Sign In  |  Register  |  About Pleasanton  |  Contact Us

Pleasanton, CA
September 01, 2020 1:32pm
7-Day Forecast | Traffic
  • Search Hotels in Pleasanton

  • CHECK-IN:
  • CHECK-OUT:
  • ROOMS:

CEO warns against investing in the ‘AI hype’

Business leader Gary Vaynerchuk calls A.I. "one of the biggest technologies in the history of mankind," but won't invest in the sector due to overcrowding and overvaluation.

American businessman, CEO and Chairman Gary Vaynerchuk signaled that artificial intelligence (A.I.) is "one of the biggest technologies in the history of mankind" – but explained why he’s not jumping to invest in the tech space.

"I've seen Web1, I've seen Web2, I've seen Web3. I'm looking at A.I. startups every day as an investor. I just think there's a million of them right now, and they're all valued very expensive because we're in A.I. hype," Vaynerchuk said in an exclusive FOX Business interview on "The Claman Countdown," Wednesday.

"So I'm just trying to be a little bit thoughtful because I tend not to like to lose money when I invest, and so I'm letting it settle a little bit, see who are the good operators. I'd rather pay a little higher valuation and see traction," he continued. "But look, this is one of the biggest technologies in the history of mankind. Every single person watching this who right now hates A.I., they will all use it."

The early investor of stock giants like Facebook, Twitter, Snap and Tumblr admitted to using A.I. more than putting money into it, expanding on the learning curve and fluid regulations around the technology.

PRESIDENT BIDEN'S A.I. EXECUTIVE ORDER HAS ‘DANGEROUS LIMITATIONS,’ SAYS DEEPFAKE DETECTION COMPANY C.E.O.

On Wednesday, Facebook and Instagram parent company Meta announced it would require advertisers to disclose when A.I. is used to alter or create political ads, Reuters reported.

The world’s second-largest digital platform for advertisements clarified that the disclosure rule will target ads portraying real people doing or saying something they factually did not, as well as digital production of a person who does not exist.

Reacting to the news, Vaynerchuk said humans are "incredibly passionate on not being accountable."

"If you want to talk about fake, 99% of politicians that go on any platform are talking about things they don't actually execute on anyway, and business owners and parents and humans," the VaynerMedia CEO noted. "I think this policy is bigger than this election. I think the timing's right. I think people's emotions get high on election. But the reality is, A.I. is a powerful technology that's coming. And I think this is a pretty smart, strategic move by Meta."

The business leader further argued that generative A.I. advancements "aren’t ready for anybody anyway," claiming it’s "super early" to have full trust in the technology.

"I think they're just trying to be smart about it. The fact that they're rolling out their product slowly to begin with, and so because they choose to let the earliest users be people who sell soap and hats instead of politics, it's just smart comms," Vaynerchuk said.

Social and traditional media platforms aren’t afraid of potential government regulations around A.I., according to Gary Vee, but, rather, they’re more concerned about how A.I. impacts valuation.

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE

"The Googles and the Metas of the world are not as scared of regulation as people make it out to. They're scared about their [profit and loss]," he explained. "They're scared about the stock price you just mentioned. They welcome if the government wants to get their act together to give them clear regulation, they welcome it."

"The reality is, is that they're worried about getting canceled by CMOs who won't put dollars into their platform," Vaynerchuk added. "They are businesses, and I think they're making business decisions."

READ MORE FROM FOX BUSINESS

Stock Quote API & Stock News API supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following
Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.
 
 
Photography by Christophe Tomatis
Copyright © 2010-2020 Pleasanton.com & California Media Partners, LLC. All rights reserved.