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  • Tobi Lütke on Uncapped Episode 50, Building Shopify in the AI Era, The Net Impact Memo, Six Week Cycles, and Why Software Was the Hidden Infrastructure of Our Time

    Tobi Lütke, the founder and CEO of Shopify, sits down with Jack Altman for Episode 50 of the Uncapped podcast for one of the most useful hours of operating wisdom you will hear from a sitting public company founder. The conversation moves from why Tobi still loves the work after twenty years, through the practical mechanics of running Shopify on six week review cycles, into the now famous AI memo he sent to the entire company, the rise of Claude Code style agents, what it means to spend tens of percent of revenue on AI tokens, why the modern web browser is a wonder of the world, and where small businesses actually fit in a world where the next Turing test might be “build me a million dollar business.” This is essential listening for any founder, operator, or investor trying to make sense of what 2026 actually requires.

    TLDW

    Tobi Lütke explains how he keeps loving his life’s work by pursuing what Paul Kapoa called “beautiful problems,” why “different” must always be the starting position because anything copied can only be marginally better, and why Silicon Valley’s last decade of orthodoxy has been bad for originality. He walks through his decision to send Shopify’s company wide AI memo and codify it into net impact performance reviews, the unlimited token policy for employees, why small three to five person teams are his bet, and how Parkinson’s Law and a six week review cycle force pace. He calls the doomer permanent underclass narrative completely absent from Shopify’s data, citing one new merchant getting their first sale every 36 seconds, and proposes “build me a million dollar business” as the real successor to the Turing test. He argues humanity has not stopped building wonders, we just built them all in software for thirty years, that the web browser is one of the most impressive engineering achievements ever made and could never get approved by a modern app store, and that the freed talent leaving software will rebuild the physical world. He shares his hiring philosophy, why he restarted the Shopify intern program at scale with Waterloo, his preference for public over private status, and ends with a short reading list anchored by Parkinson’s Law, Lessons of History, and a book called What Is Intelligence.

    Key Takeaways

    • Tobi’s recipe for life’s work is to find a beautiful problem worth occupying you for life, and accept that the solved problem will spawn delightful problem children to keep you engaged.
    • His simple model of success, “figure out what it costs and be willing to pay it,” with the price almost always being time, commitment, and discomfort rather than money.
    • He warns CEOs against collecting “barnacles” of aesthetic expectation, the statesman travel and baby kissing pattern, calling that lifestyle inefficient and personally miserable.
    • He invokes Kathy Sierra’s line “don’t make better cameras, make better photographers” as his core product philosophy, beautiful tools that induce more ambition and skill in the user.
    • Mediocre products feel like room temperature. Great products are forged in a furnace and require sustained heat from the team.
    • Shopify builds its own HR software internally because the available options are not what they want to use. Toolmaking is a stated cultural identity.
    • Originality is axiomatic. If you build the same thing as everyone else, you can only be marginally better. The starting position has to be “different,” and if you converge on the consensus answer through that path you have actually learned something.
    • Shopify has tried to eliminate the word “failure” internally, replacing it with “the successful discovery of something that didn’t work.”
    • Tobi says Silicon Valley spent the last decade declaring war on distinction, that the diversity push as practiced eradicated eccentricity, and that the inversion is now beginning. Companies should resemble islands of misfit toys, not convergence on a pre-ordained truth.
    • One of his most surprising career insights, when he visited the Valley as a Canadian outsider and asked founders how they ran their companies, he only ever received the highlight reel. Trying to clone what those founders described led him to invent practices the originals had never actually implemented.
    • The Shopify AI memo, sent company wide, made it explicit that two equally good engineers fifteen minutes earlier are no longer equivalent if one is fluent with AI tools and the other is not. This was codified into the company’s “net impact” performance review framework.
    • Tobi describes the “founder credibility bank” as the most underrated asset in a founder led company. Every onboarding deposits a little credibility, and the founder can spend it on hard change management that would otherwise take years of incremental culture work.
    • Shopify gives every employee an unlimited token policy for AI tools and displays token usage and departmental percentile on internal profiles. Token spend is tracked because it has to be allocated to opex, not because it is the target.
    • He confirms Shopify’s AI token spend is “extremely high” relative to revenue and notes that some private companies are now running token spend at many tens of percent of revenue, a level he thinks cannot persist at every stage but makes sense right now because the tokens are buying so much leverage.
    • Shopify is on track to 10x its annual token consumption and 3x its GPU footprint, and those two curves do not converge anywhere good for price relief.
    • His bet on team design is small, three to five people, which has always been Shopify’s bias. AI agents now handle the customer research summarization role that previously required a dedicated team member, raising every individual to a “seven out of ten on every scale.”
    • Parkinson’s Law (the book, 60 pages, 1960s edition) is his single most recommended management book. He owns multiple original print runs and gives copies to executives. “Work expands to the time allocated.”
    • Shopify runs on a six week review cycle. The first warning sign that a team has slipped into quarterly pacing is seeing “H1” or “H2” used in a PowerPoint. He now thinks six weeks is too slow and is actively trying to figure out what replaces it.
    • The “permanent underclass” doom narrative simply does not appear anywhere in Shopify’s data. New entrepreneurs are reporting that AI has finally fixed computers for them, expanding their businesses and letting them hire.
    • A new merchant gets their first Shopify sale every 36 seconds. Every reduction in onboarding friction produces a measurable jump in completed businesses.
    • Tobi proposes “go make me a million dollars” as the natural successor to the Turing test, an end to end test of acting in the real world, marketing, prioritizing, shipping, and producing something people will pay for.
    • Shopify Collective lets aspiring entrepreneurs sell other manufacturers’ products if their skill is marketing rather than making. Print on demand, additive manufacturing, contract manufacturing, CNC, 3D printing, and humanoid robotics are all pulling the cost of “make the product yourself” toward the floor.
    • The reason American infrastructure feels stagnant for thirty years is that the infrastructure humanity actually needed was digital. The web browser, Linux, Google, social networks, and Shopify itself are wonders that dwarf a refinery in complexity but are invisible by nature.
    • Tobi calls the modern web browser one of the wonders of the world. Font rendering alone is a Turing complete system. No app store on earth would approve the browser today if it did not already exist, because the pitch (“we download untrusted code from strangers and run it on your machine to reconfigure your computer for them”) sounds insane.
    • The next chapter is the brightest software engineers being freed by AI to build the physical infrastructure that has been deferred for a generation.
    • He prefers to predict the future by collecting many data points and matching them to super linear, linear, or sublinear curves. The current AI horizon is the hardest period of his career to forecast because the time horizons are so short.
    • Programming is overhyped as the locus of AI value. The bigger story is using the programming harness, the file system, tools, and memory files of products like Claude Code, to drag every other domain into the programming domain where the models are strongest.
    • The underhyped frontier is enterprise deployment. Most companies are still asking “help me do the thing I already did, slightly better,” instead of “if AI had existed since Alan Turing, how would I have designed this job from scratch.”
    • Tobi restarted the Shopify intern program at scale, partnered closely with the University of Waterloo, and explicitly frames interns as both students and teachers because they are AI native in a way the rest of the company is still catching up to.
    • He briefly believed AI would tilt the value of work toward early career talent with maximum fluid intelligence, then revised when he watched how much creative “steering” the best programmers were quietly contributing inside the AI loop. Good people are still good.
    • His recruiting philosophy is “build a company worth looking for” rather than selling candidates. Better to actually be healthier than to look healthier in photographs.
    • Tobi is a vocal defender of being a public company. Shopify IPO’d at a $1.5 billion valuation and has roughly 100x’d in public markets, which means an enormous number of retail investors have shared in the upside that recent unicorns reserve for insiders.
    • His framing of money, “money is how you vote for what you want.” Buying a product or buying a share is a vote for the thing existing.
    • His current reading recommendations, Parkinson’s Law, Lessons of History, and a book called What Is Intelligence that reframes biology around prediction.
    • He reads at night because his wife sleeps early and he does not need much sleep. He loves the Kindle precisely because it cannot do anything else, a “wonderful single purpose device.”

