Go.
Speaker 2I have.
Speaker 2I.
Speaker 2I know there's gonna be a coffee episode already, so.
Speaker 1God damn.
Speaker 2God damn.
Speaker 2Did you get your drink?
Speaker 1Yeah, I got my drink.
Speaker 1Your purple drink.
Speaker 1I got my perps.
Speaker 2How much would it cost for you to try a purple drink?
Speaker 1Like, the real purple drink?
Speaker 2What do you mean?
Speaker 2As opposed to the fake purple drink?
Speaker 1I guess it's a valid point.
Speaker 1So you're talking about how much would it cost for me to try an illegal drug slash soda cocktail.
Speaker 2So I said purple drink.
Speaker 1You do realize this show goes out on a public platform.
Speaker 2We haven't started.
Speaker 2We haven't started yet.
Speaker 2We're not.
Speaker 2We're not including any of this.
Speaker 1Oh, I'm including all of it.
Speaker 1That's happening.
Speaker 1I gotta tell you, I don't really like the idea of any type of drug that makes me slur.
Speaker 1You know what I mean?
Speaker 1Like, if you get, like, slurry and sloppy, like, that's not a good drug, is it?
Speaker 2That doesn't make you slur, does it?
Speaker 1I'm pretty sure it's like a painkiller.
Speaker 1And like.
Speaker 2I mean, Lil Wayne uses it to perform every concert.
Speaker 1They don't.
Speaker 1Okay, wow.
Speaker 1All right.
Speaker 2Case in point.
Speaker 1I mean, he does always kind of sound.
Speaker 2Why was that so good?
Speaker 1Little Do.
Speaker 1You know, I do Little Wayne impersonations at night.
Speaker 1That's what you do, too.
Speaker 2Well, welcome back to the number one financial literacy podcast in the world, which.
Speaker 1Some of you might be saying, hey, how could that be?
Speaker 1Well, there's only two.
Speaker 2Right?
Speaker 2And this is the one.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1I think there is more than.
Speaker 1There are more than two.
Speaker 2There has to be.
Speaker 1Yeah, I just.
Speaker 2We have.
Speaker 1Pretty sure we're the only ones.
Speaker 2You know, we have beefs with some of them, but we do.
Speaker 1Graham, Stefan, I'm talking to you.
Speaker 2Okay.
Speaker 2And I'm going to call it.
Speaker 2I'm going to say it.
Speaker 1Spade of spade.
Speaker 2Yeah, I'm not.
Speaker 2Earn your leisure.
Speaker 2I'm not a fan.
Speaker 1I don't get the draw.
Speaker 2I don't understand the draw.
Speaker 1Fit and fresh either.
Speaker 1Like, those guys.
Speaker 1I don't get that either.
Speaker 2Are they a financial literacy box?
Speaker 1I mean, it's all like, dabble culture.
Speaker 1Yeah, they dabble.
Speaker 1They dip their toe in the pond.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1But it's a lot of like.
Speaker 2Oh, yeah, I've seen them.
Speaker 2Oh, you got to create an LLC to do this.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1And, I mean, the guy.
Speaker 1Myron, the guy who runs it, he seems like a smart guy, but he seems very clickbaity in pop culture.
Speaker 1But they have a following, you Know.
Speaker 2I mean, whatever people look at.
Speaker 2Whatever people look at him as a trusted source.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1I mean, again, smart guy, trustworthy.
Speaker 1I don't know, you know, but I look at so many of these influencers, though, and I'm like, y'all are just all liars.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2They don't have the credentials to back it up.
Speaker 1None of them.
Speaker 1And the worst part about it is that's the reason they can say the stuff that they say.
Speaker 1Because they don't got a board or shareholders or investors or real clients.
Speaker 1Everything they say is designed to sell a course to you about things they have not done.
Speaker 1That's crazy.
Speaker 2It is crazy.
Speaker 2We forgot to mention, sitting next to me on my left is my partner in crime, Chris Nahibi.
Speaker 1Sitting next to me on my right, my partner in time, the one and only.
Speaker 1The man, the myth, the legend.
Speaker 1The man is probably gonna live longer than me.
Speaker 1According to recent studies, where short people live about three years on average.
Speaker 1Longer than tall people.
Speaker 2There you go.
Speaker 1Not saying that you're short, and I'm not saying that I'm tall.
Speaker 2Shorter.
Speaker 1I'm just saying that there's a disparity here.
Speaker 2There is a disparity.
Speaker 1Inflation has affected you more than me.
Speaker 1The one and only side, Omar.
Speaker 2Thank you, my man.
Speaker 2And nobody's sitting behind the ones and twos.
Speaker 1Nope.
Speaker 1Doesn't belong there.
Speaker 2Nobody.
Speaker 2Nobody.
Speaker 1Matter of fact, this is now a two person hosted podcast.
Speaker 1Show Two.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Is he ever going to make a guest appearance?
Speaker 2He has to.
Speaker 1He's never.
Speaker 1He's never said a word to me about the show.
Speaker 2We're going to.
Speaker 1Nothing.
Speaker 2Yeah, because I think he misses it.
Speaker 2He feels bad.
Speaker 1I don't think that.
Speaker 1That.
Speaker 1That's what that is.
Speaker 2No, I do.
Speaker 1I think it's.
Speaker 1He hates us.
Speaker 2No, he doesn't.
Speaker 1I'm pretty sure he does.
Speaker 2So tonight we have a special episode for everybody.
Speaker 2One that I'm sure people have been waiting for us to touch on.
Speaker 2Really?
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1I wasn't so sure when we put together.
Speaker 1I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker 1No, no.
Speaker 1So I was.
Speaker 1I have been deep into the AI space as of late, and I'm not talking like, oh, I use chat GPT a lot, bro.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1You know, I'm talking.
Speaker 1I've gone deep down, all the way down to the path of.
Speaker 1For those of you don't know, AI takes a lot of power.
Speaker 1Not only is it a technology from a chip standpoint, but it takes a lot of power to run these systems.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1So much so that the major manufacturers of this product to the market are trying to find ways to provide themselves the energy.
Speaker 1And one of the ways they're looking to do this is by building nuclear power plants.
Speaker 1Like Google, for example.
Speaker 1Nuclear power plants.
Speaker 1So I went down this mental rabbit hole of like, oh, my God, like, this technology could, in theory, I mean, we've all seen Terminator, right?
Speaker 1Skynet goes live.
Speaker 1But it could be so dynamic and impactful to the way we do things.
Speaker 1And if the early adoption is Indian indicator, everybody that I know uses some type of AI generative model to be more productive.
Speaker 2Yeah, right, Absolutely.
Speaker 1And I can tell you firsthand experience, I use it for a lot of the things that I do research on.
Speaker 1I use it for a lot of things that I write on.
Speaker 1In essence, it's like the world's greatest assistant.
Speaker 1And then you just check what your assistant did for you and then you put it out.
Speaker 2I personally use it for a lot of things that I want to brainstorm on.
Speaker 1Okay, yeah.
Speaker 1Great example.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2Great place for like a launching pad, if you will.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2To get you to think about all the moving parts.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1100% accurate.
Speaker 1I've used it for things like finding the best price on products.
Speaker 1I've used it for, you know, checking my own knowledge when it comes to construction stuff, like, because we're building out the new studio space.
Speaker 1And I've been thinking about how I want to do this.
Speaker 1I literally said, I want to do X, Y and Z.
Speaker 1I want to put new flooring in or take the walls out.
Speaker 1I want to raise the ceiling.
Speaker 1I want to put a glass wall in.
Speaker 1What should I do first?
Speaker 1In what order is the most logical and reasonable?
Speaker 1And what do you think would be the best way to approach this?
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2What things should I be considering?
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1The skill of prompting is an underrated skill.
Speaker 1Knowing how and what to ask and how to refine what you're asking to get a more concise answer from a model like that is.
Speaker 1Is really valuable.
Speaker 1But therein lies the AI conundrum.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1Some of us, in the years to come, will adapt, will evolve, and learn that the new job skills requires you to be a bit different than you are today.
Speaker 2Exactly.
Speaker 1Some of us could, in theory, be very much displaced by AI.
Speaker 1And there are people who are very much doomsdayers.
Speaker 1There are people who are very much embracive.
Speaker 1But you and I were discussing this.
Speaker 1We thought a show where we talked about AI and its implications to you as an individual in the workforce, how it could affect your job.
Speaker 2Currently, where we stand today, where we.
Speaker 1Start Today and where it's going from a very cerebral place.
Speaker 1So we're actually going to sound a lot smarter to a lot of you than we normally do.
Speaker 1I know we normally sound like idiots.
Speaker 2I know you're not used to it, right?
Speaker 1Yeah, we are equally not used to it.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1So we're gonna have to read because obviously we didn't take the time to memorize anything because we're morons.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2So the question, the theme of the show is really about will this be boosting innovation or will this be killing careers?
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2So let's dive right into it.
Speaker 2So a huge statistic that we want to make sure that we point out right out the jump is AI is projected to contribute $15.7 trillion to the global economy by 2020.
Speaker 1That's a huge number.
Speaker 2That is a huge number.
Speaker 2So how that gets broken out is 6.6 trillion coming from increased productivity and 9.1 trillion from enhanced consumer experiences.
Speaker 1So obviously a lot of people are using it.
Speaker 1They're using it to be more efficient, which we're going to talk about later in the show on what industries are likely to be impacted the most.
Speaker 1And I got to tell you, there were some of them that I think were pretty obvious and some that weren't.
Speaker 1We're going to talk about how we as consumers are going to be impacted by it.
Speaker 1How is it going to enrich our lives?
Speaker 1Not necessarily benefiting how we do our jobs, but the benefit to our lives as a response to this being out there.
Speaker 1But there's also a deep concern for the psychological ramifications of AI.
Speaker 2Really?
Speaker 2How so?
Speaker 1Well, think about social media as the vehicle with which we have now adapted to it's piece of technology that we have an infinite scroll loop and we can get lost in it.
Speaker 1It changed the way our kids think about success and wealth.
Speaker 1They think about, you know, their image.
Speaker 1Kids can now get bullied 24 hours a day, seven days a week vis a vis their social media channels.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2And if to piggyback off the psychological point you were making, I was actually having this conversation earlier today about how you can really get lost in confirmation bias with social media.
Speaker 2Oh, 100%, you can now reach people.
Speaker 2Whereas before, if you, you thought something that was maybe, you know, a little bit too far left or right or a little bit too, you know, wild, you would probably keep it to yourself because you didn't have a peer group around you that maybe shared those same thoughts.
Speaker 2Now you can go out of your way to go find these people.
Speaker 1It's Even worse.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Social media's algorithm distills your human mind down to what you like and what you don't like based on how long you're looking at an image, how many times you've seen it, how often you click on profiles and look at things it's building whether you like it or not.
