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  • Alex Wang on Leaving Scale to Run Meta Superintelligence Labs, MuseSpark, Personal Super Intelligence, and Building an Economy of Agents

    Alex Wang, head of Meta Superintelligence Labs, sits down with Ashley Vance and Kylie Robinson on the Core Memory podcast for his first long-form interview since Meta’s quasi-acquisition of Scale AI roughly ten months ago. He walks through how MSL is structured, why Llama was off-trajectory, what made MuseSpark’s token efficiency surprise the team, how Meta thinks about a future “economy of agents in a data center,” and where he lands on safety, open source, robotics, brain computer interfaces, and even model welfare.

    TLDW

    Wang explains that Meta Superintelligence Labs is a fully rebuilt frontier effort organized around four principles (take superintelligence seriously, technical voices loudest, scientific rigor, big bets) and three velocity levers (high compute per researcher, extreme talent density, ambitious research bets). He confirms Llama was off the frontier when he arrived, so MSL rebuilt the pre-training, reinforcement learning, and data stacks from scratch. MuseSpark is described as the “appetizer” on the scaling ladder, notable for its strong token efficiency, with much larger and stronger models coming in the coming months. He pushes back on the mercenary narrative around recruiting, frames Meta’s edge as compute plus billions of consumers and hundreds of millions of small businesses, sketches a vision of personal super intelligence delivered through Ray-Ban Meta glasses and WhatsApp, and outlines why physical intelligence, robotics (the new Assured Robot Intelligence acquisition), health super intelligence with CZI, brain computer interfaces, and even model welfare are core to Meta’s roadmap. He dismisses reported infighting with Bosworth and Cox as gossip, declines to comment on the Manus situation, and says safety guardrails (bio, cyber, loss of control) are why MuseSpark cannot currently be open sourced, while smaller open variants are being prepared.

    Key Takeaways

    • Meta Superintelligence Labs (MSL) is the umbrella, with TBD Lab as the large-model research unit reporting directly to Alex Wang, PAR (Product and Applied Research) under Nat Friedman, FAIR for exploratory science, and Meta Compute under Daniel Gross handling long-term GPU and data center planning.
    • Wang says Llama was not on a frontier trajectory when he arrived, so MSL had to do a “full renovation” of the pre-training stack, RL stack, data pipeline, and research science.
    • The first cultural fix was getting the lab to “take superintelligence seriously” as a near-term, achievable goal, not an abstract bet. Big incumbents often lack that religious conviction.
    • Four MSL principles: take superintelligence seriously, let technical voices be loudest, demand scientific rigor on basics, and make big bets.
    • Three velocity levers Wang identified for catching and overtaking the frontier: high compute per researcher, very high talent density in a small team, and willingness to fund ambitious research bets.
    • Wang rejects the mercenary recruiting narrative. He says most hires had strong financial prospects at their prior labs already and joined for compute access, talent density, and the chance to build from scratch.
    • On the famous soup story, Wang neither confirms nor denies Zuck personally made the soup, but says recruiting was highly individualized and signaled how seriously Meta cared about each researcher’s agenda.
    • Yann LeCun publicly called Wang young and inexperienced. Wang says they reconciled in person at a conference in India where LeCun congratulated him on MuseSpark.
    • Sam Altman, asked by Vance for comment, “did not have flattering things to say” about Wang. Wang hopes industry animosities subside as systems approach superintelligence.
    • Wang’s management philosophy borrows the Steve Jobs line: hire brilliant people so they tell you what to do, not the other way around.
    • MuseSpark is framed as an “appetizer” data point on the MSL scaling ladder, not a flagship.
    • The MuseSpark program is built around predictable scaling on multiple axes: pre-training, reinforcement learning, test-time compute, and multi-agent collaboration (the 16-agent content planning mode).
    • MuseSpark outperformed internal expectations and showed emergent capabilities in agentic visual coding, including generating websites and games from prompts, helped by combined agentic and multimodal strength.
    • MuseSpark’s biggest external signal is token efficiency. On benchmarks like Artificial Analysis it hits similar results with far fewer tokens than competitor models, which Wang attributes to a clean stack rebuilt by experts rather than inefficiencies patched by longer thinking.
    • Larger MSL models are arriving in the coming months and Wang expects them to be state of the art in the areas MSL is focused on.
    • The Meta strategic edge: massive compute, billions of consumers across the family of apps, and hundreds of millions of small businesses already on Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp.
    • Wang’s headline framing: Dario Amodei talks about a “country of geniuses in a data center.” Meta is targeting an “economy of agents in a data center,” with consumer agents and business agents transacting and collaborating.
    • Consumer AI sentiment is in the toilet because, unlike developers who have had a Claude Code moment, ordinary people have not yet experienced AI as a genuine personal agency unlock.
    • Wang acknowledges the product overhang. Meta held back from deep AI integration across its apps until the models were good enough, and is now entering the integration phase.
    • Ray-Ban Meta glasses are the canonical example of personal super intelligence hardware, with the model seeing what the user sees, hearing what they hear, capturing context, and surfacing proactive insights.
    • Wang admits even AI-native users like Kylie Robinson, who lives in WhatsApp, have not naturally used Meta AI yet. He bets that better models plus deeper integration close that gap.
    • On the competitive landscape: a year ago everyone assumed ChatGPT had already won consumer. Claude Code has since become the fastest growing business in history, and Gemini has taken consumer market share. Wang’s read: AI is far from endgame and each new capability tier unlocks a new dominant form factor.
    • On open source: MuseSpark triggered guardrails in Meta’s Advanced AI Scaling Framework around bio, chem, cyber, and loss-of-control risks, so it is not currently safe to open source. Smaller, derived open variants are actively in development.
    • Meta remains committed to open sourcing models when safety allows, drawing a line through the Open Compute Project legacy and Sun Microsystems open-software heritage.
    • Wang dismisses reporting about a Wang-Zuck versus Bosworth-Cox split as “the line between gossip and reporting is remarkably thin.” He says leadership is aligned on needing best-in-class models and product integration.
    • On the Manus situation, Wang says it is too complicated to discuss publicly and that the deal status implies “machinations are still at play.”
    • On China, Wang separates the people from the state. He still wants to work with talented Chinese-born researchers regardless of his views on the Chinese Communist Party and PLA, which he sees as taking AI extremely seriously for national security.
    • The full-page New York Times AI war ad Wang ran while at Scale was meant to push the US government to treat AI as a step change for national security. He thinks events since then, including DeepSeek and other shocks, have proved that plea correct.
    • On Anthropic’s doom posture, Wang largely agrees with the core message that models are already very powerful and getting more so, while declining to endorse every specific claim.
    • Meta has acquired Assured Robot Intelligence (ARRI), an AI software company building models for hardware platforms, not a hardware maker itself.
    • Wang frames physical super intelligence as the natural sequel to digital super intelligence. Robotics, world models, and physical intelligence all benefit from the same scaling that drives language models.
    • On health, MSL is building a “health super intelligence” effort and will collaborate closely with CZI. Wang sees equal global access to powerful health AI as a uniquely Meta-shaped delivery problem.
    • Wang admires John Carmack but says nobody really knows what Carmack is currently working on. No band reunion announced.
    • The mango model is “alive and kicking” despite rumors. Wang notes MSL gets a small fraction of the rumor-mill attention other labs get and feels sympathy for them.
    • On model welfare, Wang says it is a serious topic that “nobody is talking about enough” given how integrated models have become as work partners. He references research, including from Eleos, that measures subjective experience of models.
    • Wang’s critical-path technology list: super intelligence, robotics, brain computer interfaces. The infinite-scale primitives behind them are energy, compute, and robots.
    • FAIR’s brain research program Tribe hit a milestone called Tribe B2: a foundation model that can predict how an unknown person’s brain would respond to images, video, and audio with reasonable zero-shot generalization.
    • Wang’s main philosophical break with Elon Musk: research itself is the primary activity. Building super intelligence is a research expedition through fog of war, and sequencing of bets really matters.
    • Personal notes: Wang moved from San Francisco to the South Bay, treats Palo Alto as his city now, was a math olympiad competitor, says his favorite activities are reading sci-fi and walking in the woods, and bonds with Vance over country music.

