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DeepSeekers leveren paspoort in, Solana trekt anti-woke commercial terug en TikTok-VS naar Oracle?

Het belang van technologie dringt snel door in alle geledingen van de samenleving. Het is zichtbaar hoe politici worstelen met het reguleren van technologische ontwikkelingen, terwijl de doorsnee tech-CEO blijkt te beschikken over het invoelend vermogen van een aardappel.

Wie had ooit gedacht dat de Amerikaanse president zich persoonlijk zou bemoeien met de verkoop van de Amerikaanse tak van een Chinese app (TikTok), of dat de Chinese overheid de paspoorten zou laten innemen van personeel van een startup (DeepSeek) omdat hun werk van nationaal belang wordt geacht?

Er is dagelijks een nieuwe internationale rel over een techbedrijf. Alsof Elon Musk nog niet genoeg aan zijn hoofd heeft, is zijn AI-bot Grok nu verwikkeld in een controverse in India vanwege ongefilterde en provocerende reacties. Solana, een cryptobedrijf met wortels in Zwitserland en geleid door een Oekraïner en een Indiër, dacht goedkoop te kunnen scoren met een anti-woke commercial gericht op Amerika, maar moest deze bolus al snel weer inslikken.

Het is alsof de techbro’s elke ochtend opstaan met het doel opnieuw te bewijzen dat er een wereld van verschil zit tussen intelligentie en gezond verstand.

De beloning voor baanbrekend AI-onderzoek: paspoort inleveren? Beeld gemaakt met Midjourney.

Werken bij DeepSeek? Paspoort inleveren!

Het moederbedrijf van DeepSeek, het hedgefonds High-Flyer, houdt de paspoorten van belangrijke medewerkers vast, meldde The Information. Deze maatregel zou zijn genomen om te voorkomen dat medewerkers, vooral uit het R&D-team, het land en daarmee het bedrijf verlaten.

Headhunters zou ook zijn opgedragen om medewerkers van DeepSeek met rust te laten. Het toont de keerzijde aan van het belang dat de wereldmachten inmiddels hechten aan technologie, met name aan AI.

Koopt Oracle de Amerikaanse tak van TikTok?

Een verrassende ontwikkeling in de soap rond de door de Amerikaanse regering opgelegde verkoop van de Amerikaanse activiteiten van TikTok: database-gigant Oracle zou de belangrijkste rol krijgen in een herschikking van de aandelen. Bestaande Amerikaanse investeerders van ByteDance, het moederbedrijf van TikTok, zoals Susquehanna International Group en General Atlantic, zouden samen met private-equityfirma KKR de Amerikaanse activiteiten van TikTok overnemen via een nieuwe entiteit.

Oracle zou daarbij optreden als ‘vertrouwde technologiepartner’ en verantwoordelijk worden voor het beheer van de Amerikaanse gebruikersdata, waardoor de invloed van de Chinese overheid op deze gegevens wordt beperkt. Deze constructie, die het Chinese aandelenbelang in de nieuwe entiteit zou reduceren tot twintig procent, zou voldoen aan de Amerikaanse wetgeving die ByteDance verplicht om TikTok te verkopen of anders een verbod tegemoet te zien vanwege zorgen over nationale veiligheid. President Trump, eerder voorstander van een verbod, heeft nu aangegeven TikTok in de VS te willen behouden en de deadlines verlengd om tot een oplossing te komen.

Yann LeCun en Andrew Ng fileren Anthropic CEO

Mede door de groeiende afkeer van X wordt LinkedIn een steeds interessantere bron van informatie. Yann LeCun en Andrew Ng, twee grootheden in de AI-wereld, spraken zich er afgelopen week uit tegen het idee dat programmeervaardigheden binnenkort overbodig worden door de opkomst van AI. LeCun en Ng betogen dat het beheersen van programmeervaardigheden van onschatbare waarde blijft en het kortzichtig is om mensen te ontmoedigen om te leren programmeren.

Zonder diens naam te noemen spreken LeCun en Ng zich hiermee uit tegen Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, die dacht ook eens dapper te moeten doen in zijn PR-strijd tegen OpenAI topman Sam Altman, en zich liet verleiden tot de uitspraak dat binnen een jaar negentig procent van al het programmeerwerk wordt gedaan door AI. Laten we een gokje wagen: in Amodei’s wereldbeeld moet dat gaan gebeuren met software van zijn Anthropic.