Speaker 1An algorithm based around your mindset.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1And it's catering to it.
Speaker 1So if you have even an underlying deep seated psychological preference towards looking at someone's IKEA furniture, it's going to show you more IKEA furniture.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1It's going to find your tribe and define it for you before you even consciously realize what you're doing.
Speaker 1It might be simple.
Speaker 1I like cars.
Speaker 1Show me more cars.
Speaker 1But if you look at some people's feeds, you can get a lot more than that.
Speaker 1So a classic thing I see with dudes, right, is you'll look at their feed when they pull it up and you can quickly tell a lot about what their interests are by just scrolling through what comes up in their recommended feed.
Speaker 2My wife and I, we play this game all the time.
Speaker 1Oh, it's a dangerous game.
Speaker 2Is it?
Speaker 1Is it?
Speaker 2It can be.
Speaker 2So, yeah.
Speaker 1You see one gym come up and.
Speaker 2You don't deal boy, don't take my advice and start playing with this game with your girl or your husband right out the gate.
Speaker 2But we do this all the time, like, like once a week at least, where we say, let's see what the algo algorithm is.
Speaker 2And she'll show me, I'll show you.
Speaker 1What's the wildest thing in your algorithm right now?
Speaker 2The wildest thing.
Speaker 1What's the wildest thing that you see consistently in your algorithm?
Speaker 2Okay, the wildest thing that I would be embarrassed of if like the wrong person side is I have a really, really dark sense of humor.
Speaker 2So I was like, I, I can't share some of, some of these jokes.
Speaker 2I can't even say it on the podcast here because is bad.
Speaker 1It's.
Speaker 2It's really, really bad.
Speaker 1This is what goes with you and I share to each other all the time.
Speaker 2Yes, exactly.
Speaker 2The ones, the ones that I.
Speaker 2Oh, you're literally probably one of the only people I shared with.
Speaker 1I send those all to you, bro.
Speaker 1The algorithm pops up.
Speaker 1It's like, send this to S.
Speaker 1I'm like, no, I know mine.
Speaker 1I'll tell you.
Speaker 2It's like if the algorithm knows, you should be connecting with Saeed right now.
Speaker 1Say hello to Saeed.
Speaker 1There's lots of, lots of Diddy.
Speaker 1Lots of lots, lots of Jordan, LeBron.
Speaker 2References, a lot of Lucy K.
Speaker 2Those are his.
Speaker 2It's so bad.
Speaker 1Classic comedy, you can't do anymore, right?
Speaker 1One of my guilty pleasures on social media is jailhouse cooking.
Speaker 1Like, prison chefs.
Speaker 2That's good.
Speaker 2That's good.
Speaker 2I don't know why.
Speaker 1Like, I love seeing how these guys in prison put together meals.
Speaker 2Right, right.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2Like, yeah, they're creative.
Speaker 1Like, I'm just.
Speaker 1I'm impressed.
Speaker 1Like, y'all make better food in prisons than I do at home.
Speaker 1And I got utensils and stuff.
Speaker 1You know what I mean?
Speaker 2I know, but.
Speaker 1All right, so let's get into the AI debate a little bit.
Speaker 1So I started this whole, like, road trip with a report from PwC, PricewaterhouseCoopers.
Speaker 1According to PwC, AI's impact will come from increased productivity, product innovation, and consumer demand.
Speaker 1Industries such as health care, automotive and financial services are leading the change in adoption, driving GDP growth worldwide.
Speaker 1And this should be concerning from a financial perspective for a number of reasons.
Speaker 1We've had technological booms historically.
Speaker 1The most notable one is the fintech bubble bursting in 2001.
Speaker 1Everybody's like, oh, my God, all this technology is propping up the market.
Speaker 1But there was a lot to be said for not getting a lot of value out of the technology that the market expected from the fintech bubble burst.
Speaker 1Whereas I can make a pretty compelling case that you're going to get the value out of AI.
Speaker 1Now, where I think it's being overhyped are a lot of companies are using it for things like chatbots.
Speaker 1Let's be honest, you and me, you log into your bank account, Wells Fargo pops up.
Speaker 1Hey, I'm Fargo.
Speaker 1I'm the AI chatbot.
Speaker 2What's up?
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Your first reaction is, fuck off.
Speaker 1Yeah, I don't need you, Fargo.
Speaker 2Right?
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, right.
Speaker 2I mean, it's true.
Speaker 2But I will say this.
Speaker 2I recently used one of these AI chat bots.
Speaker 2I can't.
Speaker 2I'm trying to remember for what product it was for, but for whatever reason, this was literally my first time using a chatbot on a website.
Speaker 2And for some reason, I felt more comfortable personally it being an AI chatbot versus another person on the other side responding back to me.
Speaker 1Yeah, it does give you a little more comfort that it's like somebody like, in a foreign country.
Speaker 2Like, I know that a sales coming.
Speaker 2I know that the whole purpose behind this chatbot is just to gather information, which is true.
Speaker 2I want to give my Just be contacted so that when the person contacts me, they already have it all.
Speaker 1And Shout out to all my Filipinos out there.
Speaker 1But, like, nothing's weirder.
Speaker 1When you call someone, they're like, hello, sir, ma'am.
Speaker 1You know, like, it's.
Speaker 1It's like, it's just awkward because your.
Speaker 2English is good enough, but clearly your.
Speaker 1Comprehension'S from a different country.
Speaker 1And I get it.
Speaker 1You got a second language.
Speaker 1Good for you.
Speaker 1Shout out to you.
Speaker 1But there's always this little bit of, like, awkwardness, like, are you from a different country?
Speaker 2Yes.
Speaker 1Are you just.
Speaker 1Are you from here?
Speaker 2And so many companies do it that it's now just acceptable.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1And what was fraud and scamming?
Speaker 1Like, no disrespect to anybody, like, you don't know.
Speaker 2Makes me.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1You just don't know.
Speaker 1I feel a whole hell of a lot more comfortable with the chat bot that I can see functioning from, you know, them.
Speaker 2Exactly.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1Plus, I know that, that they're not gonna inadvertently say something to do something I'm not supposed to say, you know?
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 2Or quickly turn this into like a 30, 45 minute conversation.
Speaker 2Them trying to upsell me on something.
Speaker 2It was like, I know you're just gathering information so that somebody else can contact me.
Speaker 1Let's not do that.
Speaker 1Let's not do the high ticket sale, bro.
Speaker 2Right?
Speaker 1You don't.
Speaker 2You know how.
Speaker 1I'm a hot ticket closer.
Speaker 1God, so obnoxious.
Speaker 1It is so obnoxious.
Speaker 1I literally saw an ad today.
Speaker 1This is the truth.
Speaker 2Okay?
Speaker 1Guy walks in, closed the door on his Lambo, walks in his office, which, by the way, is not his office, it's somebody else's office.
Speaker 1Says, I'm a high ticket closer.
Speaker 1You know, blah, blah, blah.
Speaker 1We can teach you how to do this.
Speaker 1There's a girl in the background that just happens to be there.
Speaker 1Hey, how many deals you close your first month?
Speaker 1She says 13 goes into the guy who happens to be in the background.
Speaker 1Hey, you don't believe me?
Speaker 1How many?
Speaker 120, bro.
Speaker 1Close 20.
Speaker 1My first month, they're high ticket closing a course on how to high ticket close.
Speaker 2That's how this works.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1And that's the ad.
Speaker 1And in the ad, they pulled out the girl who looked attractive.
Speaker 1The dude who looked attractive.
Speaker 1Doesn't matter what side of the fence you're on.
Speaker 1The guy had a neck tattoo in the center of his neck.
Speaker 2How are you going to trust that?
Speaker 1I mean, instant credibility loss.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Side of your neck, gangster.
Speaker 1Center of your neck.
Speaker 1Questionable.
Speaker 2Very, very, you know, Exactly.
Speaker 2That's a good point, though.
Speaker 1I don't make these rules.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2The side of the neck has now entered its way into the culture where it's like, okay, it's a thing.
Speaker 1Maybe I watch a lot of jail cooking.
Speaker 2Like I know front of the neck is a little bit aggressive.
Speaker 1It's aggressive like it used to be like thigh tattoos were too much.
Speaker 1Now those are becoming a little more mainstream.
Speaker 2Right, right.
Speaker 1But front of the neck, you're still saying something.
Speaker 2Front of the neck is just as bad as on the face.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2I mean, equally as bad.
Speaker 1It depends.
Speaker 1There is an elegant way to do face tattoos and then there's lefty gunplay.
Speaker 2The level of commitment.
Speaker 2I don't think I'm committed to anything that much unless it's like my wife and my kids.
Speaker 2But like you question, you put that.
Speaker 1In, I know it's going to come.
Speaker 2Up in the future.
Speaker 1Play that clip later on.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1All right.
Speaker 1So PwC goes on to say that global GDP could be up to 14% higher in 2030 as a result of AI.
Speaker 1The equivalent of the aforementioned additional 15.7 trillion that Saeed mentioned at the top of the show, making it the biggest commercial opportunity in today's fast changing economy.
Speaker 1And you might be saying, Chris, that's all well and good.
Speaker 1What the hell does that have to do with me?
Speaker 1Yeah, well, the greatest gains from my AI according to this PwC study, which I should probably give the name out of it here, it says sizing the prize.
Speaker 1What's the real value of AI for your business?
Speaker 1And how can you capitalize all rap lyrics?
Speaker 1Yeah, PwC is getting sneaky.
Speaker 1I know what you're doing.
Speaker 1I know what you're doing.
Speaker 1The greatest gains from AI are likely to be in China, believe it or not, where they're going to boost up to 2026% of GDP in 2030.
Speaker 1Why?
Speaker 1We've outsourced a lot of our manufacturing to China and you're going to find that AI is a fantastic vertical for improving the efficiency of manufacturing.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1You have robots that are already in most these places.
Speaker 2Any type of repetitive task, right?
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1Well, not only, not only that, but a task that once required several robots, you can now probably do with one.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1You know, so the efficiencies from not only a cost perspective, but just a production, you know, result are pretty impactful.
Speaker 1But you can also get AI to, to look at orders coming in, make the orders, adjust your input output.
Speaker 1I mean there's just controlling the robots in and of itself doesn't really need AI.
Speaker 2And definitely the ability for the AI robots to pick up on pattern recognitions.
Speaker 1Within the Business and then how to improve from there.
Speaker 1Hey, I can make you more efficient by doing this.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1So North America, not to say that it's.
Speaker 1It's subpar.
Speaker 1They're going about a 14% boost.
Speaker 1So a little bit less, a little bit more than half of what China's going to get.
