On this week’s episode of The Rebooting Show, I was joined by Alex Kantrowitz, who writes the Big Technology newsletter and hosts a podcast of the same name, in order to discuss the year ahead in tech platforms. We covered a lot of ground, including:
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Welcome to The Rebooting Show.
Brian:I'm Brian Morrissey.
Brian:I'm spending January on some preview episodes of the year ahead.
Brian:this is poised to be a pivotal year in the media business.
Brian:I mean, already the year has begun, unfortunately, with cuts at the Washington Post, at Vox Media, at HuffPost.
Brian:and this tracks with a lot of my conversations that I'm having.
Brian:2024, wasn't a great year for the industry and 2025 is set to be another year of retrenchment.
Brian:While at the same time retooling for a vastly changed environment.
Brian:And I don't think there's any use sugarcoating that exactly.
Brian:but it's hard not to contrast the state of affairs, with that in the tech industry and particularly the
Brian:biggest tech platforms, now often called the mag seven or magnificent seven.
Brian:These companies, saw their market caps grow 63 percent in 2024, as they rode the wave of excitement about AI.
Brian:Meanwhile, publishers.
Brian:Fred about a I further compressing their already compressed businesses.
Brian:the mag seven accounted for fully 75 percent of the S and P five hundreds growth last year, just to give you a sense
Brian:of just how powerful the tech industry has become in this country and big tech.
Brian:Has become an entrenched power center, no matter how much cosplaying it's many vocal cheerleaders on acts like
Brian:to do about how unfairly treated they are by the quote unquote elites.
Brian:and I often say media is downstream of big tech, which controls the distribution and,
Brian:also eats up most of the monetization as the duopoly has expanded to an oligopoly.
Brian:so to get a read on the year ahead in big tech, I had to turn to Alex Kantrowitz, who writes the Big Technology
Brian:Newsletter and hosts a podcast of the same name, in order to discuss, what we should expect, and get his analysis
Brian:of, the different moves that, the big technology companies will be making.
Brian:We discussed in this episode, the slightly unseemly kowtowing to
Brian:the incoming Trump administration we've seen from Meta and others.
Brian:Open AIs, wonky economics, Alex's, surprising bet on AI companions being a breakout, uh, AI AI product,
Brian:why X has proven its doomsayers, wrong, and, the bright spot of
Brian:individual creators amid a lot of this, media industry doom and gloom.
Brian:I hope you enjoyed this conversation with Alex, I did, be sure to check out the Big Technology newsletter and podcast, I'm
Brian:going to include links to it in the show notes, But first, thank you to EX.CO for
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Brian:Thanks so much, Ex.Co.
Brian:And now onto my conversation with Alex.
Brian:All right, Alex, welcome back to the podcast.
Brian:Thanks for joining me for this little look ahead at a big technology.
Brian:I thought who better to like, look at the year ahead, the Mr.
Brian:Big technology himself.
Alex Kantrowitz:Thank you, Brian.
Alex Kantrowitz:Great to be here.
Brian:Okay.
Brian:So let's get right into it.
Brian:I mean, we're coming off like last week.
Brian:meta, you know, made waves with, with Mark Zuckerberg coming out and saying the content moderation.
Brian:he built is coming down and it was all the media's fault or various
Brian:other liberals and it's basically genuflecting, I think, to, to Trump.
Brian:I mean, they just killed their D.
Brian:I, infrastructure to today.
Brian:So I, and they just been making all these kinds of moves, but I want to get into to that part.
Brian:right now.
Brian:So this seems part of big texts like Trump accommodation.
Brian:is that fair to say?
Brian:And what are you seeing across all these?
Brian:And how will this play out in the year ahead?
Alex Kantrowitz:Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg have always played to the political winds.
Alex Kantrowitz:himself has talked about how basically, He doesn't have any like
Alex Kantrowitz:real values or morals in terms of like what should be on Facebook.
Alex Kantrowitz:He just wants to give people what they want.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I think it was pretty clear in his statement that he saw what people want, wanted in the election in 2024.
Alex Kantrowitz:And that's Trump and the associated policies and the associated dialogue,
Alex Kantrowitz:I suppose, and said, okay, well, we're going to go with that.
Alex Kantrowitz:So that sort of fits his content moderation philosophy.
Alex Kantrowitz:And of course, there's a lot to be gained.
Alex Kantrowitz:when it comes to trying to get in the good graces of this administration, which Zuckerberg has seen, which Tim
Alex Kantrowitz:Cook has definitely seen, he's going to donate to the inauguration, which Jeff Bezos has seen, he's now, you know, he's
Alex Kantrowitz:going to be best buds with Trump, and which Elon Musk has seen, and they all stand to gain a lot by having the U.
Alex Kantrowitz:S.
Alex Kantrowitz:government basically say, we're going to be on your side on the issues that You care about, especially after the last
Alex Kantrowitz:bunch of years where the U S government has been strongly anti big tech.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I think that we're, you know, of course the tech clash started under
Alex Kantrowitz:Trump where we started to talk about like the power of these companies.
Alex Kantrowitz:And, you know, we just started to see the DOJ and the FTCs to bring cases against them.
Alex Kantrowitz:but the tides are shifting.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think the big tech has taken the government's best shot and is still standing and sort of like
Alex Kantrowitz:the government sees that these companies aren't going away.
Alex Kantrowitz:And these companies now see an opportunity to change the narrative and change their relationship with the government.
Alex Kantrowitz:And they're doing what they can, you know, pragmatically to get in Trump's good graces.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:I think sometimes it's, it's almost forgotten that this is how companies sort
Brian:of always acted until all of a sudden they sort of became into social activity.
Brian:Like that was, that was a, that was a departure from the norm and we're sort of back in the norm.
Brian:I mean, companies are not about, they're about delivering shareholder value.
Brian:That that's what they do.
Brian:They're not about furthering causes exactly and I think we got into some kind of a historical period
Brian:probably between 2017 and like into, I guess, up to the election, but I think it was sort of petering out.
Brian:anyway,
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:One thing Matt Stoller, had this great tweet where he's, he's like actively watching Zuckerberg on Joe Rogan, which
Alex Kantrowitz:of course, Zuckerberg went on to sort of herald the end of DEI at Facebook.
Alex Kantrowitz:And Stoller says, Matt, Mark Zuckerberg doesn't care about any of this stuff.
Alex Kantrowitz:He wants one, an end to the FTC antitrust suit against the firm to removing the consent degree that bans
Alex Kantrowitz:the targeting of children and three, the government to legalize mass copyright violations for AI training models.
Alex Kantrowitz:And it's like, yeah, that's it.
Alex Kantrowitz:It's pretty simple.
Alex Kantrowitz:This is a business and this is Zuckerberg doing business things.
Brian:Yeah, that's right.
Brian:It's almost kind of silly to be like debating the sort of merits of it.
Brian:Cause it's, it's, that's what it, that's what it comes down to, but let's, let's
Brian:actually bring that into, you know, how, how much big tech is now embedded.
Brian:With the government, because, you know, we're seeing, and maybe that's not necessarily big tech, but tech
Brian:overall, let's just say, because there's now becoming just like there was in the finance industry.
Brian:And when Goldman Sachs was government sacks, and there was just a regular sort of pipeline between the treasury
Brian:department and Goldman Sachs that, you know, people from the technology industry are now heading to Washington.
