if they're good or not,
it's their IP. And so, open-air. I mean, let's say carried out. It's not really good at this. It doesn't matter if they're good or not, it's their IP.
And so open hands can create their own artwork.
That's in the vein of like a Darth Vader, Amos.
They can, but they can't do it commercially.
And what Chatchy PT and Open Eye here is commercial
because I pay 20 bottles a month to Chatchy PT.
So that's what you're missing.
A fan of course can make a Jedi cat.
Well, all I know is you played this like way back video
from episode 15 or something. No, no, no, Kat. Well, all I know is you played this way back video from episode 15 or something.
No, no, no.
It's the worries.
Okay.
From episode 115, as if you were done.
I know you guys never want to think of it.
I know you guys never want to think of it.
I mean, it turns out that Freeberg totally blew up your case.
He didn't blow up my case.
I will be right and continue to be right.
Okay.
Now, let's go to something we can all agree.
We're definitely not striking the segment.
I liked it.
Let's go.
No, no, no, no, no, it's spicy.
We like a little spicy here. I didn't even have to refute you. Freeberg just did it. Let's go. No, no, no, no, no, Spice, we like a little spicy here. I didn't even after a few you freeberg just data.
Well, beautiful. No, I mean, listen, okay. You came in, you thought you had the goods.
I admit it. No. He's like playing this way back video from like 45 episodes ago. I finally got him.
I finally got that. I was finally right about something. You hadn't claimed you'd never used the right
steamroll. I would have never played the clip. Oh my God. I have some life footage.
I just want to go through it and just talk about it.
I just try to get my strength.
Anyways, yeah.
So guys, there's this copyright thing.
I want to, I, okay, hold on.
Let me, let me just reframe.
Let me just start that again.
Okay.
You know, copyright issues are, okay, hold on.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Well, listen, there's this thing I want to talk about.
Copyright, which, hold on.
Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Oh, these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are these are I could get up that high. I would miss the dunk and still be missing about it. You can't just see how dense he's about to steam roll.
Thank you.
Let's keep it.
Let's try everything.
You can't destroy everything.
Come on, Jake, how you teed up the way back clip of yourself.
You teed up the way back clip of yourself.
So you brought the deny it and I just brought this on yourself.
Yeah, but you try to dunk in it didn't work.
Okay, okay, okay.
Every bit has to take the piss out of me.
I don't know, I'm seeing a trend.
No, that's the thing.
Oh, don't bring it up the way that lips.
Unless you have a clean dunk.
All right, here we go.
Don't bring it to the hoop and then break it.
Break it.
Break it.
Break it.
Get it to receipt.
It turned out the credit card was stolen.
Okay, here we go. Ah, it's. He turned out the credit card was stolen.
Here we go. Here we go.
You know who actually deserves credit for admitting that he was wrong. Oh, we'll get to. We'll get to. You'll get your flat.
We'll get your flat. Okay. Transition to come.
Your bed needs coming. Here we go. Red needs coming.
Great transition. Great transition. Great transition.
Here we go. Elon versus the FCC.
Another government agency is now targeting Elon.
This is a little bit complicated, but let me explain.
On Tuesday, the FCC rejected Starlink's application
for 900 million in subsidies for rural broadband.
Starlink originally won these back in 2020
when they agreed to provide high-speed internet
to 640,000
rural homes across 35 states. Funding would have come from the RD OF, rural digital opportunity
fund. I guess the government is paying for expanding broadband services in rural areas and
Starlink obviously is perfect for that. It's actually the only solution for this really.
She can't run fiber to these locations. So the FCC found that Starlink, quote,
had failed to meet its burden to be entitled to those funds.
And here's the quote,
FCC has a responsibility to be a good steward
of limited public funds meant to expand access
to rural broadband, not fund applicants
that failed to meet basic program requirements.
Brendan Carr, one of the FCC's commissioners, dissented from the agency's
decision, and he did not hold back last year.
So to quote, after Elon acquired Twitter, President Biden gave federal agencies
a green light to go after him.
Today's decision certainly fits the Biden administration's pattern of regulatory
harassment.
This is a decision that cannot be explained by any objective
application of law, facts or policy, car went on to explain how his decision was made and why it's
unprecedented. Instead of applying nutritional FCC standards to the record evidence, which would
have compelled the agency to confirm Starlinks $885 million award. The FCC denoted on the grounds
that Starlink is not providing high-speed internet service to all these locations today.
As noted, the FCC's milestone does not kick in until 2025. Let me toss to you, SACs. Thoughts on the Biden. It's what going up to me.
I mean, I can't remember anything quite like this. This is absolutely extraordinary. I mean, you have a sitting member of the FCC telling us
that the FCC is engaging in political retaliation. He sits on the board of the five commissioners of the FCC. They just canceled an $885 million contract to Starlink. What was that contract for
to provide rural internet service? Starlink is the only company that has that capability today. It's
the only one that has that capability, if you look forward a few years. It is by far the best. I'm providing broadband from space,
which is the best way to get it to these rural areas. So what did the
commission do? Well, they cherry picked, they took speed test snapshots from two
cherry pick moments in time. And so even that probably was not an accurate
reflection of where Starlink is today, but they then said based on those snaps, that Starlink would not be able to meet the standards in three years.
So remember, the requirements that they're saying that Starlink violated
don't even have to be met for three years. So somehow they're saying that Starlink will not get
through in three years. So preemptively judging the service to meet a standard that
is not even required to meet today.
And nobody else is even close to meeting the standard.
So Elon's response to this was, guys, okay,
if you're gonna cancel the contract for us,
like just save the money because the competitors
that you're giving it to,
have even less of a service than we do.
Yeah.
So just like save the taxpayer the money,
but they're not doing that.
So this is really remarkable.
And what Kars said here is that the Biden administration is choosing to prioritize its political
ideological goals at the expense of connecting Americans.
We can't it should reverse course.
This is now a part of a pattern of the federal government harassing Elon and his companies.
And it all stems from Biden at that press conference saying,
we gotta look at the sky.
You know, like Tony Soprano, yeah,
we gotta look at the sky, you know what I'm saying?
I mean, it was like, and so since the...
That's a nice restaurant, you got to be terrible
if anything ever happened to it.
Yeah, Jake, how you do the impression?
You can't do it.
And even.
So Biden says in this press conference,
we got to look at this guy.
And since then, they've investigated Tesla
for supposedly building a glass house,
which I didn't know was a crime.
That's amazing.
SpaceX, which is partially a defense contractor,
was sued by the DOJ because they were hiring
too many Americans and didn't,
they weren't hiring enough refugees into
sense of national security roles that they would surely be sued for doing if they were
the other way. And now they've canceled a contract for SpaceX having the best service
in the space, but somehow missing a goal that they're not required to meet for three years.
This is harassment, it's transparent. And the question I have is do we want to live in a country where the government can engage
in this kind of naked political retaliation against its critics.
And I have to say, you know, there was a time in America where Nixon was roundly attacked
for having this quote-unquote enemies list where supposedly, you know, he had made a list
of all his enemies and IRS was auditing them. Okay, we are so far beyond that point and the media isn't interested
at all and no one's really interested unless you like what Elon's doing. But if you don't,
you know, if you're on the opposite side of the political spectrum as Elon, you don't care.
And there's nobody who's willing to say in a neutral way that political retaliation is not be part of our system.
I mean, we have a presidential candidate running specifically saying, I am your
retribution. I mean, this is something that has to stop across all of politics.