LeCun reageerde kort maar krachtig:

Leer wiskunde, natuurkunde, techniek en informatica. We krijgen misschien binnenkort superintelligente AI-assistenten, maar wij zullen hun baas zijn. We moeten de basis begrijpen om hen te kunnen leiden.”

Dario Amodei’s goedkope PR-teksten

Amodei probeert continu het nieuws te halen met slappe PR-teksten. Zo zei hij onlangs dat AI binnenkort ‘een land van genieën in een datacenter’ zou genereren. Om deze kreet te pareren nam LeCun meer tijd:

“Door simpelweg LLM’s op te schalen, gaan we geen AI op menselijk niveau bereiken. En dat gaat gewoon niet gebeuren. Er is geen enkele manier, oké, absoluut geen manier. En wat je ook hoort van sommige van mijn avontuurlijkere collega’s, het gaat niet gebeuren binnen de komende twee jaar. Absoluut geen enkele kans. Het idee dat we een ‘land van genieën in een datacenter’ zouden hebben – dat is complete onzin. Dat gaat absoluut niet gebeuren.
Wat we misschien gaan hebben, zijn systemen die zijn getraind op voldoende grote hoeveelheden data, zodat elke vraag die een redelijk persoon zou kunnen stellen, een antwoord kan vinden via die systemen. Je zou het gevoel kunnen hebben dat je een PhD naast je hebt staan. Maar het is geen PhD die je naast je hebt, het is een systeem met een gigantisch geheugen en terugvindcapaciteit. Geen systeem dat oplossingen kan bedenken voor nieuwe problemen.’

– Yann LeCun

LeCun verkondigt al langer dat het opschalen van LLM’s, zoals ChatGPT van OpenAI, Anthropic’s Claude, of Elon Musk’s Grok, niet zal leiden tot AI die mensachtige intelligentie bereikt. Volgens hem kan tekstdata alleen geen menselijk begrip opleveren. LeCun stelt niet geïnteresseerd te zijn in LLM’s om mensachtige AI te creëren en denkt dat grote technische en architecturale doorbraken nodig zijn om AI in het huidige groeitempo voort te zetten. Hij ziet geen toekomst in puur schaalbare LLM’s om menselijke intelligentie te evenaren.

John Battelle nuchter over AI-agents

Journalist en ondernemer John Battelle, vooral bekend als mede-oprichter van Wired en The Industry Standard, betoogt dat volledig autonome AI-agenten voorlopig onhaalbaar zijn om een andere reden dan technologische beperkingen. Hoewel de technologie vooruitgaat, wijzen praktische obstakels zoals databeheer, trainingskosten en bruikbaarheidsproblemen erop dat echt autonome AI-assistenten voorlopig een droom blijven.

Zelfs het gerucht dat OpenAI van plan is om AI-agenten aan te bieden voor $20.000 per maand lijkt eerder een ambitie dan een realiteit, gezien de enorme operationele uitdagingen. De kern van het probleem zit in het delen van de benodigde data om autonome AI-agenten taken te laten uitvoeren.

Anders gezegd, er is overal data, data, data, maar zonder connectiviteit is er geen druppel te drinken. Wil je dat je slimme nieuwe AI-agent een vlucht voor je boekt? Dan moet die samenwerken met, laten we eens kijken… alle grote luchtvaartmaatschappijen, alle belangrijke betalingssysteem, alle grote reisplatforms, alle grote agenda-applicaties en… nou ja, dat is al genoeg om de gemiddelde AI-ontwikkelaar te laten struikelen. 

Voor elke mogelijke situatie zou een ontwikkelaar een aangepaste programmeerinterface moeten coderen, om nog maar te zwijgen over het feit dat hun zakelijke collega’s met elk bedrijf een deal moeten sluiten om toegang tot de data te krijgen. Zulke obstakels zijn voor de meeste startups vrijwel onmogelijk te overwinnen. Dit is de reden waarom je op dit moment geen AI-agent hebt die veel voor je doet – en dat zal voorlopig ook niet gebeuren.

