Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - EP #38 Palmer Luckey's AMA: The Politics of Winning the A.I. Race
Episode Date: April 14, 2023In this Ask Me Anything session during this year’s Abundance360 summit, Palmer and Peter discussed how politics can interfere with innovation, where the U.S. stands in the A.I. race, and the importa...nce of having a precise defense program. You will learn about: 01:17 | What Is The Hope For Palmer's Defense Program? 09:30 | Where Does The US Stand Compared To The Rest Of The World? 18:13 | What Will Be The First Big Step Into The Metaverse? Palmer Luckey is an inventor and entrepreneur known for designing the Oculus Rift and founding the company Oculus VR, which Facebook acquired for $2.3 billion. In 2017, he founded Anduril Industries, which integrates a consumer technology business model with mission-driven objectives to transform the defense capabilities of the US and its allies by fusing Al with hardware advancements. Learn about Anduril Industries >Become a part of my community. Learn about my executive summit, A360. >Join me on a 5-Star Platinum Longevity Trip at Abundance Platinum. _____________ I only endorse products and services I personally use. To see what they are, please support this podcast by checking out our sponsor: Levels: Real-time feedback on how diet impacts your health. levels.link/peter _____________ I send weekly emails with the latest insights and trends on today’s and tomorrow’s exponential technologies. Stay ahead of the curve, and sign up now:  Tech Blog _____________ Connect With Peter: Twitter Instagram Youtube Moonshots and Mindsets Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Will you rise with the sun to help change mental health care forever?
Join the Sunrise Challenge to raise funds for CAMH,
the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,
to support life-saving progress in mental health care.
From May 27th to 31st, people across Canada will rise together
and show those living with mental illness and addiction that they're not alone.
Help CAMH build a future where no one is left behind.
So, who will you rise for?
Register today at sunrisechallenge.ca.
That's sunrisechallenge.ca.
Listen closely.
That's not just paint rolling on a wall.
It's artistry.
A master painter carefully applying Benjamin Moore Regal Select eggshell with deftly executed strokes.
The roller, lightly cradled in his hands, applying just the right amount of paint.
It's like hearing poetry in motion.
Benjamin Moore, see the love.
At a button 360 this year, after I sat down and had a conversation with Palmer Luckey,
I opened it up to the A360 membership.
It was a vibrant conversation, to say the least.
We had people just on the tip of their seats.
One of the things that Palmer mentioned to the audience was don't follow your passion, follow your talent.
Something I'm still trying to understand and think about whether I agree with.
After this, I'd love to hear what you think of that.
So get ready for an intense Q&A with Palmer Luckey, the young entrepreneur revitalizing
the defense industry and someone who's changed all of our lives with Oculus.
My massive transformative purpose is to inspire and guide entrepreneurs
to create a hopeful, compelling, and abundant future in humanity.
And that's what I'm doing with this podcast,
to open up every relationship, every conversation I have with you,
to inspire you, to support you in going big, in helping uplift humanity.
If that's of interest to you, please subscribe to this podcast. Allow me to share with you the wisdom that I'm learning
from the most incredible moonshot entrepreneurs on the planet. All right, let's jump in.
First off, I love listening to you. I think you're just hysterical. You're like a
brilliant young guy that has a shit ton of money doing cool stuff in the world,
but it could be just, I'm just like that. Yeah. So I think it was Winston Churchill. It was, um,
about war where we said, uh, we stand, uh, we sleep soundly in our soundly in our beds because
of rough men that stand ready in the night, willing to visit violence upon those that would
do us harm. So this is a moral question about, i think we've been in the middle of a cyber war a psychic war
for the last three years probably longer but it really came to the surface what is uh i think
you're a freedom fighter i think and i think uh it's people like you that could maybe perhaps
save us from uh some of the very communist people
that many that run tech companies.
And I mean, you have to remember
that so far they've won.
I did get fired from my own company
after they bought it.
So that's a very, very, very,
I hope that's true.
But thus far, the communists running the tech companies
sure seem to be pulling a fast one on me.
Well, I think you're doing something about it.
So if you could wave a magic wand and have something happen, what are you hoping to do with everything that you're doing right now?
It's a defense company, but behind that, I think violence is never an option unless it's the only option, right?
So what are you hoping to see happen?
What would you like to see? I mentioned earlier this idea that there's no moral high ground
in leaving problems as important as defense, which is violence, to less competent people.
