Mark Cuban
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Meaning that... Meta's doing open source, right? That's a good choice for them. I think that's a smart choice, right? But it's just a business decision for everybody else. I don't think it should be forced.
Because they're all... That's a very incestuous industry where, you know... The people all work together at some level. They read the same papers. They go to the same conferences. You know, it's like the early days of streaming and the internet where people used the same technology everywhere.
Because they're all... That's a very incestuous industry where, you know... The people all work together at some level. They read the same papers. They go to the same conferences. You know, it's like the early days of streaming and the internet where people used the same technology everywhere.
Because they're all... That's a very incestuous industry where, you know... The people all work together at some level. They read the same papers. They go to the same conferences. You know, it's like the early days of streaming and the internet where people used the same technology everywhere.
And now they just try different things and you get one smarter to a couple of smart people in one company like Anthropic, right? And they do things a little bit better and model efficiency gets better. So, you know, it's just a business choice, but I don't think it should be forced, but I think it's a smart business decision.
And now they just try different things and you get one smarter to a couple of smart people in one company like Anthropic, right? And they do things a little bit better and model efficiency gets better. So, you know, it's just a business choice, but I don't think it should be forced, but I think it's a smart business decision.
And now they just try different things and you get one smarter to a couple of smart people in one company like Anthropic, right? And they do things a little bit better and model efficiency gets better. So, you know, it's just a business choice, but I don't think it should be forced, but I think it's a smart business decision.
It really, really is, right? But go back to historically, you know, there was digital computing, which was a dominant player. And they thought, and IBM to a certain extent, thought that they wouldn't be subject to a problem with the PC industry. And then all of a sudden, And with their mainframes and everything, they had captive software. They wouldn't use off-the-shelf software, right?
It really, really is, right? But go back to historically, you know, there was digital computing, which was a dominant player. And they thought, and IBM to a certain extent, thought that they wouldn't be subject to a problem with the PC industry. And then all of a sudden, And with their mainframes and everything, they had captive software. They wouldn't use off-the-shelf software, right?
It really, really is, right? But go back to historically, you know, there was digital computing, which was a dominant player. And they thought, and IBM to a certain extent, thought that they wouldn't be subject to a problem with the PC industry. And then all of a sudden, And with their mainframes and everything, they had captive software. They wouldn't use off-the-shelf software, right?
So for a digital equipment mainframe or an IBM mainframe, you needed software that was written for it. There was nothing off-the-shelf. And when the PC industry came along, it was the exact opposite. There was, you know, MS-DOS and then Windows, things that were off-the-shelf that every PC could use. And that changed how people thought about software.
So for a digital equipment mainframe or an IBM mainframe, you needed software that was written for it. There was nothing off-the-shelf. And when the PC industry came along, it was the exact opposite. There was, you know, MS-DOS and then Windows, things that were off-the-shelf that every PC could use. And that changed how people thought about software.
So for a digital equipment mainframe or an IBM mainframe, you needed software that was written for it. There was nothing off-the-shelf. And when the PC industry came along, it was the exact opposite. There was, you know, MS-DOS and then Windows, things that were off-the-shelf that every PC could use. And that changed how people thought about software.
And I think the same thing will happen here where it's going to be... As models become more efficient and easier and less expensive to train, I think there'll be more reasons to open source.
And I think the same thing will happen here where it's going to be... As models become more efficient and easier and less expensive to train, I think there'll be more reasons to open source.
And I think the same thing will happen here where it's going to be... As models become more efficient and easier and less expensive to train, I think there'll be more reasons to open source.
Yeah, I'm not buying that at all.
Yeah, I'm not buying that at all.
Yeah, I'm not buying that at all.
No, no. I think I'm not an AI fatalist at all, right? I'm an AI optimist. But it's not to say that there isn't a lot of scary shit that can happen with it. Yeah. Militarily... Like I said earlier, I'm a big believer that there's going to be millions and tens of millions of models.