Brian:They're part of this, this very strange MAGA coalition.
Brian:I mean, I think it's very interesting because we saw the debates over, The use of H 1B, visas that erupted where, there's
Brian:clear fissures between what, you know, the, the investors, the people that from the tech industry who invested in the
Brian:Trump campaign, and, you know, the, the, the grassroots MAGA, America First people.
Brian:so, I mean, how do you, I mean, it seems inevitable that, that the technology industry overall is going
Brian:to be, you know, More enmeshed with the government because the technology
Brian:industry is, is one of our, one of the nation's biggest competitive advantages.
Alex Kantrowitz:absolutely.
Alex Kantrowitz:And so I think it really begins.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, there's so much opportunity there for the tech industry to sell into government.
Alex Kantrowitz:To have government bless some of the policies that they want.
Alex Kantrowitz:And we just talked about some of the policies that Zuckerberg is interested.
Alex Kantrowitz:And this sort of combining of private enterprise and government, right?
Alex Kantrowitz:Sort of like kind of central part of the American system.
Alex Kantrowitz:only seems like it's going to get, you know, much more, enmeshed
Alex Kantrowitz:as the tech industry and the Trump administration get closer.
Alex Kantrowitz:of course there was a period within Silicon Valley where all
Alex Kantrowitz:the employees protested, military contracts, which is just one part.
Alex Kantrowitz:Of, cloud computing's relationship with the U.
Alex Kantrowitz:S.
Alex Kantrowitz:government.
Alex Kantrowitz:the companies have basically said, like, Stop protesting or we're going to fire you.
Alex Kantrowitz:I know that Google has fired some people who were against some of its cloud contracts, with certain governments.
Alex Kantrowitz:And we also see Microsoft has taken like a pretty strong stance that they were like, we're just going to use our
Alex Kantrowitz:technology and basically give it to the government for the purposes they want.
Alex Kantrowitz:And that will make a strong country.
Alex Kantrowitz:and so I was, I was speaking with the Garmin, last late last year,
Alex Kantrowitz:and he said, look like we only have about 20 percent of all computing.
Alex Kantrowitz:That's moved to the cloud and 80 percent that's still being done,
Alex Kantrowitz:like in servers within companies and governments and agencies.
Alex Kantrowitz:And his goal is to flip that to go from 20 percent cloud and 80 percent on prem to do 80 percent cloud and 20 percent the rest.
Alex Kantrowitz:And like, how do you do that?
Alex Kantrowitz:You move really reluctant.
Alex Kantrowitz:Organizations, who don't want to change, you move them to change.
Alex Kantrowitz:And so you can do that by selling into the government and getting them to move a lot of what they do to the cloud.
Alex Kantrowitz:And that sort of helps you get to that number.
Alex Kantrowitz:So there's, there's definite advantages to be had for Microsoft, for Google and for Amazon on that front.
Alex Kantrowitz:And then there's just the obvious stuff.
Alex Kantrowitz:There's Elon Musk who wants to get SpaceX to take more of a
Alex Kantrowitz:load for For the government and further advance the space program.
Alex Kantrowitz:There's Jeff Bezos.
Alex Kantrowitz:He wants to do the same thing with Blue Origin.
Alex Kantrowitz:There's even there's meta again.
Alex Kantrowitz:Part of Zuckerberg's announcement today wasn't only like, you know, we wanted like now pursue the similar policies to Trump.
Alex Kantrowitz:So please, like, you know, get us, get us these benefits where you can.
Alex Kantrowitz:But they also say, listen, like we have other governments that are pushing us.
Alex Kantrowitz:to take down content.
Alex Kantrowitz:We don't want that.
Alex Kantrowitz:We don't want to do that.
Alex Kantrowitz:And we need an ally in the White House and we're going to look to you.
Alex Kantrowitz:So it's all across the board that these companies and the government are just going to get closer and closer.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:And, and also when you think about AI, right, I mean, I remember, like, I, I wrote a little bit about this last
Brian:week and I got, I got a email from, from someone in Europe and then you always get, you always get reminded
Brian:when you get an email from someone from Europe about like data privacy stuff.
Brian:And to think about like the AI, like, I don't think there's going to be, I don't know what, how the New York
Brian:Times lawsuit's going to go, but like, you know, this, we're, we're just very business oriented and we're not like
Brian:going to like hold her, you know, we're not, we're not going to get, hung up in, in a lot of, I don't think the data
Brian:privacy stuff, but when you think about, and Zuckerberg has mentioned not being able to deploy some of their models
Brian:in Europe, and, you know, with all of these advances in AI, it's all based
Brian:on a lot of presumptions of things that you can do with data and people's data.
Brian:I mean, this example from someone, was was saying, well, if they're like combining a lot of data,
Brian:About someone that is violating these data privacy, restrictions.
Brian:I'm like, it seems like it's gonna be a mess in Europe when it comes to a I, and deploying a lot of this because one.
Brian:Let's be real.
Brian:I mean, this tech was not built there and they don't really love the idea of, being so far behind in it, in tech overall.
Brian:and to, you know, you're, you know, they regulate, they regulate a lot.
Brian:And, that's That's just how they do, do things.
Brian:And so that, that gets ironed out on the governmental level.
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:Unless you have like, I don't know, maybe a strict lobbying from the U S government and even that probably won't do it.
Alex Kantrowitz:You're just not going to get this AI stuff.
Alex Kantrowitz:In Europe, like one of the biggest tells his Apple intelligence, which
Alex Kantrowitz:does nothing, is not being released in Europe because of data privacy issues.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I think at least in the near term, the AI that's going to be most useful
Alex Kantrowitz:to us outside of those of us that use like the chat, GPTs and clouds.
Alex Kantrowitz:is going to be from companies like Google that will take our Gmail, our
Alex Kantrowitz:docs, our calendar, and as they've been doing this for a while, right?
Alex Kantrowitz:You get a flight confirmation in Gmail, it goes on your Google calendar before you even put it there.
Alex Kantrowitz:so they're going to start to really max this out with Gen AI.
Alex Kantrowitz:And, You're just not going to be able to use that in Europe, because there's
Alex Kantrowitz:going to be all these concerns that the European commission will have.
Alex Kantrowitz:And it's not worth it for these companies to launch there.
Alex Kantrowitz:If they're going to get hit with these fines.
Alex Kantrowitz:And it's amazing because every couple of days, it seems like there's another story about a new one, two, three,
Alex Kantrowitz:5 billion fine that Europe levies on these tech companies, which like at one point, like, it's like, all right,
Alex Kantrowitz:well, they're not going to, you know, pull out of your countries completely.
Alex Kantrowitz:but on the other hand, they're like, well, why are we going to launch something new?
Alex Kantrowitz:If we're just going to be fined, so, and you're not a big enough market to take that risk.
Brian:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:in Europe.
Brian:And, and it's like, I think it's part of the overall, like, you know, the, I guess it's the splinter net.
Brian:I know it's, it's beyond internet now, but like, it's not the, the WW of WWWs is kind of gone because there's different,
Brian:there's going to be different like versions in a lot of different countries because a lot of, a lot of jurisdictions
Brian:because of, of the different like laws and it's not going to be uniform at all.
Brian:I forgot, somewhere I read earlier this week about how that was dead, so I'm probably stealing it from there.