If you believe that it will be used at all, which seems a reasonable belief to have,
then you should want really smart people thinking
about how to do it in the best and most limited and most precise way. You shouldn't want people
to say, you know what, there's going to be collateral damage because we only have bombs
with this level of accuracy and this level of damage. I mean, in a perfect world, you could
have a grain of rice that goes straight into the head of exactly the ISIS
general that you want to kill, and there's no collateral damage. There's nothing bad that
happens outside of that very precise strike. And that's also going to limit the potential for
human rights abuses and for mistakes, and it becomes much more accountable. Basically,
if you can get violence to the point where it's so precise that it is only enacted upon those that you
intend it to, it's very easy to today for someone to say, oh, well, you know, that was just collateral
damage based on the limitations of the technology. In the future, you'd say you are accountable for
every single person that you kill, and you have to be able to answer for why they are dead and why
you killed them. I think that makes it easier for our democratic processes to regulate this. Like, I don't think the right way to limit our ability to commit human rights violations is
to similarly limit our ability to do the right thing. I don't think that we should give NATO
squirt guns. Like the right thing you can have to do is give them the powerful tools and rely
on democratic institutions to, if not be perfect, at least course correct away from the bad decisions
that are made. Intelligence and accountability. Exactly. And I'll finish by saying, I'm more
afraid of evil people with pretty good technology than good people with really good technology.
If our democratic institutions fall apart, they are going to do a lot of harm, whether their technology is great
or bad. It'll just be different kinds of harm. Yeah. Thank you. And I hope you use your
brilliance to help eradicate a lot of the evil in the world. I hope that our democratic
institutions make the decision to use my technology to do that.
Hey, Jack, good to see you.
Hello?
Yeah, we go.
Hi, Jag, good to have you here.
Atlas Society.
So, Palmer, you mentioned what happened to you at Facebook, where you were essentially ousted for not conforming to the dominant political culture.
Looking back, there have been some developments.
Brian Armstrong, Coinbase, saying we're going to be a mission focused company. If you don't like it, we'll pay you a very generous severance
package. What Elon Musk has done at Twitter, exposing some of what happened there. So
have things gotten any better? Yeah, I think that things are getting better for two reasons.
Some are in specific companies like mine, where the common mission is what unites people and what brought people in, and it's not partisan. So, for example, I'm the founder and the CTO of Anderle. Our CEO, Brian Schimpf, is a Democrat, and he does fundraisers for Democrats, and I do fundraisers for Republicans. But guess what? We get along perfectly fine because there's so much we have in common on national security. And we tell our employees, that's what we're here to do. That's what we're here to work on. And we can disagree and argue within the realm of what our mission is. But if
it's not relevant to our mission, you got to do that on your own time, because we can't, we cannot
afford to be a partisan company when you have to work with the entire country from administration
to administration, from, you know, Congress to Congress. So that for my company, it's pretty easy. Coinbase has been doing this.
I think the other one is what you're seeing in companies is other companies that are not
necessarily required to be ideologically neutral are starting to move that way because of rising
interest rates. I think that crazy political monoculturalism was a zero interest rate
phenomenon. It is the thing that
companies can afford to get away with. They can afford to get away with it when money is cheap
and growth is for everybody. And you can basically just do lots of dumb things and still succeed.
And I think as companies are having to realize, no, we do need to compete for talent. We do need
to actually compete in the marketplace. We need to make money. They realize they can't afford to have these like this, this crazy, these crazy witch hunts going on
regularly in their own rank. So I'm actually optimistic that like it, this was kind of like,
you know, like, like kind of like a Sodom situation where it was, you know, just like,
oh, you know, it just, it just, it happened because it became, things got out of control
because it was so easy for your business to succeed, even as you were bad. So I'm,
I'm hoping for a return to sanity. as you were bad so i'm hoping for
a return to sanity that's all nice great question jag thank you
harsha this is for you so you mentioned about those robots that you need to control remotely
so uh i was working at microsoft robotics building a lot of humanoid robots and then my team went and started doing
HoloLens and I went and built HoloSuite exactly for controlling it's a full body thing and I
couldn't get into Lockheed and all they kind of really as you said this in US system was not there
so now already Indian army and Indian space is using it so please come and visit us here and I
would love to talk to you and I mean exactly the same kind of problems that startups are having. I started it here. I had to go to
India to get the vision done. Now I've come back to Silicon Valley exactly because of your thing.
So please visit us and we can. That's awesome. My dance tickets pretty full, but send me an email.