Nobody should be using their political power to do any retribution against
anybody. They should be operating the government efficiently and the best
interests of all Americans. I mean, to be honest, Okay, so maybe I don't like that rhetoric from Trump
I don't think it's helpful, but what did Trump ever do that's in this league?
I mean everything they accused Trump of doing the fascism the retribution and all that kind of stuff
It seems to me the Biden administration is doing here. Yeah, well, I mean he says he's gonna do it
He says that the first thing is gonna do is go after journalists and do you think Trump did no retribution when he was in office, I mean, he says he's gonna do it. He says that the first thing he's gonna do is go after journalists and... Do you think Trump did no retribution
when he was in office?
I mean...
We have to look through every single issue.
You can't do it.
You can't do it.
It's interesting, right?
I mean, one doesn't come off the top.
I had, I'm trying to remember if he ever said,
I'm gonna go after this person or that person.
I don't remember an instance of him saying...
He said lock her up, that was in the end, he never did it.
Trump was all talk in this respect.
He didn't actually do it.
Yes.
This is what Peter Tiel said, like, you know, his great quote about him, like just look at
his actions, not what he says.
He say buraddles and he says he's going to do retribution against everybody, but you
know, then he doesn't.
So, Tom, I'm even talking about Trump in this context as a deflection, Jake Cal.
The action is being taken by the Biden administration.
They've now weaponized multiple federal agencies to go after Elon on these cases that seem transparently
trumped up a glass house, not hiring enough refugees
to national security roles.
And now, it's obviously a contract for Starlink,
which is by far the best rule internet service.
How do you even justify it?
These cases on their face.
I'm not just absurd.
I'm not 100% I'm in a 100% agreement.
You think there's this is politically motivated harassment
of Elon by the Biden administration?
100% he said it.
He said it and he didn't invite him to the EV summit.
So you just take Biden at his actions.
If you don't invite if you don't invite
Elon to the EV summit, it's obvious that he's got it in for this guy.
And now it's obvious he's told people to you know, investigate him and harass him. It's obvious that he's got it in for this guy. And now it's obvious he's told people to investigate him
and harass him.
It's obvious.
So why do you think they don't like him?
Why do you think Biden doesn't like him?
Why doesn't he like him?
Because he's non-union, it's obvious.
That's the beginning and end of it.
I'm sure the freedom of speech things and Twitter
doesn't help, but this predates.
Biden is a union guy, and he will not have non- union guy and he will not have non-union people.
He will not support non-union people.
He is bought and sold by the unions.
That's 100% and Elon said that.
That may be how it started, but I think you're underwriting the free speech aspect.
Oh, I said it.
It could have to do with that, but it's definitely, that's the number one issue.
And more importantly, you're saying enabling dissenting voices, strongly dissentant voices.
Absolutely. I think that from the get go, they have sought to exercise control over the
Twitter, formerly Twitter now, X platform, because it is the town square for political
speech.
Oh, they succeeded.
They succeeded.
The FBI, everyone, they thought you had to hold control of it until Elon somehow bought
the company, which was not in their plans.
Frankly, that was just a fluke.
I mean, that was something that Elon did out of the blue
because he cares a lot about free speech.
And he opened up the Twitter jails
and you know, stopped the censorship
and open up the Twitter files.
We found out that this was not just a private company
acting on its own.
It was being directed or encouraged by...
Yeah, they were giving him list of tweets. They were by the list of tweets.
They were giving them list of tweets saying,
hey, these tweets probably by the way you're trying to
serve us.
Yeah.
And the FBI acting as the quote unquote belly button
of the whole federal government directing all these
takedown requests, totally on America.
I think that the pattern of actions more than anything
mandates that Biden and his team actually have to address publicly
why it is not retribution.
The absence of doing that at this point is going to be more damaging to them than just letting
things go on and claiming down the road, hey, this is all part of the normal course of business.
Now, the guy does.
Why would they address it?
Why do they have to address the media as a whole and accountable?
The media is a reporter. mechanical media as a reporter the media
Pretend like the Twitter files never even happened remember that zero mainstream media coverage of the Twitter files
Zero mainstream media coverage of these retaliatory lawsuits. Why would the Biden administration need to explain itself?
Why would they even talk about it? The fix is in well? I mean now the question is being I think the mainstream media are
Well, I mean, now the question is being, I think this mainstream media are stenographers for one side of the political spectrum, which is precisely the reason why I see this thing.
It's precisely the reason why there's so upset with Elon with opening up free speech on Twitter,
because they had total control of the public discourse until he did that.
Did you see that thing this morning where somebody called out the New York Times for
this morning where somebody called out the New York Times for selectively editing what Hunter Biden said
to make it more broad.
Broad, did you see that Jason?
Yeah, he basically said, my father has not financially
been involved in my businesses.
And the New York Times took out the word financially
to make it more broad to say he's not been involved
in my business.
He was involved in businesses.
Really?
Yeah, and there's a clip where they show the article and then they show his interview and the interview
is very clear. He says it, but the New York Times headline emits the word and doesn't
put it in a bracket so that it shows that it was edited. It shows that that was the quote.
Can you pull it out? Do you have that thing? It's so crazy. Let me find it.
That's crazy. I mean, I would like to think there's so crazy. Let me find it. That's crazy.
I mean, I would like to think there's a possibility.
This was a mistake, but man, it's pretty bad.
I mean, this is really bad by the New York Times.
And they got to figure out who actually took that word out
because it's pretty clear Biden was very involved
in Hunter's businesses.
And that's why he put that word financially in there
because he was on, I think he's on all
the documents as being part of it and he's in the emails.
So he was a brand J.K.
Oh, there it is.
Thank you.
Nick, you're very good at finding these things there.
Okay.
So if you look on the left, that's the article in the New York Times.
And it's clear that that was the quote.
And then if you play it on the right, it's actually what he said.
Let me state as clearly as I can.
My father was not financially involved in my business.
Wow.
Yeah.
And then the quotes of my state is clear as I can.
My father was not involved in my business.
Now, if in journalism you could put an ellipsis
after involved, you know, three dots,
but why would you do that? This is like breaking very basic journalistic standards.
This is my point. There's like a format, right,
when you edit out a word like that.
Yeah.
You would only edit out a word if it was superfluous
and you wanted to have a tighter quote.
You have the person said,
mmm, ah, you can take that out.
And if you were taking out a long quote,
you put three dots and then you,
it would show that you cut the quote. There was something in between and then you went to that.
In the case of something this important, you would never take out a keyword like that.
This is just journalism 101.
So, I mean, if this happens, man, it is, it's the keyword in the sentence, by the way.
It's the keyword in the sentence.
It is the keyword in the sentence.
So if the person took it out, man, who took it out?
And this is the problem with the New York Times
is they bury their corrections.
They need to, and this is back to accountability,
you're saying, Freeberg, the Biden administration
has to explain why they excluded Elon from the EV summits.
And the New York Times needs to explain why they did this.
Where else, you know, the mind wanders
that there's some conspiracy going on here or targeting. And I wonder if they changed it. Well, here's the live story. It's
a change in the story. Did they change it yet? Look, broad water. I mean, look, broad water.
Is that a name from central casting? That's not a real name, is it?
I don't know. Let's say they post a correction. Oh, here we go. Correction. In earlier version
of the article, misquoted Hunter Biden, you said, my father was not financial. I was not
my father. So the only room I have here is if the person
was live transcribing it maybe, and they left it out,
but this is too important to not have a fact
checker go through it.
