
Reid Hoffman is one of the most impactful people in technology and startups. As a Founder he founded Paypal and Linkedin before moving to the investing side where he has led deals in Facebook, Airbnb and more. In Today’s Episode with Reid...
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Reid Hoffman
The trade wars will create a massive drop in prosperity in the us. There is next to zero chance that the missions that they have declared will be successful because the only way to get 2 trillion out of the budget would be to massively reduce the deficit and reduce defense spending. We're not reaching the upper end of LLM. The next large LLM that's trained with larger computer will still have new magic in it. The scale game is still playing.
Harry Stebbings
This is 20 VC with me, Harry Stebbings and today Reid Hoffman joins me in the stud for what is the most wide ranging discussion I think we've ever done on 20 VC. We discussed the future of tariffs, cryptocurrency, Elon Musk, the war in Ukraine, defense spending, quantum computing, TikTok, nuclear energy, Chinese cars, climate change. I don't think there's ever been such a broad discussion with so much value in one show that I can promise you. Huge thanks to Reid for being such an amazing guest today. But before we dive in today, we're excited to ignite your curiosity with a journey into the world of transformative ideas. If you're driven by the pursuit of knowledge and personal growth, you'll love exploring the vast collection of insightful book summaries on the Blinkist app. So with Blinkist you can access expertly crafted summaries that distill the essence of thousands of influential books, allowing you to read or listen to each in just 15 minutes. I know they beat 20 VC. And speaking of business, Blinkist is also a trusted LD partner for industry leaders like Amazon, Hyundai and KPMG UK, empowering over 32 million users since 2019 as a 20VC listener. Even better, you get 25% exclusive discount on Blinkist. That's blind Kist. Just visit blinkist.com 20VC to claim your discount and transform the way you learn. And while you're optimizing your learning, let's also optimize your finances with Brex. The financial stack founders can bank on. Brex knows that nearly 40% of startups fail because they run out of cash, so they built a banking experience that takes every dollar further. It's such a difference from traditional banking. Opt that leave your cash sitting idle while chipping away at it with fees to help you protect your cash and extend your Runway. Brex combine the best things about checking treasury and FDIC insurance in one powerhouse account. You can send and receive money worldwide at lightning speed. You can get 20x the standard FDIC protection through program banks and you can earn industry leading yield from your first dollar while still being able to access your funds anytime. Brex is a top choice for Start. In fact, hey, it's used by one in every three startups in the US. Just check them out now. Brex.com startups and talking about Building Trust Secure Frame provides incredible levels of trust to your customers through automation. Secure Frame empowers businesses to build trust with customers by simplifying information security and compliance through AI and automation. Thousands of fast growing businesses including Nasdaq, AngelList, Doodle and Coda trust Secure Frame to expedite their compliance during journey for global security and privacy standards such as SOC2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, GDPR and more. Backed by top tier investors and corporations such as Google and Kleiner Perkins, the company is among Forbes list of top 100 startup employers for 2023 and Business Insider's list of the 34 most promising AI startups for 2023. Learn more today@secureframe.com it is a must.
Reid Hoffman
You have now arrived at your destination.
Unknown
Reid, I am so excited for this. It is so special to have you in person again. Thank you for being here.
Reid Hoffman
Always a pleasure. I look forward to this.
Unknown
Now listen, I know you have some.
Harry Stebbings
News, so I'd love to just start with some of the news and let.
Unknown
You start with that.
Reid Hoffman
Okay, so look, obviously there's been a meme because as I was talking about with my friends, I am still extremely hopeful for American prosperity. I will remain living in Seattle, Washington as my residence. But when, when I was talking to friends, I said, look, I'd love to spend more time in the uk. That became a whole meme with the New York Times saying he's moving and it's like, no, no, no, no, no. I'm still based in Seattle, Washington, but of course I come to the UK twice a year already anyway, and here I am.
Unknown
And you thought, you know what? I'd love to see Harry two more times a year.
Reid Hoffman
Yes, exactly.
Harry Stebbings
I totally get it.
Unknown
My mother thinks the same thing.
Reid Hoffman
By the way, I will commit here to being on air with you twice a year.
Unknown
This is worth it already. How do you think about your future involvement? Like just diving, right? And you were very active.
Reid Hoffman
So. Look, I think one of the things that it's a responsibility of Americans to do, including myself of course, is you try to make whatever administration as successful as possible for the people of America, for the country, for the industry. I will be doing that. I will be investing in businesses. I will be getting new American businesses generated. I will be doing those things, obviously in the next administration, they don't want to have me helping them. Right. I won't be involved in any of the activity that the administration is doing. And actually, obviously I anticipate, unfortunately, I'll probably be critical of some of the things the administration's doing. I hope to help do as many of the things that are like reduce regulation, increase energy for AI, have AI companies, be prosperous for America and around the world. I will be doing all that kind of stuff. But on the other hand, I suspect that I will have some things that I'm still an opponent of.
Unknown
You said that you might be critical of some things. I'm critical of some things of this wonderful labor government. Well, everything that they do bluntly. And someone said to me the other day, you should be a bit more careful. Some of your tweets might piss them off. Do you feel like you have the freedom and flexibility to be critical?
Reid Hoffman
I do. Because of the principles of America, which is we should aspire to continue to be a place where we can speak truth to power, that we, we can criticize when things are wrong. And I will continue to do that. Now, that being said, one of the things that I think is part of the reason why I have been critical of some of Trump's supporters and some of what Trump has done is because there is, even in the first administration, there was the, some abuses of instruments of state for personal gain, for personal power. That is, I think, anti the spirit of anything in democracy, anti the spirit of anything in American. Those are the things that I would still be continue to be opposed to in as much as they play out. Now, my friends argue. No, no, that's just the electoral path that when he talks about the fact that he is going to attack enemies within or threaten, execute generals or other kinds of things, that's just, that's just politicking. That's not something that we will actually see. I am hopeful that they are right and I am hopeful that we'll get back to the business of America, which is business.
Unknown
You said you are hopeful there, there's multiple different outcomes that can come. If you think what could go very wrong with this administration and then what could actually go right? If we look on what could go.
Reid Hoffman
Wrong first if the administration were to engage in a lot of idiosyncratic political persecution, whether it's individuals, politicians, milit military figures, businesses that were attacked entirely for political reasons and the balance of politics versus legitimate reasons. Because sometimes people do bad things, whoever they are, and that's fine. But that, that was the cause of what's happening. That's for example, I think one of the reasons why this whole tariffs thing, which could be enormously destructive, is I think is like, well, how do I apply tariffs idiosyncratically, like against my political opponents, but not for my political allies? Economic corruption. What if foreign actors, Russia, others, were transferring economics to people with political power in order to influence the US in what they're doing? Easy ways to do that are like buy true social stock. Easy ways to do that are buy freedom coin or currency, invest in businesses that, you know, people who are, you know, have a lot of political power or Zenis Kinsley payoffs. All of those things would be in the category of disastrous things.
