LIVE CLIPS
EpisodeĀ 5-1-2026
There are many more conversations going on on the timeline today. One was kicked off, I think by Josh Kushner. I think he sort of started this. There were some other people talking about data center beautification and he summed it up perfectly, says make data centers aesthetically beautiful. And so people have been quote, tweeting, posting, riffing on this, sharing different ideas. More people would be pro data center if every data center had a beautiful, open to the public heated po. That's an interesting twist. Full water slide. I think half pipe is a big idea. Monster truck rally constantly going on. These are ways to win people over. Sort of a nitro circus going on in every data center. Monster truck rally on the roof of a data center. Yeah, sort of a universal basic nitro circus. So you get. Are you familiar with nitro circus? Is this a three fingers moment for you? Are you like I'm familiar? No, I'm just imagining that. Just say you've never actually been to nitrous. I'm imagining they're building the dirt bike ramps over the data center. Exactly. Backflipping. Exactly. Julie Young shares a trick. This one neat trick that Los Angeles uses to hide oil deckers. We have a few oil derricks in LA that are disguised as synagogues. They are literally just sitting in the middle of the city. Lowell. Surprisingly few people are aware. There's a number of data centers that are disguised in Los Angeles as well. Usually you can tell because there's no windows in the building, but these exist in downtown for edge computing, for like the content delivery network. You put store in your Netflix videos there, that type of stuff. Not doing training runs, not gigawatt clusters. I did look up how energy intensive bitcoin is relative to what we think of AI. I think the numbers are OpenAI and anthropic are around 2 gigawatts in terms of capacity, something like that. We've heard about the Colossus data center. The average meta campus is around half a gigawatt. Zuck's building something in the one gigawatt range. There's gigawatt a week plans. But if you were to put the bitcoin network current sort of estimates using between 120 and 170 terawatt hours per year. What is that in average power in gigawatts? It's between 14 gigawatts and 19 gigawatts. And so that's where you should sort of comp bitcoin too. If you're putting it in AI terms in the numbers that we throw around, which are usually like a one before our next guest Palmer Lucky has been getting into it with someone on the timeline he says Clifford responds to someone named Clifford by saying dumb tweet Toto has been fabricating advanced ceramics for semiconductor manufacturing for many years. They make more money from that than toilets Strong technical moat in a rapidly growing industry Clifford says perhaps fair point but call me dumb under your real name or STFU coward just like not realizing that he's talking but isn't Cliff Asness like a big deal? I think he's an author he's his papers I've heard of Cliff Asness before it's funny because and so it is funny that they just like didn't over oh he's the co founder of AQR Capital Management hedge fund manager Is this the right person Forbes estimated net worth of $3 billion I believe I think this is accurate I think he yeah Global Alpha I started a career in 1990 worked at Goldman Sachs AQR Capital Think he missed the like Anduril he just hasn't seen the SPVs or something stable asset management and other institutions in the aggregate made commitments of several hundred million dollars to a new multi manager hedge fund he's published in academics he's done a bunch of stuff I've heard of him before so this is very funny he has aqr. Oh aqr. Yeah interesting. Anyway very funny I believe we have our next guests in the waiting room let's bring them in.