And to have to get called out on it to fix it,
he just shows how far this is.
This is the equivalent though, Jake Hella,
putting on the front page.
I did not kill that person.
And then a day later, it buried in page 812. I actually did kill that person and then a day later it buried in page a 12. I actually did kill that person.
I mean if you-
Question at the bottom of the story is good. Everybody sees the front page, very, very people.
You would agree with me, very, very few people. See the correction.
In the old days, they would put the correction on like a two, a three of the paper and it would
be small and be at the bottom. In the digital age, you put the correction at the bottom of the article, so it's a little
bit better, but the truth is, most people don't go to the bottom of the article, so there's
an argument to put corrections at the top of the article.
But journalists don't want to admit when they're wrong.
I think that I saw a list of all of the organizations investigating Elon and what was surprising was how broad
some of these organizations
Felt that they had a mandate to look into him. So there was like I want to say Nick Maybe you can find this on Twitter
But they had a list of them and it was like the Bureau of land management
Investigation, I mean it just makes no sense like it just does not smell right. In fairness, Elon is involved in many, many,
very important projects.
So there would be a lot of agencies
that speaks to over-regulation
and then you have to drill down and say,
okay, when are they actually targeting him?
And so that's gonna be a lot of partying.
Fishing wildlife, you know, health and human housing.
I mean, it's a list goes on.
You might be able to see some orientation.
Efficient in the wrong pond or what? What's it or what? No, I think my understanding of it is,
you know, at starbase, there's some estuaries or something. And there was a lot of...
Asteroids.
I mean, yes, we protect animals and whatever. This is something that happens all over the country.
And California is actually probably the leader in this,
but I think some crabs might have got burned,
not in a barbecue, but by the rocket.
I mean, literally that, and then this is,
this speaks to what risk are we willing to take
to make progress as humanity?
Freeberg, remember we had this discussion
about self-driving cars?
Like, if getting to Mars and being multi-planetary
kills some crabs, I think we should be okay with that.
In fact, if it decimated, I mean, it's not decimated, but let's just say,
a hundred square miles got decimated by getting to Mars on planet Earth.
But you'd make that trade off, right?
Yeah, it's a, I mean, this is the same standard I think I feel around.
If there's a mouse infestation in my house, I'm not going to let them
I live in my house, even though I'm completely ethically against killing animals, killing animals
to eat when I have other options, I'm against.
And I think animal testing and medical applications, I have a totally different standard than I
think what is standard in the market today.
So for me, it's like a pretty sensitive topic because my ethics are, don't kill animals
unless absolutely necessary.
And the question is what is the definition of necessary?
And so these sorts of points that you're making about,
if it gets all humans to Mars,
that might be a trade-off worth making for some of the crabs.
I don't, you know, it's like,
probably a probably hard to understand the analogy here.
Are you saying that Elon's the mouse?
The rocket may have killed the mouse. The regulator is on the house. Wait, who's the mouse and Elon's the mouse? The rocket may have killed the mouse.
The regulator is on the house.
Wait, who's the mouse and who's the house?
The house is the rocket ship.
Clearly the mouse is the key to the mouse in the house, right?
Yeah.
Let's pull up this quote from Brendan Carr is the FCC commissioner.
I thought this was amazing.
This list is incredible.
This is the FCC commissioner.
He said, he said the DOJ FAA FTC NLRB SDNY and FWS,
as I guess that's fisher wildlife, have all taken action. The FCC now joins them. Man,
that's incredible. Yeah, it's a little bit nuts. Look at that Biden quote, where I didn't actually
know about the second part. I knew about the first part where he says we got to take a look at this guy,
but then he was at how?
And President Biden responded, there's a lot of ways.
There's a lot of ways.
You know, there's a lot of ways.
There's a lot of ways to get to somebody.
Yeah, that's like 20s or so.
I can get to you.
You might be able to get to me.
I might go a bit to you.
And you know, maybe you watch it back.
Yeah.
You know what else Biden said?
There's a lot of ways is when he was talking about the Nord Stream pipeline, and he said that pipeline is not going to move forward.
And then they said, yeah, but the press said to him, yeah, but that's like a German Russian project,
like how what's your involvement?
Let's just say in my life, we got ways.
There are a lot of ways. We got ways. Wow.
Okay, so on the counterpoint, obviously Elon has several
pretty sprawling businesses. He has self-driving cars. Right, and they push, they
right, they push the envelope on, you know, where there's an existing regulatory
framework, same with going to Mars, right, same with transmitting internet services, wireless
communications, like, you know, there is a regulatory framework for all of these
businesses, and he's on the bleeding edge and typically beyond the framework
to some degree.
So I think it's like worth acknowledging at least that there's a necessity of scrutiny
and involvement in these agencies given that they do have regulatory authority and responsibility
over these various businesses and he's well beyond where anyone else is in each of them.
So I just want to acknowledge that.
Hold on, let me respond to that. Yeah. He's well beyond where other people is in each of them. So I just want to acknowledge that. Hold on, let me respond to that.
Yeah.
He's well beyond where other people are in his industry
in terms of innovation.
He's the first to acknowledge,
because I've heard him say this many times
that he's in highly regulated industries
and they've got massive compliance programs
at Tesla and SpaceX and all these different companies.
What we're judging these regulatory agencies on
is not that there's a need to regulate
Elon's companies within the framework of their industries,
but rather the specific actions that are being brought.
Remember, DOJ suing SpaceX
for not hiring enough refugees.
Tesla being sued on this glass house business,
whatever that is right now, those are voluntary actions in a FCC canceling a contract. Yeah. Three years.
Three years. Three years before, they even need to judge that contract, whether that contract
has been met. 100% of things that happen this week, which I think is important along this
vein, is that the IRS is in charge of making sure that you can claim the $7,500 EV tax credit for cars.
And a lot of us that have been looking at this issue, the way that they break the EV tax
credit is in half.
And part of it is about where the materialist source and part of it has to do with the total
sum of certain components of the car and how much of those are made in the
U.S. etc. Okay? And it was presumed just based on the trend that Tesla would lose half
the credit, keep half the credit. And in a bit of a surprising move, the IRS came out
and said the whole thing, we're not going to acknowledge anymore. So Tesla had to go
and put on the website that the credit ends as of December 31st
So I would add the IRS to this to this list as well. That's so crazy. So I got to be investigated
I like Freiburg's suggestion that
prove to us
That you're not doing this at this point because it's pretty clear that it is happening
And it's just lucky Yeah, well good luck.
Good luck getting them to do that.
Just on the, on that EV subsidy,
you know, one of the perverse things about this
is that the administration is putting the thumb
on the scales against Elon in favor
of these less innovative competitors
who have worse products.
So like Elon said, if you want to cancel our contract for Starlink
to provide this rural broadband, that's fine. To save taxpayers the money. But by all means,
don't then give them money to these other services I can't deliver. What's the point of that?
And same thing on the electric cars. I mean, the subsidy is going to these other car companies
that make worse products. Yeah, totally. This is the key point. The fact is, all of those people
who just had
their Starlink canceled through the government, I guarantee you they will buy Starlink because
it's the best product. So irony of ironies, they're just going to go spend 60, 70, 80 bucks a month
to put their own Starlinks. And like everybody else around the world who lives rural, I have Starlink.