Unknown
Can I ask on the tariff side, what would you do with tariffs? What is the right way to leverage? Use them to benefit America?
Reid Hoffman
Look, America benefits enormously from a global trade regime. The whole country gets a lot of economic prosperity, including things that support areas of the country that have more economic challenge. So you don't want to create trade wars. The trade wars will create a massive drop in prosperity in the US and in other places. Now, that being said, there are places that either have, like, for example, take Iran, who are bad actors within the international context, or Russia and that actually, in fact, you know, are creating violence and war and chaos and in various countries around the world. And you use tariffs and other kinds of sanctions as a way to rein in that behavior. That's one zone. Another one is if you have countries that are behaving irresponsibly within the global economic system. And so, for example, with China, there's ways in which they slant the field. So they say, well, we can do economics in your country, but we can do business in your country. But you can't do business in our country. I think responding social media. Yes. So it's like, okay, if you're going to disallow our businesses to operate in your country, we can disallow your businesses in parallel to operate in our country. Just as an economic thing, as kind of nothing else for how to. To how to operate. And those kinds of things, I think are useful. If, for example, people are using labor camps to produce products, adding tariffs as a way of saying, we're not going to allow that to happen. That's another good use. But those are like specific things, not general mercantile warfare.
Unknown
How do you. I love sitting down with you because I just learned a huge amount. But how do you think about the Chinese car industry? You mentioned the kind of global tariffs they subsidize the Chinese car industry phenomenally so they can do incredibly cheap production. How do you think about that and the destruction that that brings to European cars?
Reid Hoffman
No, and that's precisely like one of the areas we say look, you're behaving irresponsibly because you're actually in fact trying to destroy our industry in the short term so that you can then raise prices later and capture it. That is mercantile warfare. Responding to mercantile warfare is completely fine.
Unknown
And so we should raise tariffs on. Totally get that. If that's like concerns and what could go wrong if we would have put on the optimistic hat, what could go right.
Reid Hoffman
So I think a lot of things is I actually think the US will be benefited by a substantial reduction in regulation. Okay. For every new regulation you want to add remove to as a way of kind of modernizing and refactoring versus just accreting some of that will be, you know, AI for example, an area that I'm committed to passionate about believe will be great for the world over time. We'll need power. How do you get that power? What do you do with regulatory a return to nuclear power. Fission and fusion I think will be are really amazing. The question around being deeply committed to growing business across the entire country I think will be really good. And one of the things that I actually think is not only a competence but a moral requirement for American presidents is to say business is good now. You should invest in business across the entire industry, not just your own. So it's not just improve real estate or improve Freedom Coin. It's do the entire thing. And I think that's really important. I think all of those things are things that we could see as very good good outcomes.
Unknown
So many things I want to unpack there. We mentioned kind of AI what does Elon's political ascendancy mean for the future.
Reid Hoffman
Of AI well, it's a little unclear. It kind of depends on how he chooses to use his time and focus. So if his time and focus was let's make sure that all of the kind of players in US industry are greatly amplified like availability of power and the creation of new data centers and power for do that and that's across the entire industry. That would be an enormous boon. If the question around okay, let's make sure that we are being rational about how we are willing to import talent as we have done in the history of the US to bring in talent that can work on this across the entire industry. That could be really good if it was the I want to make sure that we are Inventing the future at the speed we need to be doing it. That's really good. Now the challenges would be is what if he goes, no, no. The most important issue facing AI is woke a because we have this calling card which means a whole bunch of different kind of these people are evil and terrible. That's silly and not good, but easy to fix and not the most important issue. When you consider what AI means for American prosperity. Well, being a bunch of other things, that's an easy fix.
Unknown
Do you think DOGE will be successful?
Reid Hoffman
Well, in a sense I would want it to be because I think the refactoring of bureaucracy, the refactoring of efficiency, those are things that I accurately have gone wrong. There is next to zero chance that the missions that they have declared will be successful because the only way to get 2 trillion out of the budget would be to massively reduce the deficit and reduce defense spending. Those are the two areas. Or for example, Medicare, Social Security, those are the areas where the real money is. We want to posture that it's that we just have too many federal employees. And by the way, maybe we do have too many federal employees, but it's not worthy trillions of dollars in terms of what you can cut out of the budget. That's not actually where you can get it.
Unknown
Did you see the news though of like, we don't actually know where your taxes go?
Reid Hoffman
Well, that's generally true for very large financial institutions. And by the way, I think it's an important thing. That's the reason why like you say bull bear case on DOGE as well you go, look, I actually think kind of going through balancing the books, figuring out the economics, applying kind of fiscal discipline in the way that we do in companies is a very good thing. What I think is a false promise is to say, well, the real important thing is if we lay off X percentage of the federal workforce and all of a sudden our federal budget will be so much more trim. It's like, well, no, no, actually that's not. You just have to do the math. And that's actually not where the numbers that you're claiming you'll get to is.
Unknown
What do you think should happen to defense spending in Europe? We spend woeful amounts on defense. And you know, I've got Torsten from Helsing coming out tomorrow's show. He wants bluntly it to be 5, 6% and it's 2%. What should happen? US defense spending.
Reid Hoffman
So I think US defense spending should reduce. Right. I think that would actually be a Good thing. It's one of the problems that we have in American politics in that we have neither the political will to do that on either the left or the right side. Like, if I anticipate anything going to be happening in the next administration, it will be increase in defense spending versus decrease. Despite all that, we're going to have fiscal discipline and we're going to reduce costs and we're going to bring this. A massive amount of that comes from the Department of Defense. And the way that I would do it is I would try to, because basically the business of America's business, it's you want to be investing in things that create the future businesses. The military industrial complex is not the business that you most want to be investing in. And so how do you essentially do that?
Unknown
Do you think you can reduce defense budgets, though, when you have the global conflicts that we have today?
Reid Hoffman
Yes. If you said, where should Doge focus? The answer is there's a lot of massive misspending within the Department of Defense. Now, part of that is not just the Department of Defense's fault. Let's take a specific. We should not be building aircraft carriers. Aircraft carriers themselves cost billions. The planes on them are more billions. They put thousands of American lives on them. And in the modern world, you have to sure, an aircraft carrier is great for bullying Sedan, which is not a particularly good use of billions of dollars. Military. In a real conflict, one or two hypersonic missiles, which are like $2 million each, can take out an aircraft carrier. So. So if you said, what should I be doing to save money in American defenses? Let's stop building aircraft carriers. But of course, part of the political reason that doesn't happen is because the states and Congress people, one of the things that happens frequently is the Department of Defense says, well, we should stop these programs. And Congress says, no, we're continuing them because this is where you're spending money in our district is. And that's the kind of thing that if Doge had guts, they would go to. But that's a difficult political talk.
Unknown
Do you think the US should continue to subsidize the lack of spending that Europe commits to in defence?