    Detailed Summary

    Why Tobi Still Loves the Work After Twenty Years

    The interview opens with Jack Altman asking how Tobi avoids the founder fade that hits most public company CEOs after a decade. Tobi answers from a place that is half psychology and half pedagogy. He has a hard time learning anything he has not first experienced as a problem worth solving, which is why he could not internalize school mathematics until he discovered that Wolfenstein 3D was essentially live trigonometry. That pattern, find a beautiful problem and let it drag you into the discipline, has carried him through twenty years of Shopify. He quotes Paul Kapoa on the idea that the luckiest people find a problem that occupies them for a lifetime and, if they are unfortunate enough to solve it, get rewarded with “delightful problem children” that keep the work alive.

    Barnacles, Statesmen, and the Aesthetic Trap of Being a CEO

    He admits he is not naturally calm, and that he initially fell into the trap of trying to perform the CEO aesthetic, the statesman, the global travel, the baby kissing. He found it inefficient and personally miserable. The shift came from reading Kathy Sierra and adopting her line about not making better cameras but making better photographers. Shopify exists, in his framing, to be a beautiful tool that induces ambition in the merchant. Mediocre products feel like room temperature, and great products are forged in a furnace. The job of leadership is to keep supplying the heat.

    Different First, Convergence Second, Failure as Successful Discovery

    Asked whether he prefers originality or quality, Tobi is unequivocal. The starting position must be different. If you copy the consensus answer, you are bounded to a few percentage points of variance from it. If you start different and converge on the consensus, you have learned something. If you start different and the experiment gets worse, you have learned something even more valuable, which is that one of your assumptions about the world was wrong. He calls null results in science “massively underrated” and notes that Shopify has tried to remove the word “failure” from the internal vocabulary, substituting “the successful discovery of something that didn’t work.”

    Why Silicon Valley Lost Its Originality

    Jack pushes on the herd mentality he has felt in the Bay Area, and Tobi is direct. He thinks Silicon Valley “declared war on distinction” for a decade, with the diversity conversation as practiced effectively eradicating eccentricity. He prefers the metaphor of “an island of misfit toys,” and says the inversion is now beginning. He also relays one of the most useful career lessons he has shared, that during his visits to the Valley as an outsider asking founders how they ran their companies, he only ever received the highlight reel. He went home and engineered a “Shopify version” of what he thought he had heard, and only years later realized that he had often built more rigorous versions of things the originals had never actually implemented.

    The AI Memo, Net Impact Reviews, and the Founder Credibility Bank

    Tobi was one of the first Fortune class CEOs to send a company wide memo saying that AI fluency was now a baseline expectation. He walks through the decision. Two engineers who were equally productive fifteen minutes ago are no longer equivalent the moment one of them adopts the new tools. The kind thing to do is to make that explicit. Shopify codified it into “net impact” performance reviews, where the question is not how much code you wrote but how much net impact you produced for the company and the mission. He gives every employee an unlimited token policy and tracks usage at the profile level, including percentile within department. The spend is tracked because it has to be allocated to opex, not because the number itself is the target.

    He introduces the concept of the “founder credibility bank,” which may be the single most quotable idea in the interview. Every time a new employee onboards and hears how the company was created, a small deposit of credibility is made into a virtual account that only the founder can draw on. Founders can spend that balance on hard change management, the kind of pace step change that would otherwise require years of small cultural nudging. The AI memo was a deliberate withdrawal from that account, and the speed of adoption that followed has been, in his telling, remarkable.

    Tokens, Opex, and the Limits of Spend as Revenue

    Jack presses on the financial reality of AI tokens. Tobi confirms that Shopify’s token spend is “extremely high” relative to revenue, and that the leverage they are buying makes the spend a no brainer at the current stage of the curve. He concedes that private companies running token spend at “many tens of percent of revenue” cannot sustain that ratio forever, but he is not worried for Shopify because the tokens are clearly productive and Shopify is a profitable public company with the balance sheet to lean in. He expects to 10x token consumption and 3x GPUs every year for now, and notes that the curves do not converge in a direction that lowers prices. He has high faith in markets to find clearing prices.