Maar het belangrijkste zijn de overkoepelende bedrijfsmodellen van de grote technologiebedrijven, en in het huidige technologielandschap is het bedrijfsmodel bepalend voor de toekomst. Hoe zou onze vluchtboekende AI-agent de advertentie-inkomsten van Google Flights beïnvloeden, om nog maar te zwijgen van de zoekresultaten? Hoe zou het de betrokkenheid en commerciële inkomsten op platforms zoals Instagram of WhatsApp beïnvloeden? Zou onze hardwerkende AI-agent de schijnheiligheid van Apple rondom consumentenprivacy blootleggen – een schijnheiligheid die de hele marketingstrategie voor iOS en de iPhone drijft? 

Ik zou nog wel even door kunnen gaan, maar ik denk dat je het punt begrijpt: Geconfronteerd met de onzekerheden die zulke agents met zich meebrengen, zullen deze grote bedrijven waarschijnlijk niet in actie komen. En als ze ooit een AI-agent ontwikkelen die onze eenvoudige visie kan uitvoeren, kunnen we van één ding zeker zijn: die agent zal niet voor ons werken. Hij zal voor hen werken – en daardoor falen als consumentenproduct.”

CoreWeave succesvol met eerste ‘Pure-Play AI IPO’

De eerste ‘AI cloud services IPO’ lijkt een groot succes te worden. Volgens de laatste schattingen gaat CoreWeave, dat wordt gesteund door aandeelhouder Nvidia, richting de $3 miljard ophalen op een waardering van $32 miljard.

CoreWeave bouwt GPU-aangedreven cloudinfrastructuur, speciaal ontworpen voor AI-toepassingen. In 2017 opgericht door drie beurshandelaren als crypto-miningbedrijf, werd het bedrijf na een correctie in de cryptomarkt omgedoopt tot CoreWeave. Ze haalden geld op en kochten zoveel mogelijk GPU’s van failliete cryptominers in de overtuiging dat deze chips de ontwikkeling van AI zouden aandrijven. Hun gelijk werd bewezen toen in 2022 ChatGPT op de markt kwam.

De beursgang van Coreweave wordt gezien als een test voor het vertrouwen van beleggers in AI-infrastructuurbedrijven. Gezien dit succes zullen er snel meer IPO’s volgen door allerlei bedrijven die zich zullen vermommen als ‘AI-infrastructuur.’

De beloning voor een overname van $32 miljard: -1.30%

Google koopt Wiz voor $32 miljard, boeit niemand

Google deed de grootste overname in zijn geschiedenis met de aankoop van cloudbeveiligingsbedrijf Wiz, maar de reactie vanuit de tech- en financiële wereld bleef uit. De overname had nauwelijks invloed op de aandelenkoers van Google, vooral in vergelijking met concurrenten zoals Microsoft en Amazon. Beleggers twijfelen hoeveel de overname daadwerkelijk bijdraagt aan Google’s positie in cloudbeveiliging. Google blijft na Amazon en Microsoft de derde speler in clouddiensten.

Elon Musk’s Grok sensatie in India 

Het begon met een vraag op X aan Grok, dat met enige vertraging antwoorde, inclusief beledigingen in het Hindi. Musk positioneerde Grok immers als een ‘anti-woke’ chatbot met een ongefilterde, speelse toon, geïnspireerd door het boek The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. In dit geval mengde de politie van Delhi zich zelfs in de interactie met de bot, wat de populariteit verder aanwakkerde.

Vooral de manier waarop Grok zich mengt in politieke discussies in India is ongebruikelijk. De chatbot uitte kritiek op premier Modi en noemde oppositieleider Rahul Gandhi ‘eerlijker en beter opgeleid dan Modi.’ Critici van Modi en voorstanders van vrije meningsuiting zien Grok als een frisse wind in een tijd waarin de vrijheid van meningsuiting onder druk staat, anderen waarschuwen voor ongefilterde verspreiding van leugens.

Boek over Facebook verschrikkingen bestseller

Vorige week was al duidelijk dat de rechtzaak van Meta tegen Sarah Wynn-Williams om de verspreiding van haar boek over haar tijd bij Meta/Facebook te verbieden, tot grote problemen voor Zuckerberg zou leiden. Door alle publiciteit kwam het boek op nummer 1 binnen in de bestsellerlijst van de New York Times voor non-fictieboeken. Zuck bewijst hiermee opnieuw dat hij het verschil nog steeds niet kent tussen intelligent en slim.

Solana verwart crypto met… genders?

Het leek deze week een wedstrijd in stupiditeit tussen Meta en Solana. Het crypto-platform bracht een commercial uit met een anti-woke boodschap die voor zoveel controverse zorgde dat Solana zich gedwongen voelde hem na een paar uur te verwijderen. De commercial was juist bedoeld om Solana neer te zetten als een nuchtere, innovatiegerichte blockchain.