And if anyone else does, it's just Palmer at andro.com. So my name and my website, I'm pretty
easy to reach. But I mean, the reason you couldn't get into lockheed they're a cost plus contractor they make money by making things
that they can charge then be a percentage of profit on top of they are not incentivized to
reuse existing technologies unless they are forced to by the government requirements and so if they
were going to do what you were doing they're not going to want to license it from you as an existing
technology they're going to want to convince the government oh you need this and you're going to
need to pay us for a 15-year research program where you're going to want to convince the government, oh, you need this and you're going to need to pay us
for a 15 year research program
where you're going to pay us to design this from scratch
and not look at anything that's been done out.
By the way, once they've tasted that,
they're never going back.
No, the funny thing is it's such a,
it's a self-reinforcing negative loop where yes,
you know, yes, you can make a lot of money doing that way,
but only with tiny margins.
And so their business is always terrible.
Like Lockheed is only worth about $100 billion
on $67 billion in revenue.
Isn't that nuts?
They're worth a one and a half X multiple of their revenue.
And it's because they basically make tons of money,
but their margins are so low
that they're not actually that good of a business.
So let's go to mike on mike number two
sorry if anyone's from lockheed charles you're up next on zoom where are you and what's your
question palmer thank you um for um what you're doing for our country i had a question about um to
get your opinion as to the relative strength of the United States on the global stage,
especially, you know, we've read about the hypersonic missiles that Russia and China have,
and we evidently were falling behind that technology. But we also listened yesterday
to the fact that, you know, in five years, whoever is winning the AI race may actually win it for the
next century.
And so I'm just wondering, in your involvement in the defense industry, if you have any thoughts on where we stand competitively.
Thank you.
We're in a pretty good position right now.
The biggest problem that we have is that China has really pulled themselves up by their bootstraps over the last couple decades, enabled, unfortunately, by a lot of very bad U.S. foreign policy decisions.
There's this kind of myth that is unique to America, and I think it's based on our media,
our comic books, our movies, our video games, our stories, about things that are going bad,
and then at the last second, the brilliant guy has the twist of the mind that saves everything
with just the exact right idea. I think we're actually past
that point with China. That's not how reality works in the real world. You can make bad decisions
that cannot be undone without decades of work. So I'm talking about like bringing back advanced
manufacturing of the United States. It's not about bringing back a few machines. It's about
training an entire lost generation of manufacturing process engineers, fabrication engineers, people who
didn't get into those degrees because there's no opportunity for them in this country,
even as China has hugely concentrated the resources there. So these are things that are
going to be much harder than like one bill, one factory. It's going to take us literally
decades to solve it. And so we need to figure out how we're going to get through the next few decades. I think right now we're in a pretty strong military
position, but China also gets a lot more for each dollar they spend. People point out that we spend
two or three times as much as them. Well, I'll tell you, as someone who has built millions of
virtual reality headsets in China, they get a lot more than two or three dollars worth of value for
every dollar that gets spent in China. They are
very efficient. They know exactly how to most officially use that money. And so I get that
we've got a few things. We can hope their economy collapses. That's one thing that could happen.
And then if their economy collapses, they'll be too focused internally to be able to go on these
kind of escapades abroad and try to take over democratic nations. They'll probably have to stop
arming all of these other countries around the world that wish us harm and wish our allies harm.
But at the end of the day, I guess the last thing you said, which is there's this theory that AI is
going to, you know, to the winner in AI goes all. Two quick things there. One, Russia actually tried
to become the leader in military AI before the US was taking it seriously.
One of the quotes that's in the Anduril pitch deck,
actually, to our investors was a quote from Putin
speaking to a bunch of high school students
trying to convince them to work in the defense space.
And he said,
the country that leads in artificial intelligence
will become the ruler of the entire world.
I was like, wow, that's so honest. That's like James Bond villain type dialogue. We will rule the entire world.
And he says that because he thought it was a way that they could potentially asymmetrically
oppose the United States. China believes the same thing. I think that if China gets ahead in AI,
we might have to take drastic action on the economic side where people are like, oh,
what if they figure out how to make things for a 10th of the price of the
United States?
Won't we all just buy stuff from China?
Isn't that economic collapse for the U S and to which I'd say history has
shown that when situations become that unbalanced,
the United States and our allies will just decide, okay,
we're just cutting off imports from them.
Like we're, we're, we're just, we're cutting it off.
It doesn't matter how cheap it is.
It doesn't matter the harm we have to stop this problem.
I think that that is, that is one of their worst case scenarios because they cannot
live without us for not yet. They, they, they, they still need us. They still need the West.