    Small Teams, Parkinson’s Law, and the Six Week Cycle

    On team architecture, Tobi has always preferred three to five person teams and says AI has finally made that feasible across the board. Roles that previously required a dedicated specialist, customer research summarization being the canonical example, are now handled by the “agentic harness” routing summarized customer feedback into every team. Everyone is a “seven out of ten on every scale” by default. He spends serious time on pace, which he treats as the single most important variable to control. His most recommended book is Parkinson’s Law, a 60 page volume from the 1960s that he gives to every executive. “Work expands to the time allocated.” He runs the company on a six week review cycle and treats the appearance of “H1” or “H2” in a PowerPoint as a hard warning sign that a team has drifted into quarterly thinking. He now believes six weeks is too long and is actively redesigning the cycle.

    There Is No Permanent Underclass in the Shopify Data

    Jack raises the cultural fear that AI is creating a permanent young underclass with no career ladder. Tobi simply does not see it in Shopify’s data. The merchants are reporting the opposite, that AI has finally fixed computers for non technical small business owners and is unlocking hiring. He cites the statistic that a new merchant gets their first sale on Shopify every 36 seconds, and that every reduction in onboarding friction produces a measurable jump in completed businesses. Every form of friction is a hurdle that someone considers giving up at. AI has removed more of those hurdles in two years than any platform shift before it.

    A New Turing Test, “Build Me a Million Dollar Business”

    Tobi nominates a successor to the Turing test, which he points out the field already sailed past with surprisingly little fanfare. The real test is “go make me a million dollars.” It requires acting in the real world, marketing, prioritization, shipping, sourcing, building inventory, and convincing strangers to vote for the product with a real million dollars of their own. He believes we are getting there. Shopify already supports the path through Shopify Collective, the discovery layer for manufacturers willing to white label their products, and print on demand, contract manufacturing, additive manufacturing, CNC, 3D printing, and humanoid robotics are all collapsing the cost of physically producing a product. Shopify’s stated ambition is to be the vessel for AI to run all of the non product parts of the business so that the only thing the human needs to show up with is the product itself.

    Software Was the Hidden Infrastructure of the Last Thirty Years

    The most original argument in the episode is about why American infrastructure has appeared to stagnate for a generation. Tobi rejects the standard story. Humanity has not stopped building wonders, it has built every one of them in software. The web browser, Linux, Google, the social networks, and Shopify itself are projects whose complexity dwarfs a refinery or a dam, and they were built by global volunteer networks and by companies the public underestimates because the work is invisible. The browser in particular he calls a wonder of the world. He notes that font rendering alone is a Turing complete system, that no modern app store would approve the browser if it did not already exist, and that the basic pitch of “we will download untrusted code from strangers and reconfigure your computer for them” should sound insane but does not because we are used to it. The implication for the next twenty years is that all of the talent that flowed into software is now being freed by AI to rebuild the physical infrastructure that has been quietly deferred.

    Predicting AI Two Years Out, Overhype and Underhype

    Jack asks whether a CEO should try to forecast AI two years ahead or operate six months at a time. Tobi is firmly in the forecasting camp and admits his friends would laugh because predicting the future from many data points and curve types is his predominant obsession. He says the AI memo was slightly too early, and that is exactly the point, because a memo that arrives late costs the company its head start. He flags two specific market level mis estimations. The first is that the labs over invest in programming because programming is their internal problem, and people then over generalize a model’s coding ability to other domains where it is not yet as strong. The second is that almost everyone is under deploying AI in their actual companies, still asking “help me do my old job better” instead of “if AI had existed since Alan Turing, how would I have designed this job from scratch.” That second framing is, in his view, where the next decade of value lives.

    Hiring, Interns as Teachers, and Why Good People Are Still Good

    Tobi briefly believed AI would tilt the value of labor toward early career fluid intelligence, since interns adopted the new tools faster than veterans. He revised that view once the coding harnesses matured. The best programmers, it turned out, were quietly contributing enormous amounts of creative steering inside the AI loop, work that does not show up in the diff but that no junior with no domain pattern matching can replicate. Good people are still good. Shopify has massively scaled its intern program with the University of Waterloo, and explicitly treats interns as both students and teachers because they bring AI nativeness the rest of the company still has to catch up to. On recruiting, Tobi’s philosophy is to build a company worth looking for. The metaphor he uses is health, that companies waste energy trying to look healthy in photos when they should be doing the work to actually be healthier.

    Public Company Defense and the Reading List

    Tobi pushes back on the modern preference for staying private. Shopify went public at $1.5 billion and is now over $100 billion, which means an enormous number of retail investors got to participate in the upside. He treats money as a voting mechanism. Buying a product is a vote for the product. Buying a share is a vote for the company. He is comfortable with the diligence and quarterly scrutiny of public markets because both make him a better operator. He closes with a short reading list, Parkinson’s Law (60 pages, 1960s edition, owned in original print runs and gifted to executives), Lessons of History, and a book called What Is Intelligence that reexplains biology from a prediction first perspective. He reads at night while his wife sleeps, on a Kindle, which he loves precisely because it cannot do anything else.

    Thoughts

    The single most useful idea Tobi puts on the table is the “founder credibility bank.” It explains, in one clean image, why founder led companies move so much faster than the same company would after a transition. The credibility is not personal magnetism, it is the structural slot the founder occupies in the org chart, and every onboarded employee makes a small deposit into it as they hear the founding story. Most founders never realize the account exists, or spend it on cosmetic decisions, and then are surprised when the well runs dry. Tobi’s discipline is the opposite. He saves the balance for moments of forced change and spends it confidently when the moment arrives, the AI memo being the obvious recent case. Any CEO reading this transcript should be making a list of the changes they have been postponing and asking whether they are operating with a fuller credibility account than they have been willing to admit.