Speaker 1The biggest sector gains will be in retail, financial services and health care as AI increases productivity, product quality, and consumption.
Speaker 1AI in retail is a fascinating case study.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1So a long time ago, they already had this in place where a lot of your major retailers like Target, are using AI with facial recognition and your mobile phone.
Speaker 1So if you download some of their apps, some of, some of their apps will actually connect to the store when you walk in.
Speaker 1And Amazon and a couple of people tested this out, where as soon as you walk in, you just grab something.
Speaker 1It recognizes your face, recognizes your phone, charges your account.
Speaker 1You just walk out.
Speaker 1You don't have to go charge anything.
Speaker 1No scanning UPC codes.
Speaker 1It knows what you picked.
Speaker 1It's good.
Speaker 1Right?
Speaker 1So the next level up is you walk in the store and you walk by something.
Speaker 1Instead of just seeing a general ad, AI will know what you scroll through on your phone, what you like.
Speaker 1Chris, you love seeing people make food in prison.
Speaker 1Here's a.
Speaker 1Here's the.
Speaker 1Here's the aisle that's going to have you that same prison recipe of foods that you were looking at earlier.
Speaker 1You can make.
Speaker 2Here's the ramen, which is a little scary.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 2Because there's a time and place for everything.
Speaker 2And you want to make sure that.
Speaker 2Because I'm very careful personally with my algorithm on social media.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Privacy is a fallacy.
Speaker 1Now, I know people want the idea of privacy, but the idea of privacy that our grandparents had versus today is gone.
Speaker 2It's not even amount.
Speaker 2It's not even about the privacy.
Speaker 2So let's just take your jail food house example, right?
Speaker 2Like, I, I'm someone that if like an AI tool were to tell me and remind me of something like that, I would get easily distracted.
Speaker 2Oh, yeah, let me go see what's going on.
Speaker 2And like, I don't want to be distracted.
Speaker 2You get it?
Speaker 2Like, that's my.
Speaker 2That, that, that's always been.
Speaker 1But you consciously don't want to be distracted.
Speaker 1The whole point of all of this is making you want to buy things without you consciously realizing it.
Speaker 2Yeah, I know.
Speaker 2That's their goal.
Speaker 2Right?
Speaker 2So, like, for me, I would, I would be very careful with how much of that I let into my life.
Speaker 1But you're not going to have a choice.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's the sc.
Speaker 2That's.
Speaker 2And that's what I'm afraid of.
Speaker 1That's the part that's scary.
Speaker 1Like, let's say you have no social media, you don't download an app.
Speaker 1But I'm going to pick on Target here because I know they're using some of this technology.
Speaker 1You walk into a Target, Target goes, okay.
Speaker 1Every time Saeed Omar comes here, whether you use your credit card or not, they go, this guy's face, he buys X, Y and Z.
Speaker 2He goes into these aisles.
Speaker 1He goes into these aisles.
Speaker 1He has a tendency by this side.
Speaker 1Omar loves phage F.
Speaker 1The yogurt.
Speaker 2Right, right.
Speaker 1That's his thing.
Speaker 1So you walk in the store, you pass by what would otherwise be a static sign.
Speaker 1Well, now it's a digital sign and it's saying, hey, have you had your F today?
Speaker 1Because it knows, you know, and then it's going to point to the aisle and say, you see, I know I've.
Speaker 2Had, so I've had conversations with friends about this now with, you know, all the marketing that's going on all the time.
Speaker 2There's so much marketing taking place.
Speaker 2Forget like you're the billboards and everything that you see from back in the day.
Speaker 2I always question, like, is this a decision that I truly made because I want this, or has it been, have I been manipulated somehow, some way with some marketing campaign?
Speaker 2It's, and it's, it's hard to boil it down.
Speaker 2So I, I try very, very hard on like bigger decisions to take recommendations from friends or go back to experiences that I personally have, you know, had good success with.
Speaker 2But with this now, I think it's going to be virtually impossible to tell whether is it a true, natural thought or was AI taking the wheel?
Speaker 1Yep.
Speaker 1So I want to go through some definitions here because as we get into some of these things with AI, there's going to be some differences.
Speaker 1So I'm going to cover some of the definitions first and I'm going to put them up between you and I on the screen here.
Speaker 1So if anybody's watching this, you'll have a list here.
Speaker 1There's a couple different ways to look at it.
Speaker 1I'm just going to take the basic glossary approach for the main areas of AI.
Speaker 1You've got large scale machine learning.
Speaker 1It's a design of, it's a design of learning algorithms as well as scaling existing algorithms to work with extremely large data sets.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1Simple, clear, think, chat, GPT.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1It can now work in Excel.
Speaker 1It's really fascinating.
Speaker 1It's growing very fast.
Speaker 1You're on ChatGPT 4.0 and I mean some of the stuff you can do from just a generative model perspective.
Speaker 1Fascinating.
Speaker 2I've used ChatGPT for Excel on so many occasions to help me write formulas and it comes out perfect every time.
Speaker 1And now it can actually work in Excel.
Speaker 1So you can say, hey, do this in Excel and give me this chart.
Speaker 1So imagine working in Excel and literally not having to actually know the formulas anymore, just asking for what you want.
Speaker 1There's also deep learning AI models which the model is composed of inputs such as images or audio and several hidden layers of sub models that serve as input for the next layer and ultimately an output or activation function.
Speaker 1So think of more complex tasks creating a video which does X, Y and Z.
Speaker 1Specifically right now, some of this stuff is not as sharp as it could be.
Speaker 1There are better models than some for generating things like images and some of the deeper results.
Speaker 1But certainly the deep learning stuff is going to give you the segue to really AGI, which is artificial general intelligence.
Speaker 1What they expect to happen in 2024.
Speaker 15.
Speaker 1Think of this as like a free thinking independent entity, if you will.
Speaker 2Wow.
Speaker 1Right?
Speaker 1There's natural language processing algorithms that process human languages input and convert it into understandable representations.
Speaker 1There's collaborative systems models and algorithms that help develop autonomous systems that can work collaboratively with other systems and with humans.
Speaker 1There's computer vision, image analysis, there's algorithmic game theory.
Speaker 1There's soft robotics where robotic process automation.
Speaker 1Excuse me, all of these, all of these will coalesce into AGI at one point.
Speaker 1Artificial general intelligence, which is essentially a self aware machine capable of doing all of these things right on its own.
Speaker 2So let me, let me, let me ask you this question now.
Speaker 2From a society standpoint, okay.
Speaker 2I know you got, you got to remove yourself from this equation.
Speaker 1It's really hard to do.
Speaker 2You're a little, you operate a little bit differently than the average Joe.
Speaker 1Okay, I'm going to reserve my offendedness.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2Until such time as you make because I know you, you're, you're always of the mindset of continue to learn.
Speaker 2It's always good to learn.
Speaker 2Obviously.
Speaker 2Don't become too reliant on anything.
Speaker 1I want the dopamine.
Speaker 2When we went, when we, when the Internet was, you know, first became big and we were, people started using MapQuest and all these other, what was the, what was the other big one that people were using?
Speaker 2They weren't using the Thomas Guide anymore, for instance, right.
Speaker 1Okay.
Speaker 2I remember my parents would have me print them out directions.
Speaker 1Oh, I remember that too.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2And I would literally have to write it out really big for them and they would take it with them.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2And then as time went on, they would need directions everywhere.
Speaker 2They would stop remembering using that part of their brain.
Speaker 1Are you the guy gets in your car and always uses your gps?
Speaker 2Me?
Speaker 2Not always.
Speaker 2No, not if I know where I'm going.
Speaker 1I will almost always use my GPS even if I know where I'm going, because I know that it's going to understand the traffic better than I will.
Speaker 2Okay.
Speaker 2I mean, there's that too.
Speaker 2But the routes that I take home, I already know the routes that have less traffic.
Speaker 2So maybe that's the reason why I don't use it.
Speaker 2But now take that same example and take it a step further.
Speaker 2Now, with iPhones and everyone having everyone's phone numbers.
Speaker 1I don't know anybody's phone numbers.
Speaker 1My wife.
Speaker 2Okay, right.
Speaker 2And there's an argument to be made that okay, you don't need to know it anymore, move on.
Speaker 2Right, right.
Speaker 2But the question now becomes it reduces the amount that people are actually critically thinking and that serves as a huge problem for me.
Speaker 2I feel like for the majority of people it's going to hurt them more because they're just going to become more reliant on it.
Speaker 1Well, look at creative writing.
Speaker 1Look at writing right now for me and I'll be honest with you, I used to have to sit there, look at a screen and think about what I want to say, articulate wordcraft, you know, put something together, refine it.
Speaker 1And now I say, hey, hey, you know, chatgpt, if I'm using that particular model, I want to say this, this and this, this is who I am.
Speaker 1These are the circumstances.
Speaker 1Give me something, it gives me something.
Speaker 1And then I will then refine a pre drafted script.
Speaker 1Now this is not uncommon.
Speaker 1I mean, presidents use script writers.
Speaker 1They'll refine it to sound more like them.
Speaker 1They'll put in their own quotation comments here and there.
Speaker 1So this is a very common methodology now it's available to the masses.
Speaker 2It makes me concerned too with people potentially.
Speaker 1Why?
Speaker 2People using this, people using this to help them potentially make big decisions that could possibly alter the ethics behind it.
Speaker 1Well, and there's an entire subset of what we're gonna talk about tonight about the ethics around this.
Speaker 1There are questionable ethics here.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2And that's my concern.
Speaker 1Especially if plagiarism to is almost nonsensical at this point.
Speaker 2Yeah, that's True.
Speaker 2I mean, yeah, especially, but especially if you're using a AI trained model that was trained by some engineers.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2That could literally have a lot of bias built in.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1And so think about this in the comments.
Speaker 2You got to be careful, right?
Speaker 2I mean, I, I do a lot.
Speaker 1Of writing for a lot of the media, for example.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1And everybody I write with now and I send us off a response I know is going to run it through an AI model detection and they're going to say, oh, hey, Chris, this came up as, you know, 3%, 10%, 100%.
Speaker 1I.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1I can't use it.
Speaker 2I remember you've been flagged for like 5%.
Speaker 2And the 5% that was flagged was the definition.
Speaker 1What was definition?
Speaker 1And the other one was an article that quoted me.
Speaker 2So, yeah, it's like you got to let a certain percentage of it go, especially if you can factor and you can see where it's coming from.
Speaker 1And some journalists are more willing to say, okay, I can see how that's quoting you and bringing up an article to quote you.
Speaker 1And they'll say, well, I want original content.
Speaker 1I don't want you to quote yourself in somebody else's narrative, which I kind of get.
Speaker 1But at the same time I don't.
Speaker 1Because if I'm giving somebody valuable advice and that advice is still consistent, then there shouldn't be any problem saying the same thing to different outlets.
