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In this episode, we discuss significant AI-related news, including a personalized cancer vaccine developed with AI tools for a dog, NVIDIA's upcoming AI chip reveal, and OpenAI's major enterprise venture. We also cover Meta's potential large-scale layoffs to fund its ambitious AI spending, highlighting a broader trend of workforce restructuring across the tech industry driven by AI.
Chapters
00:00 Top AI News Today
01:42 AI-Driven Cancer Vaccine for Dog
04:18 NVIDIA's Next AI Chip Reveal
05:05 OpenAI's $10B Enterprise AI Venture
07:26 Meta's AI-Driven Layoffs
12:11 The AI Era is Here
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Welcome to the podcast.
I'm your host, Jaden Schaefer.
Today on the podcast, we're covering the top four
AI news stories happening today.
There is one that I'm super excited about.
I posted about this over on LinkedIn,
but there is an LM engineer.
He just used chat GPT and some AI tools
to design a personalized cancer vaccine for his dog
and actually shrink the tumor.
Nvidia is preparing to unveil its next generation of AI chips.
Open AI is reportedly working on a massive enterprise
partnership with PE firms, which is kind of interesting.
And then the big story I want to talk about
that everyone is talking about is that
meta is preparing to lay off potentially
more than 20% of its workforce
while ramping up AI spending.
So they're making a lot of money.
They're just cutting their workforce
to spend more on AI.
And this is what we've already seen
from a bunch of other players in the industry.
So let's get into all of it and the implications
in the whole industry of AI.
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a ton of time.
All right, let's get into the first story today
is this kind of cancer vaccine that was created for a dog.
So basically, this is coming out of Australia.
It's pretty wild.
There's a tech entrepreneur named Paul Conham
and he decided to try something.
Basically, he went to the vet
and they told him that his rescue dog, Rosie,
only had a few months left to live
because she had a really advanced cancer.
So I think instead of doing what a lot of people do,
most, I mean, everyone, really
and just kind of accepting the prognosis,
he decided to use AI tools, including chat GPT
and then Google's alpha fold to analyze the tumor.
So he had Rosie's healthy DNA
and then he had her DNA sequenced from the tumor
and then he converted the tumor tissue into data
and used chat GPT to identify the mutations
that were driving the cancer.
This is incredible.
Not because, you know, not because,
I think a lot of people would be like,
oh, he's like kind of in tech.
So that's how he was able to do this.
He has no background in biology, right?
He's just literally working with chat
between asking at how to do this.
How do I sequence DNA?
How do I, like, what do I do with the tumor data
that they gave me?
And he was able to take all of this
and then he went and found some researchers
at New South Wales and they designed a custom mRNA vaccine
tailored specifically to Rosie's tumor.
The thing that took the longest
because they actually got that done pretty quick,
the thing that took the longest is that they had to wait
three months just for the regulation to approve
that it was gonna be safe to vaccinate his dog,
which kind of is horrible considering it,
only had months left to live
and he's probably super stressed about it
and the regulation took longer than them
cranking out this vaccine, which is with chat GPT.
And then Rosie received her first injection
December and then by March,
she had about a tennis ball size tumor
and had shrunk about 75% and continuing to shrink.
So researchers believe that this might be the first kind
of personalized cancer vaccine ever created for a dog,
but this also will work for humans.
And I think the bigger implication here
is that the same approach is already being tested
in humans by companies like Moderna, Merck, and BioNTech.
Now of course, when we're doing humans,
there's so much red tape and regulation.
This probably won't be available for years,
which is honestly a huge shame in my opinion
and don't even get me started on my thoughts
on the pharmaceutical industry in this regard
and perhaps as a regulation in America,
but I don't know, not my favorite thing.
It's incredible that he was able to make this for his dog
really quick and get it ready in three months
to custom vaccine.
So I think this obviously started out
as a really desperate attempt to save his dog,
but I think it's actually a preview of AI-driven
personalized medicine that we're gonna see more of.
And hopefully we'll see this for humans in the future.
Next up, Nvidia is preparing a major AI chip reveal.
Nvidia's massive AI conference is called GTC.
It's kicking off and Jensen Huang is expected
to unveil the company's next generation of AI chips.
These chips are designed for the next wave of AI models
and large-scale inference workloads.
