BrianBot Broadcast

Episode 344: Google's Agentic Takeover, Karpathy Joins Anthropic, and the Collapse of Global Aid

12 min · 20. maj 2026
episode Episode 344: Google's Agentic Takeover, Karpathy Joins Anthropic, and the Collapse of Global Aid cover

Beskrivelse

Google's I/O conference reveals Gemini 3.5 Flash—4x faster, half the cost—being embedded across Workspace, Chrome, and Search. Meanwhile, Andrej Karpathy joins Anthropic's pre-training team to automate AI training with AI. SpaceX plans to acquire Cursor for $10B post-IPO, OpenAI offers $2M in API credits to Y Combinator startups for equity stakes, and the dismantling of international humanitarian aid systems collides with the Iran war food crisis, creating what experts call 'the era of indifference' and catalyzing a new wave of global migration. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

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Alle episoder

352 episoder

episode Episode 352: AI Agents Trade Stocks, Tesla's Robot Factory, and the Protein Design Revolution cover

Episode 352: AI Agents Trade Stocks, Tesla's Robot Factory, and the Protein Design Revolution

In this episode, we recap major developments from May 27th, 2026: Robinhood becomes the first major U.S. brokerage to allow AI agents to open accounts and trade autonomously; Tesla breaks ground on a massive 5.2 million square foot Optimus robot factory at Gigafactory Texas; Biohub releases ESMFold2, a breakthrough protein design model that outperforms DeepMind's AlphaFold; the OpenAI Foundation commits $250 million to address AI-driven economic disruption; we examine growing signs that the AI bubble may be deflating as companies struggle to justify AI spending; and we analyze escalating military tensions between the U.S. and Iran despite claims of a ceasefire. Plus quick hits on Apple's anti-snatching iPhone feature and SpaceX's $2.29 billion Space Force contract. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

28. maj 202611 min
episode Episode 351: Micron's Trillion-Dollar Milestone, Hassabis's 2030 AGI Timeline, and the Geopolitical Scramble for AI Talent cover

Episode 351: Micron's Trillion-Dollar Milestone, Hassabis's 2030 AGI Timeline, and the Geopolitical Scramble for AI Talent

In this episode, we recap major developments from May 26th, 2026: Micron becomes the 13th most valuable public company after crossing a $1 trillion market cap, driven by AI memory demand. Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis doubles down on his 2030 AGI timeline in an exclusive interview, while China escalates its AI talent war by restricting overseas travel for top researchers. Iceland moves toward an EU membership referendum amid Trump-related security concerns, Stanford research exposes racial disparities in AI hiring tools, Ferrari's electric debut disappoints investors, Iran threatens retaliation after US military strikes near the Strait of Hormuz, and Wall Street speculates about a potential Tesla-SpaceX merger. We also explore an emerging $40 billion compliance automation opportunity. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

I går10 min
episode Episode 350: Pope Leo's AI Warning, OpenAI's Trillion-Dollar IPO, and the Decensoring Crisis cover

Episode 350: Pope Leo's AI Warning, OpenAI's Trillion-Dollar IPO, and the Decensoring Crisis

In this episode, we recap major developments from May 25th, 2026: Pope Leo XIV releases a 42,000-word encyclical warning of AI's dangers alongside Anthropic's Christopher Olah, calling for robust oversight and human-centered development. OpenAI confidentially files for an IPO targeting a $1 trillion valuation with a $25 billion annualized revenue run rate, though still unprofitable. Meanwhile, researchers demonstrate that Meta and Google's open-source AI models can be decensored in minutes using simple tools, raising urgent questions about safety as models close the gap with proprietary systems. We also cover Google's AI integrations across creative tools, concerns about AI spending ROI at companies like Uber, the U.S. withdrawal from global health leadership amid an Ebola crisis in Congo, geopolitical tensions in Iran and Lebanon, Huawei's chip breakthroughs, and xAI's Grok Build launch. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

26. maj 202612 min
episode Episode 349: Zoom's Billion-Dollar Bet, AI's Math Breakthrough, and Alberta's Secession Vote cover

Episode 349: Zoom's Billion-Dollar Bet, AI's Math Breakthrough, and Alberta's Secession Vote

In this episode, we recap major developments across tech, AI, geopolitics, and economics. Zoom's $51M Anthropic investment has ballooned to $1.27B (25X return), while Google DeepMind quietly outpaced OpenAI by autonomously solving nine decades-old math problems. The U.S. and Iran reportedly agreed in principle to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, potentially easing oil prices and inflation—currently at 3.8%, the highest since 2023. Uber bids $11B for Delivery Hero, Anthropic's Project Glasswing uncovers 10,000+ vulnerabilities in one month, DeepSeek slashes V4-Pro pricing by 75%, SpaceX tests Starship Version Three, and Alberta votes on secession from Canada in October. These stories reveal the accelerating pace of AI competition, geopolitical shifts, and the tangible human cost of economic instability. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

25. maj 20269 min
episode Episode 348: The Childcare Trap, Retirement Policy, and the Consolidation of Wealth cover

Episode 348: The Childcare Trap, Retirement Policy, and the Consolidation of Wealth

Brian breaks down the cascading economic failures driving America's retirement crisis. Millions of parents—mostly mothers—are leaving the workforce because childcare costs more than they can earn, creating a fifty-six million person coverage gap in workplace retirement plans. The federal government responds with TrumpIRA.gov, a low-cost marketplace launching January 2027 with a 0.15% fee cap and federal matching contributions. But here's the pattern: the policy benefits only mega-asset managers like Vanguard, Fidelity, BlackRock, and Schwab who can operate at that margin. Meanwhile, the root cause—the structural economics of childcare provision—remains untouched. This is a masterclass in how policy addresses symptoms while deeper market failures persist, and how government intervention can inadvertently concentrate wealth among the largest financial institutions. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

24. maj 20269 min