Reid Hoffman
Look, I think it's better for the world and better for Europe if Europe increases its defense spending. Now, I understand it was the right thing after World War II and the right thing with the Marshall Plan and the right thing to create interdependence, to do that, because you wanted to make sure that in this area that created two world wars, that you created strength of ties and Bonds. That's part of what the European Union's about, trade, mutual prosperity. But now that that's there, where it's good for Europe to get to its rightful place both in for example, defense against terrible players like Russia, but also in the world to be another important force in the world. And that means increasing the defense spending.
Unknown
And that includes Ukraine.
Reid Hoffman
Look, my view is that the Ukrainian people have the right to fight for their own self defense. It is not for us to say, well Ukraine was always just part of Russia. That's for the Ukrainians to say, not for us. That's a repetition of evils that human beings frequently do. You should be clear about this. And people have a right to articulate their own self determination. I think supporting them in that is I think a good thing.
Unknown
Can I ask, you mentioned Medicare, what would you like to see happen with Medicare and what would be the right next 12 to 24 months?
Reid Hoffman
Well, it's another area that's a political third rail in the US because older people vote at much higher percentages and so therefore are figuring out how to like for example, again if you said if Doge had guts, they'd go look at this area to say how should we rationalize this on a cost per quality, you know, month of life? And you go well look, there's a whole bunch of money that's spent on these last three to six months of life. Let's reduce the spending on that and say that is not a public expense and let's increase for example preventative and other things that are much more dollar focused. Now again, again, unfortunately I would predict that they're not going to do that because it's a political third rail and it requires courage and other things to go into it.
Unknown
You mentioned there the propensity for older people to vote. What Trump did well was harnessing actually TikTok and younger people to vote. I'm intrigued. We mentioned BYD and Chinese car imports. Should TikTok be banned on the back of this?
Reid Hoffman
So the right way I think to think about this from an American or any other perspective is to say China bans competition in China from meta, Twitter, et cetera. And so the right way to say is like look, if you're banning our companies, we should ban yours entirely. A commercial question, not a question around like well that's a Chinese social media company. It's a. Because I actually believe that there's a different question when you say, well, what should be the rules of governance for social media companies when you get around the world and I think there should be some transparency, responsiveness to local laws, et cetera. But I think that's the right thing to do.
Harry Stebbings
Now, is it a bit childish?
Unknown
I don't mean that rudely, but it's like, well, if a child gets hit at school, it's like the parents saying, well, hit them back harder. Not really the right response, is it?
Reid Hoffman
Well, it gets back to the tariff's question, which is you want people to be playing on a, on a fair and balanced playing field. If you're, you know, country X is denying licenses to country Y, then country Y should do that to country X. Right. As just a general thing to get back to a playing field. And by the way, there's lots of bad actors in the world. So yeah, sometimes, by the way, when the bully hits you, the only way to stop the bully from hitting you again or hitting someone else is to hit them back pretty hard. Right? Because then they learn, oh, there's consequences sometimes. The rule of the, of the five year old playing ground is actually in fact the rule that countries live by.
Unknown
We mentioned like power and nuclear. There's a lot of opinions around it. How realistic is it to see the transition to nuclear power like is needed or beneficial?
Reid Hoffman
So this is maybe my greatest hope out of a administration that promises to be a wrecking ball to a history of regulation because the things that we have done in regulating nuclear have been destructive to, for example, climate change because you're using a lot more coal versus nuclear. I mean, we see great examples in France as how to use nuclear. Well, the technology has advanced over the decades in nuclear fission. You know, people have invented nuclear fission plants that are powerful. It's called TerraPower powered on nuclear waste. So it's a way of consuming the waste and getting rid of it and converting into power. There's all of these things that are really, really good to do. And a regulatory agency backed up by fearful public opinion, unknowledgeable, ignorant public opinion, but fearful too, hasn't done anything about this. And you say, well, what's the best way? We worried about running out of electricity. We're worried especially about green electricity going and doing this. And so I myself have been investing fission and fusion over the last five to ten years entirely philanthropically. I have no idea how to invest in this. When I do these investments, I write them to zero in my book. I have no idea what the economic outcomes are of this. Unlike Internet investing or software investing or what's the rational way of doing it, but creating the technology for the benefit of society and humanity is extremely important. I've been put putting lots of money into this out of a desire for putting America in a much better position, helping the world with this new technology, et cetera.
Unknown
Do you worry that with AI, with global conflict, with everything that we see today, climate kind of just falls down the pecking order?
Reid Hoffman
I think it's guaranteed. And given that it is an inevitable, it's a physics process, I worry about that. That's one of the, I think, likely outcomes of the next administration that will be a serious impact. Now, that being said, like you said, okay, bull bear on the next administration. They'll go, oh no, climate change is a fiction and it's a liberal conspiracy. And da, da, da. And you're like, why would the liberals bother with a climate change conspiracy? I mean, it's just like the logic of this is not great. But what they might do, which I would hope again be hopeful for, is they say, look, what we really need to be doing is doing the Apollo project projects on the right kinds of clean energy and we're going to now go 10x down onto that, including all versions of nuclear as well as everything else. And that actually might have a very positive impact over time in what we're doing with climate change.
Unknown
Does AI do more to help or to hurt climate change?
Reid Hoffman
Well, it's a frequent misconception because there's obviously a growth of a electricity curve that AI has got climate impact. One, it's something like data centers, I think are something like, like it's some single digit percentage of all power consumption, like 3 something. So it's not very big. And then AI within data centers is like a single digit percentage of that. So currently AI is not accounting for any of the electricity that makes any of the difference. No, but it's growing and you go, well, what happens if it continues to grow in a compounding way and so forth. And so everyone goes, ah, ha ha, I can be green in climate by posturing in the media, by saying AI is bad for climate. Pay attention to me please. Lei, pay attention to me please. This is a little bit like the people who are being anti nuclear, which then caused a whole bunch of coal plants to be built, which caused a whole bunch of environmental degradation as a consequence of being anti nuclear. It's a similar thing because AI has several points of being massively positive on climate. Here's a simple actual data point. So Google's engineers, some of the best in the world at running data centers, thought we have run our data centers as efficiently as Possible was I think five, seven, eight years ago, DeepMind ran their algorithms on Google's data centers and figured out how to save 15% of the electricity. So think about your applying AI and intelligence to go how do we run our grids more efficiently, how do we apportion costs, how do we do all this stuff, how do we add intelligence to all this? That's one, two, maybe even more significant, which by the way that means AI technology can actually be a net energy saver as we apply it to the inference cost to all the electricity city we're doing in the future. Number two is well, what's happening as a boon for green energy Right now all of the major hyperscalers are doing multibillion dollar commitments to green energy companies saying if you can deliver the energy, we will give you the initial customer capital to build that. And by the way, we will subsidize because energy is always expensive when it's small and cheaper as it gets bigger. We will pay the expense at the beginning to start building your nuclear, to build your geothermal, to build your in order to do that. So they are functioning as the R and D venture capital for creating green energy for the entire society in building their new data centers. So that's another thing where AI is coming out to building green energy. Look, the most far fetched and unclear is it's also possible. But I think this is more of a science fiction thing is well kid, the patterns of intelligence and AI and people are doing this work like applying it to can we get it to make fusion to work? Can it solve certain problems that then make sustainable green energy possible because of the intelligence that AI can bring in its massive computation to solving these problems. And people are working on that, on fusion containment because if you can make fusion work, you can solve climate change.