Anatoly Yakovenko, medeoprichter van Solana, bood nog excuses aan, maar het kwaad was al geschied. De vraag is hoe een bedrijf het verzint om een commercial uit te brengen waarin een man, die Amerika moet voorstellen, tegenover een therapeute op de bank zit en teksten uitkraamt als ‘ik wil technologie uitvinden, geen genders.’ Het is alsof Ronald McDonald bij de juf klaagt dat hij geen staatsleningen wil verkopen; het slaat nergens op.

In aflevering 8 van de NFA Podcast bespreken Nish en ik verder de onverwachte concurrentie tussen Pump.fun en Raydium, Dubai’s proefproject voor de ’tokenization’ van vastgoed en het gebrek aan grote Indiase technologiebedrijven, vergeleken met Chinese giganten zoals Tencent en Alibaba.

Aflevering 8 van de NFA Podcast met Nish & Frackers is nu beschikbaar:

Bedankt voor de belangstelling, tot volgende week!

Categories
AI invest crypto

EU says to invest two hundred billion in AI, but how?

The European Union announced this week at the AI Action Summit in Paris that it will invest two hundred billion Euros in the development of AI. Curious clicking on the link leads directly to a deleted YouTube video: 'Video removed by the uploader'. These brainiacs are going to invest two hundred billion Euros of taxpayer money in AI?

One striking aspect of the story, because serious plans are as yet unobtainable, is the creation of 'AI Gigafactories', or large-scale data centers to serve as the backbone for European AI development. When politicians start spouting texts about "hundreds of billions of investments" and empty phrases like "AI Gigafactories," because data centers are apparently not sexy enough anymore, it is advisable to be vigilant.

Of course, the European rhetoric is a reaction to the ambitious American Stargate project. That too is weighed down by a Boy Scout objective like "to build and develop AI - and specifically AGI - for the benefit of all humanity."

The communique states that priorities include “ensuring AI is open, inclusive, transparent, ethical, safe, secure and trustworthy, taking into account international frameworks for all” and “making AI sustainable for people and the planet”.
It is as if miss World and Buzz Lightyear were handing in a homework assignment together.

The Guardian wrote up a clear summary of the AI summit, with three things standing out: first, the global recognition that AI is having a huge impact on society and the economy; second, that developments in AI are accelerating; and, unfortunately, third, that there is no consensus on how to regulate developments internationally.

The fear among entrepreneurs in Europe is that bureaucrats without substantive expertise will distribute the planned budget, which will result in wasted money and slow implementation.

Smarter European approach: embrace open source AI

A better approach would be to not simply spend these funds on infrastructure or vague programs, but to invest in AI companies working with open-source technologies, not based on but inspired by China's DeepSeek. By starting with a fully open-source codebase, including transparent training data, the EU can build an AI ecosystem that is widely accessible to large companies, startups, researchers, businesses and hopefully even individual developers.

The most practical approach would be the creation of a fund to invest in AI applications that build on this open-source base. This would ideally be done in partnership with existing investment funds in the market to avoid wasting taxpayer money, rather than a top-down model in which the EU itself tries to drive innovation.

The current trend within AI shows that most investment is going to large language models (LLMs), with companies like Meta and Microsoft spending tens of billions a year on AI development. This means that if Europe is not more strategic with its investment, it risks remaining behind.

Focus on open-source AI and a smart investment model rather than a purely infrastructure-driven approach could yet help Europe achieve a competitive and sustainable AI ecosystem. But if the strategy is not sharply translated into tactical and operational decisions soon, this historic opportunity will get bogged down in inefficiency and political rhetoric.

Elon Musk's OpenAI bid not for real

Elon Musk has announced his intention to make a nearly $100 billion bid for OpenAI, but the question is whether this is a serious acquisition proposal or a strategic move to thwart his archenemy Sam Altman. Musk, who co-founded OpenAI but later left acrimoniously, vehemently opposes OpenAI's transition from a nonprofit to a commercial company. A bid of this size would make it more difficult for OpenAI to move the shares held by the non profit organization to regular commercial shareholders.