Every room I've ever got to sleep in the. You got to sleep in the living room. You got to sleep in the dining room. All right, let's pull up the trailer for TVPN Simulator. Oh, we have a trailer. Yeah, we got the trailer. Oh, let's go. Let's watch this. I think TVPN needs a game. Yeah, we definitely need to build some sort of game. This, this project has evolved so so much to the point where you can move the goal posts. I don't know that you can interact with the horse. You can definitely hit the gong. And team member is now playable. Okay. Oh, wait. So there is a mechanic. You have to gain the most subscribers. Interesting. Yes. You have to puzzle piece everything. You can watch the stream in the game. You can explore the ultra dome. It's a full backup replication. Tvpnsimulator.com sloppy. That was image gen1 image gen2 would never do that. But. But can we pull the actual game up? Oops. Hopefully. Yeah. Here it comes. Didn't pop up. If we can pull up the actual game. Let's see. There's a whole bunch of good stuff on here. Okay, so this is TVPN Simulator, the latest and greatest version. A remarkable. Ben, how did you actually get this? Like the geometry in here? Was this all described via prompt? Yeah, we've got intern Ben here. Yeah, yeah. So basically the whole process is kind of like. I'm like, okay, look at that wall right there. Yeah, I need that to be taller. Okay. Place a desk right at that wall. So the whole idea was that I had every single object so I was able to like, talk. Is there someone else in the game? Wait, it's multiplayer. It's multiplayer. Wait, so we're getting other people in the game right now? Oh, no, people are coming in. There's Mark. Tvpnsimulator.com I can't believe it's multiplayer. I can't believe you created a multiplayer game. Okay, so we got the bathroom. Okay, this is incre. No, no, no, no. Get out of there. Get out of there. Okay, so there's a chess board which was gifted to us. Ring the gong. You can ring the gong to the actual studio. Okay. Oh, gong. Cool down. And then those are the photos that we take. And there's the ultra dome. Okay. It's a one to one lidar scanned measurement. Did you. Wait, did you actually LIDAR scan? I lidar scanned it. Okay. Yeah, the measurements and you could play as any character. So yeah. Yeah. Okay, so yeah. What does it take to make it in TVPN simulator. Camera cut. Okay, so you're watching the show and you need to cut between. Oh. So you get a current cue and you have to cut between different cues on at the right time to produce the show live. Okay, we have Tyler, we have Mark in TVPN simulator. Okay. What else can you do here? How much activity? Like 35%. Is this from yesterday? Oh, this is yesterday's show is playing currently. Okay. So they're using the wallet. And if you're jordy, you play as. You have to do a mini game, which is Guitar Hero, but with soundboard, basically. Is that the game? Let's hear overnight success. So you have to. You have to hit the soundboard at the right time as the blocks come down. Okay. Things like. I think I was doing some ad reads for a while. There's a gong. Of course. We're really packing the ultra dump. We'll see if this thing has high throughput networking. You can play as the guest. What do you play as the guest? You just see what it's like to be a guest on tvpn. Okay, someone's moving the goalposts. Okay, we got a new definition for general intelligence. I didn't realize that. Yeah, the chat has joined the game. Oh, yeah. Someone says make it a Roblox game. This does have some Roblox aesthetics, but this is not. This is vibe coded. And so this is creating the daily newsletter. You have to stack the different blocks, the strips. It says perfect alignment, published clean. That's Brandon Gurrell's job. Nick has to, of course, fix the schedule, get everyone to come together. We're watching some Tetris. Tetris? Calendar Tetris. You're trying to calendar Tetris? How are you going to get Patrick Collison and Brian Chesky on the show with Alex Karp and Marc Benioff all at the same time? How will you do that? Paul Coogan. There we go. And then this is Tyler organizing the show, figuring out how to get different posts into the show. Okay. Oh, here you go. You're moving the different. Oh, you're jammed up there. You're jammed up there. You got to keep working on that. What else is this? What is Jackson up to? Making cards. What are we doing here? Oh, whack a clip. Okay, the timeline. Sniper. There's breaking news. You gotta. You ramble. You don't want to cut that. Okay. You want to hit the good hot takes at the right time. That is fantastic. I cannot believe the number of mini games here. This is insane. What A remarkable. Oh, this is me. Okay, so I have to read different phrases. It's a typing game because I have to read without a teleprompter. Live from the TVPN ultradome. Uh oh, someone's typing incorrectly. Phrase deck. Okay, well, we got a whole bunch of people. You can go enjoy it. Hopefully people are playing TVPN simulator all weekend long. Yeah, yeah, I expect people to put up. I mean, if you're launching a TBPN type show, this is a great way to get your reps in, get some practice, get some practice in before you go. Until we get live. Until we get our mastermind. Yeah, it is, it is the path of financial freedom for a lot of folks. So we recommend it, we endorse it. Get your reps in on tbpnsimulator.com and we will see you on Monday. Anything else, Jordy? Is it actually live? I think it's live, yeah. Wow. Oh yeah. People are in there. They're playing tv. We gotta change, we gotta change the slop images. Okay, we'll work on those. But a lot of this. Incredibly well done, Ben. Our first video game shipped. Truly hilarious. And people are asking for a wave pool. That's true. We do need a wave pool. We don't have a wave pool in here. Well, that's not a simulation. But if we make it in the simulator, it's probably increases the likelihood. I think the key is you have to be able to sit down in one of those laptops and play an even rougher version of TVPN simulator. Two layers deep. That's how you simulate Ben. Yeah, yeah. When you simulate Ben, it should go into a 2D version. Top down low, even lower res graphics. Pixel art. Yeah, yeah. A pixel art version of TVPN simulator. Two layers deep. And we can see how deep the ravage rabbit hole goes. But will you break out of the matrix? We certainly hope you do this weekend. Go enjoy your.