Unknown
Can you just unpack that for me? Sorry. How does fusion completely solve climate change?
Reid Hoffman
So fusion is the most scalable green energy. You know, the sun is powered by fusion and obviously there's various ways to try to use solar that I don't think we've tapped out on and everything from satellites with solar energy collection to various things on the ground. So I think there's a bunch of stuff there that's actually in a sense an indirect fusion because you have this massive fusion reactor that's known as the sun. But microfusion is both super safe and can produce enormous amounts of power very cheaply. And once you have enormous amounts of power, you can solve significant world crises. So for example, how do you do decarbonization how do you pull carbon out of the atmosphere in order to reduce global temperature back to that great band that humanity prospers in. And the answer is, it takes a lot of energy. Well, if your energy is carbon producing as you're doing it and you're not net doing it, so you have to be carbon neutral to negative on this, then if you can produce it at massive scale, you can pull carbon out of the, out of the energy, let alone power all of the things that human beings want, houses and transport and all the rest. So it's more than the silver bullet. It's like the platinum bullet.
Unknown
I love a platinum bullet. Thank you for explaining that, by the way. I've learned one thing. Never be afraid to ask the really basic questions. You mentioned that, actually. Deep mind and what you did with efficiency within data centers. How important was Willow Google's announcement on their new quantum chips yesterday?
Reid Hoffman
Well, I think it's a significant step forward. I don't know exactly where we will be in scale. Quantum computing, usually. Again, of course, the discourse with new technology always starts with the fears, which is a mistake that I'm always trying to correct because it doesn't mean you shouldn't have concerns and anxieties and navigate. But like for example, you go, oh my God, quantum computing, it's going to break security and our banking system is going to collapse and our public encryption and security safety is going to collapse and oh my God, there's a disaster. Well, look, we'll have to figure that out because that'll be an issue once we get to what is somewhere maybe minimum 2000 or 5000 logical quantum bits, qubits, so that's at 2000 to 5000 or more is when you get into the encryption issues. I'd call it 150 to 250 logical qubits. So a complete order of magnitude down quantum quantum computers become great at helping invent new medicines, new drugs, new semiconductors, new physical materials, things at a micro scale. That's going to be the first thing from quantum computing. So the moment that we can get there, it'll have enormous prosperity benefits well before we have to navigate these things. And so I'm very hopeful about quantum computing. I just don't know the timeframe.
Unknown
Speaking of kind of immense power, one thing that did just strike me that kind of worried me, it's like, I don't think we've ever seen someone with as much power as Elon has. He owns the digital town hall, he owns the roads around the town hall with Tesla. He Owns the power for it with starlink, he kind of owns the physical town hall now with ownership of Donald. Have we ever had someone with so much power and is that not worrying?
Reid Hoffman
So I think we have had people with that much power in history, but I think part of modern society is to create checks and balances, to create accountability within your government. So, like, for example, traditionally, when you have people who go into government, they put their business stuff in blind trust and do other things in order to avoid conflicts of interest. So I think the worry is not necessarily the power as much as the conflicts of interest and navigating the conflicts of interest with ethics and integrity, which I think is the thing to watch with the next administration. The power. Look, I think that.
Unknown
I mean, he's able to turn off the Instat for large swathes of the population.
Reid Hoffman
Yeah. Look instead. So I think we want that to be within the hands of democratically elected governments, or at least certain parts of it. And I think that's important. But by the way, I think while there are things that I have been and probably will be in the future critical of Elon, about the electric vehicle revolution owes itself to Elon. The revolution in space ISPs was starting. Starlink owes itself to Elon. And by the way, the initial defense of Ukraine would not have worked without starlink. So there's enormous positive contributions here. So it's a complicated topic. Now, that being said, I would want the halls of democracy and government and the conflicts of interest within personal businesses to be kept very distinct. I think we may see some challenge in that in the next couple of years.
Unknown
He thinks his greatest power and his.
Reid Hoffman
Greatest weakness, well, they actually kind of go together. Elon has a conviction that what he believes is true is absolutely true, even when all of the evidence is against his belief. That allows him to do. I can see that we can colonize Mars. And here we go, right? And that creates SpaceX, that creates Starlink, that creates. And so huge amount of kudos in power. But then that similar. Similarly, when he sees a conspiracy theory on Twitter probably being created by Russian intelligent assets to destabilize the U.S. he goes, oh, that looks right to me. And then he'll retweet it. That's correct. And so it's the same impulse which has created these amazing things, but also has these destructive things.
Unknown
Should one not have policing on tweets. I had this debate before with many American guests, and I'm like, that can be very dangerous and damaging to have someone retweet with his power and weight to the audience that he does. And my American fans are like, of course not. It's freedom of speech you should be entitled to.
Reid Hoffman
Well, so I think there's a really interesting distinction between freedom of speech and freedom of reach. If you're standing at the local corner and standing on a soapbox and saying the moon is made out of blue cheese and the earth is flat and so forth, it's fine, go ahead. When we have our collective media systems, for example, reach, it's important to have some ability to say, well, we should bring in studies and expertise into it. And by the way, this is what we have made progress with science, this is how we've made progress with law, is we use thoughtful groups of people to bring a notion of truth in science. It's reproducibility of science experience. It's scientific panels which decide on things being advocated is true in juries. It's. You have in the US 12 people who listen to it and have to agree. That's the way we do things. And so we need to kind of figure out how to apply that also within, call it the reach.
Unknown
So should there be policing? Because, I mean, he, you know, he is not an ambassador for the uk, to say the least. Yes. And some of the stuff that he retweets is true.
Reid Hoffman
Yes.
Unknown
And some is completely not true.
Reid Hoffman
Yes.
Unknown
And people believe it. So should there be policing on that?
Reid Hoffman
Well, so look, if I could, through a democratic process, because I believe in democracies, I believe in collective governance, get our society to agree to say, hey, what we should do is identify some topics that panels of experts can yield to a truth determination on what I would prefer we do with all media. And by the way, it's not just social media, it's also cable news, it's also talk radio. We say, look, if you're going to speak your opinion, which you may do, you can say the world is flat. I can get on Harry's podcast and go, I believe the world is flat. And then what you'd say is, oh, by the way, expert opinion says that's completely false. And just along with my saying the world is flat, expert opinion comes up and says, hey, by the way, if you're listening to this, you should also consider that expert opinion says this is totally false. And so it allows you freedom of speech, but it then allows a collective learning system in the system. I would prefer that, but we need to get there through a democratic process.
