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The James Altucher Show

Is Mind-Reading AI Coming Soon? My First Real AI Nervous Moment

The James Altucher Show

James Altucher

Business, Education

4.6 • 2.7K Ratings

🗓️ 17 January 2026

⏱️ 22 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A Note from James:

Data is oil. Data is the gold of this AI revolution. Imagine you have an AI that has all of everybody’s thoughts also—so it’s not just learning on tweets and texts, it’s learning on the 60,000 or so thoughts that 8 billion people think each day around the world.

This sounds like amazing science fiction and magic and everything that one could ever have dreamed of… or it could be the end of the world.


Episode Description:

In this solo episode, James breaks down a recent AI development that made him pause for the first time: OpenAI’s investment in a brain-computer interface startup called Merge Labs. He explains why data is the core asset in AI—and why the next frontier isn’t better chatbots, but higher-bandwidth access to human intent, attention, and ultimately thought.

James compares Merge Labs’ approach with Neuralink, then walks through the practical upsides: medical breakthroughs, hands-free control of devices, and AI-assisted cognition in everyday life. But he also explores the uncomfortable implications: privacy, influence, and the risk that “thought data” could become the most valuable—and most dangerous—resource on Earth.


What You’ll Learn:

  • Recognize why “data is oil” is still the most important frame for AI power
  • Understand what brain-computer interfaces are, and how they differ across companies
  • Think through real use cases (medical, device control, communication) before the hype takes over
  • Identify the privacy line: what “training on your thoughts” could actually mean in practice
  • Pressure-test your own optimism about AI by asking: “Once data is shared, can it be unshared?”


Timestamped Chapters:

  • [02:00] Data is oil: why AI is really a data arms race
  • [02:40] Utopia vs dystopia vs “newtopia”
  • [03:16] The optimist’s argument: tech usually helps more than it hurts
  • [04:39] The news: OpenAI invests $250M into Merge Labs
  • [05:29] Why the Sam Altman overlap matters (and why it’s unusual)
  • [06:02] What brain-computer interfaces actually do
  • [06:22] Neuralink explained: reading intent from neurons
  • [07:44] Writing signals back to the brain: the scary part (and the helpful part)
  • [09:39] Merge Labs’ approach: engineered neurons + ultrasound
  • [12:47] Controlling devices by thought: the “thermostat from bed” future
  • [14:35] Telepathy as technology: brain-to-brain messaging
  • [16:17] Influence risk: persuasion and “writing” thoughts
  • [18:45] The real moat: not software—data
  • [19:55] The next dataset: 60,000 thoughts/day Ă— 8B people
  • [21:36] The irreversible trade: once data is handed over, it’s gone
  • [22:17] Why this kind of news is accelerating


Additional Resources:



See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Today on the James Altiger show.

0:04.0

Data is oil. Data is the gold of this AI revolution.

0:09.2

Imagine you have an AI that has all of everybody's thoughts also.

0:16.0

So it's not just learning on tweets and texts.

0:19.5

It's learning on the 60,000 or so thoughts times 8 billion

0:24.2

people that are thought each day around the world. This sounds like amazing science fiction

0:30.6

and magic and everything that one could ever have dreamed of, or it could be the end of the world.

0:39.7

This isn't your average business podcast, and he's not your average host. This is the James

0:45.9

Altasier show. So something just happened, which for the first time really makes me question whether

1:02.7

AI is going to be a utopia or a dystopia or even what's called a newtopia.

1:15.2

So a utopia is a perfect society, a dystopia or even what's called a newtopia. So a utopia is a perfect society. A dystopia is where technology is used by government or corporations to control everyone, sort of like 1984 or the

1:22.0

Hunger Games. And a newtopia is somewhere in the middle where a government tries to use technology to make a perfect

1:30.4

society, but really they're controlling things and are corrupt behind the scenes. And look,

1:35.0

I'm an optimist. I tend to think that every advance in technology is worthwhile to society.

1:43.8

There's going to be bad consequences, but the good

1:46.4

consequences will usually outweigh the bad. So nuclear energy is a great example, where,

1:52.3

of course, the consequences are devastating on nuclear energy. We've seen this with the two

1:57.3

droppings of nuclear bombs in Japan and World War II, but also nuclear energy

2:00.9

can potentially make cheap energy for the entire world. And we've seen this with the Internet,

2:05.9

where you could look at lots of bad consequences of the Internet, but overall the Internet

2:10.4

has improved the quality of life of everyone. And look, right now we're getting information

2:15.8

about the revolution that is happening in Iran simply because of internet connectivity.

...

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