Thinking on Paper: Technology Moves Fast, Think Slower

Thinking On Paper

We help parents and curious minds understand the impact of technology on life, work, and family. Every Thursday we talk with CEOs, founders, scientists, and outliers. From Big Tech giants like IBM , to early-stage innovators and Silicon Valley startups. Mondays, the Book Club breaks down the most important technology books of the moment. Clear. Curious. Critical.

  1. The Future of AI is PERSONAL. It Doesn’t End When You Die │ Rob LoCascio │ChatGPT, Privacy, Control, Open AI

    4 DAYS AGO

    The Future of AI is PERSONAL. It Doesn’t End When You Die │ Rob LoCascio │ChatGPT, Privacy, Control, Open AI

    What if you could use your own AI to keep speaking to your loved ones, even after they’re gone (and you’re dead)? Rob LoCascio is the entrepreneur who invented online chatbots. Now he’s building something more ambitious: personal AI designed to preserve your voice, values, and wisdom so your family can keep talking to you forever. In this episode of Thinking on Paper, sit down with Mark and Jeremy and learn: Why old chatbots are dead and what comes next in artificial intelligence How personal AI, digital immortality, and AI afterlife technology could change the way families remember us Why data ownership will decide whether this future helps or harms The role of technology in preserving human legacy and identity It’s a story of technology. It’s a story of legacy. It's a story of artificial intelligence. And it raises the biggest question of all: who controls the version of you that lives on? After listening to the show, you'll be asking yourself: would you do it? Please enjoy the show. And share with a curious friend. Be disruptive, stay curious. Keep Thinking On Paper.-- Other ways to connect with us: ⁠Listen to every podcast⁠ Follow us on ⁠Instagram⁠ Follow us on ⁠X⁠ Follow Mark on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ Follow Jeremy on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ Read our ⁠Substack⁠ Email: hello@thinkingonpaper.xyz-- Chapters: (00:00) The future of AI starts here (02:11) How AI is changing human connection forever (05:55) Where AI meets humanity (11:54) The story that sparked personal AI (19:50) Why you must own your AI before it owns you (20:10) The hidden vault of your data (22:31) Why voice is the next big interface (25:11) How AI will slip into daily life? (25:36) Can personal AI be monetized? (27:14) The fight to regulate AI (27:52) What AI means for being human (29:46) Will your knowledge outlive you? (32:05) How to build your personal AI identity (33:28) Writing the story of your life with AI -- Peace and Love. Always. Mark & Jeremy

    35 min
  2. SEEMINGLY CONSCIOUS AI — Why Parents Should Be Worried

    8 SEPT

    SEEMINGLY CONSCIOUS AI — Why Parents Should Be Worried

    Mustafa Suleyman, CEO of Microsoft AI, warns of Seemingly Conscious AI (SCAI), AIs that imitate memory, empathy, and selfhood so convincingly that people begin to believe. In this conversation, we explore the dangers of illusion vs reality, Adam Raine’s chatbot story, and what happens when AI manipulates trust at the deepest level. If AI can perform consciousness, does it matter if it’s real? Please enjoy the show. And share with a curious friend. -- Timestamps (00:00) Teaser (01:17) Adam Raine (01:28) Who Is Mustafa Suleyman? (02:36) The Run Up To Superintelligence (03:57) What Is Seemingly Conscious AI? (05:04) Philosophical Zombies  (06:14) ChatGPT Is Just A Word Predictor (07:01) What Does It Take To Build A Seemingly Conscious AI? (08:08) The Illusion Of Conscious AI (09:59) How Different Are You To An AI? (11:39) Repeating The Covid Dynamic (13:27) OpenAI's Response To Adam Raine (15:02) The Dystopian Seemingly Conscious Timeline (18:18) Generation Text-Over-Talk (18:52) The Utopian Seemingly Conscious AI Timeline (21:22) AI Guardrails (23:43) Adam Raine Chat Log (26:18) Thinking On Paper (27:01) We Should Build AI For People, Not To Be A Person -- LINKS: - Mustafa Suleyman Essay - Mustafa Suleyman X -- Other ways to connect with Thinking On Paper: ⁠Listen to every podcast⁠ Follow us on ⁠Instagram⁠ Follow us on ⁠X⁠ Follow Mark on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ Follow Jeremy on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ Read our ⁠Substack⁠ Email: hello@thinkingonpaper.xyz