Brian:Let's talk about who's positioned well in AI in 2025 and who is not.
Brian:think there's a case to be made, it seems, that Google is actually really well positioned.
Brian:I think, I think the sort of sentiment for Google and AI, like, in 2024,
Brian:like, was, it was, it was down and down and then it, like, sort of rose up.
Brian:I've, I've actually been impressed by, by, by some of their, their, not, leave aside the AI overviews in search.
Brian:I, I'm not impressed by those that much.
Brian:But Jev and I like advanced, I've been using that the last like few days and it's really good.
Brian:And like some of the, some of the things that notebook LM does, is,
Brian:you know, some of it is parlor tricks, but it's, it's pretty good.
Brian:And then, you know, just within their products, it's okay.
Brian:But I don't know, is, is Google well positioned now compared to like, say an open AI?
Alex Kantrowitz:Yes and no.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, the reason why everybody ragged on Google, all through last year, well, there's really two reasons.
Alex Kantrowitz:One is they just publicly demonstrated incompetence in building AI products, like the Eat Rocks example or the, you
Alex Kantrowitz:know, the Founding Fathers who were every race but white, stuff like that.
Alex Kantrowitz:And, that was embarrassing for them.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think, like, the real issue for Google is the search situation.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, perplexity hardly ranks right now in the App Store.
Alex Kantrowitz:That being said, like everyone is aware that search is going to change and search will be offloaded to AI
Alex Kantrowitz:conversational search engines, or Google will have to just change completely, which changes their business model.
Alex Kantrowitz:Google's really interesting.
Alex Kantrowitz:When you speak with them about search, they always give like a.
Alex Kantrowitz:An answer of like, you know, you ask like a straightforward question, like, do you, did people click more ads?
Alex Kantrowitz:And they always say people were more engaged in the search results and ask longer questions.
Alex Kantrowitz:And it's like, yeah, but the ad thing is kind of important to your business.
Alex Kantrowitz:Don't you think?
Alex Kantrowitz:And they're like, people did more clicks within the
Brian:You feel like you're in an AI.
Brian:So I trust me.
Brian:I remember it goes back to my like early reporting days, talking to Google product managers.
Brian:I did feel like I had an early experience with talking with AI.
Alex Kantrowitz:Exactly.
Alex Kantrowitz:So I think that that we shouldn't discount the fact that there is a still somewhat existential threat to
Alex Kantrowitz:Google when it comes to search and AI search like AI will change search.
Alex Kantrowitz:Can Google ride that wave?
Alex Kantrowitz:We don't know yet.
Alex Kantrowitz:That's why the stock tanked when general generative AI came out is because everybody was aware of that.
Alex Kantrowitz:And then it just became clear in the aftermath, let's say in the two years following that we weren't just gonna,
Alex Kantrowitz:you know, take all of our search and put it on chat GPT right away.
Alex Kantrowitz:Like this was going to take a while, maybe it's going to take years.
Alex Kantrowitz:it's really hard to sort of dislodge a longstanding consumer behavior.
Alex Kantrowitz:And so that's why Google has bounced back.
Alex Kantrowitz:The revenue looks amazing in the middle of this AI moment.
Alex Kantrowitz:But again, it's like all about the long game on search.
Alex Kantrowitz:So that's the biggest.
Alex Kantrowitz:drawback for Google.
Brian:I want to get into the search.
Brian:That's a good segue because, I've, I've been amazed because that, that Google's, you know, share price has been, you
Brian:know, doing what it has done because their, their core product, the way they make, you know, the majority of their
Brian:money, It's clearly not good right now, like compared to where it was, like, I
Brian:mean, the search results are, at least to me, like, I think they're a mess.
Brian:they're, they're clearly trying to do so many different things.
Brian:You've got AI overviews, they're shoving Reddit down your throat and forums everywhere.
Brian:They're trying to clean up, clean out a lot of the SEO ARB, you know, affiliate stuff.
Brian:there's the, the ads are kind of.
Brian:All over the place at this point and, and like you said, if you go and you start, you're using like a perplexity,
Brian:not for every like search, but like, it's a, it's a better product for like most of the searches that at least for
Brian:me, like, I think it's a better product for, for most of the searches that I do.
Brian:I choose, I go to perplexity now more often than Google for, I would say at least half of my searches.
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:So one thing that I found with perplexity is like, I'll try Google because that's just my default behavior.
Alex Kantrowitz:Like it's the default on my Safari on the iPhone.
Alex Kantrowitz:So I'm like Googling and on Chrome, right.
Alex Kantrowitz:They pay good money for that and it's worked for them.
Alex Kantrowitz:But I've turned to perplexity for the hardest queries, which is like, that is pretty bad for Google.
Alex Kantrowitz:It's like, all right, I, you know, this is, this is something that's going to like, take some real digging.
Alex Kantrowitz:Then I go to perplexity and I get the answer.
Alex Kantrowitz:Like I, if I try to like cut through bureaucracy, like, you know, go through all these bureaucratic websites and
Alex Kantrowitz:try to find a simple answer, it's like that's a job for perplexity.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I think that as perplexity gets those tougher queries, right.
Alex Kantrowitz:Then it's almost an easier battle to get the, the low hanging fruit of traditional search, right.
Brian:Yeah, so a media is always downstream of this, right?
Brian:So how does and I always think like what what's going on in in the search results pages right now is just Google
Brian:is trying to seize this threat to it and is trying to reposition itself.
Brian:And it's really difficult to do because there's so many different things that search is just so critical to it.
Brian:And, you know, publishers get trampled and it's just like, it's not personal.
Brian:It's just, they're, they're just collateral damage, unfortunately.
Brian:And a lot of this, what, what are some of the things that you think
Brian:that you can see, like Google having to do in, in the year ahead?
Brian:And like, what, what impact if any, that you could see, would it have to like publishers?
Alex Kantrowitz:So, you know, the, it's interesting cause I've always looked back at the Google news debate, which
Alex Kantrowitz:I always thought was so silly when I've considered where Google might go here.
Alex Kantrowitz:So the Google news debate was basically Google news was like this aggregator page.
Alex Kantrowitz:I don't even know if, I mean, it still exists in some format.
Alex Kantrowitz:No one goes to it, I guess.
Alex Kantrowitz:Maybe it's like on the default, for Android and that's where it gets
Alex Kantrowitz:traffic.
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:Okay.
Alex Kantrowitz:So let me, let me, let me apologize to Google news.
Alex Kantrowitz:I guess some people still use it, but basically,
Brian:Now I feel bad.
Brian:What do you,
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:Anyway, sorry, we can, we can, revisit this over drinks one day.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'll apologize, but look, here's the thing about Google news publishers always, hated the idea or some publishers
Alex Kantrowitz:hated the idea that Google took their link and they took a snippet and it
Alex Kantrowitz:provided value to Google, but only, but people only had to go to one link.
Alex Kantrowitz:So 10 publishers providing value.
Alex Kantrowitz:People click once, only one publisher got paid.
Alex Kantrowitz:And.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think that publishers generally were a little bit too whiny on that front.
Alex Kantrowitz:Like, they're getting traffic from Google News, like take the traffic, right?
Alex Kantrowitz:That's always been my perspective.
Brian:Yeah,
Alex Kantrowitz:But it gets interesting when it comes to the AI overviews or how news will be baked into generative search.