More so than I even expected. So, yeah, we've been really happy with that. Yeah, I've noticed that Codex puppeteering a mouse cursor has gotten good. It feels like it crossed some sort of like, touring test where when I see a video of Codex moving a mouse around, it doesn't read to me like, oh, that's a jittery, like the AI is using it. It just looks like, oh, somebody just recorded themselves moving the mouse. Is there a benchmark? Is that something that just comes from the new model or work that's being done on Codex? Like, what is going on with the progress there to the sky team acquisition? Yeah, yeah. So there's kind of like three things going on there. Like, first of all, GPT 5.5 is our best model ever for like general work or knowledge work. And so it's really good at using computers. The next thing is, well, what harness do you give the model? Or, like, what information is the model seeing? And like, what tools does it have to use the computer? A lot of early versions of giving a model access to a computer, we're just giving it screenshots of the computer. But there's a lot of secret sauce in our implementation where the model actually gets text representations of what's on screen from frameworks like accessibility. The model is much more efficient when it has access to all this information. Then the last bit that I honestly think, well, I don't know if I would say it's underappreciated because I feel like people really appreciated it, but it's the level of craft that was put in to how it feels when the agent is using the computer. So for instance, you could totally just have the agent like click around on your screen and just have that be invisible and you wouldn't even. It's just like the computer is updating as clicks happen. But the team put a ton of care into exactly the animation that this mouse cursor takes as it goes between the different click positions. And it was really fun to talk about that and jam on that with them. We actually made some interesting trade offs. Having this animation actually slows down how quickly the agent can work by just a tiny bit. But it means that it's so much easier as a human for me to understand the system and therefore to trust the system. Yeah, that's interesting. That sort of goes back to. I remember the initial ChatGPT app launch on.
The better. And then sometimes you just need UI so that people can learn that this thing exists, but even that the model can suggest things. So I'll give you the most powerful, I think, example of a use case I heard recently was this person on the growth team needs to figure out, like, what experiments to run, and then they need to write code to run the experiment, and then they need to analyze the experiment. And it turns out they were using. They started using codecs individually for each separate thing. So they would have it run a bunch of analyses and they would sort of interrogate the data. You know, they would just talk to Codex about the data and then they would pick an experiment and then they would like, write. Ask Codex to write the code. Then they would run the experiment and they would ask Codex what the results of the experiment were. And then they would like, produce a deck, right? So all steps they were doing individually and they. They didn't start by saying, I'm going to automate this entire thing because that's like hard and scary, right? They just started with using codecs, like to accelerate themselves, individual productivity for each task. Then they started basically connecting all these things together into a giant skill. And then one day they just said, hey, why don't you do this every morning? And they gave it a name. It's called Lord Bottleneck because it's like solving the bottlenecks, friction for new users. And basically this is the thing the team does now every morning. Lord Bottleneck evaluates past experiments, looks at data, looks at new things, proposes some experiments and offers to the team, like, hey, let's run these experiments. The team picks, let's do this one or that one. Then LordAbotnik is like, okay, cool, here's some code or whatever config that needs to be done, runs the experiment. And at the end they like, they go and do the same loop the next day and analyze the results. And so that's actually like really serious value in automation. That's like, I forget the numbers, but it's produced like, you know, significant company value just automatically through codecs. How are you thinking about game development? It feels like all of these tools are super useful and could really accelerate game development.
