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Ilya Sutskever, OpenAI co-founder, on why the company that builds AGI shouldn't be chasing infinite profits:
Speaking on the No Priors podcast, Ilya Sutskever turns a question on the very technology he's working to build.
"If you believe that the technology that we are building, AGI, could potentially be so capable as to do every single task that people do... does it mean that it might unemploy everyone? Well, I don't know, but it's not impossible."
From that possibility, @ilyasut draws a conclusion about how such a company should be structured:
"And if that's the case, it makes sense. It will make a lot of sense if the company that builds such a technology would not be incentivized to make infinite profits."
But he doesn't present this as a settled view. He immediately points to the force that complicates it — competition:
"I don't know if it will literally play out this way because of competition in AI. So there will be multiple companies and I think that will have some unforeseen implications on the argument which I'm making. But that was the thinking."
His point is simple: if AGI can do everything a person can, it might put people out of work on a massive scale, and that changes things.
🚨 BREAKING: Claude can now completely rewire your brain so you can learn anything at lightning speed.
Here are 7 Claude prompts to learn anything 10x faster:
CycloTech just flew the BlackBird, the world's first aircraft to lift off on six spinning CycloRotors instead of propellers.
Built in Austria, it vectors thrust a full 360 degrees, so it can hover, brake in the air, and slide sideways like a car easing into a parking spot.
Concept to first flight in just 11 months.
Your words are losing the sale.
Here’s how to fix your script ⬇️
♻️ Repost to help others in your network with this.
➕ And follow me at Sean McPheat for more.
Elon Musk on how he hires:
"Don't look at the resume, just believe your interaction. The resume may seem very impressive, wow, resume looks good. But if after 20 minutes the conversation is not well, you should believe the conversation, not the paper."
PS. If you found value in this post make sure to like and repost this tweet + follow @uncover_ai to stay updated with the latest AI news.
See you in the next one:
AMD CEO says all education is about learning to think.
Su says the technology will always change, but the skill that matters never does.
"All education is about learning to think. It's about learning to problem solve. Whether that was 30 years ago or 30 years from now, I think it's the same."
The tools Su used to rebuild AMD look nothing like the tools available when she started her career. The thinking that drove every decision looked exactly the same.
"The technology changes over time, but if you can learn how to solve problems, you're going to do great things."
PS. We post daily content strictly for dedicated entrepreneurs, so if you’re one of them, make sure to follow us @entreprneursonx for more.
Like and repost if you found value in this post:
This is the part nobody saw coming. You don't log into Nitrosend, you just tell it what you want and the email lands in 10,000 inboxes.
One prompt did the writing, the design, and the send. The dashboard is officially extinct.
Breaking: Your name, address, and phone number are sitting on the internet right now available to anyone who searches.
Three sites are actively selling it to strangers today and most people have no idea.
Here is how to remove most of it:
Breaking: Your smart TV takes a screenshot of your screen twice every second and sells what it sees.
It is called ACR, and it has been running since you set the TV up.
Texas already sued over it. Here is how to turn it off in under 2 minutes:
The feature iPhone users have requested for a decade is coming with iOS 27.
Split screen. Two apps. One screen. Apple is bringing it to iPhone and the way people use their phones at work is about to look completely different.
It is finally happening.
High cortisol is aging you faster than drinking and partying.
It also burns collagen, wrecks deep sleep, and accelerates wrinkles by a decade.
Here are 7 ways to reduce high cortisol:
1. Sunlight on skin in the first 30 minutes.
ChatGPT has been better than Claude for at least the last month. Maybe more.
Yesterday, they extended that lead with their new release.
Here's how someone will use it to make $1,000,000 in 2026:
There are over 36 million small businesses in the United States. Nearly 30% of them don't have a website at all. The ones that do mostly have sites that look like they were built in 2015 because they were built in 2015.
They know the site is bad. They have not fixed it because a proper redesign from an agency costs $5,000 to $15,000 and takes weeks, and they do not have the budget or the patience for either one.
Codex Sites just eliminated both problems.
You can now build a professional, interactive website or web app by describing what you want in plain English. No designer. No developer. No Figma. No three-week timeline. Codex builds it, hosts it, and gives you a shareable URL. A site that used to take an agency two weeks and $10,000 to deliver can now be prototyped in an afternoon and refined in a day.
Step 1: Use Codex Sites to build websites for local service businesses. Plumbers. Dentists. Roofers. Lawyers. Contractors. Med spas. HVAC companies. The ones with 2015 websites and no time or budget to fix them. Charge $2,000 to $3,000 per site. You can deliver in days instead of weeks because you are building with Codex, not hiring a team. Your margins are enormous because your overhead is a ChatGPT subscription.
Step 2: This is where the real money is.
A beautiful website that nobody finds is a billboard in a closet.
Every one of those clients needs to know what AI search is saying about them. They need to show up when a customer asks ChatGPT or Google AI "who is the best plumber in Austin" or "best dentist near me."
That is not a website problem.
That is a search problem.
Audit their AI search presence using SEO Stuff. It's free:
https://t.co/Pn764BHwyL
Show them exactly what ChatGPT, Google AI, Claude and Grok currently return when a customer searches for their service. Show them the gaps. Show them the competitors who are showing up instead.
Then offer to fix it.
The website is the door opener. The search optimization is the retainer.
Charge $1,500 to $3,000 a month to manage their AI search presence alongside the site you built.
Recurring revenue. Every month. For every client.
Step 3: At 20 clients paying $2,000 a month in retainer plus $3,000 per build, you are at $40,000 a month in recurring revenue and $60,000 in build fees in the first 90 days.
Double it in the next 90.
By day 180, 40 clients on retainer is $80,000 a month in recurring revenue alone.
That is a million dollar annual run rate before the end of the year.
One person using Codex Sites to build the product and SEO Stuff to identify the search gap is going to do this in the next 6 months.
https://t.co/eh1auroJF7
And they'll get rich from it.
OpenAI gave everyone the ability to build.
The question is whether you know how to make what you build findable.
That is the gap SEO Stuff was built to close.
https://t.co/eh1auroJF7
Codex Sites builds the site.
SEO Stuff makes sure the right people find it.
The tools are here. The playbook is above. Someone is going to run this in the next six months and it is going to work.
Managing Partner and CIO of Atreides Management Gavin Baker on why the entire AI market is pricing in two completely different futures at once:
He argues that the numbers across AI stocks can't all be right at the same time:
"If you look at the valuations for all these AI names, they just they can't all be accurate."
He breaks down the disparities he's seeing across different parts of the market:
"You have memory makers at, you know, three to five times PE. You have Nvidia at a really low PE. You actually have some other accelerator companies at reasonable multiples. And then you have everything else. Everything in power, everything in cooling."
He clarifies what he means by power, noting that utilities and IPs aren't the issue:
"And when I say power, I don't mean utilities. The IPs are actually quite reasonably valued. But power, cooling, even probably some of some of the optical names. These are discounting very different things."
This is the heart of his argument. Different corners of the market are pricing in completely different futures, and only one of them can be right:
"If the multiples on the power cooling optical names are correct, Nvidia memory, they're going up a lot. If the multiples on Nvidia and memory are correct, everything else is probably going to underperform."
@GavinSBaker sums up the situation in a single phrase:
"The AI market is cross-sectionally inefficient right now, which is what I was trying to say."