Stewart Squared

In this episode of the Stewart Squared podcast, host Stewart Alsop sits down for a wide-ranging conversation that starts with insurance concepts but quickly expands into discussions about geopolitical systems, AI development, and patent law. The conversation covers the breakdown of the post-Reagan world order, the rise of surveillance technology through organizations like ICE, citizen intelligence networks like Protect 612 in Minneapolis, and the challenges of intellectual property protection in the age of LLMs. Stewart Alsop II shares insights from his venture capital experience at NEA regarding patent processes and discusses various AI researchers' perspectives, particularly expressing alignment with Yann LeCun's views on the future limitations of current language models. The episode also touches on smart home technology, with Stewart Alsop II describing his Lutron lighting system and discussing how researchers like Andrej Karpathy are applying AI to home automation.

Timestamps

00:00 Exploring the Intersection of Insurance and Crypto
03:58 The Evolution of Global Power Dynamics
07:59 The Role of Technology in Modern Governance
11:50 Understanding Bureaucracy and Its Implications
15:52 The Impact of Social Media on Public Perception
19:44 The Future of AI and Intellectual Property
23:48 Navigating the Complexities of Modern Economies

Key Insights

1. The Global Power Structure is in Fundamental Transition: The post-WWII and post-Cold War systems have ended, leaving an unstable world with Trump, Putin, and Xi Jinping as "dictatorial type people" creating uncertainty. The US-Soviet balance has been replaced by a US-China rivalry with Russia as a declining but disruptive force, while oil dynamics shift as the US and Venezuela combined now have more reserves than OPEC countries.
2. Technology is Democratizing Intelligence and Surveillance: Citizens are using technology to monitor government activities, as seen in Minneapolis where groups like Protect 612 use real-time intelligence networks to track ICE operations. This creates a two-way surveillance dynamic where both government and citizens have unprecedented monitoring capabilities, fundamentally changing power dynamics.
3. Intellectual Property Protection is Breaking Down in the AI Era: The traditional patent system cannot effectively protect AI innovations like LLMs because they're based on data manipulation rather than discrete inventions. This represents a fundamental shift from the venture capital model that relied heavily on IP moats, forcing companies toward "blitzscaling" strategies that depend on speed rather than legal protection.
4. AI Development Has Reached a Critical Philosophical Divide: Leading AI researchers have fundamentally different views about AI's future impact, from Hinton's pessimism to Ng's optimism. The author aligns with Yann LeCun's view that current LLMs are "tapped out" and innovation must move beyond current architectures, suggesting we're at an inflection point requiring new algorithmic approaches.
5. Authoritarian Tendencies are Emerging Across Political Spectrums: Both left and right have abandoned faith in liberal representative government, with COVID policies demonstrating authoritarian impulses on the left while figures like Curtis Yarvin advocate for a return to monarchy-like CEO governance on the right. This represents a crisis of democratic legitimacy requiring technological solutions.
6. Practical AI Applications are Revolutionizing Daily Life: Tools like Antigravity and Claude are enabling non-programmers to automate complex tasks through natural language commands, from web browsing to smart home management. This democratization of programming capabilities represents a fundamental shift in how humans interact with technology systems.
7. Venture Capital's Traditional Model is Being Disrupted: The historical VC approach of funding IP-protected innovations for 20+ years is being challenged by AI's inability to be patented and the speed of technological change. Companies like Palantir evolved from service-heavy models to AI-driven platforms, while social media companies succeeded without patent protection through rapid scaling strategies.

What is Stewart Squared?

Stewart Alsop III reviews a broad range of topics with his father Stewart Alsop II, who started his career in the personal computer industry and is still actively involved in investing in startup technology companies. Stewart Alsop III is fascinated by what his father was doing as SAIII was growing up in the Golden Age of Silicon Valley. Topics include:

- How the personal computing revolution led to the internet, which led to the mobile revolution
- Now we are covering the future of the internet and computing
- How AI ties the personal computer, the smartphone and the internet together