Is the US government trying to ban AI? [The Jolt with Stephen McBride] On Biden’s AI Executive Order Happy Friday! The S&P 500 is up 4% this week. The perfect concoction of solid earnings, a strong economy, and falling rates are driving stocks higher. I remain bullish. Itâs easy to get distracted by short-term market gyrations. But remember, there are always fast-growing disruptive megatrends screaming higher no matter what markets do. Artificial intelligence (AI) is by far the most important megatrend today. Letâs talk about Bidenâs new plan to make sure itâs âsafe.â First, a note. Youâre going to receive an important email from my company, RiskHedge Research, later today. Please read it before Monday. - Is the US government trying to ban AI? I loved video games as a kid. My grand-dad used to joke that I was raised on âTV and toast.â Harmless fun, right? Well, the Japanese government once considered the PlayStation 2, in the wrong hands, a military weapon. Because the chips within it were too powerful. Look at this newspaper clipping from 2000: Source: Pessimists Archive President Bidenâs new AI executive order reminds me of this folly. I combed through the 100-page document so you donât have do. The big takeaway is this. Firms building AI tools more powerful than the latest ChatGPT must now conduct safety tests and report the results to Uncle Sam. This is a big mistake. Itâs far too early to regulate this new wave of AI. It isnât even one year old and is rapidly evolving. Bureaucrats seem to think they can predict an unknowable future. You couldnât have predicted Google (GOOG), Facebook (META), or Uber (UBER) in the early â90s. So, how could you pass laws to regulate them? Same for AI today. The internet created trillions of dollars in wealth and improved our lives because the government mostly left it alone. Thank goodness Silicon Valley is 3,000 miles away from Washington! This AI executive order is silly. But itâs nothing new. Uncle Sam tried to ban internet browsers and Appleâs (AAPL) Mac PC in the â90s (seriously). Hereâs the important part. Rather than slowing down AI progress⦠these new regulations will accelerate it. Thatâs because they only have teeth against large companies building AI tools like OpenAI and Google. But thatâs not where the most breathtaking progress is taking place. Developers working on âopen source,â freely available AI models are making the real breakthroughs. And they can easily skirt these new rules. Think of Bidenâs AI Executive Order like a chain link fence. Itâll slow down the big dogs of tech. But the swarms of smaller upstarts will fly right through. Iâve long said AI is the great equalizer. Watch for small companies to quicky disrupt big tech in ways previously thought impossible. - Forget ChatGPT⦠the AI âappâ era is here. There wonât be one AI to rule them all. There will be millions of âAIsâ... all doing different things. [In Amsterdam]( earlier this week, I chatted with guys who are building AI versions of themselves to serve millions of clients around the world. Thatâs different from Waymoâs AI-powered robo-taxis. Which are nothing like the [AI tools bringing new drugs to market for a fraction of the cost](. Weâre witnessing the birth of specialized AI âapps,â which could become part of everyday life for billions of people. Iâm excited about all the new winners there will be in AI. A handful of big tech companies dominated the last decade. But as you know, AI is the great equalizer. It gives startups extreme leverage and allows them to go from 0 to 100 really quick. ChatGPT launched less than a year ago. Its creator OpenAI is raking in $100 million/month from it. It used to take software companies YEARS to reach this scale. One AI app Iâm looking forward to is from Turbulence Solutions. Itâs a new AI system that promises to make flights turbulence free. The only thing all these AI apps have in common is they run on Nvidia (NVDA) chips. Anyway, itâs a great time to be alive. Time to shake off the pessimism of the 2010s and dream big. Hereâs an image of âour bright futureâ I generated with OpenAIâs new DALL.E 3 image generator. Give it a try! - My dentist was right. [I warned you to avoid Invisalignâs (ALGN) stock a few weeks back](. It plunged 22% in one day last week after reporting woeful earnings, ouch! Align pioneered clear plastic braces for your teeth. Its stock handed early investors 4,000% profits. But my dentist gave me the âheads upâ that competitors are now making better braces at half the price Align charges. Sure enough, I recently got plastic braces. Theyâre great. Theyâre not Align brand. Sometimes the best info comes from the strangest places! Lesson: Every disruptor eventually gets disrupted. Many big tech stocks are next on the chopping block. AI will be swinging the axe. - Todayâs dose of optimism⦠We complain (me included) about our creaking education system. But itâs easy to forget that just 200 years ago, less than one in five adults could read and write! That ratio has now reversed, as this chart shows. Source: Our World In Data Human progress can feel fragile in shorter time frames. But as a species, weâve been going âup and to the rightâ for 200 years. For 99.9% of history, most people were dirt poor. America⦠capitalism⦠technology and what you might call Western values have created an age of unparalleled prosperity. Letâs double down on what makes us great. Look out for that email from RiskHedge Research later today, and have a great weekend! Stephen McBride
Chief Analyst, RiskHedge Suggested Reading... [Mary the Microsoft Millionaire](
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