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This special episode of Moonshots, recorded live at XPRIZE Visioneering 2025 in Malibu, brings together four technology visionaries to discuss the most significant developments in AI, robotics, quantum computing, and their economic implications. (01:00) Hosted by Peter Diamandis alongside Imad Mostaque, Eric Pulier, and Salim Ismail, the conversation explores how we're witnessing unprecedented acceleration in technological advancement—from AI chip wars escalating beyond $1 billion daily investment to predictions of AGI by 2026. (02:23) The discussion covers the rapid evolution of humanoid robots, quantum computing breakthroughs, and the complex economic disruptions these technologies will create.
Peter Diamandis is the founder and executive chairman of the XPRIZE Foundation, which designs and operates large-scale incentive competitions to solve humanity's grand challenges. He's also the founder of Singularity University and has been instrumental in advancing space commercialization and exponential technologies for over two decades.
Imad Mostaque is the founder of Intelligent Internet and author of "The Last Economy." He's a prominent voice in AI governance and has been working on decentralizing AI systems to ensure broader access and democratic control of artificial intelligence technologies.
Salim Ismail is the founder of OpenExO and a leading expert on exponential organizations. He focuses on helping organizations adapt to rapidly changing technological landscapes and has extensive experience in scaling disruptive business models.
Eric Pulier is the founder of Vatom Inc and has a background in enterprise technology and digital transformation. He brings expertise in how emerging technologies integrate into existing business infrastructures and economic systems.
The speakers unanimously agree that privacy, as traditionally understood, no longer exists in our current technological landscape. (03:36) Diamandis argues that "privacy is a quaint idea from many decades ago" and that "the Fourth Amendment is essentially gone" with no public conversation about this fundamental shift. The panelists compare our current situation to "living in a global airport" where constant surveillance is normalized and rights can be suspended at any time. This has profound implications for how we conduct business, relationships, and personal lives, requiring a complete rethinking of what privacy means and how to protect individual autonomy in an AI-monitored world.
Imad Mostaque presents a striking prediction that within 1,000 days from ChatGPT's launch, human cognitive labor will be "negative in value." (40:58) He explains that when you're on a team where everyone else is a genius AI that can think and work around the clock, the human becomes "the dumbest person on the team" who drags down overall coordination and performance. This represents a fundamental shift from all previous technological disruptions where humans remained complementary to technology. The implications extend beyond job displacement to questioning the very value proposition of human intelligence in professional settings, requiring entirely new frameworks for human contribution in an AI-dominated workplace.
Stanford and Harvard studies show that human physicians achieve 74% diagnostic accuracy alone, but when GPT-4 operates independently, it reaches 92% accuracy. (42:12) Most remarkably, when humans tried to assist GPT-4, accuracy actually decreased to 76%, demonstrating that human involvement introduces bias and errors rather than improvements. The speakers predict that it will soon become malpractice to diagnose without AI assistance, and that humanoid robots will become superior surgeons to humans. This transformation will fundamentally reshape medical education, with traditional medical schools potentially becoming obsolete as the value proposition of human medical expertise is challenged by AI superiority.
The discussion reveals that despite NVIDIA's announcement of US-manufactured chips, advanced packaging still requires Taiwan facilities until at least 2028. (08:12) This creates a dangerous dependency given predictions of potential conflict by 2026. The speakers emphasize that "who controls the spice controls the future," referencing how our entire economy depends on semiconductor manufacturing concentrated in a geopolitically vulnerable region. Organizations and nations must develop supply chain resilience strategies and consider geographic diversification of critical technology infrastructure to avoid catastrophic disruptions to AI development and deployment.
Diamandis emphasizes that society lacks positive programming about the future, with most media presenting dystopian visions of killer robots and rogue AI. (45:20) He argues that "without a vision, the people will perish" and that we need television and movie programming that shows optimistic futures to help people navigate coming changes. The speakers believe that providing agency and hope is crucial because if people feel like victims to technological change with no ability to control it, they'll become paralyzed. This requires conscious effort to create and promote narratives that show how individuals can thrive alongside AI and robotics rather than be displaced by them.