Speaker 1But they want quote, original material.
Speaker 1But this is where I look at AI and I think to myself, like, I could easily say, let's just say I'm not a subject matter on leprechauns.
Speaker 1I'm not a subject matter expert, okay?
Speaker 1And somebody said, hey, Chris, I need a subject matter expert on leprechauns.
Speaker 1What do you know?
Speaker 1And I go, I know everything.
Speaker 1They go, okay, great, send me a quote about fun facts about leprechauns.
Speaker 1I could go to ChatGPT, type in fun facts about leprechauns.
Speaker 1Give me a narrative.
Speaker 1I'm pitching this to cnbc and I want to be a subject matter expert.
Speaker 1I want to sound like I'm knowledgeable in the field.
Speaker 1Do it.
Speaker 1They'll send it to me.
Speaker 1I refine it, run it through an AI humanizer, which is a thing to make it past generative AI models, send it off, and guess what?
Speaker 1Now somebody who probably doesn't know my credentials.
Speaker 1So this is where I say, okay, what's the value in quoting people anymore?
Speaker 1Right?
Speaker 1I mean, we're getting to the point where there's an inflection point of all these.
Speaker 1These humans that we keep referencing in their experience are going to pale in comparison to the knowledge and sophistication of aggressive.
Speaker 1Once you get to AGI and artificial, general intelligence can say, hey, let me make your life better.
Speaker 1There's a dual edged sword there.
Speaker 1It's going to think critically on its own and make decisions and suggestions for improvement on its own at a cadence we as humans cannot keep up with.
Speaker 2I guess the fear too would be, is it going to give me an answer or a solution to my problem based on my needs and what I'm trying to accomplish?
Speaker 2Or let's just say, if it's for business, the company's needs.
Speaker 1Well, there's a valid question there.
Speaker 1But essentially we are outdated giant bags of water.
Speaker 1That's what we are, right?
Speaker 1And this silicone based life form, we are carbon based life forms.
Speaker 1The silicone based life form is the next evolution of a species that we have not, we've not taken seriously thus far.
Speaker 1And the most, most people are just like, oh, how can I.
Speaker 1How can I write faster?
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1And what we don't realize we're doing is every single time you query something, not only are you teaching the model about you and what you do, but you're teaching the model about humanity and how humanity thinks.
Speaker 2Right?
Speaker 1And they're aggregating data about all of us at all times.
Speaker 1So is Instagram, so is every social media platform.
Speaker 1And you better believe the FBI, the CIA, everybody's plugged into this.
Speaker 1They are building models of who we are.
Speaker 1Which is why I say if you think that you have privacy, you are lying to yourself.
Speaker 1Your mobile phone is tracked, your queries are tracked.
Speaker 1Everybody's building a model.
Speaker 2Every dollar, you know, every dollar you spend, invest in.
Speaker 2Why do you think, why do you think Robinhood allows for free trading?
Speaker 1Yeah, they're selling your information, bro.
Speaker 2Yeah, they, they.
Speaker 2You are the product, bro.
Speaker 1Shout out to my guy Vlad, though.
Speaker 2Yeah, we love Vlad.
Speaker 2Yeah, we love Robinhood.
Speaker 1Bijou, bro, you've been missing dog.
Speaker 1That's a whole different conversation.
Speaker 1So I have some sector information from PwC.
Speaker 1I just want to cover it really quickly.
Speaker 1So they ran down all of this, but I think that there's some pretty.
Speaker 2Impactful, very trusted source.
Speaker 1Yeah, I mean, they're an accounting firm.
Speaker 1They're pretty rational.
Speaker 1So there's a couple of sectors here that are impacted.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1And they really went by percentage of adoption and AI in their industry.
Speaker 1Near term being 0 to 3 years, mid maturity or mid term maturity is 3 to 7 years and then 7 years plus.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1So according to PwC, they think 37% of healthcare will have near term adoption of AI.
Speaker 1That's a lot.
Speaker 2That's a lot.
Speaker 2I did, I did read about this too, and I wanted to get your take on it.
Speaker 2So apparently it's supposed to allow for doctors to be able to find, you know, solutions or figure out what symptoms you have a lot faster.
Speaker 1Well, combining that with, most of us are wearing some type of biometric based tracker.
Speaker 2Yes.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1So if you've got an Apple watch on, it's tracking your heart rate, it's tracking your activities, it could track your oxygen levels.
Speaker 1Yes.
Speaker 1Most of most people track their sleep.
Speaker 1You have your phone in your pocket, so it's tracking steps.
Speaker 1So again, going back to this, nothing is private anymore.
Speaker 1You combine AI with some of these things and keep so also, I do a lot of lab work all the time.
Speaker 1Blood work.
Speaker 1My blood work feeds into Apple Health now.
Speaker 2Love that.
Speaker 1So now all of my health data, including my weight, I'm a little chunky.
Speaker 1All my stuff's there.
Speaker 2You're not.
Speaker 1I know, I know.
Speaker 2It's the old me talking.
Speaker 1I said big cheeks, dog.
Speaker 1Big cheeks.
Speaker 2You used to.
Speaker 1I still do.
Speaker 1I still got big cheeks.
Speaker 1I just covered with a beard.
Speaker 1And here's the beauty of it.
Speaker 1I look like a fat man with my face.
Speaker 1If you see me on camera, you're like, bro, he's not like, what?
Speaker 1You see me at the gym, you're like, wait a minute, what happened?
Speaker 2Who's this guy?
Speaker 1What?
Speaker 2Yeah, it's not mad.
Speaker 2The math ain't math.
Speaker 1Yeah, they don't match.
Speaker 1I know.
Speaker 1I got a fat person's face.
Speaker 2Yeah, you got the toes out tonight too.
Speaker 2I didn't want to wear, like, so confident.
Speaker 1No, I'm wearing Crocs tonight.
Speaker 1Mortal sin.
Speaker 1Because I, I, we had to do some construction.
Speaker 2That, that makes no sense.
Speaker 1It does.
Speaker 2I didn't want to do some construction.
Speaker 1I don't got steel toe boots, dude.
Speaker 2Yeah, you should get some.
Speaker 1So instead I got open toe Crocs.
Speaker 1You're distracting me from the show.
Speaker 1All right, I'm only going to cover the near term adoption.
Speaker 1Automotive, 35% in years zero through three.
Speaker 1Financial services, 41% in years zero through three.
Speaker 1Transportation, logistics, 41% adoption.
Speaker 1And here's where it gets interesting.
Speaker 1Technology, 47% adoption.
Speaker 1So not much better for technology relative to things like financial services.
Speaker 154% adoption in retail, 39% in energy, and 14% in manufacturing.
Speaker 1What's really interesting Is of all of these, in the midterm years three through seven, almost everybody falls off or has a slight incremental increase.
Speaker 1But manufacturing goes from the next three years, 14% adoption to seven years, 83% adoption in manufacturing.
Speaker 2Wow.
Speaker 1That's why China has such a huge GDP Booth, is because they do so much manufacturing.
Speaker 1This is going to be a huge lift to what they're doing.
Speaker 1But let's, let's keep going.
Speaker 1Let's talk about the revolutionary aspects of AI.
Speaker 2Let's do it.
Speaker 1Now that we've set the nice little warm temperature for you to dip your toes into.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1Okay.
Speaker 2That was a little appetizer lapper tiff.
Speaker 1So AI powered chat bots and fraud detection and banking is one example of boosting efficiency.
Speaker 1We're going to cover some of these examples fast.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2How is it, how's it going to be able to do that to, you know, to detect fraud?
Speaker 1So AI in banking was a study that looked at JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, bank of America, Citibank, US Bank, PNC and Bank of NY Mellon.
Speaker 1Okay, okay.
Speaker 1So banks like JP Morgan Chase and Bank of America are saving millions annually.
Speaker 1By automating customer interactions and fraud detection.
Speaker 1AI tools can analyze patterns across thousands of transactions in seconds, identifying anomalies that human teams might miss.
Speaker 1In researching these seven firms, chatbots and conversational interfaces emerge as the most current trends that seem to be inspiring enthusiasm and excitement in the banking world.
Speaker 1I've seen some other things on the horizon which we can talk about here shortly.
Speaker 1That said, conversational interfaces, I.e.
Speaker 1chatbots, make up roughly 13.5% of the AI vendor product offerings in banking.
Speaker 1Less than we would expect given that they make up nearly 39% of AI use cases across top 100 banks.
Speaker 1More broadly, customer facing functions, customer service, wealth management, marketing and sales made up only 25% of total AI vendor product offerings and banking.
Speaker 1In contrast, risk related functions like fraud, cybersecurity compliance, risk management and financing and loans made up 56%.
Speaker 2That would make more sense.
Speaker 1And it makes a lot of sense.
Speaker 1I have seen something so cool on the horizon.
Speaker 1So imagine you call in to a bank and this, this bank, I'm not going to name any names.
Speaker 1Brilliant.
Speaker 1They have a human answer on the phone still.
Speaker 1But when you call in their entire dashboard, on you is an interface built in AI.
Speaker 1It's going to scan your accounts literally in seconds.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1By the time you verify your account, they have a full breakdown of your spending habits, whether you qualify for a line of credit, how much of a Line of credit.
Speaker 1You should get what you could possibly use a line of credit or need one for.
Speaker 1Hey, I've seen you doing a lot of home improvement recently at Lowe's.
Speaker 1Would you be interested in a line?
Speaker 1I mean they can break down all of your spending habits.
Speaker 1They know if you tend to go certain places and buy because all of it's on your, on your credit card charge, your ATM charges when you call.
Speaker 1So they are finding a way to literally know exactly what to sell you when you call.
Speaker 2Oh yeah, I could see that working great.
Speaker 1And what's even more cool is, is I saw an example and this is probably an extreme case which is not meant for everybody where they had said, they showed up an example where they said, hey, this guy's calling in and he's paying.
Speaker 1This is what his payments are.
Speaker 1You could tell him right away that you could save him payments dollars every single month by going with this home equity line of credit product or this line of credit product and consolidating his debt.
Speaker 1And he doesn't have to submit anything to you.
Speaker 2You already have it all.
Speaker 1I already have it all.
Speaker 1I know what you're paying on debt payments to everybody else.
Speaker 2It's like having a pre approval.
Speaker 1It's, it's, it's an instant pre approval and they know your needs so they don't have to speculate or talk you through it.
Speaker 1They know exactly what you need.
Speaker 1And daddy's here for you, right?
Speaker 1So daddy's here for you.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1It's fascinating.
Speaker 1There's also a driving innovation, AI, accelerating drug discovery in health care.
Speaker 1This one very close to me.
Speaker 1You know how much I love the drugs.
Speaker 2We're not going to say them.