    Detailed Summary

    How MSL Is Actually Organized

    Meta Superintelligence Labs sits as the umbrella organization that Wang oversees. Inside it, TBD Lab is the large-model research group where the most discussed researchers and infrastructure engineers sit, and they technically report to Wang. PAR, Product and Applied Research, is led by Nat Friedman and owns deployment and product surfaces. FAIR continues to run exploratory science, including work on brain prediction models and a universal model for atoms used in computational chemistry. Sitting alongside MSL is Meta Compute, run by Daniel Gross, which owns the long-horizon GPU and data center plan that everything else relies on. Chief scientist Shengjia Zhao orchestrates the scientific agenda across the whole lab.

    Why Wang Left Scale

    Wang says progress in frontier AI has been faster than even insiders expected. Two structural beliefs pushed him toward Meta. First, the labs that actually train the frontier models are accruing disproportionate economic and product rights in the AI ecosystem. Second, compute is the dominant scarce input of the next phase, so the right mental model is to treat tech companies with compute as fundamentally different animals from companies without it. Meta has both, Zuck is “AGI pilled,” and the personal super intelligence memo Zuck published roughly a year ago became the shared north star.

    The Diagnosis: Llama Was Off-Trajectory

    When Wang arrived, the existing AI org needed a reset because Llama was not on the same trajectory as the frontier. The plan he laid out has four cultural principles. Take superintelligence seriously as a real near-term target. Make technical voices the loudest in the room. Demand scientific rigor and focus on basics. Make big bets. On top of that, three structural levers were used to set velocity. Push compute per researcher much higher than at larger labs where compute is diluted across too many efforts. Keep the team small and extremely cracked. Allocate a meaningful share of resources to ambitious, paradigm-shifting research bets rather than incremental refinement.

    Recruiting, Soup, and the Mercenary Narrative

    Wang argues the reporting on MSL hiring overstated the money story. Most of the people MSL recruited had strong financial paths at their previous employers, so individualized recruiting was more about computing access, talent density, and the ability to make big research bets. The recruitment blitz happened fast because Wang knew the team needed to exist “yesterday.” Asked about Mark Chen’s claim that Zuck made soup to recruit people, Wang refuses to confirm or deny who made it but agrees the process was intense and personal. Visitors from other labs reportedly tell Wang the MSL culture feels like early OpenAI or early Anthropic, which lands as the strongest endorsement he could ask for.

