Anthropic Pushes AI Pause While Claude Writes 80 Percent of Own Code
"Claude now writes about 80% of the code that's merged into the Claude codebase, and its engineers ship 8 times more code per quarter than they did just a few years ago."
About this episode
On this Friday episode of the Tom Bilyeu Show Live, host Tom Bilyeu delivered urgent warnings about the upcoming wave of AI company IPOs, arguing that retail investors are being set up as exit liquidity for sophisticated early investors. Without co-host Drew, who was traveling, Bilyeu focused on the SpaceX and xAI combined IPO valued at $75 billion despite the company posting $4.9 billion in losses last year. He detailed how Nasdaq rewrote its rules to eliminate minimum float requirements and fast-track inclusion into the Nasdaq 100 after just 15 days, while SpaceX reserved an unprecedented 30% of shares for retail investors compared to the normal 5-10%. Bilyeu compared the AI infrastructure buildout to historical revolutionary technologies like railroads and the internet, which bankrupted first-wave investors because revenues took decades to match the debt used for infrastructure. He argued AI faces an even worse version of this problem because GPUs, the most expensive infrastructure component, have only a 2-3 year shelf life compared to 50-70 years for railroad infrastructure. Bilyeu cited Michael Burry's claim that companies are hiding over $170 billion in losses by fraudulently extending GPU depreciation timelines. The episode then pivoted to Canada's economic decline, the only G20 nation in technical recession, which Bilyeu attributed to ideological policy-making exemplified by their new AI strategy that mentions 'indigenous' 18 times but 'GPU' fewer than 5 times. He also covered Anthropic's call for a global AI pause despite its Claude model now writing 80% of its own code, speculating this is a strategy to get nationalized and have taxpayers fund its debt. The show concluded with coverage of the ongoing Bricks and Minifigs LEGO saga, where police conspired with a business owner to arrest YouTuber Reckless Ben despite confirming his lawsuit was legitimate, and a discussion of Hunter Biden's surprisingly effective social media presence.
Key takeaways
- SpaceX IPO valued at $75 billion despite $4.9 billion loss last year, with Nasdaq rewriting rules to fast-track index inclusion in 15 days instead of normal timelines.
- Bilyeu warned AI companies face worse infrastructure risk than railroads because GPUs last 2-3 years versus 50-70 years for rail infrastructure.
- Michael Burry claimed AI companies are hiding over $170 billion in losses by fraudulently listing GPU depreciation at 5-6 years instead of actual 2-3 year shelf life.
- Canada released AI strategy mentioning indigenous 18 times versus GPU fewer than 5 times while being only G20 economy in technical recession.
- Anthropic called for global AI pause despite Claude now writing 80 percent of its own codebase and engineers shipping 8x more code per quarter.
- YouTuber Reckless Ben arrested while serving legitimate lawsuit papers after police conspired with Bricks and Minifigs owner despite confirming lawsuit was real.
- Hunter Biden emerged as surprisingly effective social media personality with self-deprecating posts about crack pipes gaining viral traction on X.