A major complication is that Microsoft owns 49% of the shares in OpenAI, meaning Satya Nadella's company has a decisive vote in any acquisition. For Microsoft, a sale would raise nearly $50 billion, but the company also has a strategic stake in OpenAI because most of its AI infrastructure runs on Microsoft Azure. This makes it unlikely that Microsoft will stand and cheer when OpenAI is acquired, unless a deal is struck in which Musk's AI company XAI along with OpenAI becomes a major customer of Microsoft.

Remarkably, Sam Altman himself owns no shares in OpenAI, giving him little direct influence over an acquisition. This highlights OpenAI's unusual governance model, with control largely in the hands of the foundation that founded the company. Musk's bid therefore seems less a serious attempt to acquire OpenAI and more a tactical move to disrupt Altman's plans and make OpenAI's future uncertain. Surely investors will be scratching their heads before they will fork over the forty billion sought by Altman on a valuation of three hundred billion in this situation.

You need a search engine to make sense of Google Gemini's choices. 

AI UI is horrible

You'd almost forget in all the fuss to take a good look at OpenAI's products. MG Siegler did not hold back about ChatGPT's sadly tuneful interface:

"Well, now we're up to eight options – six in the main drop-down and still those same two "left-overs" in the sub-menu. And technically it's nine options if you include the "Temporary chat" toggle."

At Google, the user interface (UI) is just as horrible. The makers of the most Spartan, and thus most successful, search engine ever, have managed to turn their ChatGPT competitor Gemini into an incomprehensible AI menu. It is downright woeful, because there are extraordinary capabilities hidden beneath this wretched interface. See, for example, how Google AI Studio phenomenally explains how Photoshop works.

So I asked Google Pro 1.5 Deep Research, what a name, to produce an investment strategy for the European Union based on literature research. A few minutes later, Deep Research produced this Google Doc. Far from perfect, but better than anything produced so far by the EU.

Ethereum under fire

Ethereum, for years the leader in the world of smart contracts and after Bitcoin the crypto currency with the highest market cap, is at a crossroads. Despite the rising Bitcoin price and optimism in the crypto market, especially since Trump's election victory, Ethereum remains far behind and is trading even lower than a year ago.

Ethereum's share price is suffering from the rise of competitors such as Solana and Sui

What are the causes?

  • Lack of major updates: after "The Merge" (the switch from Proof-of-Work to Proof-of-Stake), there has been no new breakthrough.
  • Increasing competition: Solana, Sui and Aptos are gaining ground with faster and cheaper transactions.
  • Negative publicity: Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin's recent tweet about communism and decentralization was taken out of context and caused unnecessary uproar.

Ethereum is still seen as a fundamentally strong blockchain, but it may lose more and more market share to newer platforms that are more responsive to users' current needs.

Huge livestream error, token price rises?

In the third episode of the NFA Podcast, which Nisheta Sachdev makes with yours truly, she surprised me with the news that NEAR Protocol's token price had risen after a team member accidentally shared the wrong screen of his computer during a livestream, unwittingly treating viewers to carnal intimacy of the eighteen-plus genre.

The crypto world is known for its unpredictable market reactions, but what happened next was exceptional even for crypto: the price of NEAR rose 5.6% to $3.50. While it cannot be proven that the livestream incident is directly responsible for the price increase, it again raises the question of how much influence, if any, "fundamentals" have on the crypto market?

If a blunder like this can drive up the price, it means the market is guided more by hype than by the true value of a project. Even the Tinder Swindler, infamous since the Netflix documentary, is launching his own token. It is leading to increasing frustration among professional developers and investors in the blockchain world.

Nish explains the Near livestream incident

GameStop considers buying crypto

GameStop, the company that was bailed out by retail investors in 2021 during the WallStreetBets revolt, is now considering investing in Bitcoin and other crypto-assets. By the way, the movie about GameStop is particularly worth seeing, with splendid roles by Pete Davidson and Seth Rogen, among others.

San Francisco overrun by startup teenagers

When incubator Y Combinator recently had a party, the platters went around with glasses of soda instead of alcohol: many startup founders were simply too young to legally drink alcohol. San Francisco's startup scene is flooded with very young AI entrepreneurs, many of whom left college to start their own companies.

The cost of university education in the U.S. has risen so much that despite the low success rate, entrepreneurship is a legitimate option. Outside the U.S., university education often remains a more logical route because the cost of a university education is much lower and the funding and exit opportunities for startups are not as great than in Silicon Valley.

That and much more in the third episode of the NFA Podcast, in which I also share how my experiment with investing one hundred dollars last February went down, exclusively in tech stocks.