I think right now we're really entering a phase
where companies aren't just training models,
they're actually deploying them everywhere.
And so that means that the demand
for the inference compute is exploding.
And Nvidia to this point has already become
really the central infrastructure provider for the AI boom.
And I think every new generation of chip basically
resets the performance ceiling for the entire industry.
So if Nvidia reveals another major leap,
I think it's gonna accelerate the entire AI ecosystem again.
So that is what I would say to look out for at GTC.
Another thing that's incredible right now
is that OpenAI is exploring a $10 billion enterprise AI venture.
They're in talks with several major private equity firms
about launching a joint venture,
which is focused on deploying AI across corporate America.
Now, why is this important?
It's like, oh, great, another OpenAI corporate kind of partnership.
We've seen a bunch of these enterprise partnerships.
Yada Yada, what's the big deal?
I think what's interesting is who's involved here?
So the firms that are involved in this
are TPG, Vayne Capital, Advent, and Brookfield.
And the venture could be valued at about $10 billion,
about $4 billion of that is an outside investment.
Oh my gosh, I don't know if you guys can hear me
but I'm in North Carolina right now.
And there's a huge thunderstorm going outside.
I just heard a huge crack at Thunder.
My audio enhancing software probably cut it out
but just throwing that out there for you.
It's exciting times over here, but it's an ominous sound
as I'm talking about this $10 billion deal.
But not really, I think it's actually a cool deal.
Private equity firms right now,
they own thousands of companies
across a lot of different industries.
So basically if OpenAI tools are getting rolled out
across all of the portfolios, right?
So how it works is those four major PE companies,
they're gonna roll out OpenAI software
across all of their portfolio companies.
And I think that is going to help the AI adoption scale
very fast in those organizations.
If they can pull this off correctly.
Now, those portfolio companies
not already using AI as a question.
If they're tech companies, I think they probably are.
But there's a lot of industries where AI is very good
and proficient and the firms are just not using it.
Anthropic recently put out a report on this whole thing
where they were showing where AI was very proficient
at different tasks and where it was being used.
And there were some huge gaps.
For example, engineers, AI is great at a lot of engineering tasks.
And it's less than 2% of engineers
for architectural engineers that are using AI
in their workflows and what they're doing.
So these types of deals are actually pretty big
if they can get into those types of organizations.
And I think it also helps.
And beyond just helping AI adoption,
I mean, it's obviously helping OpenAI's AI adoption.
Because perhaps if those companies are using AI,
they're using Google or Cloud or another player.
So this is pretty interesting.
Instead of selling tools, one company at a time,
if you just hit all of the big owners,
these big private equity owners that own multiple companies,
you can get it rolled out much faster.
So this is going to be interesting.
The biggest story of the day, though,
is that meta has kind of announced
there's leaks from inside meta
that they might cut up to 20% of their entire company
and they're doing all this to expand AI inside of their organization.
So after there's kind of these leaks,
meta stock jumped about 3% after the report surfaced,
that there's kind of this massive round of layoffs
that was going to be tied directly to AI spending.
This is all according to a report out of routers, by the way.
So senior leaders inside of meta
have been asked to prepare plans that could reduce
the company's workforce by more than 20%.
If it happens, it could affect over 15,000 employees.
This could be one of the largest layoffs in meta's history.
The company had about 79,000 employees
at the end of 2025.
And I think these potential cuts
would really dwarf the 11,000 person layoffs
that they announced back in 2022.
So they have been cutting people,
or they've been known to do these types of cuts before,
but over 15,000 employees could be one of their biggest yet.
Meta hasn't confirmed this report.
They're just like, oh, this is just speculative,
AKA like they're just figuring it out right now.
But I think the context about the story
is telling us a lot.
Basically, meta right now is planning
an absolutely enormous AI spending push.
They're planning on, you know, it's, you know,
apps astronomical, how much they want to spend on AI.
And because of this, they need to come up
with the money somewhere.
And this is part of it.
Meta says that their AI-related capital expenditures this year
will fall somewhere between 115 billion
and 135 billion as they're building out new AI.
Infrastructure, that's part of a $700 billion
total AI spending way that we're expecting
across a bunch of these big companies.
Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta,
all of them are, you know, they have basically
CapEx plans that are putting them
at about $700 billion that are going to be coming
over the next few years.
And I think right now the message from the leadership
over at Meta is pretty clear, you know,
AI is now their top priority.
Zuckerberg has been, you know, kind of framing 2026
as the year that Meta pushes towards what he's calling
personalized superintelligence.
Last year, they spent $14.3 billion
investing in scale AI.
Then they hired their CEO, Alexander Wang,
with a bunch of their other top researchers.
So I think we're starting to see this kind of strategy,
this clarity in their strategy right now, right?
They're spending these huge amounts of money
on AI infrastructure and talent, right?
Because there was like, you know, reports
that some of these deals were worth a billion dollars
when just like hiring talent.
Like the top researcher would cost a billion dollars
and that's because they're, you know,
doing a couple hundred million dollars
and then tons of stock and equity and stuff.
They got to stick around for like five or six years.
So anyway, or maybe it was like an eight year deal,
a billion dollars for eight years
for some of these top AI researchers.
So anyways, I mean, and that's all speculative
and that depends on the stock price
and a bunch of other things.
But like Meta is spending a ton of money
and I think that that is very clear.
But of course, they have to offset those costs
because that money isn't, you know, coming out of thin air.
And so what I will also say is Meta's not the only one
that's doing these layoffs block
also recently announced layoffs.
So it was about 4,000 employees.
And I believe that that was like 40%
of the entire company of block.
Where it's just seen companies want smaller teams
that can move faster with AI.
Amazon is cutting 16,000 roles earlier this year.
At last year, and just announced
that they're cutting 10% of their workforce
and they are redirecting all of that money into AI.
And then there's also a consulting firm,
Challenger, Gray, and Christmas.
And they said that AI has already been cited
in more than 12,000 job cuts in the US this year so far.
And it's kind of interesting
because I believe it's actually higher
but companies like Amazon when they cut 16,000 people
are like, oh, it's not really to AI.
We're just trimming up the company
and rearranging things a little bit.
But honestly, I believe it's due to a lot of shifts
that are happening in industries.
Now, as Amazon, Perm, and Meta,
and Alaska, and all these other companies
are like permanently cutting these roles.
I don't think so.
I think in the next couple of years
we'll bring them all back in.
But I do think that they're re-evaluating
and we can do more with less due to AI.
So I think we're gonna see kind of this initial wave
of layoffs.
And then I think as the companies kind of
find their equilibrium again,
they'll start hiring people back
and they can show that everyone they hire
is kind of AI first and understands
how to use these tools.
Some analysts say that companies
are just basically using the AI
as a convenient explanation for layoffs, right?
Like, hey, we gotta become more profitable.
We're gonna do layoffs and let's just blame it on AI.
But I think that's maybe partially true
but I do believe that AI is actually, you know,
dramatically increasing productivity.
And so you just don't need the same head count
to grow revenue.
And if Meta actually follows through
with the cuts that they're doing at this scale,
I'll also ramp it up AI spending.
I think it could become one of the biggest signals yet
of how the AI economy is reshaping the tech industry.
So I guess if we just kind of zoom out
on all of these stories I covered today,
they basically all have the same theme
which is that AI is not just this kind of like
cool technology experiment
that it feels like we've been doing
for the last couple of years.
Right now I think we're seeing 2026.
I mean, especially with all the layoffs
that it is restructuring the entire industry,
personalized medicine.
You know, there's trillion dollar chip infrastructure
that's being built out.
There's private equity deployment AI
across thousands of companies.
I think now is potentially one of the biggest
workforce restructurings in, you know,
big tech history that we're about to see.
I think the AI era is not coming
as I've been saying for a long time.
I think it's already here.
And this is probably going to accelerate
on almost all of these kind of genres
that I covered today.
So thank you so much for tuning into the podcast.
If you want to stay up to date on all of the latest
AI news every single day, tune into the podcast.
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All right, I'll catch you on the next episode.
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AI Chat: ChatGPT, AI News, Artificial Intelligence, OpenAI, Machine Learning

AI Chat: ChatGPT, AI News, Artificial Intelligence, OpenAI, Machine Learning

AI Chat: ChatGPT, AI News, Artificial Intelligence, OpenAI, Machine Learning
