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Jack Dorsey Restructuring Block Around AI as Company Brain Instead of Assistant

My First Million · I put 80% of my money in the S&P · May 11, 2026
Jack Dorsey Restructuring Block Around AI as Company Brain Instead of Assistant
My First Million
My First Million
I put 80% of my money in the S&P
"What they're saying is that's all wrong. The AI should make the decision and the humans should be around the AI and the AI should be the company brain. We're the line now. We are the nodes. We are just giving it new information."
Block CEO Jack Dorsey has laid off tens of thousands and is reportedly restructuring the organization so AI serves as the central decision-making brain while humans provide context and execute tasks. This inverts the traditional model where AI serves as an assistant to human decision-makers. The shift represents a fundamental reimagining of corporate hierarchy where artificial intelligence occupies the role traditionally held by executives and management.

About this episode

In this My First Million podcast episode, hosts Sam Parr and Shaan Puri explore how genetics, personality, and AI are reshaping careers, investing, and corporate structure. The conversation opens with a provocative 2014 Swedish study analyzing 30,000 twin pairs that concluded 45% of investing and savings behavior is genetically determined, using Sweden's unique twin database and comprehensive wealth tax records. Puri argues this demonstrates that understanding human nature matters more than financial knowledge for investment success, citing examples of how investor Mohnish Pabrai discovered through personality assessment that he was fundamentally suited for solo, competitive, numbers-based games rather than team management. The discussion shifts to AI's transformation of work, particularly Jack Dorsey's reported restructuring of Block to position AI as the central decision-making brain with humans serving as information nodes rather than the traditional model of AI as assistant. They examine Citrini Research's controversial thesis that AI productivity gains could trigger an economic death spiral through white-collar job displacement and wage collapse, which briefly crashed markets. The episode concludes with striking examples of AI in daily life, including former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman using Claude AI connected to home cameras and genetic data to monitor and control his health behaviors, and the emerging case of GitLab founder Sid using AI to treat his cancer. Throughout, the hosts grapple with how technological shifts constantly redefine which opportunities and business models will succeed, drawing parallels between today's AI revolution and previous platform shifts from social networks to marketplaces to crypto.

Key takeaways

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