One more thing to add, they under pressure from regulators. They
Announced a recall on Tuesday of two million cars to to fix some of the autopilot software
Yeah, but that's an over-the-air update so the press went crazy about that right? No, no, no
What I'm saying is if you read the if you read the article that over-the-air update is specifically because of
Again, how it's written regulatory pressure to change how the
software behaves.
Some tuning in some edge cases.
My point is that one could guess that there is an attempt here to kind of do the death
by a thousand cuts approach, right?
So the drip, drip water torture of just like a thing over here, a thing over here, a thing
over here, a thing over here.
Eventually companies can get distracted and misfire.
So the question I do think is, does it make us better off if all of these little tiki-taki
foot faults are enforced by the government?
I think we all know what the answer is.
No.
We have an example.
Microsoft got so distracted by their court cases
that the company went sideways for a decade.
Well, but I think there was a lot of good basis
for that particular entity,
that was an entity trust case
and Microsoft clearly had a monopoly.
Just on the recall thing,
I did see that story at the top of Drudge
or whatever last week,
whereas it said, every Tesla has to be recalled.
And when I see the word recall,
I think that means you gotta bring it to the dealership
and get like some part swapped out.
But that's not what happened.
No, well, so what's so interesting is they refuse
in these articles, I can show you the New York Times version
of it, they refuse to write that it's actually an OTA update.
To your brain.
And breaking news, I don't know if you guys saw this,
but a billion five iPhones were just recalled
for the 17.2 update.
So everybody's gonna have to bring their iPhones in.
1.5 billion iPhones were called.
I'm gonna bring it to the store.
Yeah, you got to bring it to the store and they'll make you this new journal app.
I don't know if you got it in the latest update,
but Apple made a journaling app so that you can have more.
That's a recall.
Yeah, that's a recall.
Yeah, it's a total recall.
All right, listen, now we keep the red meat going.
Sax is cooking with oil.
Alex Jones, the controversial conspiracy commentator of Info It's total recall. All right, listen, now we keep the red meat going. Sax is cooking with oil.
Alex Jones, the controversial conspiracy commentator of Info Wars fame, is back on Twitter after
Elon did a poll.
He got too many people to respond, asking if he should be reinstated.
70% said yes.
Of course, Jones encouraged his fans to vote in this poll.
So I'm not sure how scientific it is.
For background, Twitter permanently banned Jones in 2018 after accusing him of posting direct threats of violence and hate speech.
It already received bands from Apple, Facebook, and YouTube is pretty much the number one person
to be de-platformed, as you know, Jones was ordered to pay $1.5 billion to the families
of eight Sandy Hook victims. This was across two cases in Texas
and Connecticut. And here is Jones and his own words on the Sandy Hook parents.
Sandy Hook, it's got inside job written all over it. Sandy Hook is a synthetic, completely
fake with actors in my view manufactured. I couldn't believe it at first. The new town kids. Oh,
they take them, put them in our face, tell us their names, who they were. I heard an ad this morning
on the radio Bloomberg paid for locally going, I dropped Billy off and watched him go around the
corner. And he never came back all because of the guns. Won't you just turn your guns in from a son?
Why'd you do it to him, gun owners?
Forgive my language, but f*** that guy.
Okay, there it is folks.
That guy.
We have a f*** that guy, but let me out.
That's not being censored, right?
Unfortunately not, but I absolutely cannot stand that.
That is just like heart wrenching,
like evil, awful,
spitting out of his mouth.
And he still, you know,
should have a right to speak,
but man, f*** that guy.
I was never a big cryer.
Part of it was just my defense mechanism.
And I remember Sandy Hook
because I had just become a parent.
I had, I think, two kids by that point. And I was uncontrollably
crying when that happened. And it was the first time I realized how you change as a parent and you
just develop this empathy. And then you realize how precious kids' lives are. And I've become more and more of a cryer as my kids have grown older.
And I really appreciate that what my kids have done for me. So when I hear him talk like
that, I, yes, he has a right to say what he wants, but he is a complete piece of ****.
Yeah. Okay. So let's get into this very difficult question and sack. I don't want to
For sure to defend, you know one of those horrible humans. I think we can all agree
Well, my my position is pretty similar with the other guy's said, which is what he said was ODS
However, that doesn't necessarily mean he should be censored. We have standards
But we have first amendment standards around the stuff I agree with that so first told me back up
I mean, I didn't even really know who Alex Jones was.
I mean, I only knew him because of the controversy.
I've never actually listened to a show.
I'm not really interested in what he has to say.
I do think that if you're going to play this clip of his mistake going back many years,
you should supplement it by playing a clip of what he says now.
And what he says now is he's apologized.
He's admitted he made
a mistake.
He basically bought into a conspiracy theory, but it wasn't just him saying it.
Apparently he had some people on the show who, I don't know if they were purported experts
or what, but they were making a case that the whole Sandy Hook thing was a hoax and it
was being done to basically, you know, get people's guns.
I mean, look, it's not a stuff.
I'm not defending it in any way,
but he explained that he bought into that theory
or hoax or whatever,
and he thinks it's a terrible mistake
and he's apologized for it.
And the question is,
are you gonna have a lifetime ban on somebody
for saying things that were wrong and odious
when they have now apologized.
And for me, it's not about Alex Jones.
It's about censorship.
Remember, when this case happened way back in 2018, it was really hard to defend keeping
this guy on the platform in light of what he had said and done, because everyone's reacting
very emotionally to it.
And it was people like defenders of free speech like Lengrenwald who said that,
listen, if you take Alex Jones out now, if you have a permanent ban, it will basically
be a slippery slope and it will create a precedent and other people will get banned.
And sure enough, just two years later, Twitter was banning people like Jay Baudachariya, Stanford doctor,
for saying dissident things about COVID that turned out to be completely correct.
Marie authored the Great Barrington Declaration, talking about how lockdowns wouldn't work
and so on.
And so, even within two years of this decision around Alex Jones, the censorship was totally
out of control.
And so I think the people who warned us
that Alex Jones would become a slippery slope
ended up being completely correct.
To me, that's the symbolism of the restoration
of Alex Jones's account.
It's not endorsing what he did.
It's not saying that what he said wasn't odious.
I mean, look, again, I have zero interest
even listening to the guy.
But the point is that free speech does require us
to put up with people who are wrong,
people who are even hateful sometimes.
And stating misinformation.
People who put out misinformation,
that's what free speech requires us to do.
And if you want a different standard,
it's gonna become a precedent for a lot of censorship
that you don't like.
I agree with SACs.
The only place where I disagree with SACs is on Twitter not having a right to do this as
a private enterprise.
I think Twitter had a decision to make on what kind of editorial lization they wanted
to do with the content on their platform, on their product, and they made a choice.
I don't think that I think it was the wrong choice personally.
And we've talked about this in the past. I think that you know it's great that Elon's
making a different choice and catering to a you know a different audience perhaps
with a different product that has more open speech. But that's not you know a government free speech mandate. That's a private enterprise mandate, and I do believe in the right to
free speech.
I think it's a little bit ironic to say that it's inappropriate when someone says something
that is misinformation because it's incorrect or unprovable when we have an entire group
of people that believe in something called religion.
And much of religion is based on this concept of faith and belief without necessarily hard proof or evidence. And we allow religion, religious
speech, you know, in many forums without saying, hey, that's misinformation or hey, it's not true
or hey, it doesn't meet the standards of exorwire, z's, scientific assessment or understanding.