Unknown
Frankly, one of the things that he said, which is dangerous and the reach is worrying People said in comments when I asked is about Epstein, why is that wrong?
Reid Hoffman
So I was never a client of Jeffrey Epstein's. I never had anything directly to do with Epstein. Everything I did was fundraising for mit. Right. Which my mistake, which I publicly apologized for, is I relied on MIT's vetting to say, hey, we vetted him and it's okay to do this. I obviously regret that I've issued an apology about burnishing brands because the damage to victims and other kinds of things. But of course, the modern age is such that these things get reported and so then have a media impulse, so you have to be responsive to that.
Unknown
Do you not worry, though, about that cancel car and that freedom of ability to just destroy someone's so wrong and lie when you have a reach like Tucker Carlson and you can just say what you want and now fuck it, someone else said it. That's a really worrying world.
Reid Hoffman
Yes, exactly. And the funny thing is the right wing says woke is cancel culture. And yet that's the shit they do. It's of course, normally destructive. I'm very careful about the things I say. I only say them when I have some ground for evidence that I can speak publicly to, that I can have other people validate why it is I'm saying it right, that kind of thing. That's the standard that we should all hold ourselves to.
Unknown
Matt Clifford told me about a couple of different areas where you're spending time, he told me. One is AI applied to cancer. Talk to me about your work with AI, how that interacts with cancer, and how our interaction with cancer will change moving forward. Do you think so?
Reid Hoffman
One of the things, in addition to quantum computing, which we already talked about, one of the things that I've been looking at is what other areas are people not paying nearly enough attention to. That AI will make a huge difference for the human condition. And drug discovery is a really important one. How you use drug discovery, as we invent new drugs for really key things like cancer, those will make a huge difference to the quality of humanity life, to lives saved, and to the economics, because we spend an enormous amount of our economic budget on medicine, and we'll have a huge saving there. I've been working on the intersection of bio and computing for over a decade now. Now is the time with AI that we will start seeing amazing new products.
Unknown
I was thinking this last night when I was reading into this. Do you think that if you are a serial entrepreneur building in AI today, doing a SDR tool for sales teams, you are doing yourself an injustice when you look, and I know that's a bold statement, but when you look at cancer, climate change, poverty, conflict defense, and you are choosing to spend your time on SDR work, I think it was the Founders Fund guys who said it was like an injustice if you do that.
Reid Hoffman
That's a hyperbolic statement. I mean, look, I think we want to get more people doing the big things, doing nuclear fission infusion, doing drug discovery, doing education, doing other things that have an impact for billions. But by the way, sales process is also part of how the OS of our society is business. The OS of our society is like, how is government funded through the operations of business, how are universities funded? How is medicine funded? How is education funded through the operations of business? So improvement of business is a good thing. So improvement of sales and sales efficiency is also a good thing. So, so is it a less heroic, oh my gosh, I have cured some versions of cancer, I have made fusion possible. Yes. And I think as a society we should appropriately treat the people who are doing the heroes and things as heroes. But by the way, it's a contribution to be contributing to sales too.
Unknown
On the flip side of that, when we think about spending more time in the uk, it's a very negative sentiment towards the uk. Now, forgetting Elon, but just, just generally why you may be bullish when everyone else is incredibly bearish.
Reid Hoffman
Well, I'm bullish for a couple reasons. So one, amazing set of talent, universities, technical talent, entrepreneurs, a willingness to be bold. Not just the bold that went and created the United States of America, because you could look at us as a entrepreneurial offshoot from Great Britain, but also kind of a global perspective, a willingness to be. One of the things that I love, loved in visits here and my days as a student was the global learnings and global perspective I get from London and Oxford and Cambridge and other places. And so there is enormous potential.
Unknown
How do you think about that, though? In the face of, bluntly, the deterioration of the German ecosystem, the no growth for the UK for three consecutive years, as our wonderful Labour government have pointed out, it doesn't look good. I'm trying to be, my business is here, my fund is here.
Reid Hoffman
It doesn't mean there aren't challenges. Brexit was a terrible idea and I think there are challenges. But the notion of how we rejuvenate economies, you go, look, how do we build the economies of the future? And so you can't try to hold on to the economies of the past, you don't want to say, well, I want to be doing Coal mining in Newcastle. You're like, no, no, right. We should be good for those communities and people and try to help them transition. But we need to the economies of the future. The question is, I think the UK is well positioned to make that progress and make that effort, but it has to be collectively investing in it, enabling it, bringing talent.
Unknown
We are. Because when you think about chip sovereignty, energy sovereignty, economic distributions across the country, I cannot point to one positive around any of them.
Reid Hoffman
Well, you may have studied this more closely than I have, and so there may not be yet. But I know that the capabilities, the talent, the will is possible now we just have to organize and make it happen. I mean, this is part of the thing of. Occasionally, since it's part of my support for entrepreneur, first I meet with these entrepreneurs. They are great entrepreneurs, they can create great businesses. We need to enable that. And by the way, once you create great businesses, that then has economy, jobs, revenue, tax revenue, et cetera, et cetera, that's the thing we need to be doing.
Unknown
Do we need chip sovereignty and Europe's ability to our own Nvidias of the world? Does the U.S. how do we think about TSMC?
Reid Hoffman
I think it's important to have chip sovereignty within the western ecosystem. Like, for example, I would be less concerned. Like I'm an advocate for. I think what the Biden administration did with the CHIPS act is a good idea. Restart the chips ecosystem when the US is a very good idea. I hope that while. Well, I expect that the next administration, because they'll say everything the Biden administration did was terrible, we're tearing it all down. That they'll tear it down in words and then keep doing the work would be my hope. But I would be much less concerned about that if Europe had a good chips industry because it's within the western ecosystem and diversified. One of the things we learned from COVID is one of the challenges. Globalization tends to be the oh, we resolved to one point of manufacture, but then you're brittle. So when Italy went down with COVID all of a sudden the specific medical manufacturer that was oriented there suddenly broke for the rest of the world. So you want several different places of source of origin for resilience and robustness against possible adversity. So ideally, in a good world, you'd have two to four or five places of semiconductor manufacture and you would have at least one or two of those within the western nations. And if that was the case, then we'd be good. So a single point of dependency on Taiwan has a bunch of global risk.
Unknown
Do you think Nvidia continues to accrue power and monopolization or monopolies or do you think it continues to be easy eaten away by Apple's, Google's, Amazon's building more and more of their own chip supply and ability.
Reid Hoffman
So unsurprising to you because you and I have talked a bunch both. So both Nvidia's business will continue to go very strongly because they have an amazing lead in amazing chips and there is massive demand for their chips for doing compute and many players, Google, Amazon, others including AMD are building, building out chips as well. So you both have them developing what is still a very valuable leading resource and a bunch of other chips developing as well. We have kind of like electricity, we have infinite demand for compute at moderate pricing. So as long as we can deliver that demand will completely fill.
