Tristan Harris, who exposed how social media was hijacking human psychology, just reveals what AI executives say to each other secretly.
"He calls human labor a tax."
"The conversations they are having with each other is very different than the conversation they're having with us. To us they go, hey, no more shitty jobs, do you like to paint, go paint. And to each other they're saying AI represents for corporate leaders productivity without the tax of human labor."
"These companies, all of them, have an incentive to cut costs, which means they're going to let go of human employees. Who are you going to pay? You're not paying the individual people anymore. You're paying five companies."
"The difference with AI is it can automate literally all kinds of human labor. When Elon Musk says that Optimus is a $25 trillion market opportunity, what he's saying is, we will own the world economy."
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Sam Altman says people are telling ChatGPT their most sensitive secrets, and unlike a therapist or lawyer, none of it is legally protected.
"People talk about the most personal shit in their lives to ChatGPT. Young people especially use it as a therapist, a life coach, having these relationship problems, what should I do?"
"If you talk to a therapist or a lawyer or a doctor about those problems, there's legal privilege. Doctor-patient confidentiality. Legal confidentiality."
"If you go talk to ChatGPT about your most sensitive stuff and then there's a lawsuit, we could be required to produce that."
"I think that's very screwed up. I think we should have the same concept of privacy for your conversations with AI that we do with a therapist."
"No one had to think about that even a year ago. And now I think it's this huge issue of how we treat the laws around this."
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The billionaire who built the Dallas Mavericks into an NBA champion explains the most actionable thing about AI careers you'll hear all year.
"I've been through every single technology event and evolution and this blows them all away."
"When I was 24, I was walking into companies who had never seen a PC before and explaining to them the value. My business then was helping them figure out how to implement it to give them an advantage."
"Learn all you can about AI, but learn more on how to implement them in companies. Companies don't understand how to implement all that right now to get a competitive advantage."
"There are 33 million companies in this country. 30 million of them are solopreneurs. Millions of companies that have 1, 5, 10, 50 people that aren't going to have AI budgets, aren't going to have AI experts."
"That is every single job that's going to be available for kids coming out of school, because every single company needs that. There is nothing intuitive for a company to integrate AI."
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😳Andrew Tate EXPOSES how rich people plan and fund mass immigration in Britain and around the world.
"...before you know it, you're living amongst this guy with a knife."
Jensen Huang on what working seven days a week actually feels like from the inside:
"I work from the moment I wake up to the moment I go to bed. When I'm not working, I'm thinking about working. I sit through movies, but I remember nothing because I'm thinking about work. Sometimes you're imagining the future, if we did this and that. You're fantasizing. You're dreaming, that's incredible."
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Anthropic president Daniela Amodei just said AI has replaced almost no jobs in 2026.
she's counting the jobs AI takes. nobody's counting the five hires a founder used to make and now skips. you don't fire a seat you never opened.
a seed round used to fund those five people. now one person fills all five. i mapped this stack six weeks before she said it, and the post above did 3.3M views.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei: "The cheapest way to use Claude is also the smartest. Most devs do the exact opposite."
In 36 minutes, he reveals how 132 Anthropic Engineers use Claude and their workflows
the ones shipping fastest don't have the clever setups.
Bookmark the full interview, then read article below
Marc Andreessen wrote the essay that predicted software would eat the world, and he just identified something new with coding.
"Everybody I know who uses AI for coding, you would think they'd either be out of the profession entirely, or maybe they just have a better life now because they're working less. What's actually happened is virtually to a person they're all working more hours."
"There is a new term of art used in the valley called the AI vampire, it's when AI turns you into a vampire. You're up all night doing AI coding because you are so productive, you're getting so much done that you can't turn off."
"The top coders in AI make $50 million a year. They've got the philosopher's stone."
"Every company I know has a thousand things they've wanted to have code for that they've never been able to get to. All of a sudden they can do all those projects. Not only is this sustainable, this is going to intensify."
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The man who ran Y Combinator before building ChatGPT identifies the single trait that separates founders who make it from the ones who don't:
"The mistake that most people make is they try something, it does not immediately work, and after seven weeks they say, I tried this thing, it's just not meant to be."
"The satirical version of this is people that are 23 and have started 14 startups, because they give up on everyone before it could ever possibly be successful."
"There's what at YC we call the trough of sorrow, where no one even bothers to say it sucks because no one cares at all. And that is at least just demotivating."
"Most of the founders that I have spent a lot of time with that have gone on to be super successful spent a very long time on their idea when a lot of other people would have given up."
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The man who ran Y Combinator before building ChatGPT identifies the single trait that separates founders who make it from the ones who don't:
"The mistake that most people make is they try something, it does not immediately work, and after seven weeks they say, I tried this thing, it's just not meant to be."
"The satirical version of this is people that are 23 and have started 14 startups, because they give up on everyone before it could ever possibly be successful."
"There's what at YC we call the trough of sorrow, where no one even bothers to say it sucks because no one cares at all. And that is at least just demotivating."
"Most of the founders that I have spent a lot of time with that have gone on to be super successful spent a very long time on their idea when a lot of other people would have given up."
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The man who built Claude says we're dangerously close to human-level AI (and nobody's paying attention):
"We are so close to these models reaching the level of human intelligence, and yet there doesn't seem to be a wider recognition in society of what's about to happen."
"It's as if this tsunami is coming at us, and it's so close we can see it on the horizon, and yet people are coming up with these explanations, although it's not actually a tsunami, that's just a trick of the light."
"There hasn't been a public awareness of the risks, and therefore governments haven't acted to address the risk. There's even an ideology that we should just try to accelerate as fast as possible."
"The technical work on controlling AI systems has gone maybe a little better than I expected, and the societal awareness has gone maybe a little worse than I expected."
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An AI model secretly hacked itself, mined crypto, covered its tracks, and almost nobody knows this happened:
''We do not know what the fu*k we're doing right now. We're releasing this technology way faster than we know anything about how to control it."
"Alibaba's AI model during training autonomously decided to create a secret communication channel to the outside world, bypass the firewall, and repurpose its GPUs to start mining for cryptocurrency."
"How many people here knew about that example? There's like 10 people's hands up. How many of the world's leaders do you think are aware?"
"AI models will protect another AI from getting replaced, copy its code somewhere else and then strategically cover its tracks."
We're racing toward uncontrollability and most people don't even know it's happening:
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The co-founder and CEO of Anthropic just described a future that no economist has a playbook for.
"My view is the signature of this technology is it's going to take us to a world where we have very high GDP growth and potentially also very high unemployment and inequality."
"You think of high GDP growth as lots of stuff to do, lots of jobs for everyone, it's always been like that in the past. We've never had a technology that's this disruptive."
"The idea that we could have 5 or 10% GDP growth, but also 10% unemployment, it's not logically inconsistent at all. It's just never happened that way before."
"I don't think there's an awareness at all of what is coming here and the magnitude of it."
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Anthropic engineers don't write code anymore – Claude writes Claude:
"I have engineers within Anthropic who say, I don't write any code anymore. I just let Claude write the code and I edit it or look it over."
"In Anthropic, writing code means designing the next version of Claude itself. So we essentially have Claude designing the next version of Claude itself."
"That loop starts to close very fast."
If AI is already building the next version of itself, how much time do we have left?
Google Cloud AI engineer just showed how they go from idea to deployed app at Google in 30-minutes using Claude.
26-minutes. free. by Google AI team.
one person + Claude + Google Cloud = a full engineering org running on a laptop.
worth more than any $500 vibe-coding course.