Biggest takeaway. Yeah, I feel like Sham Sankar at Palantir with the first breakfast has done a good job shining a light on the last supper. So many people in tech are familiar with that sort of key moment of industry consolidation that led us to this moment. Were there any anecdotes or historical stories that you discovered that were more under the radar, more less discussed as you know, the founding moments of this whole journey? The biggest appreciation that I got was for this sort of like dual pairing of people pushing forward a specific project. So in the Kill Chain, which is Chris Bros, who now is the kind of co president, chief strategy officer at Anuril, but at the time was coming off the Armed Services Committee, he wrote this book, the Kill Chain, he talks about this idea of like military mavericks. And I kind of combined this with this kind of founder founder mode energy that people bring. And so you have this like founder plus military maverick pairing where you have folks like the team. So Bernard Shriver, I think his name, the guy who basically led the team inventing ICBMs. He absolutely needed Eisenhower as his kind of military maverick to pair that effort. There's countless stories of this, the modernization of the Navy. There's all these different things that were like that one, two punch was kind of required once you get away from like, you know, at one point the DoD was 36% of global R and D. Yeah, they had a pretty good handle on the cutting edge. Once you've, the further away you get from that, the more you need founder mode people digging in to figure out the solution. And, and it's heartbreaking because you see these like countless examples of like profits of urgency throughout time where like, once we lost that, that sort of like desire for founders to come in and solve problems. You have all these people who are like, throughout the 80s and 90s and early 2000s, they're releasing reports and writing white papers and talking about how, hey, this is going to be a problem. Warfare is changing. China's going to school on how we do conflict, and that's problematic. And none of them had sort of founders to be able to come solve problems because no one was willing to pay attention to the actual problems. And. And so we lost that pairing. There's reports of Anduril raising a new round $60 billion potentially. Is this book a financial thesis? Is this financial advisor?
But the point, I believe, is this is actually a point of contention. So the judge does not. The judge prohibited, like, going too far into, like, doomerism into the world stuff. And she's like, look, that's kind of a sideshow distraction, like extinction humanity stuff is not the point of this case. But must side called this guy because they want someone. And this my understanding is that Stuart is like, very aligned with the idea that AI is super dangerous and going to harm us all. And so if you get. How does that, how does that make that point? How does that not.
Here is making some of these decisions, so I don't think it's going to be, like, completely disregarded is what I would say. Yeah. How has Judge Rogers done so far, in your view? Just reading. Reading the live blog. She seemingly has, like, zingers. Pretty, like, good, like, one liners the time. I'm just, like, kind of imagining what it's like in there because obviously I'm just reading text, but she's had, like, seemingly, like, some pretty good comedic timing. Yeah. Oh, my God, she's so funny. She's, like, real, like, as you might imagine, there's, like, a number of different types of judges and how they handle their court or whatever. And she just takes no BS from anyone, including the lawyers. And, like, when they try to, like, tap dance or break the rules or whatever, she's like, no, shut up. Or, like, get back on track or. No, no, no. Actually the best part or the most insane part. So one woman in the overflow room who is just not just. It was a civilian going to attend and watch it started recording, which is, again, against the rules, if not the law, in a federal courthouse. So the judge brings her in and in front of a room of like, 100 people, just, like, dresses her down, yells at her, saying, did you not see any of these signs? What are you doing? I will kick you out. I will. It was like, I would have, like, peed my pants and started crying if she had done that to me. It was deeply, deeply intense. It's teacher, you know, berating a student. Yeah. Classes in session. Classes in session here. It was brutal. How have you been processing Elon's positioning? It feels like the two stories that I've heard him sort of telling are.
It's too much. It's too high risk for them because you could just. You could have, like, turned off the light or whatever. Talk about the fans. Are there really Elon Musk fans in the courtroom? Like, what motivates someone to go and watch that live? Is this their UFC front row ticket? Like, why are they there? So you guys would have fun? Like, it actually is. A lot of court cases are boring to people who don't care about this stuff. Right. Like, you and I may be super into. Like, the FTC trial was super fun for me because it's like, oh, my God. Mark Zuckerberg emailing Sheryl Sandberg and talking about Path. Like, this is incredible. And, like, the average person has no idea what we're talking about, but this is like a circus. There are people who genuinely love Elon or are genuinely worried about the end of the world happening, and I think it's a really good thing that there's public access to these courts. Like, I think, like, the average person can come in and. And show up, and that's what I think. After the buzz of Twitter and, like, people seeing that this is an event, we got a much longer lines and, like, folks who are local. Like, just, like, I know a PM in tech from Meta that came. I know, like, a guy from Box made it in. Just if you get a seat. If you get there early enough and you can get a seat and you can just hang out, it's like. And I think that's really great. I think it's great that people are. Yeah. Are there for it. You know, it shouldn't just be me. Yeah. What about the. What about.