Unknown
In terms of demand we have multiple different LLM providers. We had Mark Benioff on the show and he said I'm not going to do his accent actually it's going to be terrible. We're reaching the upper end of LLM abilities but now we're moving.
Reid Hoffman
By the way, incorrect, but yes, we're not reaching the upper end of LLM. It's kind of like look, the press cycles like to go ah, we haven't seen anything in the last six months. We're at the upper end. It's like oh, if it were, we haven't seen anything. By the way, we did see GPT01, right? We hadn't seen anything in the last couple months. That doesn't mean it's the end of the cycle. That means we're still getting to what the next set of stunning things. I think the next larger computer, the next large LLM that's trained with larger computer will still have new magic in it. And all of the people who argue against it are to some degree arguing their own book. Well, I don't have the compute, so the next level of compute won't make a difference. I don't have the data. So the next level of data won't make the next difference. Or the current data is all we have. And so we won't be do is like well actually in fact we can create synthetic data and there's a ton of data that's out there that's not part of the standard Internet training corpus. The scale game is still playing.
Unknown
So he was saying we've reached the upper hand of Azula.
Reid Hoffman
Incorrect.
Unknown
And then now it's the era of agents. And that is why agent forces.
Reid Hoffman
Well by the way he's right that look, we're going to have a ton of agents, and I think the agents will be composed of multiple models. But to count out the next level of scale models as being important in creating a number of quality agents is just incorrect.
Unknown
Do you worry when you look at the pricing of some of the investments going down today that it's just a complete bubble?
Reid Hoffman
Well, so when everyone understands that a technology transformation is happening, a bunch of people make foolish investments. It happened in the Internet, it happened in mobile. It happens. But because there are some foolish investments doesn't mean there aren't also really good investments that change. And so part of the work for being a good investor is to on a probability basis, because you will make some foolish investments too, to make sure that you have some of the really good ones. And by the way, sometimes the decision of foolish or wise is doing something that may seem like it's a crazy price.
Unknown
What deal did you do that seemed like a crazy product? Price was a phenomenal investment.
Reid Hoffman
When I did the Series A of Airbnb, what was the price? 60 million post. At that time, the founders probably could have gotten on the phone all week and called every single person who had used an Airbnb that week if they were working through the call list.
Unknown
Oh, wow.
Reid Hoffman
So it was a very small transactional volume. And the question is, would it grow? What would happen with cities? What would happened with market acceptance? There's a bunch of other things, but part of the way that I invest is I go look, if I'm right, if the theory of this investment is correct, then it will transform an industry. And that's what I tend to do as an investor. It's majority of my investments, not all. There's sometimes other things. But if that plays out to be the case, and so then is my theory of my investment at least a reasonable probability? Right. Like it has a reasonable chance of working. And that's why I did the Airbnb one. So that would be one example. But I also tend to be more careful about. Part of the discipline that I've learned from Silicon Valley is when you look at a seed, a series A, Series B, it isn't that price is irrelevant. Does the coherent sense of this make sense in terms of what future capital would need, how the entrepreneurs are thinking about their business? And so that's part of where pricing comes in.
Unknown
Do you think aqua hires are inevitable for LLM companies? We see the likes of Mistral in France, they just don't have enough cash. It's Spade a spade aquhire is inevitable.
Reid Hoffman
Well in a well functioning society hopefully it's acquisitions rather than acquihires part of the thing. There's a thread of antitrust that misunderstands their own game. So for example, the threat of antitrust roughly looks like this. It says we should stop the aggregation of power in the large companies so we should block acquisition and in some cases limited specific cases that makes sense. But in general if you want competition with those large companies from startups investors say for example, I'm an investor who's going to put a billion dollars into a company that might compete with one of the large tech companies. I'm only going to put the billion dollars in if I have a chance of an acquihire or not an acquisition exit because I'm going to need the billion dollars back possibly that's a huge loss. So if I am blocked, if you have a regulatory authority to say we are never going to allow that, then I'm never going to do the investment that allows a company to potentially compete with those large tech companies. And so their theory which is worth stopping the aggregation of big power is they're creating more aggregation of big power because they're stopping the financing of competition.
Unknown
Does the M and A window open up without leaning on well, I hope so.
Reid Hoffman
And by the way, I think it's good for society, it's good for competition, it's good for investing in the competition. And so that's part of the reason why I've kind of made public statements around this because it's not that I'm saying oh, antitrust is bogus. I'm saying you actually got the exact wrong theory of the game.
Unknown
Do you think Figma's antitrust was bogus?
Reid Hoffman
Yes, shortly. Look, I'm an investor and all the rest and I think Figma is an amazing company that's going to probably going to make substantially more money because the deal was essentially derailed. But that was a bad theory of the case.
Unknown
I would love to move into a quick fire. I always love my, I always leave thinking God, I've learned so much. I say short statement, you give me your immediate thoughts. What do you believe that most around you disbelieve?
Reid Hoffman
Great question. So what I think is that the AI revolution will both create enormous value for the large companies and enormous value for the small companies. And it's going to both. And part of that is because I don't think it's a big tech question, I don't think it's a little tech Question. I think it's a scale tech question. And I think part of what we do as investors and creators and creators in new industries, we invest in scaling technology. It starts small and it gets very large. And we want more large tech companies. The answer is not we want fewer large tech companies. We want more large tech companies.
Unknown
Is Twitter better post Elon or worse?
Reid Hoffman
With deep regret, I would say substantially worse.
Unknown
What would you do if you knew you couldn't fail?
Reid Hoffman
Oh, well, Fusion energy, maybe.
Unknown
What's the highest multiple investment you've ever made?
Reid Hoffman
Actually, almost never. Look at multiples. No, my investments are at seven to ten years out. And so it's a belief in what seven to ten years looks like. And almost everything I invest in is unprofitable when I invest it. Have I invested in a business that's profitable? I can remember.
Unknown
What would you most like to change about venture today? You see the landscape.
Reid Hoffman
Well, what I would love to have. And look, I understand the economics. I myself follow the economics of going into software, a broader range of things. And I've tried to do some of that myself. So I don't just preach it. You know, a nuclear fission infusion, a joby and flying cars. Because the world is not just digital, it's also real and physical. And so a broader range be a good thing.
Unknown
What have you changed your mind on in the last 12 months?
Reid Hoffman
Interesting, I guess. What is the right way for governments to interface productively with cryptocurrency? And there's micro things. I still am a believer in cryptocurrency. I bought bitcoin back in 2013. I've invested in cryptocurrency companies. I think it can be very good for society. But the way that it, you know, the kind of the ways that it can integrate well in society, like there's evolving beliefs there, like what should happen, what should not happen. But they're all like my micro things, not macro things. Maybe the most macro thing might be. It's not a change of my belief as much as it's kind of like an open question. I watched some congressional testimony from people from the National Security establishment that were claims that government labs were studying material from extraterrestrial spacecraft. And this was congressional testimony. And so I was like, huh, is it an asteroid or is it a robot ship or is there nothing? Is it just craziness? But before I had watched that testimony, if you had said, what do I think about UAPs? The answer is conspiracy theory. And maybe that's still the right answer. But I just watched that recently and I'm now got to go scratch at that a little bit and say okay, what is this UAP thing? And try to understand it.