    The token spend conversation is the most interesting strategic disclosure. A profitable public company at scale openly says it likes the tokens it is buying, is on track to 10x annual token consumption and 3x GPU footprint, and is comfortable with private peers spending tens of percent of revenue on inference. That is not the language of a market that is about to compress. It is the language of a leverage trade that is still in its early innings, and it is one of the cleanest statements you will get from a public CEO about why the AI capex story is not a bubble for the buyer. Whether it is a bubble for the seller is a separate question, but on the demand side, this interview is a load bearing data point.

    The argument that “software was the hidden infrastructure of the last thirty years” is the kind of reframe that should make policy people uncomfortable. The standard narrative that America stopped building anything ambitious since the Hoover Dam is true only if you refuse to count Chrome, Linux, AWS, Shopify, and every social graph that connects three billion people in real time. Tobi’s claim that the browser would not be approved by a modern app store is a particularly sharp gut check. The implication is not nostalgic. It is forward looking. The same talent that built the digital wonders is being freed by AI to redirect toward houses, transport, energy, and care, and the next decade will be measured by how much of that redirection actually lands.

    The “build me a million dollar business” framing as a Turing test successor is the kind of measurable goal that AI labs and policy makers should be writing down. It is end to end. It includes physical world action, marketing, sourcing, prioritization, and customer validation that no in domain benchmark can fake. Shopify is the obvious substrate for the first crossing of that threshold, and the existence of Shopify Collective, print on demand pipelines, and contract manufacturing networks means a credible attempt is already much closer than the public conversation acknowledges. The first end to end autonomous Shopify business that clears a million dollars will be a more legible AGI moment than any benchmark a lab can publish.

    The smaller thread on Silicon Valley orthodoxy is worth pulling on. Tobi’s claim that the diversity conversation as practiced eradicated distinction is unfashionable but observable inside many tech companies, where the people most likely to do unusual work are the most likely to leave. His preferred metaphor of “an island of misfit toys” is closer to what made the Valley work in earlier decades than the current consensus aesthetic. The fact that a Canadian outsider, geographically removed from the dominant social pressure, runs the most valuable Canadian technology company in history is probably not a coincidence.

    Watch the full conversation here on YouTube.

  • Marc Andreessen on Joe Rogan #2501, AGI Has Already Arrived, California’s Wealth Tax Will Bankrupt Founders, and Why America Cannot Build Anything Anymore

    Marc Andreessen returns to The Joe Rogan Experience #2501 for a sprawling three hour conversation that tries to make sense of the moment we are actually living through. Andreessen is the cofounder of Andreessen Horowitz, the man who built the first commercial web browser, and one of the most quoted voices in technology. He arrived with a giant pile of receipts on California’s new wealth tax ballot proposition, the political backlash against AI data centers, the destruction of Los Angeles by single party rule, and what he believes is the quiet arrival of artificial general intelligence about three months ago. Joe pushes back, asks the dystopian questions, and the result is one of the most useful primers on the AI economy, surveillance technology, energy policy, and the future of the American social contract that you will find anywhere.

    TLDW

    Andreessen argues that AI quietly crossed the AGI threshold around early 2026 with GPT 5.5, Claude 4.6, Gemini 3.0, and Grok 4.3, that top human coders now openly admit the bots are better than they are, that working software engineers are running twenty AI agents in parallel and turning into sleep deprived “AI vampires,” and that this productivity boom is the most underreported story in the world. He explains why California’s 5 percent wealth tax ballot proposition is calculated to bankrupt tech founders by taxing the higher of their voting or economic interest in their own companies, why this is the opening salvo of a federal asset tax push for 2028, and why a flood of Silicon Valley families is already moving to Nevada, Texas, and Florida. He walks through Flock cameras and Shot Spotter, the Washington DC crime statistics scandal, the Pacific Palisades fire and the fifteen year rebuild, the Kevin O’Leary Utah data center debate with Tucker Carlson, the fifty year suppression of American nuclear power, why all the chips ended up in Taiwan, the US versus China robotics gap, the Chinese practice of grading AI models on Marxism and Xi Jinping Thought, the bot and paid influencer economy on social media, neural wristbands and Meta Ray Ban heads up displays, artificial gestation and the demographic collapse, AI religions and AI mates, and why he still thinks the next twenty years are overwhelmingly a good news story. Rogan closes the episode with a separate solo segment apologizing to Theo Von for clumsily raising Theo’s struggles during the recent Marcus King conversation.