For the hasty viewer and clicker

00:00 Introduction to NFA Podcast and Hosts Nisheta and Michiel 

01:42 Surprising News in Crypto: Near Protocol Incident 

03:53 Market Reactions and Near Token Performance 

05:22 Ethereum's Market Sentiment and Fear Index 

08:09 Ethereum's Performance Compared to Other Blockchains 

09:29 Market Predictions and New Money Flowing In 

11:35 GameStop's Potential Move into Crypto 

12:42 Upcoming Launches: Tinder Swindler's Token 

13:06 Elon Musk's Bid for OpenAI 

14:44 The AI Summit and Global AI Treaties. 

16:49 Youth and Startups: The College Dropout Phenomenon 

20:44 Market Spotlight: Insights and Predictions 

22:34 Investing Strategies and Personal Experiences. 

24:44 Supermicro, Palantir and Nvidia 

25:20 Dutch Trance NFA Podcast Theme 

25:41 NFA Dutch Trance Theme Review 

25:59 Indian NFA Podcast Theme 

26:25 Indian NFA Theme Review

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AI invest crypto

Forget FANG, it's all about BATMMAAN now - or is it crypto after all?

Once upon a time, the acronym FANG (for Facebook, Apple, Netflix and Google) was the symbol for tech stocks. But almost unnoticed, Broadcom snuck into the club of trillion-dollar companies, and now there is a new acronym: BATMMAAN (Broadcom, Apple, Tesla, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, Alphabet, Nvidia). Barron's came out with an excellent analysis including a price comparison. What does it show? Nvidia is the cheapest stock of the bunch.

BATMMAAN stock performance in the last year: up 66% on average.

Forget FANG, here's BATMMAAN

This is especially noteworthy since Nvidia was already by far the best-performing stock among the tech giants over the last year. Propelled by the AI hype, Broadcom (symbol AVGO) is also coming on strong, while Tesla is mostly driven by members of Elon Musk's cult.

The entire BATMMAAN club made an average return of 66% last year. In fact, Apple and especially Microsoft are doing substantially worse than the S&P 500, which has proven to be a solid investment at 25%. Both icons are suffering from the AI hype: Apple because it derives no identifiable revenue or profit benefit from AI and Microsoft because it is making tens of billions in additional investments in AI, the long-term returns of which investors doubt.

Return of top cryptocurrencies: 174%

Investors with a strong stomach have had a wonderful year in the crypto world, where the average rise of the largest crypto currencies measured by market cap, has been a whopping 174%.

The most frequently asked question in crypto remains: which coin should I buy? But the largest crypto currencies were already doing 174% year-to-date.

In addition to the rise of memecoin Dogecoin, carried in part by Doge fan Elon Musk, it is particularly notable that XRP, a Stone Age token by crypto standards, rose over 450%. Trump's upcoming presidency ensures that a new SEC boss will be appointed, following notorious cryptohater Gensler. The hope of XRP holders is that under the new administration, the SEC will end the ongoing legal proceedings against XRP.
 

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AI invest crypto technology

The big trends of 2024: AI, crypto and carbon removal

There are currently three major trends in technology driven by technological, as well as sociological and political currents: AI, crypto and carbon removal. These groundbreaking developments, like any major innovation, are received with skepticism, a pattern that has been evident for decades.

PC: "too expensive and useless"

In the 1980s, when the personal computer emerged, personal computers were mostly seen as too expensive for a device without many relevant applications. That quickly changed thanks to price reductions and standardization of software, after MS-DOS became the world standard thanks to a sophisticated licensing model by Microsoft. The word processor and spreadsheet quickly made the PC indispensable in the office.

Internet: "too difficult and dangerous"

In the 1990s, this pattern repeated itself with the Internet. The personal computer was seen as a work tool, not a potential mass medium. Bill Gates even declared that the Internet suffered from lack of standards, it was insecure and far too complicated, which is why he did not use the word Internet even ten times in his book The Road Ahead.

Bill preferred to talk about the information super highway, which he was going to build himself with the closed MSN, which we never heard anything more about. Yet within a few years, email, the Web browser and applications such as eBay, Amazon and Google made the Internet accessible to consumers.

In the Netherlands, it took until late 1996 for the NOS Journaal to understand that the Internet was about to become a serious mass medium, although Joop van Zijl still compared computer penetration to that of the microwave oven.