They still need us to make many microprocessors. They still need us to make their technology and
they still need us to sell stuff to and to, and to sell them agriculture because we grow everything.
Thank you for your question, Charlesles george good to see you all right good to see you um hey palmer uh over here uh thank you i
loved everything you're doing everything you said i was on the edge of my seat um i'm a emerging vc
here in la on top ventures and so my question you mentioned your pitch deck so i kind of want to go
back to that and pick your brain about
Would have loved to have been there when you were starting the first VR company. What would you advise on?
Special founders like yourself. What what do you think if you as you look back?
What makes you special especially when you were just starting out 20 years old, right? And and I'm sure you probably have similar friends in your community
what would what would your advice to me and some of the other VCS be here and years old, right? And I'm sure you probably have similar friends in your community. What would
your advice to me and some of the other VCs be here in being able to work with founders like
yourself and help you with your journey? To be honest, Oculus was very much a case of the right
technology in the right place at the right time with very little planning or thought behind it.
And I wouldn't model your investments after that. Because look, I was working on VR because
I loved VR. I truly believed in it. I had decided as a gamer that VR was not just the next thing in
gaming, but the final thing in gaming. And that's what I wanted to be working on.
What science fiction was your most inspirational for that, by the way?
Oh man, well probably of course, Neil Stevenson's Snow Crash. But you know, I also like sorted
online and like as a child, my favorite book was 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, which is a highly technical book. I wish more writing was like that
today. But anyway, the point is, I happened to be working on VR at the time when modern rendering
technology and display technology and motion tracking technology simultaneously made good VR
viable. I could have been just as passionate five years earlier and failed. I could have been just
as passionate 10 years earlier and failed. Timing is everything. It
really was. And it's not, I don't want to act like I was like this, this savant who saw the future.
I made an irrational, insane decision. I was like, I'm going to drop out of college and work on my
VR toys because that's what I want to do. That sounds like a lot of fun. And I would say that
is not a good way to start a company. I mean, we've talked about this, but one of my bits of controversial advice to founders
is don't follow your passion, follow your talents.
Because people are told,
oh, follow the thing you're passionate about.
Like Andral was not me following my passion.
I did not want to work in defense.
I did not want to be building weapons,
but I felt like it was something really important.
And I felt like I had the talents that I could use
to do really good things in that space but if people say oh it must
be more fun than VR right nope VR is way more fun I had a way better time every
single day but weapons is important and so I want to work on that so I think
that follow your dreams and follow your passion that was great advice in the
1970s when the number one most desired job for children was astronaut. Astronauts were
fighter pilots, PhD mathematicians combined. And today, do you know what the number one job that
kids want to be is? Contact creator. No, it's, it's a, it's, it's a YouTuber. And then the next
one is professional gamer. And like, I think it's really dangerous to tell people, follow your dreams when their dreams are so bad.
And so, and so like what I would advise to you,
if you're an emerging VC,
I would say like basically ignore Oculus.
That was, we did a lot right,
but it was crazy good luck too.
I would look more at Andral. You want to find somebody who is rationally looking
and saying, I have this certain set
of skills.
And so do my co-founders.
That's going to let us solve this problem that matters.
And that's what we're, here's how we're going to do it.
Here's why we're going to do it.
Here's why we're mission driven.
And not because they say, oh, I just, I just love doing this.
Or I, you know, I just, I have this dream.
I've always wanted to be that.
Uh, I, I, in my, in my experience, it's the ones who are mission driven, who, who feel like they're, uh, who feel like they're driven by that,
by you driven by that, uh, by that goal that are going to be the most successful.
Also invest in people who are angry and have something to prove. Um, I think that's a big
part of why Andrew has done so well is because I was fired and I'm enraged by that. And I just,
I had a big chip on my shoulder. And I'm serious.
It sounds like I'm just making a quip,
but like there's a lot of founders I see
where some of them were wronged by their former employer.
Some were wronged, they felt, by their industry.
Others were wronged even directly by their families
inflicting some financial hardship on them.
And a lot of, there's a lot of good founders out there
who say, I'm going to show them.
They'll see, they'll all see. and that's what gets them up in the source
of energy it's infinite yes we need nuclear thank you George let's go to
Roger hey Rogers all right this is a question for everyone I'm Roger Hamilton
from genius group and this time last year our summit the big theme was the
metaverse I it was that was all about the metaverse.
And metaverse never had this mass viral wow moment
the way AI has this year.