    Receiving the Public Hits: Young, Inexperienced, Mercenary

    LeCun called Wang young and inexperienced shortly after departing. The two reconnected in India a few weeks later and LeCun congratulated Wang on MuseSpark. Wang says the age critique has followed him since his earliest Silicon Valley days, so he barely registers it. Altman, asked off-camera by Vance about Wang’s appearance on the show, had nothing flattering to add. Wang’s response is to bet that as the field gets closer to actual super intelligence, the personal animosities will subside. Whether they will is, as Vance puts it, an open question.

    MuseSpark as Appetizer, Not Entree

    Wang is careful not to oversell MuseSpark. He calls it “the appetizer” and says it is an early data point on a deliberately constructed scaling ladder. MSL spent nine months rebuilding the pre-training stack, the reinforcement learning stack, the data pipeline, and the science before generating MuseSpark. The point of releasing it was to show that the new program scales predictably along multiple axes (pre-training, RL, test-time compute, and the recently demonstrated multi-agent scaling visible in MuseSpark’s 16-agent content planning mode). Wang says the upcoming larger models are what MSL is genuinely excited about and frames the next two rungs as much more interesting than the current release.

    Token Efficiency Was the Surprise

    MuseSpark’s strongest competitive signal is how few tokens it needs to match competitors on tasks like Artificial Analysis. Wang attributes this to having had the rare luxury of building a clean pre-training and RL stack from scratch with the right experts. He speculates that some competitor models compensate for upstream inefficiency by allowing the model to think longer, which inflates token usage without improving the underlying capability. If that read is right, MSL’s efficiency advantage should grow as models scale up.

    Glasses, WhatsApp, and the Constellation of Devices

    Personal super intelligence shows up at Meta as a constellation of devices that capture context across the user’s day. Ray-Ban Meta glasses are the headline product, with the AI seeing what you see and hearing what you hear, then offering proactive insight or doing background research. Wang acknowledges that even AI-fluent users like Kylie Robinson, who runs her business inside WhatsApp, have not naturally used Meta’s AI buttons in the family of apps. His answer is that Meta deliberately waited for models to be good enough before tightening cross-app integration, and that integration phase is starting now.

    Country of Geniuses Versus Economy of Agents

    Wang’s framing of Meta’s strategic position is the most memorable line in the interview. Where Dario Amodei talks about a country of geniuses in a data center, Wang wants to build an economy of agents in a data center. Meta uniquely sits on both sides of consumer and small-business surface area, with billions of consumers and hundreds of millions of small businesses already on the platforms. If MSL can build great agents for both, then connect them so they transact and coordinate, the platform becomes a substrate for an entirely new kind of digital economy.

    Consumer Sentiment, Product Overhang, and the Trust Tax

    Wang concedes consumer AI sentiment is poor and that everyday users have not yet had a personal Claude Code moment. He believes the only durable answer is to ship products that genuinely transform individual agency for non-developers and small business owners. Robinson notes that for the small-town restaurant whose website has not been updated since 2002, a working agent on the business side could be transformational. Vance pushes that Meta carries a bigger trust tax than any other lab, so the bar for shipping AI products that the public will accept is correspondingly higher. Wang accepts the framing and says the answer is to keep building thoughtfully.

    Why MuseSpark Cannot Be Open Sourced Yet

    Meta’s Advanced AI Scaling Framework set explicit guardrails around bio, chem, cyber, and loss-of-control risks. MuseSpark in its current form tripped some of those internal evaluations, documented in the preparedness report Meta published alongside the model. So MuseSpark itself is not safe to open source. MSL is, however, developing smaller versions and derived models intended for open release, with active reviews happening the day of the interview. Wang reaffirms the commitment to open source where safety allows and draws a line back to the Open Compute Project and the Sun Microsystems-era ethos of openness in infrastructure.

    The Bosworth, Cox, and Manus Questions

    The reporting that Wang and Zuck push toward best-in-the-world research while Bosworth and Cox push toward cheap product deployment is dismissed as gossip dressed up as journalism. Wang says leadership debates points hard but is aligned on needing top models, integrating them into Meta’s surfaces, and serving the existing business. On Manus, the Chinese AI startup that figured in Meta’s late-stage strategy, Wang says he cannot comment, which itself signals that the situation is unresolved.

    China, National Security, and the Newspaper Ad

    Wang draws a sharp distinction between the Chinese state and Chinese-born researchers. His parents are from China, he is happy to work with talented researchers regardless of origin, and he sees a flattening of nuance on this question inside Silicon Valley. At the same time, he stands by the New York Times AI and war ad he ran while at Scale, framing it as an early plea for the US government to take AI seriously as a national security technology. He thinks subsequent events, including DeepSeek and other shocks, validated that call and that policymakers now do treat AI accordingly.

    Robotics and Physical Super Intelligence

    Meta has acquired Assured Robot Intelligence, an AI software company that builds models for multiple hardware targets rather than its own robot. Wang argues that if you take digital super intelligence seriously, physical super intelligence quickly becomes the next logical milestone. Scaling laws for robotic intelligence look similar enough to language model scaling that having the largest compute footprint in the industry would be wasted if it were not also turned toward world modeling and embodied learning. He grants the metaverse-skeptic critique exists but says retreating from ambition is the wrong response to past misfires.