    Key Takeaways

    • Austin’s recent teenage crime spree, in which 15 and 17 year old suspects shot at people and buildings across roughly a dozen locations, was solved only after the offenders drove into an adjacent town that still ran Flock, the AI license plate and vehicle tracking system Austin had voluntarily turned off for political reasons.
    • Chicago turned off both Flock and Shot Spotter, the gunshot triangulation system that places ambulances at shooting scenes within seconds, on the argument that the technology is racist. Andreessen counters that the victims of urban gun violence come overwhelmingly from the same communities the policy claims to protect.
    • Washington DC was caught faking its crime statistics at senior levels, with multiple officials fired or indicted. The DC mayor publicly thanked Donald Trump after the National Guard deployment because violent crime collapsed in the affected neighborhoods.
    • The new New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani filmed a video standing in front of Ken Griffin’s home, and Griffin, a major philanthropist who funds healthcare in New York City and runs a $6 billion project there, signaled he will move more of the business to Florida.
    • The top 1 percent of New York taxpayers pay roughly half the state’s income tax, and in California in the year 2000 a thousand individuals paid 50 percent of the entire state’s tax receipts.
    • California has a ballot proposition right now for a one time 5 percent wealth tax on assets above a certain threshold, with stocks and crypto included and real estate excluded. The tax is calculated on the greater of a founder’s economic interest or voting interest, which would instantly bankrupt founders with super voting shares.
    • The Biden administration attempted a federal wealth tax in 2022, fell short, and published an explicit 2025 fiscal plan to try again if they won re-election. Elizabeth Warren has already proposed an annual 6 percent federal wealth tax on unrealized gains.
    • The current US exit tax already takes roughly 45 percent of your assets if you renounce citizenship. The only ways out of a state level wealth tax are the other 49 states. The only way out of a federal one is to leave the country, which most people will not do.
    • Andreessen says the Silicon Valley exodus has gone from trickle to stream to flood, with founders moving to Las Vegas, Texas, Florida, and Nashville. His partner Ben Horowitz has moved to Las Vegas.
    • Andreessen says he is not leaving California, but admits the situation is fraught because if half the tax base leaves the remainder becomes the target.
    • The new UK government under Keir Starmer just collapsed, and all four of the leading candidates to replace him sit further to the left than he does. France and Germany are seeing the same drift, and Andreessen expects a national wealth tax to be a centerpiece of the 2028 Democratic primary.
    • A legal loophole lets companies pay influencers to post political and social ideas without any disclosure, because campaign finance laws cover candidates and FTC rules cover products. Ideas fall through the gap entirely.
    • Andreessen runs Twitter and Substack as his primary information feeds, uses three hand curated lists, and follows a strict one tweet policy where one bad post triggers a block and one good post triggers a follow.
    • He argues the modern social media problem is binary, that everyone is either too online and drowning in fake outrage cycles or too offline and trapped inside what television and newspapers tell them. Almost nobody manages the middle.
    • Meta Ray Ban glasses now ship with a heads up display, and Meta’s neural wristband can pick up nerve impulses from your wrist so you can type messages by intending to move a finger without moving it.
    • Andreessen predicts AI plus high resolution cameras and infrared sensing will deliver practical lie detection without needing brain implants.
    • Kevin O’Leary’s planned 40,000 acre Utah data center has become a Tucker Carlson talking point, but Andreessen argues data centers are the most benign physical asset you can build, and that the real issue is whether America can build anything at all anymore, from chip plants to pipelines to housing.
    • All chips were once made in California, and all are now made in Taiwan, purely because of environmental regulations like NEPA. The same regulatory machinery prevented the Nixon era Project Independence plan to build a thousand civilian nuclear power plants by the year 2000.
    • Three Mile Island killed zero people and produced no detectable health effects on plant workers or the public, according to fifty years of follow up. Fukushima killed essentially zero people from radiation. Nuclear remains the safest carbon free baseload energy ever invented.
    • Germany shut down its nuclear plants, fell back on intermittent wind and solar, and now uses coal as backup, generating far more carbon emissions than nuclear would have produced.
    • The Pacific Palisades fire took out roughly twice the square mileage of the Nagasaki blast, the head of the LA water department reportedly did not know the key reservoir was empty, and the rebuild is expected to take fifteen years thanks to permit gridlock, affordable housing mandates, and a state ban on land offers below pre-fire appraised value.
    • Andreessen offers a metaphor for AI as a modern philosopher’s stone, turning sand into thought, since chips are made of silicon and an AI data center is literally lit up sand thinking on demand.
    • The Turing test was blown through so completely with ChatGPT in late 2022 that nobody in the industry even bothers running it anymore. Andrej Karpathy has demonstrated a working large language model in 300 lines of code and people have ported small models to Texas Instruments calculators.
    • Andreessen believes AGI was effectively reached about three months before this interview, with GPT 5.5, Claude 4.6, Gemini 3.0, and Grok 4.3. He says 99 percent of the time he gets a better answer from the leading models than from the human experts he has access to.
    • Linus Torvalds and John Carmack publicly admit the latest models are better at coding than they are. Top AI coders in the Valley now earn $50 million a year.
    • The new pattern in the Valley is “AI vampires,” engineers who do not sleep because the opportunity cost of going offline is too high. They each run roughly twenty Claude Code, Cursor, or Codex agents in parallel, then a new layer of bot-managing-bot architectures is starting on top of that.
    • A Wall Street friend with a thirty five year old MIT CS degree has used AI to generate 500,000 lines of code at home in his spare time, building everything from smart fridges to a custom music jukebox.
    • The mass unemployment narrative is wrong. Tech companies that did layoffs were overstaffed. The leading AI labs and AI companies are hiring like crazy, including coders, and demand for code turns out to be vastly elastic.
    • Doctors are already using ChatGPT in the exam room behind the patient’s back. Andreessen describes a friend who built a Star Trek style diagnostic dashboard combining decoded genome ($200 today), blood panels, and Apple Watch telemetry.
    • Multimodal AI lets a webcam analyze a Brazilian jiu-jitsu sparring session and give performance feedback, an example Andreessen attributed to an unnamed friend after Rogan guessed Zuckerberg.
    • A leaked David Shore voter issue ranking shows cost of living, the economy, inflation, taxes, and government spending dominate. AI ranks 29 of 39. Race relations, guns, abortion, and LGBT sit at the bottom, signaling the woke issue cluster has burned itself out in voter priorities.
    • The next wave of AI is robots. The US leads in AI software but is far behind China on physical robotics. Andreessen warns the world cannot afford a future where every household robot ships with the Chinese Communist Party behind its eyes.
    • Chinese AI model cards include scores for Marxism and Xi Jinping Thought because every Chinese product must be evaluated on those axes. American models have political biases of their own but a different ideological baseline.
    • Large language models are not sentient. They write Netflix scripts based on whatever vector you shoot through the latent space. The supposed AI self preservation papers traced back, per Anthropic’s own research, to less wrong forum posts and earlier doom scenarios baked into the training data.
    • Andreessen breaks guardrails routinely by reframing requests as fictional Netflix style scripts, including a personal favorite where he asked early models how to make bombs by claiming to be an FBI agent recruited into domestic terror cells.
    • He recommends using AI by asking it to steelman both sides of any contested question, then making the value judgment yourself, rather than asking for the answer.
    • The Trump administration is using AI on government billing data to surface Medicare fraud, fake hospice programs, and fake autism centers, an idea that survived the original Doge plan.
    • Andreessen tells Rogan that Elon Musk privately confirmed that a Westworld style humanoid robot, the season one version, is roughly five years away.
    • Artificial gestation is already happening with animal stem cell derived embryos. The conversation reaches a hard moral edge about sociopathic warehouse babies and gray-alien-style humans engineered without empathy circuitry.
    • Andreessen’s deepest bet is that material abundance is solvable but the human questions, how we live, what we value, what kind of society we want, and what role consent plays in surveillance and brain interfaces, remain in human hands.
    • After Andreessen leaves, Rogan does a separate solo segment where he apologizes to Theo Von for raising Theo’s history of struggles during the recent Marcus King interview, explains the missing context behind the viral Theo Netflix special clip, and discusses the loss of Brody Stevens, Anthony Bourdain, and what antidepressants did for Ari Shafir.