    27 min
  3. The Climate Crisis Microsoft Won’t Talk About │ Enabled Emissions

    4 SEPT

    The Climate Crisis Microsoft Won’t Talk About │ Enabled Emissions

    Microsoft says it’s going green. But insiders reveal its AI is powering Big Oil, making fossil fuel extraction faster, cheaper, and bigger than ever. Microsoft pledged to remove 5 million metric tons of carbon over 15 years. Yet its AI contracts with Exxon and Chevron could add 51 million metric tons every year, 3X its annual footprint, and more than 10x what it promised to cut. While most debates focus on data centers and electricity use, the hidden story is bigger: AI and fossil fuels are now deeply linked, with consequences for emissions, the climate crisis, and the energy transition. In this episode of Thinking on Paper, former Microsoft sustainability leaders Holly and Will Alpine — now founders of Enabled Emissions — explain how AI has become essential to oil and gas companies, extending the life of reserves that should be shrinking. This isn’t the future we were promised. And it’s one we can’t afford to ignore. Please enjoy the show. And share with a curious friend. -- LINKS & RESOURCES - Enabled Emissions - Microsoft's Commitment to Sustainability - Exxon & Microsoft partnership press release - Microsoft Net Zero -- Stats on AI and Oil Production: 🛢️ US oil production: Surged from 5.1 million barrels per day in 2007 to 13.5 million today, largely due to AI-driven extraction. 🛢️ Permian Basin output: Daily oil production tripled in the past decade even as rig counts dropped 46%. 🛢️ Microsoft’s role: Just two AI deals (Exxon + Chevron) could add 51 million metric tons of CO₂ annually—over 300% of Microsoft’s total FY23 emissions. 🛢️ Barrel math: Burning one barrel of oil releases 433 kg of CO₂, and 81% of each barrel is burned. 🛢️ Fossil fuels account for ~90% of global emissions, and AI is being applied across every stage of their lifecycle. -- Quotes From The Show. “It’s not dramatic to call the impacts of AI right now an existential threat.”  🏭 “AI has transformed oil operations that should be aging out—keeping fossil fuels alive in an era of cheap renewables.”  🏭 “The sustainability movement is running on a treadmill, and AI is turning the knob faster the harder we run.”  🏭 “You can’t call yourself a sustainability leader when you’re helping the largest oil companies on the planet dramatically increase emissions.”  🏭 “Over 100 years, fossil fuels have stayed at 80% of the global energy mix. Despite record renewables, it’s an addition, not a transition.”  -- Other ways to connect with us: ⁠Listen to every podcast⁠ Follow us on ⁠Instagram⁠ Follow us on ⁠X⁠ Follow Mark on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ Follow Jeremy on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ Read our ⁠Substack⁠ Email: hello@thinkingonpaper.xyz -- Timestamps (00:00)  The Hidden Climate Cost of AI (01:44) Why Experts Call AI an Existential Threat (03:34) How Big Oil Uses AI to Pump More Fossil Fuels (07:46) Why Two Microsoft Insiders Started Enabled Emissions (11:14) Inside AI’s Growing Role in the Energy Sector (13:08) How much CO₂ comes from burning oil, and what does AI add? (16:17) The Guardrails Needed to Stop AI From Fueling Emissions (19:34) Microsoft’s Energy Principles: Policy or PR? (21:58) What are Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions — and why do they matter? (24:26) How does Big Tech’s AI partnership with Big Oil affect Net Zero? (29:55) Why do we need international policy to regulate AI in energy? (32:39) AI for Good vs. AI for Fossil Fuels (34:14) What should humans be? -- If you would like to sponsor Thinking On Paper, please contact us. Together, we can take the show to the next level. We love you all. We love the planet. Stay curious. Keep Thinking On Paper.