Speaker 1Lil Wayne said, you're a little bit voice the whole time.
Speaker 2We already got flagged the Atlantic science machine, the Peptides.
Speaker 1So according to the Atlantic, this the scientist versus the machine.
Speaker 1AI models like AlphaFold have reduced the time needed to predict protein structures from months to hours, revolutionizing fields like pharmacology and biotech.
Speaker 2Wow.
Speaker 1People have long worried about robots automating the jobs of truck drivers and restaurant servers.
Speaker 1After all folks, from the invention of the cotton gin to the washing machine, we're used to an economy where technology transforms low wage jobs and physically arduous work.
Speaker 1But that isn't how AI is going to work for us.
Speaker 1The past few years have shown that highly educated white collar workers should be the ones bracing for artificial intelligence to fundamentally transform their, and I should probably say our professional lives here.
Speaker 1The angst that this spurred from all Corners of white collar America has been intense.
Speaker 1And notwithstanding merit, okay.
Speaker 1There's reasons why people should feel this way.
Speaker 1If you're a lawyer, for example, I don't know how valuable you're going to be in the future.
Speaker 2It's a little scary.
Speaker 1Do you really need somebody arguing your argument for you when you can say, hey, here's the facts.
Speaker 1Argue.
Speaker 1Give me the best case.
Speaker 1I mean, we are literally.
Speaker 2But that's the problem.
Speaker 2But there's a problem there, right?
Speaker 2If somebody's hiring an attorney, they almost want to bend.
Speaker 2Bend the truth a little bit.
Speaker 2There's some sleaze balls out there.
Speaker 1Wow.
Speaker 1You just.
Speaker 1You just went for everybody's a D bag.
Speaker 1You didn't want.
Speaker 1You want to go.
Speaker 2I said there are some sleaze balls out there.
Speaker 2Right?
Speaker 2They don't want.
Speaker 2They don't want you to just operate off just the facts, then the truth a little bit.
Speaker 1We're at.
Speaker 1We're at a really important time, an inflection point, where I think that you'll be able to tell AGI, Artificial General intelligence.
Speaker 1Hey, argue my point on this.
Speaker 1Even if you got to be a little unethical.
Speaker 2Kind of makes a good case to replace a judge, though.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1No, even, even.
Speaker 2Even better.
Speaker 2Right?
Speaker 2You take the bias completely out of it.
Speaker 2Yeah, right.
Speaker 2These are.
Speaker 2These are the facts, bro.
Speaker 1Don't even get me started on unbiased.
Speaker 1Like.
Speaker 1And I've been in some litigation.
Speaker 1Let me tell you where some of these judges, you look at them and you're like.
Speaker 1When you just said to me, yeah.
Speaker 2You know what you're doing right now?
Speaker 1You look at some of them, you're just seething mad.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2They're on their power trips.
Speaker 1I did not say that.
Speaker 1Said in a court of law.
Speaker 1That's Saeed almost.
Speaker 2I'm low level, bro.
Speaker 2You don't have to.
Speaker 1I got enough litigation.
Speaker 2I got nothing, bro.
Speaker 1I got enough litigation.
Speaker 1When this comes up, they're gonna take a sound bite.
Speaker 1I'm not playing that game with you.
Speaker 2Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1All right.
Speaker 1So America has been.
Speaker 1This scrutiny has been important, but AI the potential to take over much of our creative life and the risks to humanity are well documented.
Speaker 1Material science is an area of research where we can see the direct applications of scientific innovation.
Speaker 1Material scientists, right?
Speaker 1Where the ones who developed graphene, thus transforming numerous products ranging from batteries to desalination filters and photovoltaic structures that have enhanced solar panel efficiency, driving down the steep decline in renewable energy costs.
Speaker 1These are all really cool inventions.
Speaker 1Right?
Speaker 1Well, there are also countless More applications in fields such as medicine and industrial manufacturing, where AI is already coming up with better inventions and faster inventions than we as humans have done.
Speaker 2You know what's one area that really stands out right now that I'm thinking about it, given what we have been dealing with the last several weeks.
Speaker 1Porn.
Speaker 2Christopher.
Speaker 1I was just trying to figure out.
Speaker 2What you're talking about, Christopher.
Speaker 2And there's your flag, in case we had it yet.
Speaker 2LA wildfires.
Speaker 1Oh, I did not think you go there.
Speaker 2I feel like.
Speaker 2I feel like the budget was mishandled.
Speaker 2A little bit illogical.
Speaker 2Yeah, a little illogical.
Speaker 2Understanding that you knew that fires were on the horizon and to cut the budget for the fire department by 20 some odd million dollars.
Speaker 2I mean, I could see a world where you could use AI to create a budget that would efficiently be used for your local governments.
Speaker 2That would make a lot of sense.
Speaker 1I could go off on a diatribe now about the aging out of politicians.
Speaker 1It takes a.
Speaker 1It takes a weird person to want to be a politician.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1And I'm not saying it's weird and bad.
Speaker 1I'm just saying you got to be different to want to be a politician.
Speaker 2Like, no, like you got to be different to want to be an actor or an actress.
Speaker 1Yeah, totally different.
Speaker 1And I don't know that.
Speaker 1That a lot of them have the subject matter expertise they would otherwise need in order to do something.
Speaker 1If you're a politician and you've got a career background in some type of business, that doesn't mean that you understand fire infrastructure.
Speaker 1You know, that doesn't mean you understand how to deal with a homeless population.
Speaker 1It might mean you ought to understand it like how to balance a budget or you're an attorney.
Speaker 1But we are looking at these things like people should understand.
Speaker 1And this is where I look at AI and go, I can be a very valuable tool.
Speaker 1But people are going to be super scared of the idea of I'm not handing over my rights and my civil liberties to a machine.
Speaker 2I mean.
Speaker 2And that's where the fear of who trained the AI.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2Comes into play.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1So new discoveries in this field and others like it, speaking of the material sciences field, have the potential to transform human life, making us happier, healthier and richer.
Speaker 1Which I'm all for.
Speaker 1Peptides, baby and another flag.
Speaker 1And when scientists at this company were required to integrate an AI assistant in generating new ideas, they became more productive, discovering 44% more new materials.
Speaker 1Because AI was there to facilitate.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1Quoting directly from the Atlantic here, I think a big takeaway from economic growth models is that the, in the long run, really, productivity is the key driver of improvements in living standards and in health.
Speaker 1So I think that all the big improvements in living standards we've seen over the last 250 years or so really are driven fundamentally by improvements in productivity.
Speaker 1And those come really from advances in science and innovation driving new technologies.
Speaker 2I remember I watched an interview from you Remember there's a gentleman that you met at the school, Yale School of Management, that was, he was talking about where we got to a certain level of computing.
Speaker 1Oh, Brown.
Speaker 2Brown, yeah.
Speaker 2What's his name?
Speaker 2Jim Brown, I think that's what I thought it was.
Speaker 2Jim Brown.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1And he, honestly.
Speaker 1So he looks like, like, almost like a Mormon with like this big white beard.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1And sweetheart of a man.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1And I didn't realize sitting in class with him that he was kind of like the foremost expert on quantum computing and.
Speaker 2Quantum computing.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1And this is in 2018, I want to say 2019, somewhere there.
Speaker 1And he gave us like this lecture as a student in the class with us on tech.
Speaker 1And then I later on watched him on some pretty really well respected podcasts where he was just breaking down AGI and quantum computing.
Speaker 2Look where we are now.
Speaker 1Oh, he, he was so far ahead of the curve.
Speaker 2So, yeah, this is back then.
Speaker 2I remember, I remember watching one of his interviews and kind of being blown away and he said, you know, this idea of us living with, with traffic, you know, 50 years from now will just go away because all the cars will be talking with one another and everything people will be just more efficient driving on the road.
Speaker 1Have you ever seen the study out of Japan where they tried to model how we, how we have traffic and why?
Speaker 1And it was a fascinating way of doing it and it really showed how it works.
Speaker 2No, no, no.
Speaker 1So in Japan, they had everybody drive in this big circle.
Speaker 1They had this 30,000 foot elevation view of everybody driving the circle.
Speaker 1And they told everybody to drive at a certain speed and no more, no less.
Speaker 1And everybody driving in a circle, in theory, should be totally fine.
Speaker 1Once you get some cadence and some speed and you get going, there should be no traffic because everybody's driving the same, yet everybody congregated together and slowed down and then sped up and then slowed down.
Speaker 1And there was every, every side of the circle at some point in time had a slowdown.
Speaker 1And it's the humanity that causes this.
Speaker 1There's inconsistencies in the way we all drive and respond, even when all the rules are exactly the same.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1You're not changing lanes.
Speaker 1It was a fascinating study, but it goes to show you that you will always have traffic with humanity at the wheel.
Speaker 2Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2Now that'll be one problem that'll just go away one day.
Speaker 2No different than.
Speaker 2I know this is going to sound crazy in a reach, but this is what was brought up in the interviews.
Speaker 2Like, no different than back in the day.
Speaker 2There was a problem with literally horseshit on the road.
Speaker 2This was a problem that they were dealing with and they're like.
Speaker 2With the innovation of cars that just went away.
Speaker 2That problem just went away.
Speaker 1You know why?
Speaker 1Men typically walked on the inside of the road and I'm sorry, on the outside of the road.
Speaker 1And women walking the inside of the road.
Speaker 2I still do that to this day, by the way.
Speaker 1I do it too.
Speaker 1But the reason why is originally in London, you used to go to the bathroom in a pot, right?
Speaker 1You would literally shit in a pot.
Speaker 1And then people.
Speaker 1It was not uncommon for people to empty their pot out their window, but because there were awnings and eaves, if the women walked on the inside towards next to the building, they would be under the eaves.
Speaker 1And it was a man who risked getting shit on from flying above.
Speaker 2Just no, like, appreciation for this, bro.
Speaker 2What is, what's going on?
Speaker 1You were literally risking salmonella to protect your wife every time.
Speaker 2Every time.
Speaker 2Can you believe that?
Speaker 1I mean, obviously there's cars in the road, but back then, the cars weren't going fast enough for that to be a real threat.
Speaker 2Right?
Speaker 1So, oh, my God, it's coming at me.
Speaker 1It'll be here in 10 minutes to hit me.
Speaker 1You know, it wasn't the same thing.
Speaker 2So just really quick back to that interview with Brown.
Speaker 2The part that scared me the most from the interview I remember, like having to pause and really, like think this through was the AI and the quantum computing will reach a level so advanced that when the cars are talking to one another, it will literally decide if you're about to get into an accident, which accident is better for you and your family or for an overall outcome to where perhaps nobody dies.
Speaker 1Oh, it's going to come up with an instant judgment and that's going to be.
Speaker 2That'll be it, right?