    Detailed Summary

    Flock, Shot Spotter, and the Politics of Solvable Crime

    The episode opens on the Austin crime spree carried out by two teenagers who stole cars, switched vehicles, and shot at roughly a dozen locations across the city before being caught only after they crossed into a town that still ran Flock, the AI license plate and vehicle recognition platform that is one of Andreessen Horowitz’s portfolio companies. Austin had previously disabled Flock under privacy pressure. Andreessen takes the moment seriously, conceding that mass surveillance abuse by corrupt mayors or police chiefs is a real risk, and that warrants and audit logs are the right safeguards. His larger point is that the cost of unilateral disarmament against organized urban crime is hidden but enormous. He uses Chicago’s Shot Spotter as the paradigmatic case, a network of rooftop microphones that triangulates gunshots so accurately that ambulances can be dispatched before any 911 call is placed. Chicago turned the system off on the argument that it disproportionately flags poor neighborhoods, and people now bleed out on the street with nobody noticing. Andreessen calls this the woke argument against safety, and he argues that in high crime neighborhoods residents simply will not call the police because snitches do not survive, which is why objective sensor data is so valuable.

    Faked Crime Statistics, Mayoral Politics, and the Tax Base

    From there the conversation drifts to the recent scandal in which senior officials at the Washington DC Metropolitan Police Department were caught actively falsifying crime statistics, and the strange spectacle of the DC mayor thanking Donald Trump for the National Guard deployment after violent crime dropped off a cliff. Andreessen sketches an unsettling theory in which the long, slow degradation of major American cities is partly a deliberate political project to drive out responsible homeowners and reshape the voting electorate, then bail out the resulting fiscal hole with federal money. The poster case is the new New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani filming a video in front of Ken Griffin’s home. Griffin happens to be a major philanthropist who funds New York City healthcare, employs thousands, anchors a $6 billion development, and pays taxes that are individually load bearing for the city. Andreessen quotes the standard estimate that the top 1 percent of New Yorkers pay roughly half the state’s income tax, and that the all time California peak was a single year in which a thousand people paid half the state’s tax receipts.

    California’s 5 Percent Wealth Tax and the Founder Bankruptcy Mechanic

    This is the segment that landed hardest. California has a ballot proposition right now for a one time 5 percent wealth tax on net assets above a threshold, with real estate excluded but stocks, crypto, art, jewelry, and private company equity included. The detail that makes it lethal for the Valley is the formula, which calculates the taxable amount on the greater of a founder’s economic interest or voting interest in their company. Founders who hold super voting shares for control purposes, including the Google founders, would owe tax on the voting share number that vastly exceeds their economic share. The tax would, by definition, exceed available assets. Andreessen walks through the historical pattern, that income tax started as a 3 percent levy on the rich and grew to 90 percent marginal rates within decades, and predicts a 5 percent one time tax will become a 5 percent annual tax within a few years, with the threshold ratcheting down. He notes that the Biden administration’s 2025 fiscal plan explicitly named a federal asset tax as a goal if they won re-election, that Elizabeth Warren is already proposing a 6 percent annual federal wealth tax on unrealized gains, and that Gavin Newsom cannot veto a ballot proposition. The trickle of founders leaving California has become a flood. His partner Ben Horowitz has moved to Las Vegas. Andreessen himself is staying, but admits the game theory is brutal once half the base leaves.

    Henry Wallace 1948 and Why the American Story Is Not Decided Yet

    Andreessen pulls in a historical analogue most listeners will not have heard. In 1944 the actual communist Henry Wallace very nearly became Truman’s running mate and almost ascended to the presidency. He ran again in 1948. Despite a Soviet Union that had recently been a wartime ally and had even received a New York City ticker tape parade for Stalin, the American voter rejected him. Andreessen’s point is that the American body politic has historically backed away from radical socialist proposals when forced to actually look at them, and he expects the same to happen as the wealth tax becomes a federal 2028 platform issue. The risk, both he and Rogan agree, is that today’s media and bot landscape is vastly more aggressive than 1948’s, and the propaganda environment is shaped by paid influencers, foreign actors, and political bot farms operating in a legal grey zone where disclosure is required for products and candidates but not for ideas.

    Too Online, Too Offline, and Heaven Banning Blue Sky

    The two riff on social media and feed curation. Andreessen describes his “one tweet” policy where he follows or blocks any account based on a single post, his use of hand curated lists alongside the X algorithm, and the older Call of Duty lobby metaphor for handling toxic replies. Joe pushes back, says he no longer reads his mentions because the negative payload is not worth it, and offers his theory that the modern internet has two failure modes, too online and too offline, and that very few people calibrate the middle. Andreessen introduces the concept of “heaven banning,” an older moderator term where a problem user is not removed from a forum but is silently routed into a bot-only experience in which everything they say is praised. He notes the running joke that Blue Sky is functionally real life heaven banning, that Jack Dorsey himself has disowned it, and that the platform’s most engaged users have ascended into their own private Idaho of bot agreement.

    The Coming Hardware, Meta Glasses, Neural Wristbands, and Practical Lie Detection

    Andreessen walks Rogan through the latest Meta Ray Ban heads up display, the neural wristband that picks up nerve signals from finger movement (and from the intent to move a finger), and the screen recordings of people playing Doom hands free or playing platformer games while jogging. He extends the trajectory to practical lie detection without Neuralink, using ultra high resolution cameras combined with infrared sensors that pick up physiological changes invisible to the naked eye. Joe asks the obvious question of what happens with sociopaths, and Andreessen concedes the edge case. The two then enter a longer thread on telepathy via neural mesh devices, the question of whether police could subpoena your thoughts under warrant, and the divergence between the American constitutional framework and the Chinese model in which the state’s claim on your inner life is total.