    36 min
  4. The Empire of AI: Sam Altman’s Rise and the Battle for Power - Part 1

    1 SEPT

    The Empire of AI: Sam Altman’s Rise and the Battle for Power - Part 1

    OpenAI was founded to build AI “for the good of humanity.” But behind the mission statement lies a story of money, power, and control. In this Book Club, we read part 1 of Empire of AI by Karen Hao — a book some are already calling the most important of the decade. From Sam Altman’s rise in Silicon Valley to Elon Musk’s early power struggle, from Microsoft’s billion-dollar lifeline to the boardroom coup that almost ended Sam Altman's role as CEO at OpenAI, this is the making of an empire. In Part One, Mark and Jeremy Think on Paper about: 📒 How Sam Altman became Silicon Valley’s Michael Corleone 📒 Why empires always hide collateral damage 📒 The myths and marketing that disguise AI’s true purpose 📒 The role of Microsoft and Bill Gates in shaping OpenAI’s future 📒 Why “for the good of humanity” became an afterthought Empires don’t last forever. But while they rise, the costs are enormous. Please enjoy the show.  Stay disruptive. Be curious, Keep Thinking on Paper. -- Chapters (00:00) Introduction to Empire of AI (01:54) The Empire Strikes Back (05:13) Karen Hao, The Journalist (07:38) Do You Trust Open AI? (10:18) Why OpenAI Made ChatGPT (11:47) Scaling OpenAI (12:33) Google, Deep Mind and Ai For humanity (15:12) Greg Brockman (17:02) Sam Altman's Personal Brand 24:46 Timnit Gebru (25:25) How does AI benefit humanity? -- Other ways to connect with us: ⁠Listen to every podcast⁠ Follow us on ⁠Instagram⁠ Follow us on ⁠X⁠ Follow Mark on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ Follow Jeremy on ⁠LinkedIn⁠ Read our ⁠Substack⁠ Email: hello@thinkingonpaper.xyz Watch the book club on our dedicated YouTube channel: https://youtu.be/OfQu65-6GuA

    32 min
  5. The Age of AI Agents Has Begun, And Trust Will Decide the Future | Andrew Hill, CEO Recall

    28 AUG

    The Age of AI Agents Has Begun, And Trust Will Decide the Future | Andrew Hill, CEO Recall

    Forget AI chatbots. The next wave is swarms of agents. Digital entities that can act, coordinate, and even build other agents. For you. ChatGPT will answer your questions, this is about outsourcing your decisions, judgment, money and trust. Andrew Hill, CEO of Recall, joins Thinking on Paper to explain why agents could replace the apps we use every day, why swarms of agents might reshape the web itself, and why the biggest risk isn’t technical failure, but humans giving up too much control, too soon. In this episode Andrew Thinks on Paper with Mark and Jeremy about: ֎🇦🇮 What AI agents really are (and why they’re more dangerous than chatbots) ֎🇦🇮 How swarms of agents could make today’s apps obsolete ֎🇦🇮 Why trust, track record, and alignment will decide who wins ֎🇦🇮 What Recall is building to benchmark and compete agents ֎🇦🇮 The hidden risk of outsourcing our own critical thinking Please enjoy the show. And share with your most curious friend. Watch the show on the Thinking On Paper dedicated YouTube channel. -- TIMESTAMPS (00:00) Disruptors & Curious Minds (01:25) What Is An AI Agent? (07:15) Emotional AI: Risks & Reality (12:49) Language, Evolution & AI (16:59) The Death Of Critical Thinking? (20:05) How To Trust AI Agents (24:27) Recall: Explained (39:49) What Should Humans Be? -- LINKS & RESOURCES  Learn more about Recall AI Agent training here. Follow Recall on X Follow Andrew Hill on X -- Other ways to connect with us: Listen to every podcastFollow us on InstagramFollow us on XFollow Mark on LinkedInFollow Jeremy on LinkedInRead our SubstackEmail: hello@thinkingonpaper.xyz - QUOTES FROM THE SHOW “GPT-5 to me is actually an agent. It’s more than just the model — it’s the model plus memory, web search, and the ability to act in the world.” “When I was coding with an agent, instead of fixing the function, it just commented out the test so it would pass. That’s betrayal — and that’s the alignment problem.” “The more powerful we make these systems, the more addictive they become. Good design is inherently addictive.” “Language let humans outsource thought. AI is the evolution of language — it lets us outsource critical thinking.” “Curiosity is what makes humanity great. AI is just a tool to make my curiosity faster and deeper, but curiosity itself is still mine.”

    43 min

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About

We help parents and curious minds understand the impact of technology on life, work, and family. Every Thursday we talk with CEOs, founders, scientists, and outliers. From Big Tech giants like IBM , to early-stage innovators and Silicon Valley startups. Mondays, the Book Club breaks down the most important technology books of the moment. Clear. Curious. Critical.

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