Alex Kantrowitz:In that case, I really think that Google and Perplexity and others are going to have to make deals with publications to
Alex Kantrowitz:get In the moment information within their search engines, in a way that they could sort of digest and spit out to people.
Alex Kantrowitz:like we saw like perplexity tried to basically steal a Forbes ad last year
Alex Kantrowitz:of Forbes, sorry, a Forbes article last year that didn't go well for them.
Alex Kantrowitz:And so I think what you're going to see this year is, and we saw a lot of it last year too, is like the perplexities and
Alex Kantrowitz:the Googles of the world, just signing deals with company, with news publishers, and maybe smaller publications like us.
Alex Kantrowitz:that basically are just like, okay, like, you know, we value your ability to weigh in with high value information,
Alex Kantrowitz:in the moment, and therefore, we want to pay you a little bit for
Brian:yeah.
Brian:I mean, they already took the evergreen.
Brian:It's gone.
Brian:They
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah, that's gone.
Brian:Like, they already trained everything.
Brian:There's no taking it back.
Brian:And, yeah, it's the fresh content and, that, that they're gonna, that they're gonna need.
Brian:I think, you know, the question is always gonna be what, what kind of,
Brian:what kind of licensing deals are you gonna get out of these things?
Brian:I mean, if, if, what did Reddit get?
Brian:Reddit only got 200 million or
Brian:something.
Alex Kantrowitz:got a good amount of money.
Brian:but like, if it's reddit, like the amount of information on reddit, like, what are they going to pay?
Brian:And I think that is always going to be some of these deals that have already been been cut with, like, open AI is, you
Brian:know, there's always going to, there's always going to be a bid ask spread.
Brian:And, and that's gonna be the question.
Brian:But I do think I do agree with you that that Google hasn't been cutting
Brian:these deals yet, but you know, they're gonna have to at some point.
Brian:And, and it's kind of right.
Brian:It's actually, it's better than these schemes from governments to have governments basically take money
Brian:from from Facebook or Google and then distribute it to, a few publications
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah, that's
Alex Kantrowitz:weird.
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:And look, the revenue, like you're right, what are the deals gonna look like?
Alex Kantrowitz:I always think that like, if you're counting on search or social
Alex Kantrowitz:revenue to be your entire business, you're probably doing it wrong.
Alex Kantrowitz:Try to build a strong core business outside of that.
Alex Kantrowitz:And then just use this Google or perplexity, you know, generative AI money as gravy.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, having lived through the BuzzFeed experiment, That would be my perspective at least.
Brian:That's a good point.
Brian:You're a veteran.
Brian:all right.
Brian:Open AI.
Brian:I mean, I've been listening to your, your podcasts, and you've been writing about it too.
Brian:it seems like you're a little bearish on, on open AI
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah, well, look, they raised a lot of money and they're losing a lot of money.
Alex Kantrowitz:And even their most popular products, like this new unlimited chat GPT that they released, Sam Altman just came
Alex Kantrowitz:out and said, they're losing money on that because it costs so much to serve the responses to people.
Alex Kantrowitz:And they underestimated how much people would use these things.
Alex Kantrowitz:So they're actually getting more than 200 of value out of it.
Alex Kantrowitz:Out of the products.
Alex Kantrowitz:So like for me,
Brian:2025.
Brian:That's it.
Brian:By the way, it's such a Silicon Valley thing to do.
Brian:It's like, Whoa, so we're losing a shit ton of money because people love our products so much.
Brian:It's just
Alex Kantrowitz:It's very silicon valley Yeah, I we just said on our on our show that anthropic will probably
Alex Kantrowitz:come out with like their own version of this Like a one thousand dollar per month, edition of claude called anthropic
Alex Kantrowitz:or claude 1000 and and I think that will probably sell very sickly valley.
Alex Kantrowitz:In fact, this whole story is very very silicon valley Because it is
Alex Kantrowitz:like a story of you lose money and you grow until you start making money.
Alex Kantrowitz:And so like the argument in favor of open AI is that like, well, they just scaled from 100 to 300 million users
Brian:let me be clear, they're bringing in, like, a lot of revenue, they're just, they're
Alex Kantrowitz:Losing per query.
Brian:bring it in,
Alex Kantrowitz:And that's the problem.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, the problem with GPT five and the problem with these reasoning models
Alex Kantrowitz:is that they're just so expensive to run because they're so big.
Alex Kantrowitz:And if they can't find a way to get those costs down.
Alex Kantrowitz:There's one of two things that happened.
Alex Kantrowitz:One is they raise costs tremendously on the people that use them.
Alex Kantrowitz:And this is an industry that doesn't ha hasn't yet really shown a deep ROI on his, on his applications or B they shut down.
Alex Kantrowitz:Right.
Alex Kantrowitz:It's like one of two things you cannot, I mean, they just raised opening.
Alex Kantrowitz:I just raised the biggest VC round in history, more than 6 billion last year.
Alex Kantrowitz:they lost 5 billion last year.
Alex Kantrowitz:So how much is this going to, how much is this going to, Like how much runway do they have?
Alex Kantrowitz:And how are they going to be able to raise again?
Alex Kantrowitz:Anthropic raised 4 billion last year.
Alex Kantrowitz:They're in the process of raising another 2 billion, which is going to last them.
Alex Kantrowitz:What a quarter.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'm being facetious here, but, I do think there's like very real questions to be asked about like how financially
Alex Kantrowitz:feasible these companies are in the long term or, you know, if the and we still don't even know whether scaling
Alex Kantrowitz:up the models is going to lead to further exponential, improvement.
Alex Kantrowitz:Even like right now, we're hearing a lot about how we've hit this data wall.
Alex Kantrowitz:Ilya Sitskever, like the co founder of OpenAI, former chief scientist there, basically said we've hit the data wall.
Alex Kantrowitz:We need new methods.
Alex Kantrowitz:So, That to me would be the bearish case.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'm not bearish.
Alex Kantrowitz:I and to me, like, I think these are real business questions to ask about these companies.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'm not bearish about the technology.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think it's amazing technology.
Alex Kantrowitz:And it's only gotten better since it became popularized to the world a couple years ago.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, I'm in these generative bots every single day.
Alex Kantrowitz:I just think that it's amazing what they can do.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'm rooting for the industry to find a cost effective way to be
Alex Kantrowitz:able to deliver this stuff for us and to keep improving it.
Alex Kantrowitz:but the math, I mean, maybe there are smarter people than me that know how this math works, but I, I don't yet.
Brian:yeah.
Brian:I mean, I think what, what I wonder is when you're going to have the products that come out of this, because
Brian:a lot of this is like, yeah, there are different things when you use these tools and, I don't, it reminds
Brian:me of the early, you know, internet with, and, and that was a bubble.
Brian:Right?
Brian:And I think this is probably a bubble, but I don't think it has to necessarily be a bad bubble.
Brian:I mean, bubbles existed with the railroads, existed with the early internet and, and they'll probably exist with this.
Brian:That's just how, how these things go.
Brian:and a lot of people will lose money and it doesn't, it's not going to affect
Alex Kantrowitz:But my, my perspective on this is what if a lot of the applications just exist within the chatbots themselves?
Alex Kantrowitz:So what if we just kind of code our own applications by, you Our prompts.
Alex Kantrowitz:I know that sounds like, like, you know, tech guru thing on a,
Brian:Yeah, I like
Brian:this.