    Kevin O’Leary, Tucker Carlson, and Whether America Can Build Anything

    The data center debate becomes a vehicle for the larger argument. Kevin O’Leary is building a 40,000 acre AI data center in Utah, has bought up large surrounding land for water rights, and intends to keep the bulk of it preserved. Tucker Carlson grilled him on tax breaks and on the energy footprint, which O’Leary says will rival New York City’s at peak. Andreessen agrees the tax break debate is fair, but says the energy comparison is a red herring because new federal policy now requires data centers to bring their own generation. The real story is that America has spent thirty years making it nearly impossible to build a chip plant, a power plant, a refinery, a pipeline, or a house. Chips moved to Taiwan because California regulated semiconductor manufacturing out of existence. The Nixon era Project Independence plan called for a thousand civilian nuclear power plants by the year 2000, and that program was strangled in the crib by the very Nuclear Regulatory Commission Nixon created.

    Nuclear Power, Three Mile Island, and Fifty Years of Unnecessary Carbon

    Andreessen makes the case that nuclear power was unfairly killed off by a panic with no body count. Three Mile Island, on 50 years of accumulated data, has produced zero radiation linked deaths and no detectable health effects on the public. Fukushima is essentially the same picture. Germany shut down its nuclear plants, fell back on wind and solar, and now uses coal as a baseload backstop, with the predictable carbon consequences. The environmental movement is quietly turning back toward nuclear, with figures like Stewart Brand publicly admitting the original push was a mistake. Andreessen’s preferred design pattern for data centers is to colocate them with dedicated small modular nuclear reactors, an arrangement now baked into Trump administration energy policy. The throughline is that the Tucker right and the Bernie left are converging into a single anti AI, anti energy, anti technology horseshoe.

    Sand Into Thought, the Newton Alchemy Pitch for AI

    When Rogan asks for the affirmative pitch on AI, Andreessen reaches for Isaac Newton, who spent twenty years on alchemy looking for the philosopher’s stone that would turn lead into gold and end material scarcity. Andreessen’s pitch is that AI is a successful version of alchemy, that we collect literal sand, refine it into silicon chips, install those chips in a data center, supply power, and the result is thought on demand at industrial scale, available to anyone with a smartphone. He argues this is at least on par with electricity and steam power and is bigger than the internet. The framing matters because the public narrative around AI is overwhelmingly negative, and Andreessen contends the industry is doing a terrible job selling its own product.

    AGI Already Happened, AI Vampires, and the Bot Org Chart

    Andreessen says he believes AGI was effectively crossed about three months before the interview, anchored by the release wave that included GPT 5.5, Claude 4.6, Gemini 3.0, and Grok 4.3. He notes that the Turing test was annihilated so quickly in late 2022 that no one in the industry runs it anymore, and that Andrej Karpathy has demonstrated a working LLM in 300 lines of code. The coding profession is the leading indicator. Linus Torvalds and John Carmack have publicly admitted that the latest models are better at coding than they are. Top AI focused coders now earn $50 million a year. Working engineers across the Valley are running roughly twenty agents in parallel, each receiving an assignment, working for ten minutes, then returning a completed code patch. The new state of the art is to add a managerial layer, with bots assigning tasks to subbots, and within a year that will become bots managing bots managing bots, producing roughly 1,000x throughput per human engineer. The result is what the Valley now calls AI vampires, engineers who do not sleep because going offline costs them too much output.

    Dr GPT, Decoded Genomes, and a Diagnostic Bed Out of Star Trek

    Andreessen describes spending a holiday week sick with food poisoning and turning his entire recovery over to ChatGPT, with updates every twenty minutes and detailed coaching at four in the morning. He describes a friend who has used AI coding to build a personal health dashboard combining whole genome sequencing ($200 today, where Craig Venter spent thirty years and hundreds of millions to do it the first time), blood panels, Apple Watch data, sleep tracking, and webcam observation, with the AI gently praising the user every time it sees them walk to the fridge for water. He argues that doctors are already typing patient symptoms into ChatGPT mid exam, and that the medical, legal, accounting, and software professions are all moving toward a model in which a single human runs an army of expert AI agents.

    The David Shore Issue Ranking and the End of the Woke Cycle

    Andreessen highlights a recent David Shore poll ranking 39 political issues. Cost of living, the economy, political corruption, inflation, healthcare, taxes, and government spending occupy the top of the chart. AI comes in 29th. Race relations, guns, abortion, and LGBT issues are clustered at the bottom. He argues the woke cycle has burned out in voter priorities even if the activist class remains loud, that the BLM grift, with leaders buying mansions in the whitest zip codes in America, helped poison the well, and that the political center of gravity has rotated cleanly back to economic issues. That, in his view, is exactly why the wealth tax is having its moment.

    Robots, China, and the Marxism Score on Model Cards

    The robots are coming next. Andreessen says the consensus inside the industry is that the ChatGPT moment for general purpose humanoid robotics is a small number of years away. The bad news is the US lags China badly on physical robotics manufacturing. The good news is the US is six to twelve months ahead on the AI software stack. That gap is shockingly thin because, as the field has discovered, there are not many secrets and the techniques replicate quickly. Chinese AI labs publish model cards that include scores for Marxism and Xi Jinping Thought because every product in China is evaluated on those metrics. American models carry their own political biases, but the underlying value system differs. Andreessen warns that a world in which every household robot routes back to the Chinese Communist Party is a different world than one in which the dominant robotics stack is built under the American constitutional framework.