Smartphones: "only for representatives"

When the iPhone hit the market in 2007, the Blackberry reigned supreme in the business market. Although most of the population in developed countries already had a cell phone, often a Nokia, criticism of the iPhone was not muted. "Too expensive, only useful for sales representatives," was the verdict of a friend from the world of IT. Incidentally, the same chap who ten years earlier judged the cell phone as "only useful for drug dealers," a common sentiment.

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer laughed off the iPhone in a video in which, as he was taught by PR people, he quickly switched to promoting the company's own Windows Mobile which we also never heard anything more about. It makes CEO Satya Nadella's feat of completely revitalizing Microsoft after Ballmer all the more galling, but about that another time.

AI, crypto and carbon removal on the turn

Right now we are seeing the exact same patterns as before, but now about AI, crypto and carbon removal:

  • AI is often dismissed as useful for work, but without useful applications for consumers.
  • Crypto is criticized with comments like, "Name an application." Meanwhile, the first application lies in something as basic as redesigning the banking system, with each user managing their own account and making banks obsolete. Apparently, the significance of this is missed by many. Tip: Never get into an argument with people who were too lazy to read the Bitcoin white paper but have an opinion.
  • Carbon removal is often characterized as a fraud, referring to familiar examples such as inefficient cooking ovens, without knowing or understanding the complexity and potential of projects that do actually remove carbon from the atmosphere, such as ocean fertilization. This kind of removal of carbon from the atmosphere is the biggest task facing the world in the coming decades. Tip: Never engage in climate change discussions with people who were too lazy to read the summary of recent IPCC reports.

Admittedly, I have a personal fascination with how innovations break through or fail. That's why both my 1993 graduate thesis and my 2001 book were both called "In Search of the Holy Grail," although some weirdo photoshopped the cover of my book which, by the way, is still on sale in large numbers. And not because of its great success.

I learned more from Megamistakes than Megatrends. Everyone knows Rodgers' adoption curve, but it remains mysterious why one innovation catches on and another flops mercilessly. For carbon removal, crypto and AI, there are several key success factors, some of which I want to highlight.

CO2 success was not during COP29

Breakthroughs in carbon removal require political will. All media were focused on the COP29 climate summit in Baku, but in the meantime, successes were being made in Brussels and Washington in the fight against climate change.

In Brussels, the European Council approved the creation of the first EU-wide certification framework for permanent carbon removal, carbon farming and carbon storage in products. This voluntary framework is intended to create a certification system that can quantify, monitor and verify carbon removals and counteract greenwashing; carbon farming. The EU's adoption of the new rules marks the last major legislative step to give the green light to the creation of the new certification framework for carbon removal.

Now in Dutch: standards are being introduced that will allow companies and citizens to actually offset their carbon emissions, and not by planting or preserving flimsy forests, but by measurably reducing CO2 emissions or even better, removing CO2 from the atmosphere.

Democrats and Republicans together for carbon removal

In the United States, a bill was introduced by Senators Lisa Murkowski (Republican, Alaska) and Michael Bennet (Democrat, Colorado) seeking to expand carbon removal subsidies for a wide range of technologies intended to permanently remove carbon dioxide from the air and seas.

The bill is unlikely to be passed by the current Congress yet due to time constraints, but its introduction indicates that subsidies for carbon removal will be expanded even under President Trump. The fact that the bill was introduced by senators from both parties, a rarity these days, is hopeful.

AMCs for CO2

In coming years, watch for the term Advanced Market Commitment (AMC), explained here by the Economist: no matter how the political winds blow, the pressure from society for decarbonization is so great that smarter companies are independently seeking to remove or minimally offset their own carbon footprint, by funding techniques that remove carbon for the long term; preferably forever. Salesforce, Google, Meta and Microsoft are just the first from a long list of companies that will fund AMCs.

As another example, it was announced last week that Planetary Technologies has removed 138 tons of CO2 through "Ocean Alkalanity Enhancement (OAE)," which, by adding minerals or substances, increases alkalinity, the ocean's capacity to absorb CO2e, with the goal of sequestering CO₂ and combating climate change. Buyers of the associated carbon removal credits were Shopify (96 tons) and Stripe (42 tons) under a "pre-purchase agreement. In Scrabble, you don't put it easily, but it really exists and will be used a lot.