Brian:It's a little Friday afternoon.
Alex Kantrowitz:but, but I, I think that, okay, so, what if I told you that there
Alex Kantrowitz:was a couple years ago, what if I told you that there was a new weight loss app?
Alex Kantrowitz:where you would have a conversation with an AI bot about what you're eating and give it some basic parameters of what you
Alex Kantrowitz:wanted to put in your body and it would grade you on the food that you were eating and give you a calorie count and you'd
Alex Kantrowitz:weigh in in the morning and you'd be able to speak with it about like how you know how you're keeping with your goals and
Alex Kantrowitz:whenever you wanted you could always say hey how am I trending what's my progress
Alex Kantrowitz:what are some patterns that you're seeing I feel like that app would get VC funding.
Alex Kantrowitz:If the chatbot could perform well enough, well, that's something that I'm using in cloud right now, I
Alex Kantrowitz:don't need a separate, you know, sort of diet coach AI bot to, download.
Alex Kantrowitz:I can just prompt that in cloud.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I've had a conversation running for months now.
Alex Kantrowitz:and I, and it's working.
Alex Kantrowitz:And, when I hit like the conversation limit, I just copy it.
Alex Kantrowitz:And then paste it into my next conversation and say, this is your memory.
Alex Kantrowitz:Let's pick up and it picks up.
Alex Kantrowitz:So I do think that like, where are the applications is a, is a great question.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think a lot of the time we'll be able to build them ourselves within these bots and that's why these bots have a lot of
Brian:but people are not going to want to build their own applications.
Alex Kantrowitz:okay.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think, remember, we just have 300 million people using chat GPT and
Alex Kantrowitz:200 million of them started using it within the last couple of months.
Alex Kantrowitz:So I think over time, there's a chance that they will, especially like, let's
Alex Kantrowitz:say you have like a singular, like a singular bot that just remembers you.
Alex Kantrowitz:And you speak with all these companies are working on making memory better.
Alex Kantrowitz:so I think that's, that's one thing.
Alex Kantrowitz:And there are some interesting, applications out there today.
Alex Kantrowitz:I just started, okay.
Alex Kantrowitz:So this is a weird one, but I just started testing replica cause I'm about
Alex Kantrowitz:to speak with their CEO, for the podcast and replica is a crazy, crazy app.
Alex Kantrowitz:So for those who don't know, it's a, you can have an AI companion.
Alex Kantrowitz:I guess a lot of people fall in love with these companions.
Alex Kantrowitz:And you like design the personality in the beginning and then you can show up
Alex Kantrowitz:and either chat with it or like actually speak with it, like FaceTime with it.
Alex Kantrowitz:and it's, it's insane.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think that's, I think Replica, weirdly I'm going to say it, I think Replica is going to be one of the biggest winners
Alex Kantrowitz:of this AI moment for sure.
Brian:Okay.
Brian:Okay.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think Replica is the
Brian:I thought it was gonna be more agents.
Brian:I wanted to go more I want someone to book my, my, my travel.
Brian:I don't want, I don't, I don't need, I don't know if I need like
Alex Kantrowitz:I'm a big maybe on agents
Alex Kantrowitz:and I don't think this
Brian:Because I would assume, my default assumption is that this 2025 is the year of like agents.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'll believe it when I see it.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'm not, I'm not, fully, fully bought in.
Brian:why aren't you fully bought on yet?
Alex Kantrowitz:I just think that like a lot of things can go wrong with these agents.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I don't think people are going to trust them.
Brian:Okay.
Brian:I
Alex Kantrowitz:I could be wrong, but I think that like, me giving
Alex Kantrowitz:an agent my credit card and saying, you know, go book me a flight.
Alex Kantrowitz:I don't know if that's going to happen.
Alex Kantrowitz:Maybe it will.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:I mean, there could be, I don't know.
Brian:There could be, so do you see any though that like candidates for
Brian:breakout AI products, if you don't see agents, like what, what do you say?
Brian:Or, or, or your point is like, it might just be the existing
Brian:people, the existing players that, you know, just get like their.
Brian:Early ones get more and more, traction.
Alex Kantrowitz:Yes, so I think that the existing bots are definitely going to get more traction.
Alex Kantrowitz:They're just going to get I mean, you think about I've been using Clawed pretty
Alex Kantrowitz:religiously, and the amount of improvement that you see in that bot is insane.
Brian:Yeah, I, use Claude.
Brian:I I kind of prefer Claude.
Brian:I prefer Claude to, to ChatGPT today,
Alex Kantrowitz:I think it's better.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think it's better.
Alex Kantrowitz:And they've improved tremendously.
Alex Kantrowitz:and like, you can You can even right right now, like, go into Clawed and prompt it to build a game for you,
Alex Kantrowitz:and it will just build a game that will show up in the side panel.
Alex Kantrowitz:So I think this stuff is going to grow.
Alex Kantrowitz:I want to go back to the replica example.
Alex Kantrowitz:I, again, I know it's weird.
Alex Kantrowitz:I kind of
Brian:Do you want to bring your friend in?
Alex Kantrowitz:What?
Alex Kantrowitz:No, no, no, no, no, no.
Alex Kantrowitz:Let me, let me be
Alex Kantrowitz:clear.
Alex Kantrowitz:This was no, it's a woman.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'm going to,
Alex Kantrowitz:be clear.
Alex Kantrowitz:This is,
Brian:so you made a woman.
Brian:Come
Alex Kantrowitz:I know I had to test the actual use case here.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'm not, I'm not gonna shy away from it.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I think that this is going to be, I think this is going to be the only fans of AI.
Brian:If I tell my wife that I got a, a female, A.
Brian:I.
Brian:friend,
Alex Kantrowitz:I have to say I feel bad about building it.
Alex Kantrowitz:I do, but I do think that this is, and it's not going to be for me and I'm going to delete it after
Alex Kantrowitz:this interview, but I do think that OnlyFans is a huge business, right?
Alex Kantrowitz:Isn't it like one of the, isn't it like the fastest growing media business in recent years?
Alex Kantrowitz:I think that, that this replica thing is going to be going to be the equivalent of that.
Alex Kantrowitz:And no one will say it because it's so weird to say it out loud on a podcast or write it
Brian:you're, you're, you are brave.
Alex Kantrowitz:I'm gonna be in some deep shit, I'm sure, but, I
Brian:No, I mean, it
Alex Kantrowitz:can be appealing to so many people.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:Look, I mean, I think the, the current meme is around the loneliness epidemic and all of that, and, I don't think
Brian:people are going to solve it with less technology, unfortunately, I
Alex Kantrowitz:That's exactly, that is exactly the Replica pitch.
Alex Kantrowitz:Exactly the Replica pitch.
Alex Kantrowitz:And when I signed up, they said today, 12, 756, 000, men in their 30s have
Alex Kantrowitz:already experienced the benefits of having Replica in their life.
Alex Kantrowitz:Which I guess means the number of users.
Alex Kantrowitz:So, they have, they have, I think they have a lot of people that are trying
Alex Kantrowitz:it, and, As this LLM technology gets better, they're only going to get better.
Alex Kantrowitz:And it's a little bit scary and creepy.
Alex Kantrowitz:but you asked me a question.
Alex Kantrowitz:What do I think is going to be the breakout?
