Sometime in the next 2-3 years agents will be using the internet more than humans
We designed the whole thing for human eyes, human emotions, human attention spans
Agents do not have any of that
The internet as we know it was built for the wrong user
The opportunity is rebuilding everything for the new user
Agent-native search. Agent-native commerce. Agent-native discovery
Every category is open again
I can't stop thinking about it.
@PaulSpacey Completely accurate!! If a child shows interest and wants to play soccer make the decision— have them go all in and play….. or they won’t. Simple.
Chamath: We have a huge perception issue in AI… here’s how to fix it.
“We have a huge perception issue in AI.”
“We have a handful of companies, all the PR that you see from those handful of companies is a bunch of circular dealmaking, a bunch of capital that flows from one to the other.”
“It causes these stocks to go up, of which a small percentage of people benefit.”
“And at the tail end of it, it's accompanied by a completely different set of articles that everybody also reads about this Sword of Damocles that's about to fall on their head, whether it's electricity prices or whether it's their jobs.”
“So the question at hand is how do we fix it?”
“How do we get back to the place where a video talking about stopping all progress would seem as laughable as it should be?”
“We now need to be on the forward foot as an industry.”
“We need to start to use a percentage of the balance sheets of these companies in order to benefit as many Americans as possible.”
“That is the absolute minimum.”
“Andrew Carnegie built 2,500 libraries.”
“The idea was, as he built the railroads, you're going to scale GDP, you're going to scale education and knowledge.”
“Those libraries are artifacts that allowed people to feel a dividend from that industrial revolution.”
“We need to self-organize better, and we need to be more on the forward foot.”
“We need to start doing things that are practically measurable by tens of millions of American citizens.”
Something there….bigger than most realize.
20 minutes per day=7300 minutes/per year or for context 3 full time average work weeks.
Stop scrolling—start building.
There has never been a better time!
On point with great advice as always! Well said Greg.