Speaker 1Irrefutable.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2And then the question, the follow up question was great.
Speaker 2What if both ways somebody dies?
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2How does the AI decide then?
Speaker 2And I literally had to pause it and think to myself, God damn, bro.
Speaker 2You can easily see a world where you could be the AI whoever trains the AI, right?
Speaker 2Because even Brown said to Himself or he answered the question with.
Speaker 2You got to let the AI decide at that point.
Speaker 2Yeah, right.
Speaker 2I mean, there's.
Speaker 2At some level you have to put it in AI's hands.
Speaker 2But you can see how, depending on who trained the AI, what if this person paid more tax dollars than this person in an accident?
Speaker 2Could that be taken into account?
Speaker 2This person is 70 years old.
Speaker 2This person is 20 years old.
Speaker 2A lot more time in the workforce.
Speaker 1I bet a million dollars that gets taken into account.
Speaker 1That's a real.
Speaker 2It has to.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1Like there's.
Speaker 1I'm, I'm not only.
Speaker 1I'm not choosing between life anymore.
Speaker 1I'm now choosing over who has the greatest probability.
Speaker 2There's no.
Speaker 1Can you imagine if there's no empathy?
Speaker 2There's no empathy in that.
Speaker 1What if it went into your biometrics instantly and goes, okay, say it has a higher probability of cholesterol issues.
Speaker 1It's person, same age.
Speaker 1Doesn't.
Speaker 1This person's got a longevity.
Speaker 1I'm gonna save this person and kill Said.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2And this person produces way more tax revenue.
Speaker 1I think about this a lot when I think about you, you know, for me.
Speaker 2But that should scare everybody a little bit.
Speaker 1And to give everybody an idea of how far does that make you feel, though?
Speaker 1Honestly, it doesn't scare me as much as.
Speaker 1It's just, it's an unavoidable destination at this point.
Speaker 1We are so far down this path that we cannot avoid this conclusion.
Speaker 1So I'm not going to fight it from a moral and ethical basis.
Speaker 1It does give me a little bit of anxiety thinking how different things are right now.
Speaker 1You get home, you turn on the tv, you, you, you pick some shows that you want to watch.
Speaker 1You're already at the point where it goes, hey, similar to what you watched here.
Speaker 1What do you think AI is going to do?
Speaker 1Bitch, you're watching this.
Speaker 1I know you want to watch it.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1You know what I mean?
Speaker 1So I say this again in a comedic way, but I mean it.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2And it's going to burn when it's right.
Speaker 1It's going to burn on the truck.
Speaker 1I don't want to watch people throwing midgets that much.
Speaker 1I mean, I won't go watch this for five minutes.
Speaker 2Wolf of Wall Street.
Speaker 2He's referencing Wolf of Wall Street.
Speaker 2That's what it is.
Speaker 1It's asinine because it's not true.
Speaker 2Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2Yeah, right.
Speaker 1But so to give everybody an idea of how far we've come, when Mr.
Speaker 1Brown had this conversation with us in the class, the smallest Supercomputer was the size of a football field and it was underground.
Speaker 2For listeners out there that don't know what's a supercomputer.
Speaker 1Basically it had the ability to compute things faster than anything else.
Speaker 1And I'm watering it down, right?
Speaker 2The most complex situation, complex problem.
Speaker 1And it was the most complicated, fastest computer we had.
Speaker 1Size of a football field.
Speaker 1Now you've got quantum computers that NASA and Google are joint building and sharing.
Speaker 1I think there's three of them.
Speaker 1They have, they're about the size of a refrigerator.
Speaker 1Excuse me, about two of them.
Speaker 1Do you like side by side refrigerators?
Speaker 1These things look like they're straight out of like interstellar, sorry, hairball.
Speaker 1And they, they can do things.
Speaker 1All of your encryption that you think is keeping you safe, all of your codes.
Speaker 1Right, gone.
Speaker 1It can.
Speaker 1I mean it.
Speaker 1I do yourself a favor.
Speaker 1Well, maybe we should do a quantum computing episode at some point in time because it's, it's stunning the things that it can do.
Speaker 1And here's a part that I'll just leave as like low hanging fruit we can talk about on a later episode.
Speaker 2Okay.
Speaker 1They don't fully understand how it works when it's working today.
Speaker 1Because computers are traditionally binary ones and zeros.
Speaker 1And without getting into the detailed nuances of what they are, the quantum computer can work in a world where it can be one, it can be zero, or it can be both.
Speaker 1They don't fully understand it to the level that we should.
Speaker 1And they've come up with a conclusion that it may be tapping into another dimension.
Speaker 2Now, so stop.
Speaker 1I swear to God, like the conclusion.
Speaker 1The scientists got it.
Speaker 1You know what?
Speaker 1Fuck it, Tim.
Speaker 1I think it's.
Speaker 1I think it's tapping into a different dimension.
Speaker 1And I know it sounds like sarcasm is almost like DC Universe, Marvel comic stuff.
Speaker 2Like coincidence that all these UFO sightings are coming up now.
Speaker 1I've got a whole litany of explanations there, but suffice it to say that quantum computing combined with AI, it's a scary phenomenon.
Speaker 1And now it's not a race to get a quantum computer.
Speaker 1We have those, those are there and they're privatized like Google has them.
Speaker 1So Google says, okay, how do we power this thing?
Speaker 1With AI, you build a nuclear power plant.
Speaker 1These tech companies, you look at Elon Musk and say, Elon Musk runs all these things.
Speaker 1I'll give you a great example of how AI is going to change the world in a meaningful way.
Speaker 1That's not next year.
Speaker 1It's like tomorrow.
Speaker 1Elon Musk to A lesser degree, Jeff Bezos.
Speaker 1They own the distribution network of privatized satellites vis a vis SpaceX and blue or Blue Origin.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1And Elon Musk has the ability to move satellites around the globe.
Speaker 1And I don't know if you've seen how many satellites SpaceX has in space, but when you look at it as they circle the Earth, and there's a graphic on this I think you can get on SpaceX's website, it is stunning how many satellites they have up there.
Speaker 2Okay.
Speaker 1There's an entire grid surrounding the world.
Speaker 1Wow.
Speaker 1And he can move them around.
Speaker 1Right now, we use mobile cell sites.
Speaker 1Basically, cell towers amplify signals to your phone.
Speaker 1But we already have the ability to do things like satellite calls from an iPhone 16, an iPhone 17, whatever the hell it is, out.
Speaker 1Now you already have satellite text messaging from phones.
Speaker 1At some point in time, all these cell sites are going to be obsolete.
Speaker 1AT&T Verizon, you're gone.
Speaker 1And SpaceX is going to be able to offer mobile service anywhere in the world.
Speaker 1And let's say you go to.
Speaker 2I mean, it's kind of frustrating that it's not.
Speaker 2We're not there now already.
Speaker 1No, we are there.
Speaker 2You should be.
Speaker 1But you're going to have satellite coverage anywhere you go.
Speaker 1Meaning instead of you going, oh, my God, I'm over an ocean, I can't watch anything.
Speaker 1Nope, you can do that now.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1You don't need a cell site in the ocean.
Speaker 1You got a satellite above.
Speaker 2Oh, sorry, honey, I'm.
Speaker 2I'm passing that part of the hill where I lose reception.
Speaker 1Not anymore.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1And here's the.
Speaker 1Here's the crazy thing.
Speaker 1You know how you go to certain venues and there's so many people there you can't use your phone.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1What does Elon do?
Speaker 1He just shoves in some more satellites there.
Speaker 1And then he used AI to constantly flow with where people are at.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 2Because they can.
Speaker 2It can literally predict demand natural disaster.
Speaker 1Power goes out.
Speaker 1Guess what?
Speaker 1Cell phone towers are gone.
Speaker 1Satellites are still Gucci.
Speaker 2Gucci, man.
Speaker 1You can still stream your Spotify.
Speaker 1You know what I mean?
Speaker 1Power might be out, but you can still throw the party.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1I'm just saying, like, these things are real, right?
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1Like we have real, real life changes coming in a way.
Speaker 1And these things are happening at a much faster cadence.
Speaker 1I mean, cell phones are relatively new technology.
Speaker 1When I was a kid, just having a cell phone meant you sold drugs.
Speaker 2I remember my parents did not let me have a beeper because they, wow.
Speaker 1You just dated the hell out of yourself.
Speaker 1Said beeper.
Speaker 1Yeah, Most kids are like, what is that?
Speaker 1Is this beep or something?
Speaker 1What does that do?
Speaker 2Low key.
Speaker 2Still kind of cool.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1143 dog.
Speaker 2143 dog.
Speaker 1People are like, what does that mean?
Speaker 1I don't even know why.
Speaker 1That means I love you.
Speaker 2I.
Speaker 2I want what?
Speaker 1143.
Speaker 1Why does it mean that?
Speaker 2One for I, four for love.
Speaker 2L, O, V, E.
Speaker 2Four letters.
Speaker 2U, Y, O, U, three.
Speaker 2One, four, three.
Speaker 1I did not know that.
Speaker 2Get there faster, bro.
Speaker 1Wow, look at you.
Speaker 1Pop culture icon.
Speaker 1Arun.
Speaker 1Suck it.
Speaker 2Got you, bro.
Speaker 1I looked over to the booth like he was there too.
Speaker 2Wait, I should have paused for saying a man like this.
Speaker 2Wait, is this how it feels like to be you all the time or you just know the answer?
Speaker 2I should have taken that in for.
Speaker 2I should have taken that in for a little bit.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1All the hair on your arm standing up.
Speaker 1If I had hair, mine would be the same.
Speaker 2Exactly.
Speaker 1So I want to run over some job creation in tech.
Speaker 1I'm going to do this super fast.
Speaker 1This is from a Springer Ethical Implications of AI article.
Speaker 1As AI adoption expands, the demand for skilled workers in data science, AI engineering and ethics oversight continues to grow.
Speaker 1We need people to say, hey, does this make sense from a Sox control perspective?
Speaker 1If you don't, that is.
Speaker 1Sarbanes, Oxley, look it up.
Speaker 1The U.S.
Speaker 1bureau of Labor Statistics projects a 31% increase in data related jobs by 2030.
Speaker 1And I got some examples.
Speaker 2Oh, give me.
Speaker 1I'm here to give examples.
Speaker 1Okay.
Speaker 1You know, there's.
Speaker 1There's a lot that AI can do from.
Speaker 1From a job creation perspective, but I think.
Speaker 1Well, I think I got the list for you.
Speaker 2Hit me with it.
Speaker 1You don't seem very enthusiastic.
Speaker 1Can you try that again?
Speaker 2Hit me with it.
Speaker 1Okay, so on the ethical importance of meaningful work.