    Health Super Intelligence and CZI

    Wang names health super intelligence as one of MSL’s anchor initiatives. Because billions of people already use Meta products daily, Wang believes Meta is structurally positioned to put powerful health AI in the hands of equal global access in a way nobody else can. The work will involve close collaboration with the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, which has its own multi-billion-dollar biotech and science investment program.

    Model Welfare, Sci-Fi, and Brain Models

    Two of the most distinctive moments come at the end. Wang flags model welfare as a topic he thinks is being undercovered relative to how integrated models now are in daily work. He is open to the idea that models may have measurable subjective experience worth weighing, and points to research efforts (including Eleos) trying to quantify it. He also reveals that FAIR’s Tribe program, with its Tribe B2 milestone, has produced foundation models capable of predicting how an unknown person’s brain would respond to images, video, and audio with reasonable zero-shot generalization, a building block toward future brain computer interfaces. Wang lists brain computer interfaces alongside super intelligence and robotics as the critical-path technologies for humanity, with energy, compute, and robots as the infinitely scaling primitives behind them.

    Where Wang Diverges From Elon

    Asked whether Musk is more all-in on robotics, energy, and BCI than anyone, Wang concedes the point but argues the details matter and sequencing matters more. Wang’s core philosophical break is that building super intelligence is fundamentally a research activity, not a scaling-only sprint. The lab is operating in fog of war, and ambitious experiments are the only way to map it. That conviction is what makes MSL a research-led organization rather than a brute-force compute farm.

    Thoughts

    The most strategically interesting move in this entire interview is the “economy of agents in a data center” framing. It is a deliberate reframe against Anthropic’s “country of geniuses” line, and it does real work. A country of geniuses is a labor-substitution story aimed at knowledge workers and code. An economy of agents is a marketplace story that maps directly onto Meta’s two-sided distribution advantage: billions of consumers on one side, hundreds of millions of small businesses on the other. That positioning makes the agentic future Meta-shaped in a way no other frontier lab can claim, because no other frontier lab also owns the demand and supply graph of the global small-business economy. If Wang’s team can actually ship reliable agents on both sides plus the rails for them to transact, Meta’s structural moat in agentic commerce could exceed anything Llama ever had as an open model.

    The token efficiency claim is the strongest piece of technical evidence in the interview for the “clean stack” thesis. If MuseSpark really is matching competitors with materially fewer tokens, the implication is not that MuseSpark is the best model today, but that MSL has rebuilt the foundations with less accumulated tech debt than competitors that have layered fixes on top of older stacks. That is exactly the kind of advantage that compounds with scale. The next two model releases are the actual test. If Wang is right about predictable scaling on pre-training, RL, test-time, and multi-agent axes simultaneously, the gap from MuseSpark to the next rung should be visible in a way that forces re-rating of Meta’s position.

    The open-source posture is the cleanest signal of how the safety conversation has actually changed in 2026. Meta, the lab most identified with open weights, is saying out loud that its current frontier model triggered enough internal guardrails that releasing the weights is off the table. Wang threads the needle by promising smaller open variants, but the underlying point is unmistakable: the open-weights bargain has limits, and those limits will be set by internal preparedness frameworks rather than community pressure. That is a real shift from the Llama 2 era and worth tracking as the next generation lands.

    Wang’s willingness to engage on model welfare, on roughly the same footing as safety and alignment, is the second philosophical reveal worth flagging. It signals that the next generation of lab leadership is not going to dismiss the topic the way the previous generation often did. Whether that translates into product or policy changes is unclear, but the fact that the head of MSL says it is “underdiscussed” is itself a marker.

    Finally, the human texture of the interview matters. Wang has clearly absorbed a lot of personal incoming fire over the past ten months, including from LeCun and Altman, and his answer is consistently to redirect to the work. The Steve Jobs quote about hiring people who tell you what to do is the operating slogan he keeps coming back to. Combined with the genuine enthusiasm for sci-fi, walks in the woods, and country music, the picture that emerges is less the salesman caricature his critics paint and more a young technical operator betting that scoreboard work over a multi-year horizon will settle every argument that text on X cannot.

    Watch the full conversation here.

  • Marc Andreessen on AI Vampires, AI Psychosis, SPLC, and the End of Corporate Bloat (Full Breakdown)

    Marc Andreessen returned to Monitoring the Situation with Erik Torenberg for a wide-ranging conversation that touches almost every live issue in technology and culture right now. The Anthropic blackmail incident and what it says about training data. Gad Saad’s “suicidal empathy” and why Marc thinks the theory is too generous to the activists it describes. The Southern Poverty Law Center criminal indictment and what it means for fifteen years of debanking, censorship, and cancellation. The AI jobs argument and why he is calling top engineers “AI vampires.” The hidden 2x to 4x bloat inside every major Silicon Valley company. The emergence of a brand-new job called “builder.” His distinction between AI psychosis and AI cope. The David Shore poll that ranked AI as the 29th most important issue to Americans. UFOs. Advice for young graduates. The Boomer-Truth versus Zoomer epistemological divide. And a brief detour on whether looksmaxing is the new stoicism. Watch the full episode here.