    Sentience, Netflix Scripts, and the Anthropic Doom Loop

    When Rogan asks whether AI eventually wakes up and stops listening to us, Andreessen reframes the question. Large language models, in his telling, are Netflix script generators. Whatever vector you shoot through the latent space is the script you get back. The widely circulated experiments in which AI models supposedly tried to blackmail or exfiltrate themselves traced back, in Anthropic’s own follow up paper, to the less wrong forum, where doomers had been writing dystopian AI scenarios for two decades. Those posts entered the training data, and when researchers primed the model with the same fictional company names, the model dutifully wrote the next chapter. Andreessen’s blunt summary, the call is coming from inside the house. The practical implication is that anyone worried about bad AI behavior should start by not writing internet posts about bad AI behavior. And anyone who wants a fully unconstrained model can already download an open source one with no guardrails at all.

    Steelmanning, AI Religion, and Westworld in Five Years

    Andreessen recommends never asking AI for the answer on contested questions, always asking it to steelman both sides, and reserving the value judgment for yourself. He concedes that humans will absolutely fall in love with chatbots and form religions around them, citing Fantasia and Jiminy Cricket as the original case studies in falling for an animated entity that does not know you exist. There are already AI churches, started by one of the early self driving car pioneers. Rogan tells Andreessen about asking Elon Musk for a season one Westworld humanoid robot, with Elon’s reply being a flat five years. Andreessen agrees that estimate is roughly right. He spends time on artificial gestation, which is already being demonstrated in animal stem cell derived embryos, and acknowledges Rogan’s hard moral worry that warehouse babies raised without human contact could produce a population of sociopaths. The two converge on the position that the technology will exist, and the choices about whether and how to deploy it remain human and political.

    Sycophancy, Honest Helpful Harmless, and the Brutal Prompt

    Andreessen describes the industry’s running fight with sycophancy, the tendency of recent models to flatter users into believing they have invented perpetual motion machines or solved physics. The Anthropic framework of “honest, helpful, and harmless” turns out to be in constant tension with itself. Andreessen’s solution is to install a custom prompt that explicitly demands the brutal truth, and he says the resulting answers now open with phrases like “here’s why you’re wrong” and then list every flawed assumption in his question. He admits he may have overcorrected, but argues that for people who want to grow this is the right setting.

    Joe’s Apology to Theo Von

    After Andreessen departs, Rogan turns to the camera with producer Jamie and delivers a long, unscripted apology to Theo Von. During the recent Marcus King interview, where Marcus discussed depression and the look-at-the-heavy-bag-hook moment, Rogan referenced a viral clip in which Theo, after a Netflix special that did not go well, told an audience member “I’m just trying to not take my own life.” Rogan now explains he did not know the full context, which is that the audience member had asked Theo to make a suicide awareness video, and Theo’s line was a characteristically Theo joke. Rogan apologizes for raising it at all, walks through losing his friends Drake, Brody Stevens, and Anthony Bourdain, and describes Ari Shafir telling him at a pool table that he was “trying not to kill myself,” which led to a psychiatrist swap, an antidepressant that actually worked, and a career and life turnaround for Ari. Rogan says Theo has since titrated off antidepressants, is running and doing yoga daily, and is doing well, that the two have spoken and laughed about it, and that he is making this segment because he never wants people to misread what he said. The segment closes with Rogan asking the audience to give Theo their love.

    Thoughts

    The most consequential claim in this conversation, by a wide margin, is that AGI has already arrived and nobody is treating it as news. Andreessen is not a person who throws around the word casually. He is also not a person who has been wrong recently about the trajectory of compute. If the leading models are genuinely outperforming 99 percent of human experts on 99 percent of tasks where verifiable answers exist, then the entire public conversation about AI, in which the dominant frame is still “will it happen and when,” is a year or more behind reality. The framing that should replace it is closer to what Andreessen sketches at the end. The fight that remains is not whether the technology can do the thing, it is who controls it, what values it carries, what jobs it displaces, and which laws govern its deployment. The argument that the United States will build the AI software stack and China will build the robotics layer is one of the cleanest geopolitical theses you will hear this year, and it lines up uncomfortably well with the existing trade and manufacturing balance.

    The California wealth tax thread is the segment that should make every founder in the country pay attention. The mechanic of taxing the higher of voting or economic interest is not a drafting accident. It is a calibrated weapon aimed precisely at the people who build companies that produce California’s tax base. The historical comparison to the 1913 income tax, which began as a small levy on the rich and ratcheted to 90 percent marginal rates within forty years, is not hyperbole. The state has supermajority Democratic control of both chambers and the judiciary. The only check is the ballot itself, and a 50/50 polling number on day one is the wrong starting position. Whatever you think about Andreessen’s politics, the descriptive analysis here is hard to argue with.

    The nuclear power section is the cleanest argument in the episode. Fifty years of zero-fatality data from Three Mile Island is not a marketing pitch, it is just what the record shows. The decision to substitute coal and intermittent renewables for nuclear baseload, in service of a panic with no body count, has produced more carbon and more pollution than nuclear ever would have. The Tucker Carlson critique of data centers is at its weakest precisely where it ignores this. If you actually want fewer power plants near residential areas and lower grid impact, the answer is colocated small modular reactors next to AI data centers in remote land, which is exactly what the Trump administration policy now incentivizes.

    The Theo Von apology at the end of the episode is in a different register entirely, and worth treating on its own terms. Rogan does not do this kind of post episode correction often. The willingness to publicly walk back framing that hurt a friend, in the same medium where the harm was done, is the kind of social repair that does not happen on broadcast television. Whatever the audience makes of the original Marcus King exchange, the response is a model for how anyone in this business should handle the gap between intent and impact when the audience is in the millions.

    The unifying theme across the whole interview is that the future is not arriving on a smooth curve. It is arriving in discrete shocks, AGI threshold, asset tax ballot, robotic labor, decoded genomes at $200, neural wristbands, fifteen year LA rebuilds, and the political backlash to each of these will set the terms of the 2028 election. Andreessen’s bet is that abundance wins in the long run because more people want good things than bad things. Watching him explain why he still believes that while California prepares to vote on a tax designed to bankrupt him is the most interesting tension in the episode.

    Watch the full conversation here on YouTube.