Speaker 1Meaningful work is ethically significant as it provides an important way to develop and exercise one's rational capacities and use them in ways that help others to meet their needs.
Speaker 1There's also a dual impact.
Speaker 1There's skill development and use on surveillance in work autonomy.
Speaker 1The use of AI to surveil workers will likely have similar impacts as traditional surveillance and can be a way for employers to use their power to exert control over their employees.
Speaker 1That's scary.
Speaker 1Now I don't.
Speaker 1I don't have to go.
Speaker 1Hey, you know, honestly, I've seen Saeed kind of around a little bit like, God, he just doesn't seem like he's efficient.
Speaker 1Now, AI will tell you, Saeed is 31% less efficient than Joseph.
Speaker 2Yeah, all those end of the year assessments are just going out the window.
Speaker 1Yeah, I don't need the assessment.
Speaker 2Yeah, AI is going to do it for me.
Speaker 1Hey Saeed, AI says you've been watching YouTube too much, right?
Speaker 1It's true.
Speaker 1On task significance, when AI amplifies a worker's abilities to do their current tasks, positive impacts on task integrity and skill cultivation and use should effectively.
Speaker 1These things are net benefits.
Speaker 1But it's going to change people on AI and equity.
Speaker 1AI can also be deployed to promote justice.
Speaker 1That is the judge example you referenced earlier.
Speaker 1Which can positively impact task significance.
Speaker 1For example, when AI is used to minimize bias and maximize evidence based decision making through giving workers access to new data driven insights.
Speaker 1This promotes fair outcomes in the tech sector.
Speaker 1On practical implications for organizations.
Speaker 1This one's interesting.
Speaker 1Organizational use of AI can reap many benefits through improved service range and quality, efficiency, even profitability.
Speaker 1However, the ethical deployment of AI requires weighing up its many costs and benefits.
Speaker 1So.
Speaker 2Okay, I wonder if.
Speaker 2Okay, the example of the judge again, let's just revisit this for a second.
Speaker 2Okay, so let's say you have a lawsuit, cases present their sides and you have AI of passing judgment.
Speaker 2I can see a world where, let's just say the judgment has to be passed by multiple AI models.
Speaker 2Can't just rely on the one.
Speaker 1Kind of like your three arbitrator panel.
Speaker 2Yes, exactly.
Speaker 2I could see that actually working a little bit better just to make sure that the outcome comes out the same.
Speaker 2Or if not, there's a majority.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2Because in case one gets trained one way versus the other.
Speaker 2I recently found out, listening to the Joe Rogan.
Speaker 2Joe Rogan.
Speaker 2Joe Rogan podcast.
Speaker 1Who's that?
Speaker 2Yeah, Mr.
Speaker 2Joe Rogan to you, sir.
Speaker 1Yeah, Mr.
Speaker 1Joseph Rogan.
Speaker 2Yeah, Mr.
Speaker 2Joseph, exactly.
Speaker 2That he was saying how.
Speaker 2I guess he's.
Speaker 2He used to be a huge like billiards player.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2Pool guy.
Speaker 2And these professionals that like play for money, they'll play 120 game matches.
Speaker 1I'm sorry, 120 games?
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2To find out who's the true better player.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2Because anybody.
Speaker 2Any.
Speaker 2So it takes multiple days.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 2Because he's like any person.
Speaker 2Like for instance, like if you and I did a three point shooting contest, you might beat me once just out of luck.
Speaker 2But if out of 120 games I'm gonna win a majority of them, you.
Speaker 1Can'T use bad examples where nobody believes you.
Speaker 1I mean that, that's not true.
Speaker 2You see.
Speaker 2So it's like.
Speaker 2Okay, so you have Three.
Speaker 2A three panel AI model where it's got to be the majority.
Speaker 1Yeah, Like Minority Report.
Speaker 2There you go.
Speaker 1Yeah, you got your three future.
Speaker 1Seeing people in a little jelly bath.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Just kind of chilling.
Speaker 2Look at you.
Speaker 1Yeah, see, I'm here.
Speaker 1I know people thinking, oh my God, guys, that's amazing, you guys.
Speaker 1All these positive gummies and lollies about AI.
Speaker 1But there are threats.
Speaker 1Oh, and I know that people think of China as like a third world country, but there's some.
Speaker 1There's some pretty sophisticated jobs in China.
Speaker 2Especially when you pass by the Tesla store now you see this robot staring at you.
Speaker 2You're like, God damn, please buy me.
Speaker 2I'm like, bro, it's.
Speaker 2This guy's gonna come for me first.
Speaker 2He's gonna look at me like, this guy's weak.
Speaker 2I got him.
Speaker 1Yeah, you are obsolete.
Speaker 1So I went on the path of reading about a particular freelance freelance illustrator named Amber Yu in China.
Speaker 1So there are some threats posed by AI, and I'm gonna give you one of the most obvious examples of it.
Speaker 1Generative AI tools like Mid Journey, if you haven't used it, it can create astonishing videos.
Speaker 1Are reducing the illustrators, particularly in sectors like gaming.
Speaker 1This trend is expected to spread globally, raising concerns about creative jobs becoming obsolete.
Speaker 1Freelance illustrator Amber Yu used to make 3,000 to 7,000 won yuan yuan.
Speaker 2That sounds fun.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1$430.
Speaker 1Approximately thousand US dollars.
Speaker 1I looked it up for every video game poster she drew.
Speaker 1Making the promotional posters published on social media to attract players and introduce new features was skill intensive and time consuming.
Speaker 1Once she spent an entire week completing one illustration for a woman dressed in traditional Chinese attire performing a lion dance, as in like the cat meow.
Speaker 1First making a sketch on Adobe Photoshop, then carefully refining the outlines and adding colors.
Speaker 1But since February of last year, 2024, these jobs, job opportunities, they vanished.
Speaker 1You told rest of world, which is the article I sourced here.
Speaker 1Gaming companies equipped with AI image generators can create a similar illustration in seconds.
Speaker 1You said they now simply offer to commission her for small fixes like tweaking the lighting in skewed body parts for a tenth of her original rate.
Speaker 1Recent breakthroughs in AI image generation with the release of programs such as Dall E, which is ChatGPT's image generator.
Speaker 1I use that as well.
Speaker 1Midjourney Fantastic in stable diffusion in 2022 have enabled users to produce impeccable drawings from text prompts.
Speaker 1In the past few months, Chinese video game companies, from tech giants like Tencent to indie game developers have begun using these programs to Design and create video game characters, backdrops and promotional materials.
Speaker 2Well, damn, damn.
Speaker 1But that's a real thing.
Speaker 1There's going to be a point.
Speaker 1I've seen movies now, like clips entirely created by mid journey and some of the AI tools that are out there.
Speaker 2Yeah, dude.
Speaker 2So they're going to be able to create whole movies out of this?
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2But the key thing here, right, is.
Speaker 2And I don't know if you.
Speaker 2I don't think you need to go and take a course for it.
Speaker 2I think just practicing how to prompt.
Speaker 2Over time you'll learn what works, what doesn't work, how to, you know, create exactly what you need.
Speaker 2I have an example here of a progression and prompting that I thought would be valuable for the listeners.
Speaker 1Oh, hit me with a prompt.
Speaker 2So this is a.
Speaker 2This is what would be considered a vague prompt.
Speaker 2Okay, tell me about AI.
Speaker 1Yeah, not good enough.
Speaker 2Not good enough.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 2It's too broad and it'll, it'll spit you out an answer, but not what you want.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1That's not the right way to go.
Speaker 2Here's an improved prompt.
Speaker 2Can you explain the role of artificial intelligence in healthcare, particularly in diagnosing diseases like cancer?
Speaker 2Okay.
Speaker 2You'll get a more general, general, but curtailed response.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2Next, a targeted prompt.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 2This is where the skill starts to come into play.
Speaker 2Explain how machine learning algorithms can be used to detect early stage lung cancer from CT scans.
Speaker 2Include examples of current AI tools and their effectiveness in clinical practice.
Speaker 1Yeah, you got to know what you want when you prompt.
Speaker 2Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2Exactly.
Speaker 2So it's, it's not, you gotta know, have a little bit of an understanding of the subject matter.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2You to.
Speaker 2In order to get what you want.
Speaker 2Exactly.
Speaker 2And now here is a refined prompt with context.
Speaker 2As a healthcare professional working in radiology, I'm interested in understanding how AI can assist with detecting early stage lung cancer.
Speaker 2Could you explain the science behind AI algorithms and mention specific AI tools like IBM, Watson or Google's health AI model?
Speaker 1Fantastic.
Speaker 2That's amazing.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2Now, obviously that takes time and practice in order to get to there, but definitely doable.
Speaker 2I mean, I know you've used it a lot for the podcast.
Speaker 1Right?
Speaker 2Yeah, I know.
Speaker 2For the images that you've created.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2And it takes a lot of.
Speaker 2There's a science to it.
Speaker 1I would say like 65, 70% of the podcast images that we generated for thumbnails has been AI, if not generated.
Speaker 1It's giving me the original inspiration.
Speaker 1I also use ChatGPT and basically what I do before I even create an episode, I create an outline for us to follow.
Speaker 1And then what I'll do is I'll kind of come up with some ideas and I'll really spitball back and forth on what I want to cover.
Speaker 1I generally feed in articles and topics that I want, and then I'll ask it to put them in a pattern or organizational cadence that it makes sense for us.
Speaker 2A nice flow, right?
Speaker 1Nice flow.
Speaker 1And then I'll usually say, hey, I want some more data around this topic, and I'll be a little more specific.
Speaker 1And then by the time I actually record the show, I'll download the transcript of us speaking to one another, put it back into AI, say this was the result of it, give me some ideas for title, give me some ideas for show notes, give me some ideas for thumbnails.
Speaker 1And I just have, like a couple prompts that I continue to reuse and recycle through it.
Speaker 1But basically the way it works now is it's actually one project under ChatGPT, and then I'll feed back into it the final product.
Speaker 1So if I make a final thumbnail, feed it back into it and say, look, this is kind of the aesthetic I want.
Speaker 1Remember this for next time.
Speaker 1And it does.
Speaker 2Beautiful.
Speaker 1So it's gotten sharper and sharper, and I've gotten better at prompting, too.
Speaker 1But.
Speaker 1So I'm going to give you and our listening audience an option here.
Speaker 1I have a lot more on this.
Speaker 1And to give you an idea of a flavor of what a lot more is, is we're about halfway through the content that I have on AI, and it gets more and more specific the longer we go down.
Speaker 1I have a really fascinating segment on economic inequality and how AI is going to create inequality from an economic perspective and further exasperate the wealth gap.
Speaker 1I've got ethical concerns, AI bias and privacy risks, addressing equity and ethics and AI in general, which is a really fascinating article.