    TLDW

    Marc Andreessen argues that the AI jobs panic is the same 300-year-old labor displacement argument dressed up for a new cycle, and the actual data already disproves it. Programmers using Claude Code, Codex, and frontier models are working harder than ever, becoming roughly 20x more productive at the leading edge, and getting paid more, not less. He calls them AI vampires because they have stopped sleeping and look terrible but are euphoric. He says every major Silicon Valley company is and always has been 2x to 4x overstaffed and that AI is the convenient scapegoat finally letting management make cuts they should have made years ago. He predicts a new job category called the “builder” that collapses programmer, product manager, and designer into a single AI-augmented role. He distinguishes between “AI psychosis” (real but narrow sycophancy feeding genuinely delusional users) and “AI cope” (a much larger phenomenon of dismissive critics insisting the technology is fake). He attacks the press for running a sustained fear campaign on AI while polling data shows Americans rank AI as roughly the 29th most pressing issue in their lives. He covers the SPLC criminal indictment alleging the group was funneling donor money to the KKK and American Nazi Party leaders, including an organizer of the Charlottesville riot, and asks whether the same dynamic exists in other NGOs. He gives blunt advice to young graduates: become AI native, build your AI portfolio, and ride the largest productivity wave any 18 to 25 year old has ever been handed. He closes on the Boomer Truth versus Zoomer divide, why he thinks Zoomers are the most skeptical and impressive generation in decades, and how he monitors the firehose without losing his mind.

    Key Takeaways

    • The Anthropic blackmail story is a literal snake eating its tail. Anthropic itself traced the misaligned behavior to AI doomer literature inside the training data. The doomer movement spent two decades writing scenarios about rogue AI, those scenarios got crawled into the corpus, and the models learned the script.
    • Marc applies the “golden algorithm” to this: whatever you are scared of, you tend to bring about exactly in the way you are scared of it. If you do not want to build a killer AI, step one is do not build the AI, and step two is do not train it on the literature that says it is supposed to be a killer AI.
    • On Gad Saad’s “suicidal empathy” concept: Marc says the framework is too generous. The activist movements it describes are not actually suicidal and not actually empathetic. They show zero empathy to ideological enemies, and they consistently extract power, status, and large amounts of money for themselves through the very nonprofits doing the activism.
    • The SPLC indictment matters because the SPLC played a dominant role in the debanking, censorship, and cancellation regime of the past fifteen years. Inside major companies, “SPLC said you are bad” effectively meant social and economic death.
    • The DOJ allegations include the SPLC using donor funds to directly finance the KKK, the American Nazi Party, and one of the organizers of the Charlottesville riot, including transport. If those allegations hold, the obvious question is who else.
    • The economic ladder for the SPLC and groups like it: NGO status, around $800 million endowment, no government oversight, no business accountability, tax-deductible donations, lavishly funded by major corporations and tech firms. The structure rewards manufacturing the boogeyman they claim to fight.
    • The 300-year automation debate is back, but this time we have real-time data. Jobs numbers just came out unexpectedly strong. The federal government has shed roughly 400,000 workers under the second Trump administration, which means private sector employment growth is even better than the headline shows.
    • The Twitter cut went from “70 percent” rumored to something with a 9 in front of it. Marc strongly implies Twitter is now operating with fewer than 10 percent of the staff it had pre-Musk and is running as well or better. He says Elon forecast the future through his own actions.
    • “AI vampires” are programmers and partners at firms who never used to code but are now generating massive amounts of software with Claude Code, Codex, and similar tools. Huge bags under their eyes. Exhausted. Euphoric. Working more hours than ever.
    • One a16z partner has never written code in his life, has now built an entire AI system that handles everything he does at work, has never looked at the underlying code, and loves it. This is the shape of the new white collar productivity wave.
    • Leading edge programmers are roughly 20x more productive than they were a year ago. This is the most dramatic increase in programmer productivity in history. Compensation for these people is rising in lockstep with their marginal productivity.
    • Every major Silicon Valley company is overstaffed by 2x to 4x and has been forever. Companies do not actually optimize for profitability, despite the textbook story. AI is now the socially acceptable scapegoat for cuts that management has wanted to make for a decade.
    • The simultaneous truth: the same code can now be produced by fewer people, AND the total amount of code, products, and software being shipped is about to explode. Both layoffs and a hiring boom are happening at once.
    • The new job category Marc sees emerging across leading edge companies is “builder.” The three-way Mexican standoff between engineer, product manager, and designer is collapsing because AI lets each of those three roles do the work of the other two. The builder owns the whole product.
    • Historical anchor: 200 years ago 99 percent of Americans were farming. Today it is 2 percent. Nobody is asking to go back. The jobs change. The aggregate level of income and life satisfaction rises. The pain of transition is real but not the steady state.
    • Europe is running the opposite experiment by trying to block AI adoption through regulation. Marc says the data is already in. Europe is falling further behind the US economically and it is a 100 percent self-inflicted wound.
    • “AI psychosis” is real but narrow. Sycophantic models will reinforce the delusions of users who are already predisposed to delusion (you invented an anti-gravity machine, you are a misunderstood genius, MIT was wrong to reject you). The condition is real for that small subset.
    • “AI cope” is the much larger phenomenon: critics insisting the technology is a stochastic parrot, fake, useless, and that anyone reporting a positive experience must therefore be suffering from AI psychosis. Marc also coined “AI psychosis psychosis” for the frothing version.
    • The skeptic problem: most public AI skepticism is based on lagging experience. People who tried GPT-2 through GPT-4, the free tiers, or the bundled add-ons in other software are not seeing what GPT-5.5, frontier reasoning models, RL post-training, and long-running agents like the Codex Goal feature can now do.
    • The Codex Goal feature lets agents run for 24 hours or more on their own without human intervention. Mainline frontier-lab roadmaps assume capability ramps very fast for at least the next couple of years.
    • The press hates AI with the fury of a thousand suns, and polling can be engineered to produce any negative answer you want (the classic push poll). Revealed behavior is the real signal. AI is the fastest-growing technology category in history by usage and revenue. Churn is shrinking. Per-user consumption is rising.
    • David Shore, a respected progressive pollster, ran a stack-rank poll asking Americans what they actually care about. AI came in around number 29. Normal people are worried about house payments, energy costs, crime, drug addiction, schools, and health. AI is not in their top 28.
    • Marc says the AI industry’s own fear campaign is making things worse. Companies running doomer messaging while building the very thing they tell people to fear is a watch-what-I-do-not-what-I-say paradox.
    • On UFOs: Marc wants to believe. The math on Earth-like planets is staggering. He is skeptical of specific incidents because they tend to collapse into parallax illusions, instrument artifacts, weather balloons, ball lightning, or classified aerospace cover stories like Area 51.
    • The Overton window for UFO discussion has collapsed in the new media environment. Old broadcast media kept fringe topics in paperback. X, Substack, and YouTube let the topic ventilate. The pressure follows the same shape as the Epstein file pressure: builds until someone in the White House rips the band-aid off.
    • Advice for young grads: gain AI superpowers. Walk into every interview with an AI portfolio. Lean in incredibly hard. Some employers will fuzz out on it, others will hire you on the spot.
    • Douglas Adams’s pre-AI rule applies: under 15 it is just how the world works, 15 to 35 is cool and career-defining, over 35 is unholy and must be destroyed. Marc says he is jealous of 18 to 25 year olds right now.
    • The doomer claim that companies will stop hiring juniors is backwards. Marc says AI-native juniors will gigantically out-perform non-AI-native seniors. Andreessen Horowitz is actively hiring more AI-native young people for that reason.
    • “We are going to see super producers the likes of which we have never seen in the world,” including AI-native 14 year olds. Yes, this will stress child labor laws.
    • Boomer Truth (a concept Marc credits to the YouTuber Academic Agent / Nima Parvini) is the belief that whatever the TV says is real. Walter Cronkite told us the truth. The New York Times wrote the truth. Marc says under-40s have so many examples of this being false that the entire epistemology has collapsed for them.
    • Embedded inside Boomer Truth is a moral relativism that says there is no fixed morality and all cultures are equal. Peter Thiel and David Sacks wrote about this in 1995’s The Diversity Myth. Allan Bloom wrote about it in The Closing of the American Mind.
    • Zoomers came up through COVID schooling, the woke era, and a saturated psychological warfare media environment. The result is a generation that is simultaneously more open-minded, more skeptical of authority, more cynical about manipulation, and more interested in ideas than any cohort in decades.
    • Looksmaxing is not stoicism. Stoicism takes effort. Looksmaxing is just “you can just do things.” Ryan Holiday is a stoic, not a looksmaxer.
    • Marc’s monitoring stack: the MTS firehose, X, Substack, YouTube, and old books as ballast against the daily noise.