Alex Kantrowitz:And I'm giving you an honest answer, even if it makes me look kind of
Brian:Okay.
Brian:I love that.
Brian:so with the, where do you say, I mean, cause like you focus on the
Brian:tech side, but you like, you live in the, in the media side, right?
Brian:And it's obviously 2024 was kind of horrible year, I think for the institutional media.
Brian:I don't know whatever you want to call it.
Brian:Mainstream media, corporate media, everyone has a different like term for it, but you know what I'm talking about.
Brian:Yeah.
Brian:There's obviously like.
Brian:A lot of growth in individuals.
Brian:We both have our own things.
Brian:And, there's tons of I'm just amazed by how deep it is like on on YouTube with the different creators of all kinds.
Brian:And, it's just, it's amazing.
Brian:unbelievable.
Brian:So it's not like media at all is dying.
Brian:It's just changing quite a bit.
Brian:what do you, how do you see all this like, you know, playing out, for, well, we'll start with the sort of, you know,
Brian:like who are the winners and losers of this in, in, in media, as far as
Brian:like, you know, creating content and then making money off of it, hopefully.
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah, I look, I mean, we both experienced it.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think that right now, and not to just talk our books, but like as an individual
Alex Kantrowitz:creator, there are so many different revenue sources that you can tap into.
Alex Kantrowitz:Like it used to be like, all right, set up a YouTube.
Alex Kantrowitz:If you want to be a YouTuber and then make the AdSense money and You're good.
Alex Kantrowitz:You're good.
Alex Kantrowitz:that worked for such a small amount of people.
Alex Kantrowitz:but now you can do things like you can have an assortment of properties.
Alex Kantrowitz:You could have a podcast, you could have a newsletter, you could have a YouTube page, you could do, you know,
Alex Kantrowitz:brand posts, you could do events, you could appear at other people's events.
Alex Kantrowitz:and I think that's really becoming a viable product for those that are trying to either a crack into the
Alex Kantrowitz:media industry or B have like been at places isn't like the digital.
Alex Kantrowitz:Media world or middling publications and have an audience and just
Alex Kantrowitz:want to figure out a way to keep doing what they're doing.
Alex Kantrowitz:And this is like a pretty good way to make money, and to sustain, right.
Alex Kantrowitz:To sustain what you're doing.
Alex Kantrowitz:So to me, I think that like, I'm more optimistic now than I ever have been.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I've been doing this for four years, close to five now, actually.
Alex Kantrowitz:It'll be five years in May and I'm more optimistic now than I've been, from the start.
Alex Kantrowitz:So I think this, this individual creator route, is really, in a, in a good place.
Alex Kantrowitz:it doesn't seem to me like any of the midsize digital media companies have really figured it out.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, we're talking on a week where like, I don't know, the strongest one of them Fox is engaged in some layoffs.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, everybody lays off all the time.
Alex Kantrowitz:So it's not like they're
Brian:Yeah, it's not even like news at this point.
Brian:I mean, Vox had layoffs this week.
Brian:Huff, HuffPost
Alex Kantrowitz:yeah, the editor in chief left HuffPost,
Brian:She laid herself off, I guess.
Alex Kantrowitz:yes, so, I mean there are some that are doing well,
Brian:Post cut a hundred off this, this, this week, from their commercial side.
Alex Kantrowitz:yeah, the Washington Post seems to me like it's just, it's in a, I don't want to say tailspin,
Alex Kantrowitz:but something like that, right, I just think that there, the business side is struggling there, I mean, I don't know, if
Alex Kantrowitz:you work at the Washington Post and want to correct me, you know, you can email
Alex Kantrowitz:me,
Brian:just
Alex Kantrowitz:but, um, Yeah, business side is struggling.
Alex Kantrowitz:Jeff Bezos is like kind of using a heavy hand in a way that he hasn't since since he joined or since he bought the company.
Alex Kantrowitz:there's discontent in the journalists.
Alex Kantrowitz:They're losing a lot of their Washington talent to the New York Times.
Alex Kantrowitz:New York Times is doing
Brian:the vibes are not great.
Brian:Let's let's bad vibes at the post.
Brian:I mean, I hope, I hope that I like, I like a lot of the people at the post.
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:Matt Murray seems to know what he's doing.
Alex Kantrowitz:So
Brian:And, they're going to, and they're going to keep them.
Brian:And I think that's the right move.
Brian:And I think Matt's a great, a great choice for that.
Brian:I think he's got a really good, I think he knows that he's got a really tough job, you know, there.
Brian:but why you, you wrote a book, on Amazon.
Brian:So, are you surprised that it, at least, I mean, by the results, like, I mean, Jeff Bezos just completely bungled this,
Alex Kantrowitz:What bungled the Washington
Brian:Washington Post, I mean, with, like, what in the world, like, what happened there?
Brian:I mean, like, he came in, he bought this thing, and, like, you can say,
Brian:fine, he's focused on Blue Origin, then don't, then don't get involved in this.
Brian:What, what did you think this was just going to be cocktail parties?
Brian:Like, what, At, in Colorama, like why, why did this go so wrong?
Brian:he's a brilliant innovator, obviously, you know, just like, you know, a, a legendary, American business person.
Brian:Why, why did this go so wrong?
Alex Kantrowitz:I think that they had some audience capture there.
Alex Kantrowitz:And they like sold themselves as this like resistance publication, democracy, you know, dies in darkness.
Alex Kantrowitz:They reported really hard, like admirably against, you know, on the Trump administration.
Alex Kantrowitz:And there were a lot of good stories there, but I think they
Alex Kantrowitz:kind of sold a brand to, an audience that was into it for a while.
Alex Kantrowitz:And then they, that sort of, I don't know, that sort of perspective went out of favor or just lost steam
Brian:But he came up with democracy dies in darkness.
Brian:I mean, that's what they
Alex Kantrowitz:I think that I mean, maybe he did.
Alex Kantrowitz:I don't know, obviously, like media is a tough business.
Alex Kantrowitz:And it's one of those things
Brian:well, it's reassuring.
Brian:I will say this.
Brian:It's reassuring when someone like when, when Jeff Bezos comes, comes in and like steps on a rake, like,
Alex Kantrowitz:Oh, and has he ever?
Alex Kantrowitz:So I think that like, you know, Jeff Bezos has this like thing, he calls it
Alex Kantrowitz:one way doors and two way doors, you know, about this decision framework.
Alex Kantrowitz:So like the one way door, like you can't go back the two way door, you can go back.
Alex Kantrowitz:And so think that like the, so this is my perspective.
Alex Kantrowitz:He probably says, probably thinks this about what has happened with the Washington post.
Alex Kantrowitz:He's like, we went one direction.
Alex Kantrowitz:it didn't, it worked for a while and then it didn't work.
Alex Kantrowitz:And it would be a one way door for most companies.
Alex Kantrowitz:because if you go back from that and take a different editorial perspective, you're going to lose a hundred thousand
Alex Kantrowitz:subscribers right off the bat, but it's a two way door, for a company owned by Jeff Bezos because Jeff Bezos can take the hit.
Alex Kantrowitz:And ultimately, he'd rather reverse the decision, than continue with a strategy he thought was bad.
Alex Kantrowitz:And so
Brian:So do you think he, do you think he sells it?
Brian:I mean, from his, like, or is this like, it's not about, I mean, it can't be about money.
