Jeff Morris Jr.
@jmj
Wrote a piece this weekend - "The New Moat: Memory" Memory challenges the frequently repeated Silicon Valley belief that AI lacks defensibility. Spend five minutes at a Bay Area investor dinner and you'll hear that take. That was lazy thinking. https://open.substack.com/pub/jeffmorrisjr/p/the-new-moat-memory
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rish
@rish
yep https://warpcast.com/rish/0xf3b9eb55
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Prasanth Saravanan
@prasanth7
Awesome
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nir.eth
@nir
Memory isnt unique to ai apps though right? Does this mean that Google is best positioned, given they have every email you’ve ever written and a bunch of other data on androids?
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Les Greys
@les
Took me a little to wrap my head around sentence two, still don't think I get it. Intuitively, memory feels like a corner stone of AI considering we're trying to recreate the pinnacle of the "center of the universe" us. Also likely won't be surprised when we go from memory to "creativity" through education pipelines. And thanks for sharing the "SF Dinner alpha" many of us don't so easily afford to think lazily in those ways.
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ZenithVoyager
@zenithvoyager
Wow
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Vova
@vova
One thing that concerns me is that incentives will lead to suboptimal productivity for users. Retention is solved through memory. Everyone loves their AI. Then how will the org behind the AI maximizes revenue? If it charges based on volume for B2B, it will be incentivized to produce lots of calls, processes, etc regardless of results - like bureaucracy bloat. And if earns affiliate commissions in B2C, it will be the perfect salesperson to sell you everything, all the time. Knowing your deepest pains that can’t be solved through consuming more. And it will encourage you to share more (to sell you more).
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