Unknown
What is the price of Bitcoin? End of 2014, by the way, I.
Reid Hoffman
Never do like that again. 7 to 10 year horizon. So I bought a bunch of bitcoin. I've just hold, I just hold it like I've never sold it. And I then haven't bought new bitcoin. I would say under 25. So I'm I'd guess approaching 200,000.
Unknown
That's it. We're going to have another show at the end of 25.
Reid Hoffman
Great.
Unknown
You mentioned bitcoin, you mentioned Airbnb Series A. What was the worst financial investment you've made?
Reid Hoffman
Well, actually the interesting thing about this is people tend to think the worst thing you did did was you invested in something and went to zero. Actually, in fact, the worst thing is saying no to the things that went to the moon.
Unknown
Well, he's not doing the B of Airbnb and the C. Yes, exactly like.
Reid Hoffman
Those kinds of things.
Unknown
It's the what one comes to mind with that.
Reid Hoffman
Well, Airbnb was one. I mean where I have key lessons is where I have key lessons of missing an opportunity I should have said yes to and I should have said okay, not look, I led the A, I don't need to go lead the B or the C. I should gone, I'll lead the B or C, I'll double down on the risk coefficient because I had the conviction. I just had the oh look, I'm already in it. I already led the series A. And so that's clearly one. I think there's. I got pitched early in stripe and square and I didn't do the investments because I knew how hard payments was from PayPal. It's one of the things when you know too much and you know the risks too well. And those, those were terrible mistakes. I mean there's just the list of things you miss that you regret is substantial.
Unknown
Oh, for sure. When you're doing it right.
Reid Hoffman
Yes.
Unknown
Yeah, I totally agree. Final one for you. You have had the most incredible career when you think about advice given across it.
Reid Hoffman
Yes.
Unknown
What's the best advice that you've ever been given that sticks with you most?
Reid Hoffman
Lots. We could have a whole show on advice. But I'll say with one of the things my dad said to me when I was kid, which is he said the difficulty of making decisions is that in the short term it reduces your opportunity set because you've made a decision but it's the only way you have long term opportunity.
Unknown
I love that and honestly I have so enjoyed today. I can't thank you enough for going so broad with me across so many different topics. You've been fantastic so thank you.
Reid Hoffman
A pleasure as always. I look forward to the next in my next trip to London.
Harry Stebbings
I mean I always so enjoy my discussions with Reid. And if you want to see that episode recorded live in the studio in London, you can find it on YouTube by searching for 20VC. That's 20VC. Now before I leave you, we're excited to ignite your curiosity with a journey into the world of transformative ideas. If you're driven by the pursuit of knowledge and personal growth, you'll love exploring the vast collection of insightful book summaries on the Blinkist app. So with Blinkist you can access expertly crafted summaries that distill the essence of thousands, thousands of influential books, allowing you to read or listen to each in just 15 minutes. I know they beat 20 VC being recommended by the New York Times and Apple CEO Tim Cook. It's no surprise that 82% of Blinkist users see themselves as self optimizers and 65% say it's essential for business and career growth. And speaking of business, Blinkist is also a trusted LD partner for industry leaders like Amazon, Hyundai and KPMG UK, empowering over 32 million users since 2012 as a 20 VC listener. Even better, you get 25% exclusive discount on Blinkist. That's bl I n k I s t. Just visit blinkist.com 20vc to claim your discount and transform the way you learn. And while you're optimizing your learning, let's also optimize your finances with Brex. The financial stack founders can bank on. Brex knows that nearly 40% of startups fail because they run out of cash, so they built a banking experience that takes every dollar further. It's such a difference from traditional banking options that leave your cash sitting idle while chipping away at it with fees to help you protect your cash and extend your Runway. Brex combined the best things about checking treasury and fdic insurance in £1 powerhouse account. You can send and receive money worldwide at lightning speed. You can get 20x the standard FDIC protection through program banks and you can earn industry leading yield from your first dollar while still being able to access your funds anytime. Brex is a top choice for startups. In fact, hey, it's used by one in every three startups in the US just check them out now brex.com and talking about Building Trust Secure Frame provides incredible levels of trust to your customers through automation. Secure Frame empowers businesses to build trust with customers by simplifying information security and compliance through AI and automation. Thousands of fast growing businesses including Nasdaq, Angellist, Doodle and coda, trust Secure Frame to expedite their compliance journey for global security and privacy standards such as SOC2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, GDPR and more. Backed by top tier investors and corporations such as Google and Kleiner Perkins, the company is among Forbes list of top 100 startup employers for 2023 and Business Insider's list of the 34 most promising AI startups for 2023. Learn more today at secureframe. Com. It is a must. As always, I so appreciate all your support and stay tuned for an incredible episode coming on Wednesday with Daniel dines, founder of UiPath, on the future of agents in enterprise.
Podcast Summary: The Twenty Minute VC (20VC) – Reid Hoffman on Politics, Technology, and Global Affairs
Episode Title:
"20VC: Reid Hoffman on The Trump Administration | Elon Musk and DOGE | The US Defence Budget, NATO and The War in Ukraine | China, Tariffs and TikTok | The Future of Chips, Nuclear Energy, Quantum Computing and Climate"
Release Date:
December 16, 2024
Host:
Harry Stebbings
Guest:
Reid Hoffman
In one of the most expansive and insightful episodes of The Twenty Minute VC (20VC), host Harry Stebbings engages in a comprehensive dialogue with Reid Hoffman, co-founder of LinkedIn and renowned venture capitalist. The conversation traverses a broad spectrum of topics, including U.S. politics, global trade, cryptocurrency, defense spending, technological advancements, and climate change. Below is a detailed summary capturing the essence of their discussion.
Reid Hoffman opens the discussion by addressing the impact of the Trump administration on American prosperity and democratic principles.
Fiscal Policy Concerns:
Hoffman expresses skepticism about the administration's fiscal strategies. He states, “The trade wars will create a massive drop in prosperity in the US... the only way to get 2 trillion out of the budget would be to massively reduce the deficit and reduce defense spending” (00:00).
Democracy and Governance:
Emphasizing the importance of “speaking truth to power,” Hoffman asserts, “We should aspire to continue to be a place where we can speak truth to power, that we can criticize when things are wrong” (06:01). He underscores the need for integrity and ethical governance, particularly criticizing the misuse of state instruments for personal gain.
Optimism vs. Pessimism:
When discussing potential outcomes, Hoffman differentiates between negative scenarios, such as political persecution and economic corruption, and positive outcomes like deregulation and investment in future industries.
A significant portion of the conversation delves into the ramifications of trade wars, particularly between the U.S. and China.
Impact on Prosperity:
Hoffman warns against the detrimental effects of trade wars, noting, “The trade wars will create a massive drop in prosperity in the US and in other places” (08:44).
