Silicon Valley, the Mecca for techies, looks tempting since the media often glorifies and turns startups and their founders into rockstars. However, Mark Judge’s 2000s show revealed the gritty reality for first-time viewers through a team of six, including CEO Richard Hendricks of Pied Piper.
The plot begins with Hendricks giving up his cushy job at a big tech company called Hooli to make it out on his own. The companies battle to ‘save humanity’ before one another through technological advancements.
Here are show’s six moments that remain relevant in today’s ChatGPT landscape:
More money, more problems | S02E01: Sand Hill Shuffle
Silicon Valley’s second season opener tackled the issue of runaway valuations, as Pied Piper faced ballooning term sheets from enthusiastic venture capitalists.
Despite Monica being right, in the world of generative AI, VCs are investing heavily in startups without a clear plan for making money. As we move into 2024, where the emphasis is on actual products and profits, the risky moves by VCs in Silicon Valley become important, affecting how well new AI companies will do.
The hard labour behind AI | S04E04: Team Building Exercise
Erlich aimed to impress Jian Yang with a demo for his “Shazam for food” app pitch. He roped Big Head’s Stanford students into labelling and sorting online food images to finish it. However, the students saw through his plan and pitched their food app to the VC firm that funded SeeFood.
The episode talks about the hard work behind AI apps. While companies flaunt tech expertise, building neural nets is a grind. Initially, humans must guide the computer, pointing out what’s what.
A year ago, OpenAI made news as TIME explored how they used inexpensive labour to train AI models for ChatGPT. The piece shed light on the lesser-known behind-the-scenes of the generative AI industry.
Same Old, China and Copyrights | S05E04: Tech Evangelist
Jian Yang has a list of companies in which he is making copies for the Chinese market. After moving back to China, the show stealer successfully creates a clone of Richard’s New Internet. The technology Yang calls ‘new new internet’ even snatches a client of the original Pied Piper.
The AI child Tong Tong is the latest example of the Confucian-esque philosophy where copying is not only sensible but also a symbol of respect for authority and, importantly, a way of passing the test.
The Chinese’ Little Girl’ was developed at the Beijing Institute for General Artificial Intelligence (BIGAI). The institution was founded and led by Professor Zhu Songchun, an expert in computer vision, statistics, and applied mathematics. Having lived and worked in the US for 28 years, Songchun left his professorship at UCLA to start BIGAI in Beijing.
The Terminator Problem | S05E05: Facial Recognition
The episode is all about the Machine’s Raised Consciousness, echoing the Blake Lemoine controversy at Google. Richard secures an AI customer, setting off a panic in Gilfoyle, a Satan enthusiast, usually unfazed by human interaction but now horrified at the prospect of PiperNet sparking a robot revolt.
At Eklow Labs, Richard encounters Fiona, a female AI victimised by Eklow’s creator, Ariel. Fiona analyses Richard’s emotional profile, leading him to advise self-reflection. Gilfoyle, initially wary, switches allegiance, recognising the strategic move to side with machines in an impending uprising.
While Richard and Gilfoyle differ in perspective, the episode resonates with the ongoing discourse on AI’s potential dominance, similar to concerns raised by Lemoine and others.
Do No Evil | S06E05: Tethics
In the penultimate episode, Gavin Belson, feeling a bit lost, introduces the idea of ‘tethics’ – a blend of technology and ethics. He suggests that tech companies act more ethically instead of trying to cheat the system and the people using it.
But making technology ethically isn’t easy. Ethicists who speak up about putting people before profits often face problems. Sasha Luccioni, AI + Climate lead at Hugging Face, told AIM, “There’s too much friction because the responsible AI team’s job is essentially to push back.”
Recollecting the Google debacle two years ago, where the AI ethicist Timnit Gebru and her team faced the axe for sounding alarms on the dangers of large language models, Luccioni stated, “That is what they were hired to do, and yet when the push comes, responsible AI researchers are the ones that get shoved out because they conflict with the broader profit model of the company.”
Thrown away from your kingdom | S02E10: Two Days of the Condor
In the episode, we witness one of the worst things that can happen to a founder – unwillingly being ejected from the CEO seat. Without control over the board, Richard is at the mercy of Raviga Capital and now has much less control over the direction of his newly funded startup.
Are you already thinking about the Sam-Altman firing-hiring week? The co-founder and CEO was ousted abruptly, only to be hired by Microsoft and then rehired by OpenAI. There was also an interim CEO involved, a board reshuffle and whatnot!
Monica rightly said, “Firing a young CEO and installing a much more experienced one looks like leadership. Firing two CEOs in a month looks like chaos.”
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