Old school tech compared to AI and crypto

Stock market valuations are a reflection of market expectations, and the enthusiasm around AI and crypto shows that investors have confidence in their longer-term potential. I have created four virtual "baskets" that I have posted about before:

  • 'MANAAM': the old school tech companies
  • Spotlight 9: the nine I believe to be leading tech investments
  • AI Spotlight 9: nine companies benefiting from AI
  • Crypto Spotlight 9: the biggest nine cryptos measured by market value

Old school tech MANAAM: +36%

In the broader tech sector, established players continue to dominate. At one time investors were fans of the term FANG (for Facebook, Apple, Netflix and Google, as if Microsoft meant nothing), but let's take the "MANAAM" group consisting of Meta (formerly Facebook), Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet (formerly Google) and Netflix. The average increase in shares of this now classic little club this year is a whopping 35.9%. That's phenomenal from an investment perspective, until you consider that the S&P 500 is also up 27.19% this year.

Spotlight 9: +63%

Microsoft(14%), Alphabet(22.28%) and Apple(27.84%) are not even outperforming the index. While investors buy tech stocks for the higher price appreciation, compensating for the higher risk.

Not a buy recommendation, but indicative: the Spotlight 9 is +63%

However, those who had bought the Spotlight 9, which consists of the major tech companies and the two largest crypto currencies Bitcoin (+119%) and Ethereum (+57%), would have already seen their investment portfolio rise 63.37% this year. Compared to the MANAAM, Netflix is missing from the Spotlight 9, while Nvidia (+187%) has obviously been added as the world's most valuable technology company.

AI Spotlight 9: +76%

The valuation of AI-driven companies such as Nvidia, which play a key role in the development of AI infrastructure, has reached record highs. This shows that the market recognizes the speed at which these AI-powered companies are seeing their results soar.

Despite AMD, Gigabyte and Super Micro, the AI Spotlight 9 does as much as + 76%

Since Nvidia is already included in the Spotlight 9, I left out the market leader in my also completely arbitrary "AI Spotlight 9," consisting of nine companies that I suspect AI will allow them to grow faster than the leading large tech companies (the MANAAM group) and perhaps even faster than the Spotlight 9.

With 76.11% growth, that is certainly the case this year, with it being entirely remarkable that this increase came about despite Super Micro (which saw the auditor go the distance), AMD (-1%) and Gigabyte, hardware parties that did not keep up with the growth of the rest. Software company Palantir (+305%), which I wrote about in early November, more than makes up the difference.

Crypto Spotlight 9: +191%

Since the approval earlier this year of Bitcoin ETFs, tens of billions have already flowed from the traditional investment world toward crypto. The wait was for the moment when the "alt rotation" would begin, the moment when more money flows into other cryptocurrencies than Bitcoin, which counts as the unofficial kickoff of "altcoin season. That moment occurred yesterday, when the Ethereum Spot ETF net inflows, outpaced those to Bitcoin.

Crypto Spotlight 9: +191% and this does not include memecoin.

So the real daredevil is now stepping big into the craziest coins that often have no underlying value at all, but that is as risky as putting everything on red or black in a casino. A less risky strategy, insofar as that is possible in crypto, is to spread out in the biggest cryptocurrencies and take advantage of overall sentiment.

The "Crypto Spotlight 9" consists of the largest crypto currencies measured by market value, excluding stable coins, memecoins (crypto giblets) and tokens linked to crypto exchanges such as BNB.

That group, listed alphabetically as Avalanche, Bitcoin, Cardano, Ethereum, Solana, Stellar, Toncoin, TRON and XRP, achieved a 191% increase so far this year. So is this a buy recommendation? Absolutely not.

What I do recommend to anyone active in technology and innovation is to look into AI, carbon removal technology, blockchain and crypto-currencies. Just like in the 1980s with the personal computer, the Internet in the 1990s and the smartphone 15 years ago, these are developments that are unstoppable worldwide.

A practical way to stay informed is to then invest a bit in those sectors, with my advice being to do so only with money you don't need for rent, mortgage or other daily concerns. Even within technology and crypto, it certainly pays to look closely at what the intended investments actually involve; what does Palantir actually do, is Ethereum threatened by Solana and SUI; and isn't it funny to take a small gamble on memecoins after all?

Anyone who puts in some money will start to inform themselves. The alternative is to write a weekly newsletter about tech and innovations, but that also requires a huge ego.

Warm regards, thanks for your interest and see you next week!