And we know it's open AI, and now we see Google, Microsoft,
while we see also meta, not really talking much
about the whole metaverse anymore.
So it seems to me that the AI graphics that we're seeing
and what's happening in terms of rendering virtual worlds
could accelerate the wow moment for the metaverse.
So my question is,
do you think it's going to happen sooner rather than later?
Any predictions?
Which company would you put your bet on
as to who might be the one
that creates that wow moment for the metaverse?
And will it be meta?
I mean, okay, the metaverse,
parallel world that exists alongside
and amongst our own,
merging the digital and the real.
I think it's not just virtual space,
purely virtual space.
It's that combination of the two.
So running backwards in order,
I don't think the first big wow moment
that we see is going to be
from one of the big players.
Why?
Because the big players have to make bets and they can only pick a few of them, right? They can pick one or two
things and bring their massive resources to bear on that handful of bets. But that means that
they're competing against hundreds, if not thousands of companies that have a few people
that are trying a thousand little mammals. Yeah, exactly. You know, they're the furry little
mammals that are eventually going to turn into people,
there's a whole lot of them, and they're all trying different things.
And maybe none of those companies...
And they're crazy things that big companies would never try.
They're crazy things that we'd never try.
I mean, one of the most powerful things with Oculus,
when we launched, we started shipping these development kits.
We got them out to 55,000 people.
And 55,000, I'd say most of the game developers made garbage.
Maybe a couple hundred made things that
were okay, but there were a few dozen that really opened your mind. You saw and said, oh my God,
this is the future of gaming. This is the future of computing. I get it even on this primitive
hardware. And I think it was because we had so many people working that inevitably one of them
would find that magical thing. I don't think it's going to be a big company. It's going to be one of these many companies.
Roger, why did Google Video fail
and Larry spend $1.65 billion to buy YouTube?
Yeah, exactly.
Why?
It's exactly the same as why Oculus got bought as well, right?
Because the whole mindset of having a bigger company.
No, but there's one reason why they failed.
What's that?
The lawyers.
Oh, you can't allow that video to go up on google
on google video but this is true even today so you have things like horizon world which is facebook's
metaverse platform and like it's it's one of the reasons it's bad is the lawyers you know what the
best metaverse platform is right now it's vr chat why because there's no copyright enforcement and
mass copyright infringement and anyone can make anything with no lawyers involved because there's not enough money to be even worth suing the people running the company.
That's the world that has the most active users, the most worlds, the most creativity.
And the last question, we're going to go to Josh on Zoom. Josh.
Yes. Hello, everyone. I'm zooming in from Denver. It's a fascinating chat and absolutely love the
obvious passion in the group here. It's a great reminder for us all to dream bigger.
And specifically as entrepreneurs with these high tech and very detailed concepts, how
do we tie them into our simple daily routines or day to day living from a simple basis?
I mean, I often like to look at problems from the perspective of how I would solve them
if my technology hadn't, it wasn't my technology. I see a lot of problems getting solved where
people are trying to find every use case for every shiny new thing. And they're like, oh, we're going
to do VR education. So, well, is it, is it actually better than anything? Or is this just iPads for
education again? Or it's like, oh, we got to buy iPads for every kid. And that's going to turn
every kid in the country into a super genius. No, that's not true. The people are doing it because it was shiny, not because it was the best solution.
You know, and like, look, I'm a big believer in, for example, the metaverse broadly,
my email signature for 10 years was see you in the metaverse. So you can't accuse me of being
a trend jumper. I was crazy my whole career. Um, but, but nonetheless, there's so many new
companies that are like, Oh, the metaverse solves this problem. That problem. I have to look at
them and say, does it really?
Or would this be better with solve with like a pen and paper?
Like when you're trying to keep track of the things that are going on in your day.
So you put on the VR headset and you're visualizing all of the different places.
I'm like, God, you literally just need this.
That would be better.
And also phones, like phones are actually better than AR and VR for some things.
And so like when I'm trying to integrate, when I'm to integrate you know this thinking of my daily life i'm trying
to make sure i don't fall into the trap of using tech for the sake of using tech in my everyday
life for trying to solve a problem that doesn't need it it doesn't solve it it's hard for me
because i'm a gear head i'm a techno head i love the technology but i had a rule of no unintentional
gimmicks yeah it's going to be a gimmick, make it intentional and lean into it.
And don't play yourself. You can tell everyone
else, this is incredible. As long as
at the end of the day you say, this is so dumb.
Alright guys, let's give it up
for Stacy, for Mike, and for
Bob.