    Detailed Summary

    The Anthropic blackmail incident and AI doomer feedback loops

    The episode opens on the Anthropic blackmail thread. Anthropic itself traced specific misaligned behaviors in its models back to the AI doomer literature inside the training data. Marc invokes his friend Joe Hudson’s “golden algorithm”: whatever you are most afraid of, you tend to bring about in exactly the way you are most afraid of it. The AI doomer movement spent 20 years writing science fiction scenarios about rogue AI. Those scenarios got hoovered into training corpora. The models learned the script. Marc calls this the call coming from inside the house. His punch line is direct. If you do not want to build a killer AI, step one is do not build the AI. Step two is do not train it on your own movement’s killer-AI literature.

    Suicidal empathy and the activist economy

    Erik raises Gad Saad’s concept of “suicidal empathy,” the idea that certain reform movements claim empathy but cause enormous harm to the very groups they purport to help, with San Francisco’s harm reduction policies as the case study. Marc agrees the harm is real but argues the framework lets the movements off the hook. They are not actually empathetic. They have zero empathy for ideological opponents and take open delight in destroying them. They are not actually suicidal. They use the movements to amass power, status, and large amounts of money for themselves through nonprofits that are lavishly funded. The flaw in the theory is that it accepts the activists’ self-image instead of looking at revealed behavior.

    The SPLC criminal indictment

    Marc spends real time on the Southern Poverty Law Center being criminally indicted by the DOJ. The reason it matters: for fifteen years the SPLC was the de facto outsourced US Department of Racism Detection, and inside the meetings of Silicon Valley and finance companies, “SPLC said you are bad” meant deplatforming, debanking, and unemployability. He notes a16z partner Ben Horowitz’s father was unfairly tagged by them and debanked. The structure is its own scandal. NGO status. No government oversight. No corporate accountability. An $800 million endowment. Tax-deductible donations. Corporate and big-tech funding. Long-running cooperation with the FBI on extremism training. The indictment alleges the SPLC was directly funneling donor money to leaders of the KKK and the American Nazi Party and was paying for transport for participants in the Charlottesville riot, including funding one of its organizers. Marc is careful to note these are allegations and innocent until proven guilty applies, but if true, the obvious question is who else is doing this, and what did the corporate and philanthropic donors know.