Every room I've ever got to sleep in the. You got to sleep in the living room. You got to sleep in the dining room. All right, let's pull up the trailer for TVPN Simulator. Oh, we have a trailer. Yeah, we got the trailer. Oh, let's go. Let's watch this. I think TVPN needs a game. Yeah, we definitely need to build some sort of game. This, this project has evolved so so much to the point where you can move the goal posts. I don't know that you can interact with the horse. You can definitely hit the gong. And team member is now playable. Okay. Oh, wait. So there is a mechanic. You have to gain the most subscribers. Interesting. Yes. You have to puzzle piece everything. You can watch the stream in the game. You can explore the ultra dome. It's a full backup replication. Tvpnsimulator.com sloppy. That was image gen1 image gen2 would never do that. But. But can we pull the actual game up? Oops. Hopefully. Yeah. Here it comes. Didn't pop up. If we can pull up the actual game. Let's see. There's a whole bunch of good stuff on here. Okay, so this is TVPN Simulator, the latest and greatest version. A remarkable. Ben, how did you actually get this? Like the geometry in here? Was this all described via prompt? Yeah, we've got intern Ben here. Yeah, yeah. So basically the whole process is kind of like. I'm like, okay, look at that wall right there. Yeah, I need that to be taller. Okay. Place a desk right at that wall. So the whole idea was that I had every single object so I was able to like, talk. Is there someone else in the game? Wait, it's multiplayer. It's multiplayer. Wait, so we're getting other people in the game right now? Oh, no, people are coming in. There's Mark. Tvpnsimulator.com I can't believe it's multiplayer. I can't believe you created a multiplayer game. Okay, so we got the bathroom. Okay, this is incre. No, no, no, no. Get out of there. Get out of there. Okay, so there's a chess board which was gifted to us. Ring the gong. You can ring the gong to the actual studio. Okay. Oh, gong. Cool down. And then those are the photos that we take. And there's the ultra dome. Okay. It's a one to one lidar scanned measurement. Did you. Wait, did you actually LIDAR scan? I lidar scanned it. Okay. Yeah, the measurements and you could play as any character. So yeah. Yeah. Okay, so yeah. What does it take to make it in TVPN simulator. Camera cut. Okay, so you're watching the show and you need to cut between. Oh. So you get a current cue and you have to cut between different cues on at the right time to produce the show live. Okay, we have Tyler, we have Mark in TVPN simulator. Okay. What else can you do here? How much activity? Like 35%. Is this from yesterday? Oh, this is yesterday's show is playing currently. Okay. So they're using the wallet. And if you're jordy, you play as. You have to do a mini game, which is Guitar Hero, but with soundboard, basically. Is that the game? Let's hear overnight success. So you have to. You have to hit the soundboard at the right time as the blocks come down. Okay. Things like. I think I was doing some ad reads for a while. There's a gong. Of course. We're really packing the ultra dump. We'll see if this thing has high throughput networking. You can play as the guest. What do you play as the guest? You just see what it's like to be a guest on tvpn. Okay, someone's moving the goalposts. Okay, we got a new definition for general intelligence. I didn't realize that. Yeah, the chat has joined the game. Oh, yeah. Someone says make it a Roblox game. This does have some Roblox aesthetics, but this is not. This is vibe coded. And so this is creating the daily newsletter. You have to stack the different blocks, the strips. It says perfect alignment, published clean. That's Brandon Gurrell's job. Nick has to, of course, fix the schedule, get everyone to come together. We're watching some Tetris. Tetris? Calendar Tetris. You're trying to calendar Tetris? How are you going to get Patrick Collison and Brian Chesky on the show with Alex Karp and Marc Benioff all at the same time? How will you do that? Paul Coogan. There we go. And then this is Tyler organizing the show, figuring out how to get different posts into the show. Okay. Oh, here you go. You're moving the different. Oh, you're jammed up there. You're jammed up there. You got to keep working on that. What else is this? What is Jackson up to? Making cards. What are we doing here? Oh, whack a clip. Okay, the timeline. Sniper. There's breaking news. You gotta. You ramble. You don't want to cut that. Okay. You want to hit the good hot takes at the right time. That is fantastic. I cannot believe the number of mini games here. This is insane. What a remarkable. Oh, this is me. Okay, so I have to read different phrases. It's a typing game because I have to read without a teleprompter. Live from the TVPN ultradome. Uh oh, someone's typing incorrectly. Phrase deck. Okay, well, we got a whole bunch of people. You can go enjoy it. Hopefully people are playing TVPN Simulator all weekend long. Yeah, yeah, I expect people to put up. I mean, if you're launching a TVPN type show, this is a great way to get your reps in. Get some practice. Get some practice in before you go. Until we get live. Until we get our mastermind. Yeah, it is. It is the path of financial freedom for a lot of folks. So we recommend it. We endorse it. Get your reps in on tbpnsimulator.com and we will see you on Monday. Anything else, Jordy? Is it actually live? I think it's live, yeah. Wow. Oh, yeah. People are in there. They're playing tv. We gotta change. We gotta change the slop images. Okay. A lot of this. Incredibly well done, Ben. Our first video game shipped. Truly hilarious. And people are asking for a wave pool. That's true. We do need a wave pool. We don't have a wave pool in here.