And so I think it's just worth acknowledging
that this whole concept that someone has to ultimately
be the police of the truth and the police of fact
and the police of information is going to lead to a bad place.
And I'd rather have more free speech
with people saying misinformation and saying awful,
putrid things than one where a few people get
to decide what everyone gets to hear.
So as much as I absolutely despise this guy.
Trevor, you may be right that Twitter as a private company had the right as our laws
currently exist to decide who they were going to suspend in ban from the site. However,
once that censorship power was created, it attracted powerful entities from our government
who wanted to co-opt and use that power. That's what we saw on the Twitter files with the
80 FBI agents sending take down requests. That's what happens is when you
create the sensitive power, people will abuse it. People will abuse it, but more to the point,
it's such a tempting power to use by people in authority, right? It's like the ring of power.
Those tools that Twitter created, it's like
they released a fair amount or something that attracted all these powerful shadowy actors
from the federal government in the FBI and all these agencies. And so that is why I think
it's just very dangerous for even private companies to create these censorship regimes is that
they can be co-opted and abused.
Being co-opted and abused is the issue.
I don't think that the issue is their choice
in what kind of content they wanna put out.
You can go to the Netflix kids version of Netflix
and they control what content is on Netflix
and they provide a different version
than what they provide to adults.
And I think like editorializing the content platform
that you're making available,
whether it's user generated or paid for or whatever, is a a totally reasonable approach to running a business, a content business.
The point you're making is the right one, which is the point at which you allow government
agencies to intervene and have control and manipulation over private citizens' user-generated content
is where I think it crossed the line.
So I don't disagree with you on that point.
May I ask to clarify in question, sir? Because I'm curious how you would handle this.
If you were the CEO of X, formerly known as Twitter, would you have reinstated Alex Jones,
yes or no? And then number two, if Alex Jones, then as a new member of the community
who's been reinstated and forgiven, because he apologized. And then he did this again,
this exact same thing again, with another school shooting with parents.
Would you remove him for the platform?
I don't know that these are yes or no questions.
What I would say is that I've written what I think should be a speech policy for social
media platforms in a blog post I did several years ago.
What I said is that I would take first moment case law and operationalize it for
social media platforms. There are nine categories of speech that the Supreme Court has said are
not protected speech because they're dangerous in some way. So for example, in slightly
violence is one of them, you know, harassment is one of them. So I would use this clearly
falls under those two
Well, people his fans went and knocked on the door his fans his fans Yeah, so as I understand the whole thing and he hooked thing what happened is he said the whole thing was a hoax
Obviously wasn't true. You paid a huge price for that his fans then
Some of his crazy fans went and harassed the parents, which obviously is not right, but
according to him, he didn't, and I don't know that anyone's shown that he did that.
I don't think he encouraged that.
It just happened.
I barely got some of my fans.
Well, of course he does.
It's a conspiracy show.
So knowing it's a conspiracy show, knowing that incitement of violence is one of your criteria,
if his fans, after him saying it's fake
Then went to the house knocked on the door and asked the parent to see little Susie because you know she's alive
Would you kick him off the platform?
listen
The baron
That's what happened the baron's in declaration was declared to be a conspiracy show the idea that
on the Burnt and Declaration was declared to be a conspiracy show. The idea that COVID originated in a lab
was considered a conspiracy show.
I don't think you can pre-judge in advance.
That a show is, quote unquote,
dangerous.
Factually wrong conspiracies.
As I understand it, again, I haven't watched this show,
but I did watch a clip by Joe Rogan,
who provided something of a character reference for Alex Jones.
I don't know if Nick can find that and play that. It was actually quite good.
What Rogan said is, look, I've known Alex Jones for like 30 years.
He's had problems with alcohol abuse, substance abuse, whatever.
He's had mental health issues and he's acknowledged and sometimes he goes off the rails.
At the same time, he's also been way ahead of the curve on certain things.
For example, he told me about the Epstein Island, like 10 years before the story broke.
I don't know how he figured that out, but somehow he did.
Now that was a conspiracy theory until it was proven true.
And it probably would have been a good thing for the public if that story had come out
a lot sooner so that it could have been shut down a lot sooner.
So I don't think you can just judge in advance that somebody is a conspiracy theorist
and basically blackball them from the internet.
One other data point I wanna bring up
is that, something that Elon mentioned
is that he looked at the Twitter tools,
the admin tools, to seek to look at Alex Jones' account.
And the third strike he received
that caused him to be banned
from the Twitter platform by the former management
was he actually insulted a reporter,
which was a very borderline case.
So, the things that you're saying that he was banned
for a war and even the reason he was banned.
Yeah, no, that's true.
I mean, I think, yeah, so that's why I was framing it to you
as, you know, and this is at the issue that
I think, and maybe what some people are missing here.
A mentally ill person like himself, if he's admitted to mental illness and substance abuse,
when they go on these tirades or they go off their meds or whatever it is, or they're
just evil, and they do this for ratings to make money, it starts to cause real world harm.
People start showing up on these people's doorsteps. And so then, are you going to wait 10 years for the courts to do this $1.5 billion
judgment and then make the decision while real-world harm is occurring?
And if you own the platform, my believe is you have a higher standard, obviously believe
in freedom of speech, you can make your own website.
But if you own the platform and the platform enables them to reach a large number of people
and those people are being harmed. And parents' doors are being knocked on demanding to see their children
because Alex Jones said that child is still alive and they're trying to take our guns
and he knows his fans are crazy.
There's responsibility that comes from it and there's responsibility that comes with owning a platform like this.
I know Elon's going full freedom of speech, but I would be very careful about this.
Steve Scalise, the House Republican whip was shot by a crazy birdie Sanders supporter
Does that blame go to Bernie Sanders?
I think we have to separate you have there is hold on there. There is a legal standard for incitement
Okay, there's a legal standard for judging that you're saying that these crazy people were incited
But there is actually a legal way of determining that. I don't think that's been proven
I would do a common sense one which is do we see real world happening? people were excited, but there is actually a legal way of determining that. I don't think that's been proven.
I would do a common sense one, which is, do we see real world happening? I would just
use common sense. Do we see real world happening? Okay, real world is happening. We own the platform.
We need to stop this, which is what happened. That's a judgment standard, right? Yeah, I
would make the judgment. If I was to see how I'd make the judgment, and I would make the
judgment based on, you know, the courts are are gonna take years to adjudicate this,
and it's my platform, I don't want this happening.
I would operationalize a content moderation policy
based on first-moment case law.
You're right that you can't always wait
for the courts to adjudicate it.
There's gonna be judgment calls.
I would have been fine, I think, with the suspension
of Alex Jones in that context,
because it does seem pretty agreed,
just needs to apologized for it.
The question is whether there should be lifetime bands.
And I'm pretty much, I think I'm against lifetime bands.
I'm okay with timeouts, I'm okay with suspensions for egregious behavior.
When somebody has apologized, they've, I mean had to pay, I mean, I think he's been bankrupted.
He's had to pay all these fines.
I think he's paid his price to society, so to speak, and he's admitted he was wrong.
The question is, do you solve the lifetime ban?
It seems to me he's acknowledged this mistake.
If he doesn't like this again, then you can suspend him.