Speaker 1And it talks about kind of the inflection point.
Speaker 1And it's a Stanford study, really good.
Speaker 1And it's very long.
Speaker 1And then I have.
Speaker 1It's very long.
Speaker 1It's a whole psychology breakdown.
Speaker 1I have the balance of power from the EU's AI act, where the EU has now got rules they're putting in place, which in order to use AI in the European Union, you're going to have to follow some of these rules.
Speaker 1This is for an article from Computer Weekly preparing for an AI regulation, which is fascinating to see how they're kind of on the forefront of it, which I think is really interesting.
Speaker 1Then I have it in the role of education.
Speaker 1A lot of us have kids.
Speaker 1So how AI is going to change the workforce and AI driven economy with education and how we learn and how we interact, it's going to be fascinating.
Speaker 1And then I've also got some actual insights for listeners, for job seekers, for businesses and for investors that we could break down.
Speaker 1We could do this in a part two.
Speaker 2I definitely think all of these should be expanded on more than us just rushing through it for the sake of the listeners.
Speaker 1So here's what I'll do is we typically don't cover technology like we did tonight.
Speaker 1We usually focus more on the finances.
Speaker 1And yes, inflation numbers came out.
Speaker 1But I also want to take a bit of a reprieve.
Speaker 1The inflation numbers were largely in line with expectations.
Speaker 1I didn't think that anything that really happened this week from a finance perspective was particularly incendiary or fascinating.
Speaker 2And let's just say at the end of the day, they're not cutting rates.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2So the right now you don't gotta worry about the job prints.
Speaker 2Yeah, the job prints, the inflation prints.
Speaker 2I mean, unless they start speaking about potentially hiking again, which they have dabbled in a little bit just to keep the option on the table.
Speaker 2But it's not really an outcome that's.
Speaker 2No one's taking this likely right right now.
Speaker 2So for now they're not moving rates.
Speaker 1So let us know.
Speaker 1If you listen to the show and you like the AI content and you want us to do two things, let us know in the comments.
Speaker 1Whether you're on Spotify, YouTube, drop a comment or if you're, you know, listening to Apple podcasts, you're welcome to send us an email.
Speaker 1Do you want to hear more about AI and this particular topics that I covered and do you want to do us to do a full breakdown of supercomputing?
Speaker 1I think it's fascinating and I got some friends that are experts in that area that I could probably bring in or call in to talk about it.
Speaker 2We should definitely do that.
Speaker 1So the quantum computing thing is so much more fascinating than people realize.
Speaker 1It's not just nerding on a computer.
Speaker 1It's.
Speaker 1It's nerding out that there is a potential for us tapping into things that we don't fully understand and what that means.
Speaker 1It's so cool.
Speaker 2Yeah, we should definitely do that.
Speaker 2Leave us a comment down below if you enjoyed this episode and if you want more of it, if that's you watching over on YouTube, subscribe, hit that like button, ring that notification bell.
Speaker 2Or if you're listening to us on Apple or Spotify.
Speaker 2Leave us a five star review because that means you're being honest, and then we'll do more of it.
Speaker 1If those of you missed out the video portion of this episode, I am wearing a pink hoodie.
Speaker 1You know what?
Speaker 1I'm out here.
Speaker 1Thriller in Manila.
Speaker 1This is my shout out to the Filipinos out there.
Speaker 1What's up?
Speaker 1I got your back.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2That's why you're allowed to do the accent.
Speaker 1I got the Filipino flag on the sleeve.
Speaker 2Because you're rep.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2You're representing them and you're married to a Filipino.
Speaker 1My wife is.
Speaker 2Is what?
Speaker 1Is amazing.
Speaker 1I've never actually seen her culture.
Speaker 1I just see beauty.
Speaker 2Oh, what?
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1I didn't know she was Filipino.
Speaker 1So you said something right now.
Speaker 2Stop.
Speaker 2Did she carry over any culture?
Speaker 1My wife.
Speaker 2Yeah, any Filipino culture.
Speaker 2Into, like, into you guys house or.
Speaker 1Not really.
Speaker 2Really?
Speaker 1Yeah, my wife is.
Speaker 2My wife is watered down a lot, too.
Speaker 1No, no, seriously.
Speaker 1No.
Speaker 1I've known your wife since she was a kid.
Speaker 1What are you talking about?
Speaker 1She's not watered down.
Speaker 1She's very Afghan.
Speaker 2No, no, no.
Speaker 2Not very.
Speaker 1Oh, yeah.
Speaker 2No, no.
Speaker 2Dude, I had to beg.
Speaker 2I had to beg for an Afghan rug in the house because I love Afghan rugs.
Speaker 2I was like, we got to have one thing culturally in the house, bro.
Speaker 2Yeah, okay.
Speaker 2That's African.
Speaker 2Rugs are my thing.
Speaker 1I.
Speaker 1Look, I also appreciate rugs.
Speaker 1We're totally building the stereotype here, but it's okay.
Speaker 2We're allowed to.
Speaker 1No, look, I like.
Speaker 1I like.
Speaker 1Look, I think if you have a very contemporary interior, having like a.
Speaker 1A cultural flair, like to your rug, you know, add something to the room.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1It says this guy who lives here knows his culture and knows how much he doesn't like it.
Speaker 2He's proud of it, too.
Speaker 1He's modestly proud of it.
Speaker 2Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1I get it.
Speaker 2Well, some of that's got to get carried over onto the kids.
Speaker 2It's good for them, man.
Speaker 1I don't think just because you have a rug, the kids are gonna be like, oh, we're Afghan.
Speaker 2No, but it can spark conversations, right?
Speaker 1I don't think your kids are going to have many conversations about rugs in your house, brother.
Speaker 2Oh, I'm gonna make sure of it.
Speaker 1Okay.
Speaker 2No, not you.
Speaker 2Not so much.
Speaker 1My son's got a whole identity crisis coming his way from an ethnicity standpoint.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1He's gonna be very confused.
Speaker 2There's gonna be some soul searching.
Speaker 1Daddy, what am I?
Speaker 1You know what, son?
Speaker 1You're a child of the world.
Speaker 2There you go.
Speaker 1Because I'm like French, German, Dutch, a lot of North Africans.
Speaker 2What are your handsome.
Speaker 2That's what you are.
Speaker 2So, yeah, you're welcome.
Speaker 1And I, I had the realization early.
Speaker 1So when my wife gave birth.
Speaker 1This is a true story.
Speaker 1I think a lot of dads can relate to this.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 1When you have a child as a father, you don't have the same bond that the mom does when she carried the child for nine months.
Speaker 2I have had this conversation.
Speaker 2I couldn't agree more.
Speaker 1And it took me a long time to reconcile with the guilt that I felt not being as connected on day one.
Speaker 2Bro.
Speaker 2Why do we feel so.
Speaker 2I felt so bad too, throughout the whole process.
Speaker 2No, no offense to my kids.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2I.
Speaker 2I did not feel connected to them.
Speaker 2They were inside, you know.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2You know, the womb.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 2But I was, I was just feeling for my wife the entire time, like, you're going through this, and I feel bad that I can't go through it for you.
Speaker 1And this 8-10 lb screaming larvae comes out, Right.
Speaker 1And you're holding it and you're in this surreal moment because your wife's drugged up.
Speaker 1Right.
Speaker 2It's all on you.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 1You're holding everything.
Speaker 1And you're in this moment where you should feel connected and relief and, and you.
Speaker 1I.
Speaker 1I felt like the obligations, but I didn't feel the connection right away.
Speaker 1And I don't, I don't know really how to, to get and express it out.
Speaker 1But I think a lot of fathers feel this, like, internal guilt mechanism.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1But I knew in this moment that my son was different than me.
Speaker 1He came out and he looks super Asian.
Speaker 2Oh, okay.
Speaker 1Super Asian.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1I was like, baby, who did?
Speaker 1Who?
Speaker 1The baby daddy.
Speaker 1Even my wife was like, wait a minute.
Speaker 1But.
Speaker 1And the sad part is, you know, I'm.
Speaker 1I'm partially Iranian, so there's like an Asian adjacent part of my culture.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1One country over Afghanistan.
Speaker 1Technically Asia.
Speaker 2Technically Asia.
Speaker 1Iran.
Speaker 1Technically Middle East.
Speaker 1I don't know why.
Speaker 1Who draws this Middle East Asia boundary, But that's the thing.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2I feel like the Afghans are like, we don't want to be any part of them.
Speaker 2So they're, they're, they're really so worried.
Speaker 1And I'm wrong.
Speaker 1My son looks exactly like me now.
Speaker 1But.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1I realized in that moment, like, oh, my God, like, he's half Filipino.
Speaker 1He's half one thing.
Speaker 1I've never been half one thing my entire life.
Speaker 1Like, that was such a.
Speaker 1An epiphany.
Speaker 1Moment for me, like, oh, my God.
Speaker 1Like, I.
Speaker 1My mom's French, German, Dutch, American Indian.
Speaker 1My dad's, you know, Jewish, German, Iranian.
Speaker 1I mean, it's just.
Speaker 1And it's this multi cocktail of, like, whatever the hell I am that came out with.
Speaker 1And my son's more of one thing than I am.
Speaker 2Right.
Speaker 1That was a big, like, moment for me, going, like, wait a minute.
Speaker 1He has more ethnic certainty than I do.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 1Wow.
Speaker 1So I'm the problem?
Speaker 2You're the problem.
Speaker 2Yeah, you're the problem.
Speaker 2To get rid of the problem, bro.
Speaker 1Can't get rid of me.
Speaker 2No, no.
Speaker 2Can't do it.
Speaker 1Here to stay.
Speaker 2Yeah, there you go.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2Unless I have something to do with it.
Speaker 1You know, I found out a little.
Speaker 2Trick is going to definitely see you as a threat and be like, get rid of this motherfucker.
Speaker 1If you ever look at my hairline in any of the thumbnails, I figured out that if I could circle my hairline and just say, make thicker, I get an actual thicker hairline from AI.
Speaker 2You've done it, haven't you?
Speaker 1Oh, and AI knows I need this now.
Speaker 2Just remember this for next time.
Speaker 1You want me to make your hairline thicker?
Speaker 2Chris, you forgot this prompt.
Speaker 2Christopher.
Speaker 1I did it last time.
Speaker 1Now, none of y'all said anything, okay?
Speaker 1Y'all all thought it was natural.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2That's good, man.
Speaker 2All right, you got anything else?
Speaker 1No.
Speaker 1I'm gonna go break down another wall.
Speaker 2Yeah.
Speaker 2Oh, yeah.
Speaker 2Let's go.
Speaker 1Let's go hammer this some holes.
Speaker 2Let's do this.
Speaker 1Stress out.
Speaker 2Good night, everybody.
Speaker 1The long one.