Anyway, in the mansion section, there is a record breaking home in Los Angeles with a question. Will a Los Angeles area mega mansion become America's most expensive residential property? $400 million. They're asking 70,000 square feet. The guest house is 30,000 square feet. It's absolutely insane. 39 bedrooms, eight acres, three pools. It has an X ray machine. This is in the mansion section of the Wall Street Journal. Fascinating, because Tyler was unimpressed. And I was wondering, like, what could possibly be better than a $400 million mega mansion in Los Angeles? But you found something. What? What? Absolutely. I was comparing it to, you know, some kind of palatial manor, right? So clearly it's like Versailles. Versailles, you know, 10x bigger. It's like. It's like 700,000 square. 700,000. Just the indoor space, obviously, with the gardens. It's like millions of square footage, millions of square feet. We're kind of just getting brutally mogged. What about on bedrooms? This one is 39. You certainly can't go higher than 39 bedrooms. I think it was. Yeah, 2300. 23. Oh, no, no, that was just rooms, actually. That was rooms. Okay, so not all bedrooms, but I mean, if you need a buddy who crashes, like, they can crash in any room, right? Like, you know. Have you ever slept in a kitchen you've never had? We don't have any room. I've ever slept in the. You got to sleep in the living room. You got to sleep in the dining room. Lucky. All right, let's pull up the trailer for.
Hi. Should we show everyone the game that we made? Should we show everyone TVPN simulator? Do we have that pulled up? Can we play that? Would. Would now be a good time? It's a later. We might not have enough time. We can have them pull it up while we read through the. Let's pull up this packaging of the Neo Robot over at 1x. The Neo Robot over at 1x. Have you seen this? They got a suitcase. They got a suitcase. That is remarkable. Let's pull this up. This. This packaging is so cool aesthetic, this warm tone. It's. It's welcome. I gotta say, it's really cool. Until it's 2:00am and you hear a shaking in your house and you go and you turn on the lights and this little like, you know, suitcase things shaking and then Neo pops out and I and goes Terminator mode. I wouldn't know what that, what that actually is like, but I'm going to watch Terminator this weekend and report back. Ridiculous. Wow. Amazon, Google.
There's like, it's fraught, I guess, is what I would say. Yeah, yeah, it's a, there's obviously a continuum there, which is why he tried to hammer that. It was like, partly. I imagine most car companies have taken a rival car for a spin. Have they taken the car apart? You know, there's a line there and there are laws, but that's a separate issue, of course. Has, has anything come up with a jury around prediction markets? Because I was thinking we've now seen insider trading across every possible prediction market, right? From, you know, from like. Very interesting. You know, even, even the Maduro thing was, was, was interesting because a lot of people were like, oh, he's just betting on himself. But then I saw that, I was like, hey, that's sending a signal to the entire world that an attack could be happening, which puts your entire team at risk. Right? So very, very clearly, like US Military personnel should not be able to trade against our own military's actions ever. Right. And they need to come down really hard on that. Are you. But a jury, A jury on this. Are you just trading on this crazy? Are you going to retire? The reason, the reason that the jury thing is, is, is bad is it creates potentially an incentive for the jury to basically work together and say like, hey, like we all have to be here for like a month. Like we could at least make some money on it. And then you only need to get four. You only need to get like four or five of these people. The chat is saying, monetize jury duty. Oh my God. No, but, but, but like it seems like very important that this does not happen, right? Because, because there's very like they, they tried to select a jury that just doesn't care about the AI race. They don't care about this or that. And, and, but if they are self interested in some capacity, they could be like, well, my, my decision is not, is not even really legally binding. It's just advisory. Like I may as well, you know, I don't know. Right. I think that's a great point. And like something that I imagine like court systems aren't even prepared for fully yet because like, well, there hasn't been a big, there hasn't been a big trial. Like, there's been, I'm sure some like epic apple stuff that was slightly.