Maybe you do the ban, but I do believe in giving people second chances, and I'm just sort of
viscerally against the lifetime banning people. I don't like the standard of what can be deemed
dangerous speech, because I think that, as SAC said, there's a clear way to measure whether
someone's inciting violence or inciting harm versus saying speech that can be deemed dangerous
in some contexts, and then not be deemed dangerous
after the fact. COVID vaccine conversations are the perfect example, telling people that there's
health risks associated with taking a vaccine in the period when everyone was worried about a
pandemic, killing us all was deemed too dangerous to allow. And after the fact, it wasn't dangerous
because there were suddenly clear evidence that there
may be some costs and benefits associated with the vaccines. And so I really don't like this
standard of dangerous speech. In fact, I think that the biggest changes that are necessary in society
initially start with dangerous speech, and then they eventually become true, and then they become
a standard, and then things change. My repeated calls for reduction in fiscal spending
at the federal level and lack of accountability
and fiscal spending at the federal level,
by some measure, could be deemed dangerous speech
and an incitement against the government.
But really, my point is to call out the importance
of this issue and after the fact,
I may be right, I may be wrong and I need to be able
to say that.
I think it's critically important to say those sorts of things.
And I think that other people in their own domains will find other things that are critically
important to say.
And that would be deemed by some standard to be dangerous at the time.
So as much as I have great disdain for certain people and certain things that they may say,
I do think that what might be deemed dangerous speech is a critical element of the kind of progressivism
that's allowed the United States to prosper.
I think it was dangerous speech
to promulgate the false conspiracy theory
that Trump was an agent of Putin.
I mean, that was in the steel dossier.
They basically said that Putin had compromise on Trump
and Trump was basically working for the Kremlin.
I mean, he was a trader.
I mean, what if there were people out there
who tried to assassinate the president on the grounds
that we can't have a trader in the White House?
That was a private document, right?
That wasn't like a public talk show.
No, the state was absolutely leaked during the campaign.
You making my point exactly, it's leaked, right?
So this is like a private document by somebody.
But then it was printed by BuzzFeed. And then once it was in the echo chamber,
it was endless. You're repeated by the mainstream media. So the idea that like only
people like Alex Jones
promote conspiracy theories, the mainstream media promotes a lot of conspiracy theories and some of those theories if
acted upon by crazy people
would be just as dangerous as the things that Alex Jones has said.
You're in hypothetical and but actually I think you and I are not too far apart.
You wanting to take these harms and operationalize them is sort of what I'm saying.
And in each of these cases, it's a judgment call.
And this is where I think, you know, in many ways I'm proud of what you want is doing
and saying like freedom of speech is an absolute thing and that's what the platform
is going to be.
His right to do it, it's his platform. And so I'm fine with
that. I would do something different if it was my platform. Everybody's different, you
know, everybody can take their stance. I would have some basic humanity as my stance.
And I'll be willing to give up a little freedom of speech in my restaurant, in my cafe,
in order to have it be more delightful for everybody there.
I wouldn't go as far as banning people talking about COVID, but yeah, if somebody was trying
to claim that parents of murdered children were liars and actors, that would be fine for
me to say, yeah, no good.
And then, of course, there's Kanye.
So, you know, Elon banned Kanye.
That was under his realm.
And this is what Kanye said.
And I think this falls into hate speech and real world harm.
I'm a bit sleepy tonight, but when I wake up,
I'm going death, death, con three on Jewish people.
The funny thing is I actually can't be anti-Semitic
because black people are actually Jew.
Also, you guys have toy with me and tried blackball
anyone who ever opposes your agenda.
So when you see this tweet, would you have banned him sex?
Or is that for a long time?
I'm not a fan.
I'm not a given him a timeout.
I think his family wanted him to get a time out because it was having an episode
I certainly wouldn't give him a lifetime ban give me your something look
I don't really know this Alex Jones guy. I certainly don't know my person. I don't even listen to him
It's not a show I'm interested in even now. I only know you look
I like knowing the truth
I like hearing facts and I don't believe that factual information like the lab leak theory
should be censored by labeling it a conspiracy theory.
For example, but what I would say about Alex Jones is there is some humanity in allowing
him a forum to apologize for what he did, acknowledge this mistake and explain why he thought what he did and why he was wrong.
And that's what he did on X.
And I went on the Twitter spaces and I asked him a follow-up question which he wouldn't answer.
I said, how have you changed your behavior?
Yeah, but honestly, Jake, I was going to ask you this.
You can't answer it.
You came bounding in in the last five minutes.
I didn't get that.
I'm asking him a bunch of questions about what he did when it had already been covered at the top of the pod.
And I listen to it and he had not answered the question,
how is your behavior changed?
And so he doesn't want to talk about it.
And that might be for the least,
but the first half hour of relitigating Sanihook
and you weren't aware of that
even more ago over it again.
10 minutes.
But he wouldn't answer questions
on how he would change his behavior.
And so I think that's one of the things I would want to see
from him, how have you changed your behavior and how you, you know, do shows?
And I don't think he's answered that question anyway.
We're going to disagree on this one.
Any final thoughts to Mapa as we wrap here on this issue?
The free speech litmus test is very simple.
It's this exact thing.
It's when the person that you dislike says the thing that you find very
displeasing. What do you do? And I am a free speech absolutist on this.
I just think it's a very slippery slope and I don't think we're very
capable of making these delineations. And so I agree the right solution are time
outs. But lifetime bands, I think again, go down this path where human
judgment gets involved
and then it's about the person in charge and then it becomes a power play and then it
eventually always gets corrupted.
So I can hold two thoughts in my head.
One, Alex Jones should be able to say what he thinks and two, it was disgusting and he
should be ashamed of what he said.
Yeah, you know, the bands doubling every time is probably a good precedent as well.
So I mean, we should do it like we do at our poker game that finds go up.
Yeah, phone penalty doubles.
Expansible back off.
I mean, you're gonna you're gonna put your phone down and play the goddamn game
if it gets to 800 or 1600 because that's things a little bit.
So there it is.
Yeah, it totally does.
But maybe that's the right solution Jason.
It's like you have a finding mechanism somehow, and it just like it increases.
And so there's a financial penalty of nothing else
as well as a time out when you violate these laws.
At least that's a scalable way to solve the problem
in a way that's hard to corrupt and gain.
But if it goes down to the person to an individual
or a group of people's judgments
as we saw with the previous management of Twitter, I think it's going to be a very difficult problem. I
don't think that those were bad people, but I think that they were led astray.
Yeah, I mean, Nick, do you have that clip from Rogan? Because when I listen to this clip from Rogan,
it did have an impact on what I thought because it does show...
They've been friends for like 20 years, yeah.
It does show the human complexity.
And again, you're judging him based on the worst thing he ever did and Rogan presents
a more balanced viewpoint about this guy.
Again, I have no dog in this hunt.
I don't really care about Alex Jones, but I'm just saying that if we're going to sit in
judgment of people, I think maybe we should have a more balanced view because I mean, it
does bias the conversation to play the clip of the worst thing you ever did. Let's play Rogan for a second. I think it we should have a more balanced view because I mean it does buy us the conversation to play the clip at the
Worsey ever did this play rugged for a second. I think it's interesting look at the way people look at Alex Jones now
Because Alex Jones has been on my podcast a few times the people that have watched those podcasts think he's hilarious
And they think that he definitely fucked up with that whole sandy hook thing
But he's right more than he's wrong.
And he's not an evil guy.
He's just a guy who's had some psychotic breaks in his life.
He's had some genuine mental health issues that he's addressed.
He's had some serious bouts of alcoholism,
some serious bouts of substance abuse,
and they've contributed to some very poor thinking.