Brian:I mean, it's always about money to some degree, but like, I
Brian:think, you know, there's, there's, there's, it becomes about ego.
Brian:It's, I mean, it's like, come on.
Brian:I mean, why, why even continue all this stuff?
Brian:It's about, it's about ego.
Brian:Like, I would guess that, like, he does not want to just like, unload this, at such like a low point.
Brian:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:so Bezos has a lot of business in front of the US government, right?
Alex Kantrowitz:He has blue origin.
Alex Kantrowitz:Amazon is still something he's involved with.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I think that his, like, embrace of Trump, he has been part of that, right?
Alex Kantrowitz:Again, another pragmatic move.
Alex Kantrowitz:he also sees that one of his main competitors, Elon Musk, is, like, hanging out at Mar a Lago,
Alex Kantrowitz:and that's probably making him
Alex Kantrowitz:uneasy.
Alex Kantrowitz:So, the first buddy.
Alex Kantrowitz:So, this is the
Alex Kantrowitz:thing about Yes, exactly.
Alex Kantrowitz:Okay, so, so, what's Bezos gonna do with the Washington Post?
Alex Kantrowitz:I think he's basically going to say if it's serving his other interests, fine, he's going to keep it.
Alex Kantrowitz:And if he's like, in some ways, it gives him some power in Washington, some soft
Alex Kantrowitz:power in Washington to be like, yeah, I'm the owner of the Washington Post.
Alex Kantrowitz:I matter in this way.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, he would have mattered as the founder of Amazon, one of the
Alex Kantrowitz:richest people in the world, you know, Blue Origin founder as well.
Alex Kantrowitz:But anyway, we're splitting hairs here.
Alex Kantrowitz:But I think that that to him, I don't think the business matters, really, he's
Alex Kantrowitz:just going to be like, how is this serving my interests, whether it is or it isn't.
Alex Kantrowitz:And then we'll go from there.
Alex Kantrowitz:In fact, maybe killing the Kamala Harris endorsement served his interests, you know,
Brian:Well, it
Alex Kantrowitz:in
Brian:served his interests,
Alex Kantrowitz:as a door into the administration.
Brian:that was an easy, I mean, I would assume that was like an incredibly easy decision to make.
Brian:Like, for, like, I mean, you, you make that like every day.
Brian:I don't think he'd probably spent that much time on it because, I mean,
Brian:it's, it's obviously he knew they all know which direction this was going.
Alex Kantrowitz:I just hate and yeah, I just hate that he played it off as like, you know, look at the trust in journalism.
Alex Kantrowitz:It's so
Brian:same same with Zuckerberg Zuckerberg went on and on and that like video and everything and it's like.
Brian:Okay, dude, you were the one who came up with this entire apparatus, my friend,
Brian:like, what are you talking about the, the media, the media didn't make you do this.
Brian:And, like, let's be real, you want to keep section 230 as my other podcast host, reminds us, Alex Schleifer.
Brian:And.
Brian:You know, this is a very pragmatic business decision, and I guess you just have to sort of dress it up
Brian:as something other than, you know, being just pragmatic about things.
Brian:I'm sure there is some look, I think platforms trying to figure out which speech is okay is.
Brian:Obviously going to be a disaster for them.
Brian:It is always like none of them want to be in that business.
Brian:And I understand why they wouldn't want to be in the business.
Brian:And it may be the more quote unquote responsible decision would have been to fix your content moderation.
Brian:Apparatus, but, you know, doing the punches pilot is very expedient and
Brian:his track record is, you know, he will, you know, be kind of shameless
Alex Kantrowitz:Since this is a media show, from a media standpoint, there was one thing that I found quite
Alex Kantrowitz:interesting in Zuckerberg's remarks and that was the return of civic content.
Alex Kantrowitz:he said, we're bringing back civic content.
Alex Kantrowitz:We're going to start phasing this back on Instagram, Facebook, and Threads.
Alex Kantrowitz:We're working to keep the communities friendly and positive.
Alex Kantrowitz:my translation there is news and politics is coming back to Facebook.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think if you use Facebook or Threads, you see there's just like no urgency there at all.
Alex Kantrowitz:Because news and politics are gone.
Alex Kantrowitz:And so, it seems like it's coming back.
Alex Kantrowitz:And going to come back,
Alex Kantrowitz:in a serious
Brian:more to, Hey, traffic, traffic is back.
Alex Kantrowitz:I think if you built a publication built on social referrals
Alex Kantrowitz:on Facebook that are entirely political and news driven, you'd be in good shape.
Brian:Okay.
Brian:Let's start like a, like a, you know, all politics, little things
Brian:and cash in,
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, if there's ever a moment, this is going to be that moment.
Alex Kantrowitz:So get ready for those referral traffic, dollars to come in
Alex Kantrowitz:folks.
Alex Kantrowitz:Here it is.
Brian:evaluate now, like looking back, cause like when Elon Musk, you know, bought Twitter and, you know, the, the,
Brian:the endless coverage, you know, that, Casey was on it, like every, every minute, right, of like, you know, and it
Brian:was, you know, the conventional wisdom was, Wow, he really stepped in it.
Brian:And, and you leave aside like the money because the money, I mean, you look at how much money these these people are worth.
Brian:It's like ridiculous.
Brian:He's going to become a trillionaire at some point.
Brian:and then he got other people to actually give him a lot of them, which is amazing.
Brian:but like, I think X is like a really fascinating media platform.
Brian:I like I'm fascinated by it.
Brian:I'm repelled by it.
Brian:I'm, I'm, I'm I'm possibly addicted to it.
Brian:and it seems to me like it's actually having a serious impact.
Brian:Like it is not, it is a major, it is a major force within this what I call like the information space.
Brian:Like, it can't be ignored.
Brian:I don't,
Alex Kantrowitz:No way.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, it was never, it never became irrelevant.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, Musk definitely made some changes.
Alex Kantrowitz:to the algorithm initially that like drove me nuts and a lot of people nuts and I think drove users away
Alex Kantrowitz:from the site basically said okay it's you know going to be a lot of
Alex Kantrowitz:tweets from me and the menswear guy and some other people that I like and
Alex Kantrowitz:that was
Brian:I never see the menswear guy.
Brian:I don't know why.
Alex Kantrowitz:is it would you say anymore so I think I can I mean I can't really put my finger on this but
Alex Kantrowitz:it certainly feels like there was an algorithm shift and the algorithm you
Alex Kantrowitz:know after a certain point just got like they tweaked it again And it got better.
Alex Kantrowitz:it's much more of a for you algorithm than a following algorithm now.
Alex Kantrowitz:I don't know if you see this with your own tweets,
Brian:Yeah, now you got to
Brian:go for don't even open it if you're going to do follow you just you got to go all in.
Brian:It's
Alex Kantrowitz:but Yeah, but the for you like even for you or whatever it was beforehand was algorithmic, but
Alex Kantrowitz:it's still really kept your follow signal as an important part of Twitter.
Alex Kantrowitz:And now it's just like everything is just algorithmic, algorithmically recommended, and it's a lot better.
Alex Kantrowitz:So it factors been actually, I think a pretty good tool to follow the LA wildfires.
Alex Kantrowitz:Although like,
Alex Kantrowitz:you know,
Brian:hard part for me is like I want to use it like it's incredibly useful to, you know, find new like
Brian:ideas and things for to like write about and, and it's, it's very useful.