Car for a spin? Have they taken the car apart? You know, there's a line there and there are laws, but that's a separate issue, of course. Has, has anything come up with a jury around prediction markets? Because I was thinking we've now seen insider trading across every possible prediction market, right? From, you know, I'm sure from like, very interesting. You know, even, even the Maduro thing was, was, was interesting because a lot of people were like, oh, he's just betting on himself. But then I saw that, I was like, hey, that's sending a signal to the entire world that an attack could be happening, which puts your entire team at risk. Right? So like very, very clearly, like US military personnel should not be able to trade against our own military's actions ever. Right? And they need to come down really hard on that. Are you just ready on this? Are you just ready on this? Crazy. Are you going to retire off this? The reason, the reason that the jury thing is, is, is bad is it creates potentially an incentive for the jury to basically work together and say like, hey, like we all have to be here for like a month. Like we could at least make some money on it. And then you only need to get four. You only need to get like four or five of these people. The chat is saying, monetize jury duties. Oh my God. No, but, but, but like it seems like very important that this does not happen, right? Because, because there's very like they, they tried to select a jury that just doesn't care about the AI race. They don't care about this or that. And, and, but if they are self interested in some capacity, they could be like, well, my, my decision is not, is not even really legally binding. It's just advisory. Like I may as well, you know, I don't know. Right. I think that's a great point. And like something that I imagine like court systems aren't even prepared for fully.
And reminder, we have the Isaacinator coming on in just seven minutes. Mike Isaac has been covering the Elon Musk versus trial. Is it like a four day work week with trials? It is. Are they living in the future? It is. Wait, wait, wait. So can we pull up this screenshot? Because did you read Mike Isaac's full thread on his experience covering the trial? Did you read the whole thing? Cause he's been live tweeting it and it's very funny because he will post. So we gotta zoom in here. This is a. Did you turn this into infographics? I turned it into an infographic. So this is a minute by minute chronological log of off topic, slash personal minor inconvenience moments. Because Mike Isaac will talk about. Oh, Elon Musk just said this on the stage. Oh, the lawyer fired back with this. The jury said this. The judge said that. Right. But then in between that, he has been logging very, very minor inconveniences that he's experienced. So he talks about his lunch, the roasted tomato and corn pizza. He says he forgot a pillow for his burger to sit on. Wait, he said corn pizza? I don't know. He said he bought pillow. That's a very Oakland thing. At 16:07:45. This is transcribed from X I think the times are UTC or something. He brought a water bottle but forgot to fill it in the rush for a seat. Now he's increasingly thirsty. During an intense moment of testimony, someone's laptop suddenly blasted a loud YouTube video in the gallery. This is a garden hose nozzle. It said courtroom mishap. So he's going through it all. It's very fun to track his and we'll dig into his experience both in the court and actually with what's going on with the case. But let's play this. Jensen.
Found three total failure modes. True local effect, false world model, wrong level of abstraction from training data. Solved the level but didn't reinforce the reward. And so the ArcPrize account goes through a little bit of what's going on when an AI model tries to play Arc AGI V3, which is basically a 2D video game. Simple enough for any human to progress through, but increasingly difficult for AI models. Okay, yes, we gotta talk about one of the most exciting new products created in the last hundred years. According to Katie at Business Insider, Amazon will now create an AI podcast about their products where two AI hosts discuss the products and take your questions as if it's a call in show. Yes, let's play. We don't need to play this one. This one is so rude. But you can imagine the type of products that people are generating AI podcasts for. Only the silliest things will be generated. I don't know if people want to listen to a full podcast about every product they buy on Amazon, but you have had some very strong opinions about paper towels. You wanted paper towels from like the 1950s or something. Remember this whole thing? You didn't want to. Well, I just wanted a filter to be able to buy only shop for things on Amazon. Well now instead of a filter, you can listen to an hour long podcast about every possible skew and then you can make the most determined decision available. Well, we have Alex from OpenAI, he's a member of product staff here to talk about Codex and GPT 5.5. I believe he's in the waiting room. So.