But if you know the guy, if you
get to know him, like I have, I've known him for more than 20 years, and if you know him
on podcasts, you realize like he is genuinely trying to unearth some things that are genuinely
disturbing for most people. Like is the guy that was telling me about Epstein's island
decade ago, at least.
Yeah, I mean, this platforming mentally ill people
during an episode is a whole nother can of worms.
I mean, I told this to Lex Reed when he had Kanye on
during that episode.
And I said, I think it's a very bad idea to spend
two hours with somebody who's having an episode
and sure enough, what did he do?
More anti-Semitic insanity on his podcast.
And I just told Lex, leave the guy alone.
It's not worth it.
Let him get help.
I think you have a point there, but that would be an argument for a temporary suspension
on a ban in my opinion.
Yeah.
All right, SACs.
In other news, something insane has happened on the internet.
It's never happened before. right, uh, sacks in other news, something insane has happened on the internet.
It's never happened before, but somebody has apologized for getting something wrong.
This is breaking news. We're in year 34 of the internet.
And somebody says, is it my wife?
Is it my wife?
Did she admit she's never gotten anything wrong?
I've listened.
I've been there for this whole relationship.
A hundred out of a hundred times correct.
So you know, it's frustrating. It's so frustrating. I mean, she makes a mistake. in there for this whole relationship. She has been 100 out of 100 times correct. On social issues.
Frustrating.
It's so frustrating.
I mean, she makes a mistake, well, no,
but it hasn't happened yet.
Actually, paradoxically, same with my wife.
She's been right for 22 years.
No, my wife has been wrong four times,
and I've gotten three on voice memory.
I taped them.
I pull out the phone and I'm like,
hold on, I need you to say it again.
Yeah.
So I've gotten three on voice,
but it's because it's been only three.
Did those three have something to do with deciding to marry you or to
move in with you and make children and start a life together?
It's so frustrating. How can one person be so wrong?
I mean, all the time.
Well, I mean, at least you're self-aware.
Everybody loves self-aware, John.
John.
It is.
Oh, God.
It's a new trend.
It's new trend. But yes a new trend we're on.
But yes, Nassim Taleb, public he admitted, we're going to pull it up here, Saks.
Here we go.
He publicly admitted that techno watermelon, that's your name, Saks.
That was his insult.
I don't really understand the insult.
I never understood either.
I think he's saying your head is the size of a watermelon and that you're involved
in technology.
That's my, it was my interpretation.
I don't think you have a melon head. Or does it mean like I'm green on the outside and
right on the inside or something like somehow I'm supporting how I mean the summer.
I don't, I don't really understand it, but that has come up. Well listen, it's better than
mine. I'm a psychotic ennuramous. So he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he,
he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he, he some point I'm sure he, but here it is folks. Well, you just said I can see that David Sacks is correct about the relative strength
of the parties in the Ukraine war and I was wrong, all counts.
Russia is not as weak as it seemed to have staying power.
This means the settlement is likely outcome.
Anyway, it's so rare on the internet for anyone to admit they were wrong. And what they usually do is, does memory hole at which is why,
you know, I always like to produce receipts. I only do that for the people who strongly
to announce me about something. And then I end up being right. They never can see. It's not just
about the fact that I was right. It's about the fact that they attacked me personally. And they
never come back and apologize or correct the record and Taleb did that.
So kudos to him.
I mean, I met when I read this.
I was like, you know, like a senior.
Yeah, I'm like, okay, what's the gotcha?
It's going way for it.
I thought I thought a trap door is going to open under my feet.
I thought a cartoon piano was going to follow my head.
I just, I thought this can't be it.
And, but no, that was it.
So, good.
That was it, amen.
Well, there it is, kudos.
But by the way, just, I mean, the reason why I understood what was gonna happen in this,
you know, counteroffensive and why the war is not gonna go as well as people thought,
it's not because I purport to be some sort of Ukraine expert or foreign affairs expert. I mainly just spent the time
to figure out who the real experts were and the real experts are never the people who the media
tells you. You actually have to spend the time to look at people's track records. What they said
in the past, did it come true or not? You know, it's basically a falsifiability standard.
Look at what they predicted, look at what actually happened, and you can figure out who the
real experts are.
And that's what I did in the case of Ukraine.
It was possible to figure out who were the foreign policy scholars who got this right,
who were the military bloggers, who were accurately reporting information, and who were the
ones who were basically putting out propaganda.
If you spend the time to do that on virtually any issue,
you can effectively become an expert.
It's a great point, Seth, really good point.
Yeah.
Well, you have to find your own process
in front of the truth today,
because I don't think you can trust the journalists out there
to do it.
You definitely can.
100%.
And by the way, as a VC, people say,
well, what does a VC think?
You know, in a way, like what VCs do,
is when you get an incentive topic, you kind of
go deep, you're trying to simulate a lot of information, you're trying to figure out who
are the real experts in the space, so that those that people I should listen to, and then
need to develop a take.
It's not the worst skill set in the world for doing a pod or tweeting out hot takes on
Twitter.
Again, I'm not saying I'm an expert, I'm just somebody who is independent minded enough
to get to the bottom of an issue without disrelying on what I'm not saying I'm an expert. I'm just somebody who is independent minded enough to get to the bottom of an issue without
disrelying on what I'm supposed to believe.
And I just try to figure out who the real experts are.
All right.
Producer Nick, are you there?
You did a tweet about questions that people might want to have to ask the besties here
as we wrap up this up.
So we'll take two.
You're two favorite questions, producer Nick.
The law is on the Harvard board standing behind President Gay despite her transgressions.
Okay. That's a good question. That's a very good question. question that's a good one for you mom here's what I'll say
I think that the Harvard board was probably in a really difficult position in the following way
you know when you hire somebody and you realize that that person has some faults.
You have three choices, right? One is to fire them.
Two is to be unequivocal in their support.
And three is to basically give a milk toast,
CYA kind of a statement to give yourself time.
The reason why I think that President Gay wasn't fired was probably because of the board
for whatever reason didn't want to seem like they were a cowtowing to Bill Ackman and all
the other people that were asking for her resignation.
But what they didn't do is equally important.
They may not have fired her, but what they also didn't do was come out with an unequivocal
statement of support.
I think it was kind of a little bit wishy-washy and acknowledging her mistakes, which seems
to be a set up to allow her to basically make a couple more mistakes so that then they
can fire her and they can all seem like they did the right thing.
So I suspect that that's what happens.
She probably won't be in that job any year from now.
Or she kind of bottles along and in two or three years, she quote unquote retires to spend
more time with her family.
Anyone else want to get it on this?
Yeah, I mean, I think this university president's debate has been a little bit of a Rorschach
test.
And I've seen people that I generally agree with fall into one of two camps.
Some see it as a free speech issue, other people see it as a kind of woke double standards
or DEI issue.
I think for those who see it as a free speech issue, they're emphasizing the motivations
of people like Elise Stefanoek, the person who asked the University Presidents the question
in saying when she said, basically, the question was, does your code of conduct allow calls for genocide of Jews?
And their argument is that's a loaded question because there is not an epidemic on campus
of people calling for genocide of Jews. And so this is basically all kind of an invented hysteria and the purpose of it is to suppress
debate about this Israel-Hamos war in Gaza and it's designed to expand campus speech
codes so that it's harder for Palestinian supporters to protest in favor of their cause.
