Why Today's AI Boom Is No Dot-Com Bubble
Few people experienced the Dot-Com bubble with more vertiginous intensity than Bill Gross, the Pasadena-based founder of Idealab and many many other internet startups over the last 30 years. So when I sat down with Gross at DLD, I couldn’t resist opening with the boom/bubble gambit. How, I asked him, does today’s AI hysteria compare with the Web 1.0 madness of the Nineties? While Gross - whose current ProRata.ai play is focused on protecting creativity in the age of generative AI - doesn’t believe that today’s boom is akin to the Dot-Com bubble, there are similarities. We are at what Gross calls a “Napster moment” in terms of making the big LLMs accountable for all the content they are illegally crawling (ie: stealing). And to get beyond this moment, he says, everyone from Google and OpenAI to Perplexity and Anthropic, needs to move to a “Spotify model” that fairly shares revenue with the human creators of knowledge.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
Phil Klay on Rebuilding the American Citizen in an Age of Endless, Invisible War
Mark Esper: The Surrealism of Life as Secretary of Defense in the Trump Regime
Lise Vesterlund on The No Club and How to Put a Stop to Women's Dead End Work
Jon Mooallem: How to Make Sense of Profound Arbitrariness in a World That Is Suppose to Make Sense
Charlotte Mullins: Finally a History of Art That Includes Female and Non-White Artists
Glenda Gilmore: The Significance of Romare Bearden's Art in the American Canon
Gregg Barak: On the Persistent and Unambiguous Criminality of Donald J. Trump
Maurice Stucke: How Big-Tech Barons Smash Innovation and How to Fight Back
Francis Fukuyama: Are We At the End of the History of Liberalism?
Andrew Leon Hanna: How the World's Refugees Are 25 Million Sparks of Innovation and Humanity
Finally Some Good News: Why We Might All Be Altruistic Creatures
James Zimring: How Math Distorts Our Thinking
Leslie Fenwick: How the Legacy of Jim Crow Still Infects American Schools