YPO Technology Network AI Brief

The Labs Disagree — What To Do When the People Building AI Don't Agree About What AI Will Do

11 min · 28. maj 2026
episode The Labs Disagree — What To Do When the People Building AI Don't Agree About What AI Will Do cover

Description

On Tuesday, in Sydney, Sam Altman — the CEO of OpenAI — publicly walked back the white-collar jobs apocalypse he had warned about. Quote: "I'm delighted to be wrong about this." Forty-eight hours after our Tuesday episode argued the opposite, the CEO of the most valuable AI lab in the world said the thesis is wrong. Or at least premature. The story is not Altman versus Suleyman. The deeper story — what does a CEO do when the people building this technology no longer agree about what it is going to do? And while that disagreement is playing out, two other things happened this week that no one in your executive team is going to brief you on. DeepSeek, the leading Chinese AI lab, made a 75% V4-Pro price cut permanent — locking in margin pressure on OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google. And Microsoft just blocked Databricks from connecting to Power BI — the latest "toll gate" being erected by platform owners (Workday, ServiceNow, HubSpot are doing the same) to control which AI agents can act on your data. Stephen Forte argues: the AI market just stratified along three axes. Labor — no consensus. Cost — collapsing. Distribution — locking up. A CEO needs a position on all three. Three things to do this week: * Write a one-page scenario for what your company looks like under both Altman's and Suleyman's labor timelines. Hand it to your board. * Pull your two largest AI vendor renewals into a single review. If the per-token cost assumption dates from 2025, send it back. * Ask your CIO to map your semantic layer dependencies — where "revenue," "customer," and "order" actually get defined. That's where your AI agent strategy lives. The most useful thing the people building this technology have done all year is tell you, by disagreeing publicly, that you are allowed to disagree too. The AI Brief is produced for YPO Technology Network members. New episodes every weekday at 6 AM ET.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the YPO Technology Network AI Brief community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

80 episodes

episode The Reckoning artwork

The Reckoning

Two new principals just walked into every room where AI decisions are being made — the federal government and public markets. President Trump signed an executive order on June 2 creating a framework for government pre-release access to frontier AI models. Anthropic picked Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs to lead its IPO. OpenAI is targeting a fall IPO. SpaceX filed for the largest IPO in history. Three of your most critical AI vendors are heading to public markets simultaneously. This episode covers what both developments mean for enterprise buyers — the voluntary framework that may not be truly voluntary, and what publicly traded AI vendors mean for your contracts, roadmap commitments, and vendor risk model. Two desk actions: review your Anthropic/OpenAI contracts before the IPO window, and read Sections 2 and 3 of the executive order if you are in financial services, healthcare, critical infrastructure, or defense.

5. juni 202610 min
episode The Agents Are Already Inside artwork

The Agents Are Already Inside

You did not approve these agents. There was no vendor evaluation, no procurement process, no board sign-off. But they are running in your environment today. This episode covers three agents that arrived without the normal enterprise procurement process: Microsoft Scout — the always-on ambient AI agent now live inside Microsoft 365; Accenture's strategic investment in AlphaSense — the agentic market intelligence platform used by ninety percent of the S&P 100; and Anthropic's Mythos cybersecurity AI, now running in over one hundred fifty organizations across fifteen countries including critical infrastructure. The question is not whether to adopt AI agents. That decision has already been made for you. The question is whether you know what they are authorized to do. Three desk actions: ask your CTO what Scout is authorized to do in your environment; find out if your top competitors are using AlphaSense; and if you are in critical infrastructure, ask your security team about Glasswing access.

Yesterday10 min
episode AI Moves Onto the Device artwork

AI Moves Onto the Device

For the last four years, serious AI mostly meant sending prompts to a cloud data center and paying the meter. This episode looks at two announcements that point in a different direction: Microsoft turning Windows into a runtime for persistent agents, and Nvidia pushing data-center-class AI compute into laptops and deskside workstations. The business question is not whether cloud AI goes away. It does not. The question is whether some of the most sensitive, expensive, and operationally important AI work starts moving closer to where the data and the people already are. * Microsoft: Windows Agent Framework points toward agents that live inside the operating system, persist across tasks, and use local memory under user control. * Nvidia: RTX Spark puts serious local inference capability into enterprise laptops and workstations, changing the hardware-refresh conversation. * Executive takeaway: If your AI strategy assumes cloud-only deployment, that assumption is about to be tested by cost, privacy, and governance pressure. Two action items for leaders: put RTX Spark-class machines into the fall hardware evaluation, and have IT run a Windows Agent Framework proof of concept before the procurement cycle closes.

2. juni 202610 min
episode The Bill Has Arrived artwork

The Bill Has Arrived

At Microsoft Build 2026, the company unveiled its MAI family of frontier AI models, a direct shot across the bow at Claude Code and OpenAI's developer tools. GitHub Copilot simultaneously announced a switch from flat-rate to token-based billing, with some enterprise teams reporting monthly invoices jumping from $29 to over $750. Meanwhile, an unnamed Fortune 100 client quietly accumulated a $500 million Claude API bill in a single month, and law firm Kirkland and Ellis committed half a billion dollars to build a proprietary AI platform rather than rely on off-the-shelf tools. Three action items for CEOs this week: audit every flat-rate AI contract before your next renewal, set hard token budget ceilings at the team level before bills arrive, and watch Microsoft Build announcements closely for capability shifts that could reorder your vendor stack.

1. juni 202610 min