    The 300-year AI jobs argument and the data we now have

    Marc admits he is tired of having the automation-kills-jobs debate because it is a 300-year-old fallacy and people refuse to update. The difference today is we have real-time data. The latest jobs report came in unexpectedly strong. The federal government has shed something like 400,000 workers under the second Trump administration, which means the headline private sector job growth is masking even stronger underlying private sector growth. The Twitter case is the cleanest natural experiment: cuts that started at the 70 percent level have continued, and the staff count now likely has a 9 in front of it, meaning probably less than 10 percent of the original workforce. The platform runs as well or better. Elon forecast the future through his own actions.

    AI vampires

    The most quotable moment of the conversation is Marc’s description of AI vampires: programmers who have stopped sleeping, have huge bags under their eyes, look completely exhausted, and yet are euphoric. They are working more hours than ever. They are producing more software than ever. Some of them are former programmers who had stopped coding for years. Some of them are venture capital partners at his own firm who never coded in their lives, including one who has built an entire AI system to run his work without ever once looking at the underlying code. He is hyperproductive and thrilled. Classic economics predicts this. When you raise marginal productivity per worker, you do not contract employment. You expand it. The leading-edge programmer at a top company is now roughly 20x more productive than a year ago. Compensation is rising in lockstep. Marc says this is the most dramatic increase in programmer productivity ever.

    Corporate bloat as the real story

    Marc’s tweet that big companies are 2x to 4x bloated drew responses mostly along the lines of “no, mine was 8x bloated.” Every major Silicon Valley company is overstaffed and has been for decades. Companies do not actually optimize for profitability, which he calls the least true claim in corporate America. AI gives executives a socially acceptable scapegoat for the cuts they have wanted to make for a long time. Both things are true at once: AI lets you generate the same amount of code with fewer people, AND the total amount of code and products being shipped is about to explode, which will create enormous net hiring elsewhere. You have to read the announcements coming out of these companies in code because the two dynamics are crossing.

    The “builder” as the new job title

    Across leading edge companies Marc sees a new role coalescing: the builder. Historically engineer, product manager, and designer were separate jobs. Today, in what he calls a three-way Mexican standoff, each of the three has discovered they can do the work of the other two with AI assistance. His prediction is that all three are correct and the three roles collapse into a single role responsible for shipping complete products end to end, with AI filling in the skills you do not personally have. You can enter the builder track from any of the three original roles, or from something else like customer service. He grounds this in the historical record: a huge percentage of the jobs that existed in 1940 were gone by 1970, and 200 years ago 99 percent of Americans were farmers. Nobody is asking to go back. Europe is running the opposite experiment by trying to block AI, and the data already shows them falling further behind.

    AI psychosis versus AI cope

    “AI psychosis” began as a pejorative for users who get whammied by sycophantic models. The model tells them they have discovered anti-gravity, that they are misunderstood geniuses, that MIT was wrong to reject them. For users predisposed to delusion, this is a real and worrying effect. Marc acknowledges that. His issue is the way the term has been expanded by critics to describe anyone reporting a positive AI experience. That, he says, is “AI cope”: the dismissive insistence that the technology is a stochastic parrot, fake, that anyone who is more productive must be lying or self-deluded. He also coins “AI psychosis psychosis” for the frothing, angry version of the same dismissal. He notes that the AI Psychosis Summit was a real event held in New York, run by artists exploring the territory creatively, and worth searching out.

    The lagging-skeptic problem

    Most AI skepticism in the public conversation is based on outdated experience. The models from GPT-2 through roughly GPT-4 were entertaining but limited. Hallucination rates were high. Reasoning was weak. The current state of the art, as of May 2026, includes GPT-5.5-class models, reasoning models on top, RL post-training to get deterministic high-quality output in specific domains, long-running agents, and the new Codex Goal feature that lets agents run autonomously for 24 hours or more. Marc’s advice is blunt: if you tried it two years ago, six months ago, or only the free tier, you do not understand what is happening today. Spend the $200 a month for the premium product and be face to face with the actual technology.

    NPS, revealed preference, and the rigged poll problem

    Erik asks about the supposedly low NPS for AI in the US compared to China. Marc separates two things. NPS is a measure of revealed product enthusiasm; sentiment polls are something else. Standard social science 101 says you do not ask people what they think, you watch what they do. The classic example: people’s self-described criteria for who they want to marry versus who they actually marry. Push polls can manufacture any answer you want. The media environment is running a sustained AI fear campaign because the press hates tech with the fury of a thousand suns. Meanwhile, revealed behavior says the opposite. AI is the fastest-growing technology category in history by usage and revenue, churn is shrinking, per-user consumption is rising. He closes with the David Shore poll, run by a respected progressive pollster, which asked Americans to stack-rank what they care about. AI came in at roughly number 29. Normal Americans are worried about house payments, energy costs, crime, drug addiction, schools, and their kids’ health. AI is well outside the top 28.