So that's one way of looking at it. My view on that is, if it ends up being
the case that campus speech codes get expanded in that way, that'd be a bad thing. I don't
think we need to restrict speech on campus. So I agree with them on that point. However,
there is a different way of looking at this, which is the motivations of the University
Presidents in answering that question. And yes, it was a loaded question,
but they flubbed the answer.
And the question is why?
Because as we talked about last week,
if they were asked about calls for the murder
of any other group, a racial group,
or friends, people, or something like that.
Asian people.
Again, I don't think their answer would have been the same.
And I do think that that comes back to the fact
that they have a preconceived notion of which groups deserve protection and which ones don't think their answer would have been the same. And I do think that that comes back to the fact that they have a preconceived notion
of which groups deserve protection,
and which ones don't, and that is a double standard.
And I think anything we can do to get rid of
that poisonous ideology that wants to treat people
differently on campus, I think is a good thing.
And so I support what Bill Ackman is doing on that basis.
But if Bill Ackman goes too far and demands restrictions on the ability of students to protest
Then I think it would be a bad thing and that's going too far. So this would be a great thing to ask him
Like what his motivations are
The you know if he comes on the pod
I think that's crazy is that just the crazy hypocrisy like these are the same people who were
firing people or not letting them speak on campus.
If they had a, you know, a microaggression where they didn't, they missed gender at somebody
or they used a different pronoun or they had a different feeling about what defines a woman
versus a man or, you know, gender differences, whatever.
Their massive intolerance in the crazy hypocrisy which you're alluding to here, Saks, is
the thing that I think has broken everybody's brain.
This is bizarre.
And the DI stuff is a road to nowhere.
I tweeted today about the absolute grift
that was going on attack not long ago,
which was call out a company venture firm,
whatever it is for their DEI stance.
Then quietly contact them after you've done this
break a dooning of them and say,
hey, we can solve your problem.
Higher us as consultants and speakers to come in
and fix your DEI and tell you what you've done wrong.
And then publicly come out and I saw this happen,
publicly come out and then tell the same group,
hey, this person's now an ally.
Rinsen repeat, it was a crazy grip
and it's all coming out now and there's a,
yeah, that deal, I can think, Jake. Calvert, you retreated is crazy.
That's story.
Yeah, so we could just go down this rabbit hole forever, but I think you call it a cul de
sac.
I call it a road to nowhere or dead end identity politics and DEI, it's just a dead end.
We just start judging people based on, you know, any criteria other than their character
and performance in the world.
Do we know if there was a response by MIT?
Is this one?
MIT, yeah.
Yeah, I don't think yet there has been.
Anyway, we'll cover that story next week for sure.
And that's what Bill Aquaman is doing is brave because he is taking on the EI.
And that is, historically, that's been one of the most dangerous things you can do.
I mean, that is what people get canceled for.
Now, I know there are people who I am fans of, like, like, Ling Rienwald, who's been very
critical of Ackman because he thinks that Ackman's trying to restrict free speech and
prevent, again, the propel-student cause from protesting or saying its piece. And I guess Bill can clarify that,
but I think this issue is less about foreign policy
and more about domestic policy, these DEI policies.
And finally, we have someone who's willing to take it on
and challenge it at an ideological level
and then challenge it at like a, does a grift level.
Yeah, shout out to Brian Armstrong.
He got this right and he went right up the hill and took the arrows for it. And I think we've like a just griff level. Yeah, shout out to Brian Armstrong. He got this right and he went right up the hill
and took the arrows for it.
And I think we've turned a corner.
The tweet I did today, I would not have done two years ago
because I just didn't want to risk my firm
or the companies I work with to kind of expose that grift
because we could blow back on people.
So, but now I thought totally comfortable doing it.
So, Uber's at 70.
Well, that all started.
Uber got 76 points.
Me and I don't care about Uber.
That's for sure.
I mean, he's got FU money now.
Atman's got a lot of firepower, you know,
that bond call was totally right.
You know, the 10 years now, so four percent.
I was gonna say, yeah, I will say that does,
your bank account does give you the ability to go.
Okay, final question.
Please, we have what we must wrap.
We must have a final question.
And please throw it to Friedberg.
First, I got Friedberg involved early on offense today.
It's a great job.
From mom cooks fast and slow on X for Friedberg, I guess, what is the correct way to hire kids
out of school now that an elite university degree tells you very little about the applicant and will you follow this path in your companies?
Oh, I have a great answer from that.
Tim, go ahead.
No, go.
Please, lift, free, bro.
Go ahead and go.
We got to go to the schools with co-op.
Why?
Because it allows you to evaluate these kids in C2 on a real-time basis without a obligation to hire.
You can find the ones that can really do the work,
have the energy, and then hire them.
Explain how our programs place, it's for people to know.
I went to a co-op school, University of Waterloo in Canada,
the way that it works there, not everywhere,
but there at least is you go to school
for the first eight months, and then you never get a break.
You're either in working for four months,
or you're in school for four months,
and you go back and forth until you graduate. So instead of graduating in four years, you graduate
in five, but you graduate with basically two full years of work experience. And depending on
the employers that you work at, you typically get two to three job offers from those folks if you do a good job. When I was helping to build
Facebook, we went there. We had never hired an intern before and we started to hire people. And I
think now, it happened in Microsoft, it happened in Google, I think it's happened in Facebook. If
you look at the number of kids that work at those schools now from co-op schools, they're higher than
any other school. There's a bunch of schools
in the United States that have co-op, but I would go and find those schools and hire those
kids.
Freeberg any thoughts? You're now running a company. You're back in the saddle. How are
you going to hire people? And tell everybody the name of the company again.
It's called O'Holo.
O'Holo. Not Mo.
O'Holo.
O'Holo. And you're a Hollywood. moho, hollo. And you're hollo.
Mohollo was taken. Who owns that domain name now? I still have it. Yeah. If somebody wants to
you have it, I have Mohollo and I have Kukua. Happy to sell it to somebody if they want to. But
tell us, how are you, which are hiring criteria? And how do you think about this now? Just like to
start an enterprise software business called Kukua. It means to help or to guide in Hawaiian.
So probably the third or fourth most important word.
Yeah. Go ahead.
Freeber, please.
I have criteria around raw horse power skills or experience and then motivation.
And I have systems for how we try and assess those and then matching our
principles. I it's kind of the fourth bucket of things.
Horsepower you can test skills is based on experience and fits the role in the need.
But motivation is one that there's a lot of question marks around,
does this person have they demonstrated that they've had a not just a desire but an action
that they've taken that has pushed them beyond the limits of the systems that they've operated in.
And that's what I would typically look for, regardless of the schooling background, the
education background is some demonstration of that because that's necessary in business
building.
So that's my framework for hiring.
We call it smarts or horsepower skills, motivation and principles.
And we score each one of those and then try and come up with hiring.
You started to do that with the CEO candidates.
I got that email from you and I was very intrigued.
So I like that.
All right, everybody.
This has been another amazing episode of the All in Podcast four, the king of
beep and the dictator and the rain man himself.
I'm your boy, Jacob.
We'll see you next time.
I love you guys. Bye bye. We'll see you next time. Bye bye. I'm going on a leave
Besties are gone, go thrifty That's my dog taking a wish to drive away
So, wait a minute, I'll get it
Oh man, I'm a disaster when we be at police station
We should all just get a room and just have one big hug or something
It's like this like sexual tension that we just need to release them out.
I'm doing all the good