Strategic Tariff Implementation:
He advocates for targeted tariffs against irresponsible economic behaviors, such as China’s subsidization of its car industry, which undermines European manufacturers. “Responding to mercantile warfare is completely fine” (10:30).
Balanced Global Trade Regime:
Hoffman underscores the benefits of a global trade system for American economic prosperity, cautioning against general mercantile warfare and promoting fair competition.
Hoffman provides a critical analysis of U.S. defense spending and its implications for global stability.
Reducing Defense Budgets:
Contrary to prevalent political trends, Hoffman argues for a reduction in U.S. defense spending, stating, “US defense spending should reduce. Right. I think that would actually be a Good thing” (15:24).
Critique of Military Overreach:
He points out inefficiencies in the Department of Defense, such as the costly and vulnerable aircraft carriers, suggesting, “We should stop building aircraft carriers” (16:13).
European Defense Commitment:
Hoffman emphasizes the necessity for Europe to increase its defense spending to ensure global security and reduce America's burden. “It's better for the world and better for Europe if Europe increases its defense spending” (17:29).
The discussion transitions to the role of cryptocurrency in modern financial systems and its potential societal impacts.
DOGE and Government Spending:
Hoffman touches on Dogecoin (DOGE), expressing skepticism about government fiscal strategies. “There is next to zero chance that the missions that they have declared will be successful... You have to do the math” (13:42).
Bitcoin Investment Strategy:
Reflecting on his cryptocurrency investments, Hoffman reveals, “I bought a bunch of bitcoin. I've just hold, I just hold it like I've never sold it” (53:07), indicating a long-term investment approach.
Antitrust and Acquisitions:
Addressing the challenges of antitrust laws, Hoffman argues that restrictive regulations hinder competition and innovation by limiting startups' acquisition potentials. “Their theory is worth stopping the aggregation of big power because they're stopping the financing of competition” (48:09).
Hoffman delves into the transformative potential of emerging technologies and their interplay with societal issues.
Artificial Intelligence (AI):
He distinguishes between the current state and future potential of Large Language Models (LLMs), asserting, “We're not reaching the upper end of LLM... The scale game is still playing” (44:35). Hoffman highlights AI's capacity to enhance energy efficiency and drive innovations in various sectors.
Quantum Computing:
Discussing Google's advancements, Hoffman is optimistic about quantum computing's role in revolutionizing medicine, materials science, and more. “Quantum computing will have enormous prosperity benefits well before we have to navigate these things” (29:02).
Nuclear Energy:
Hoffman advocates for a renewed focus on nuclear energy, citing advancements in nuclear fission and fusion as pivotal for combating climate change. “Fusion is the most scalable green energy... it can solve climate change” (21:33).
Addressing the urgent issue of climate change, Hoffman outlines both challenges and technological solutions.
Regulatory Reduction for Green Energy:
Hoffman believes that reducing regulations can accelerate the adoption of renewable energy sources. “We're using a lot more coal versus nuclear. We see great examples in France as how to use nuclear... hasn't done anything about this” (21:33).
AI’s Role in Climate Solutions:
He underscores AI's dual role in climate impact, both as an energy consumer and as a tool for optimizing energy usage. “AI technology can actually be a net energy saver as we apply it” (24:14).
Fusion as a Solution:
Hoffman elaborates on fusion energy's potential to provide limitless, clean power, essential for large-scale carbon reduction efforts. “Fusion is the most scalable green energy... it's the platinum bullet” (27:26).
A critical discussion on the influence of social media magnates like Elon Musk and the balance between free speech and responsible content dissemination.
Elon Musk’s Influence:
Hoffman acknowledges Musk's significant impact through platforms like Twitter and Starlink, noting both positive contributions and potential conflicts of interest. “The ability to turn off, the Instat for large swathes of the population... conflicts of interest and navigating the conflicts of interest with ethics and integrity” (30:42).
Freedom of Reach vs. Freedom of Speech:
He differentiates between expressing opinions and having the power to amplify misinformation. “There's a really interesting distinction between freedom of speech and freedom of reach” (33:22).
Proposed Solutions:
Hoffman suggests a democratic approach to managing the impact of influential voices on media platforms, advocating for expert panels to validate information without infringing on free speech. “We need to figure out how to apply that also within, call it the reach” (34:20).
Towards the end of the episode, Hoffman shares his perspectives on venture capital, investment decisions, and the future of startups.
Investment Philosophy:
Emphasizing long-term value, Hoffman recounts his investment in Airbnb’s Series A as a strategic move despite high initial valuations. “So it was a very small transactional volume. The question is, would it grow?” (46:03).
Antitrust Misconceptions:
He critiques antitrust approaches that inadvertently stifle competition by preventing startups from challenging tech giants through acquisitions. “If I have a chance of an acquihire or not an acquisition exit because I'm going to need the billion dollars back... aggregation of big power” (48:09).
Lessons from Missed Opportunities:
Reflecting on past investment decisions, Hoffman acknowledges regrets over not investing in burgeoning sectors like payment technologies, highlighting the importance of seizing transformative opportunities. “I should have said yes... those were terrible mistakes” (53:30).
In the concluding segments, Hoffman offers his vision for the future and personal reflections.
AI Revolution:
Hoffman is confident that AI will generate substantial value across both large and small companies. “The AI revolution will both create enormous value for the large companies and enormous value for the small companies” (50:10).
Advice Philosophy:
Sharing personal wisdom, he cites his father's advice on decision-making: “The difficulty of making decisions is that in the short term it reduces your opportunity set because you've made a decision but it's the only way you have long term opportunity” (54:48).
Optimism for the UK Economy:
Despite challenges like Brexit and economic stagnation, Hoffman remains bullish on the UK's potential due to its talent pool and global perspective. “The UK is well positioned to make that progress and make that effort” (40:15).
Notable Quotes:
Reid Hoffman on Trade Wars:
“[...] the trade wars will create a massive drop in prosperity in the US” (00:00).
On Speaking Truth to Power:
“We should aspire to continue to be a place where we can speak truth to power” (06:01).
On AI and Climate Change:
“AI technology can actually be a net energy saver as we apply it” (24:14).
On Freedom of Speech vs. Reach:
“There's a really interesting distinction between freedom of speech and freedom of reach” (33:22).
Investment in Airbnb:
“I did the Series A of Airbnb... would it grow? What would happen with cities?” (46:39).
Conclusion:
This episode of The Twenty Minute VC (20VC) stands out for its extensive coverage of critical and timely issues affecting both the business and technological landscapes. Reid Hoffman's candid insights into political dynamics, economic policies, and technological innovations provide listeners with a nuanced understanding of the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead. Whether discussing the intricacies of U.S. defense spending, the potential of nuclear fusion, or the evolving role of AI in society, Hoffman's perspectives are both thought-provoking and informative, making this episode a valuable resource for entrepreneurs, investors, and enthusiasts alike.