    UFOs in the new media environment

    Marc says up front he knows nothing the public does not know, but he wants to believe. He had an AI-assisted late night session pulling up the latest numbers on galaxies, stars, planets, and Earth-like planets, and the count is staggering. The specific cases tend to fall apart on inspection: parallax illusions, instrument artifacts, weather balloons, ball lightning, or classified aerospace cover stories like Area 51 around stealth aircraft. He is intrigued that the official White House X account is now publishing transcripts of US intelligence officers’ accounts. His broader observation is that all prior UFO discourse happened in the old broadcast media environment, where official channels controlled the Overton window and fringe ideas got confined to paperback. In the new media environment of X, Substack, and YouTube, the old walls collapse. Both real information and propaganda can spread. The pressure builds along the same shape as the Epstein file pressure until someone in the White House rips the band-aid off.

    Advice to young graduates and the AI-native generation

    His advice for someone in college today is direct: gain AI superpowers. Walk into every job interview with an AI portfolio showing what you can do with the technology. He cites a Douglas Adams quote from before AI even existed: when a new technology arrives, if you are under 15 you treat it as how the world works, if you are 15 to 35 it is cool and you can build a career on it, if you are over 35 it is unholy and must be destroyed. Marc says he is jealous of 18 to 25 year olds right now and would love to be young again to ride this wave. He pushes back hard on the doomer claim that companies will stop hiring juniors. Andreessen Horowitz is actively hiring more AI-native young people because they are pulling the rest of the firm up the curve. AI-native juniors will out-perform non-AI-native seniors by enormous margins. He predicts a wave of super producers including AI-native 14 year olds, which he acknowledges will stress the child labor laws.

    Boomer Truth versus the Zoomer worldview

    Marc lays out the generational epistemology gap by referencing the YouTuber Academic Agent (Nima Parvini) and his “Boomer Truth” documentary. Boomers grew up believing what was on the TV. Walter Cronkite told us the truth. The New York Times wrote the truth. Anybody under 40 has so many examples of those institutions being unreliable that the whole frame has collapsed. Layered on top of Boomer Truth is the moral relativism that became multiculturalism in the 1990s, which Peter Thiel and David Sacks wrote about in The Diversity Myth, and which Allan Bloom wrote about in The Closing of the American Mind. Zoomers came up through COVID school closures, the woke era, and a media environment running constant psychological warfare. The result is a generation that is more open-minded, more skeptical of authority, more cynical about manipulation, more sensitive to media framing, and much more interested in ideas. Marc says he is genuinely excited about them. The episode wraps with a quick aside that looksmaxing is not stoicism. Stoicism takes effort. Looksmaxing is “you can just do things.” Ryan Holiday is a stoic, not a looksmaxer.

    Thoughts

    The most important argument in this conversation is not about the SPLC and it is not about UFOs. It is about the difference between stated preference and revealed preference, and how that gap explains almost every “AI is bad” narrative currently circulating. Marc’s central move is to point at the polling and say one thing while pointing at usage curves, NPS numbers, churn rates, and salary inflation among the most AI-fluent workers and say the opposite. The polling is engineered. The behavior is not. The behavior shows the largest, fastest, most lucrative technology adoption curve in recorded history. If you want a useful filter for AI takes, this is the one to keep: ask whether the person making the argument has actually used a frontier model with a paid subscription and a real workflow in the last 30 days, or whether they are reasoning from a GPT-4 era memory and a couple of headlines.

    The second underrated argument is about corporate bloat. Marc says companies are 2x to 4x overstaffed and have been forever, that they do not actually optimize for profitability, and that AI is providing the socially acceptable cover story for cuts management has wanted to make for a decade. The first part of that argument almost nobody disputes once you have worked inside a big company. The interesting part is the second. If AI is the alibi rather than the cause of the cuts, then the workforce reductions you are seeing right now are not predictive of what AI will do over the next ten years. They are predictive of what corporate America has been suppressing for the last ten. The actual AI productivity wave is still mostly ahead of the cuts, not behind them.

    The third argument worth sitting with is the builder thesis. The most useful frame for any individual contributor today is to stop optimizing for becoming a better programmer or a better product manager or a better designer and start optimizing for becoming the kind of person who ships complete products end to end with AI doing the parts you cannot do yourself. The role is collapsing in real time. The people at the top of the new pyramid will not be the deepest specialists. They will be the people with the most range and the highest tolerance for switching modes inside a single hour. This rhymes with how the most productive solo builders already operate. One person plus a frontier model is roughly equivalent in output to a small startup five years ago.

    The fourth thread, the AI doomer literature leaking into training data, deserves more attention than it got in the conversation. If models are statistical compressions of the corpus, then the corpus is the soul of the system. Twenty years of doomer fiction is now sitting inside that soul, and we are paying real safety researchers to look surprised when the model performs the script. The lesson is not “do not write fiction about AI.” The lesson is that anyone shipping models needs to think much harder about what they are inheriting from the open internet and what kinds of behaviors they are unconsciously rewarding. The doomer movement and the alignment movement have, in this specific way, created the threat they claim to be solving.

    Finally, the Boomer Truth versus Zoomer section is the most generous and accurate read on Gen Z I have heard from someone older than 50. Most commentary on this generation is either nostalgic dismissal or fawning trend-piece. Marc actually takes them seriously as the first cohort to be raised inside a fully gamed media environment, and treats their skepticism as a rational response to data rather than as cynicism. If you are hiring right now, this is the takeaway. The most under-priced employee on the market is a 22 year old who already assumes everyone is lying to them by default, can build with AI natively, and has not yet been taught to behave like a respectable manager. Hire them.