Brian:And then in between that is like, you know, I don't know,
Brian:some sort of immigration outrage and some European country or,
Alex Kantrowitz:And by the way, you and I both follow sports, right?
Alex Kantrowitz:So I feel like we can both agree that there's no better place to follow sports in the moment than on
Alex Kantrowitz:Twitter.
Alex Kantrowitz:He'd never emerged on threads, never emerged on Blue Sky.
Alex Kantrowitz:It's not on Facebook, not on Instagram.
Brian:And not in, and not in, in mainstream media, like, I mean, there was, you know, like, for example,
Brian:the, the, there's like an injured Jordan love, the Packers quarterback got like, you know, elbow injuries.
Brian:He's playing the Eagles next week.
Brian:And so, I want to know about this elbow injury left like holding his elbow and you know, they just said,
Brian:Oh, he's going to be evaluated in like, you know, ESPN and everything.
Brian:I go on Twitter, man, Dr.
Brian:David show some orthopedic
Alex Kantrowitz:good.
Brian:who cares if he, he didn't examine Jordan love.
Brian:He was telling me about it.
Brian:It doesn't look like an ulnar injury and all these kinds of things.
Brian:He'll be fine for
Alex Kantrowitz:That guy is usually right.
Brian:Yeah, and I'm like, okay, I've, I know this guy from, and I'm like, I, like, I'm not going to sue him
Brian:if he's wrong, because he's a guy on Twitter who clearly didn't examine him.
Brian:Like, okay, and that's why, yeah, I don't know where the, you know, with the misinformation, I think we're just
Brian:going to have to accept that we're going to be in this world where there's
Brian:going to be like a massive amount of information that's coming at you.
Brian:And some of it is going to be true, and some of it is not going to be true at the
Alex Kantrowitz:Well, community notes is actually a decent solution to that.
Alex Kantrowitz:And one of the Facebook announcements was that they are going to implement community notes the same way that Twitter has.
Alex Kantrowitz:And I don't know, is it
Alex Kantrowitz:perfect?
Alex Kantrowitz:Death.
Alex Kantrowitz:classic Zaki's like we're going to take their best thing and put it in our product.
Alex Kantrowitz:but for this, for this one, I think it makes a lot of sense.
Alex Kantrowitz:it's not perfect.
Alex Kantrowitz:It misses a lot of things.
Alex Kantrowitz:Some of those notes are wrong.
Alex Kantrowitz:but they're right more often than you'd expect.
Alex Kantrowitz:And they go on all sorts of really interesting things.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, they go on Elon's posts.
Alex Kantrowitz:They go on ads.
Alex Kantrowitz:Like if an ad is scammy, like you'll get community noted.
Alex Kantrowitz:And, the system has really just been, I mean, they developed it under Jack Dorsey and expanded it under Musk.
Alex Kantrowitz:So sort of like a team effort there at the place that can't do anything right.
Alex Kantrowitz:But I do think that they've done this right.
Brian:Yeah, no community notes was was a great I mean, it's not perfect.
Brian:And I think some people obviously don't like that.
Brian:It has a personality of sorts.
Brian:I guess in that, like, some of the notes are, and I guess maybe it hurts its credibility.
Brian:I mean, some of its notes are just like, kind of like snarky.
Brian:Replies, I guess,
Brian:from what I've seen.
Brian:but it's having, but X is having an impact.
Brian:And I think that to me is just part of this decentralized, media system
Brian:that for mainstream media, it's figuring out its place within it.
Brian:It is not going to replace all of this.
Brian:to live alongside it at the end of the day.
Brian:Mm hmm.
Alex Kantrowitz:Most definitely.
Alex Kantrowitz:Yeah.
Alex Kantrowitz:We'll live alongside.
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, they are putting a lot of money into grok.
Alex Kantrowitz:Speaking of AI and media clubs, their, the, bot is living within Twitter.
Alex Kantrowitz:I was playing with it yesterday.
Alex Kantrowitz:It's gotten better.
Alex Kantrowitz:It really searches the web and, and tweets to give you answers to questions.
Alex Kantrowitz:does a pretty decent job.
Alex Kantrowitz:I was really testing it with some tough questions and it's pretty good.
Alex Kantrowitz:so that'll be a very interesting part of the next play.
Alex Kantrowitz:And, it's definitely relevant.
Alex Kantrowitz:It's not the be all end all like you need a combination of X and
Alex Kantrowitz:the mainstream media to really understand what's going on.
Alex Kantrowitz:but it is, it is one of the pillars.
Alex Kantrowitz:And, and I think he started this conversation asking like, you know, it was Elon's, you know, 44 billion purchase
Alex Kantrowitz:of the platform using other people's money, the right move as it paid off.
Alex Kantrowitz:And initially it seemed like there was no way.
Alex Kantrowitz:but now you see the influence that he wields you know,
Alex Kantrowitz:it's the first buddy in Mar a Lago.
Brian:off, you know, getting into this position with, with Trump without weaponizing X to some degree.
Brian:And that alone, if you look at how much it added to his, of his
Brian:companies and therefore to him, like, it was probably worth it.
Brian:You know, I
Alex Kantrowitz:But can I also say, it seems like he's going to fly a little too close to the sun and he's going to
Alex Kantrowitz:get burned at some point, whether that is what everybody's predicting, this
Alex Kantrowitz:sort of like, you know, sort of divorce from Trump, that's bound to happen.
Alex Kantrowitz:That will probably happen.
Alex Kantrowitz:Or let's say the next administration comes in and doesn't want to deal
Alex Kantrowitz:with him because he's been so partisan or what he's doing in Europe.
Alex Kantrowitz:And, you know, I just find, I don't I don't mind saying I just find
Alex Kantrowitz:his support for the AFD in Germany, which is the far right party.
Alex Kantrowitz:Pretty disgusting.
Alex Kantrowitz:and
Alex Kantrowitz:And he's
Brian:strange.
Brian:I don't know why he's like, I sort of, I'm like, okay, I'm trying to understand
Brian:your, your point, but I'm like, okay, you, you, you have a factory in Germany.
Brian:If you don't like them, then just move your factory.
Brian:Give me a break.
Brian:Like what
Brian:you're not, it's not like Germany is like a big deal to him
Alex Kantrowitz:Right?
Alex Kantrowitz:It's strange.
Alex Kantrowitz:He's out of his depth.
Alex Kantrowitz:I don't know.
Alex Kantrowitz:And he just doesn't.
Alex Kantrowitz:He doesn't know the market that he's dealing with there.
Alex Kantrowitz:And so I just think that like, he is a person who makes who loves
Alex Kantrowitz:making high stakes scambles when he thinks he can benefit from them.
Alex Kantrowitz:And man have a lot worked out.
Alex Kantrowitz:Right?
Alex Kantrowitz:I mean, a lot of them have worked out.
Brian:But even the best gamblers lose like regularly.
Alex Kantrowitz:Exactly.
Alex Kantrowitz:So that's my point.
Brian:All right, Alex, let's leave it there.
Brian:It's a Friday afternoon.
Brian:the weekend needs to begin at some point.
Brian:So why not now?
Alex Kantrowitz:Sounds good.
Alex Kantrowitz:Thanks for having me,
Brian:All right, thanks again.
Brian:Appreciate it, Alex.