<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:psc="http://podlove.org/simple-chapters" xmlns:podcast="https://podcastindex.org/namespace/1.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[Signal Podcast]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>Follow us on Instagram @signalpodcastofficial</p><p></p><p><b>Signal</b> is hosted by Joel Coenes and Stephen Spellicy — two guys on the same path, just at very different points on it. Joel is 25, a former pro athlete turned Computer Science student and project manager breaking into the software industry. Stephen is a seasoned executive who's already deep in it. Together, they break down what's actually happening in tech and business — and why it matters to your everyday life, your career, your money, and your privacy. Every week they go deep on tech news, the next on business, leadership, and career. And every other month, they bring in guests from the industry who've got something real to say.</p>]]></description><link>signalpodcast.riverside.com</link><generator>Riverside.fm (https://riverside.com)</generator><lastBuildDate>Sat, 30 May 2026 23:36:00 GMT</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://api.riverside.com/hosting/Jukjy38L.rss" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><author><![CDATA[Signal - the Podcast]]></author><pubDate>Sat, 28 Feb 2026 03:11:07 GMT</pubDate><copyright><![CDATA[2026 Signal - the Podcast]]></copyright><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><ttl>60</ttl><category><![CDATA[Business]]></category><category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category><itunes:author>Signal - the Podcast</itunes:author><itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;Follow us on Instagram @signalpodcastofficial&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Signal&lt;/b&gt; is hosted by Joel Coenes and Stephen Spellicy — two guys on the same path, just at very different points on it. Joel is 25, a former pro athlete turned Computer Science student and project manager breaking into the software industry. Stephen is a seasoned executive who&apos;s already deep in it. Together, they break down what&apos;s actually happening in tech and business — and why it matters to your everyday life, your career, your money, and your privacy. Every week they go deep on tech news, the next on business, leadership, and career. And every other month, they bring in guests from the industry who&apos;ve got something real to say.&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary><itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type><itunes:owner><itunes:name>Signal - the Podcast</itunes:name><itunes:email>mindthegengap.pod@gmail.com</itunes:email></itunes:owner><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:category text="Business"/><itunes:category text="Technology"/><itunes:image href="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/logos/d8ef5493-4846-487f-978c-96f6d8f47ee1.png"/><item><title><![CDATA[#23 - Musk vs. Altman: Vendetta or Principle?]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>In April 2026, Elon Musk and Sam Altman faced each other in a federal courthouse in Oakland, California — two men who co-founded OpenAI in 2015 on a shared promise to build AI for humanity, now arguing in front of nine jurors about who owns the soul of it.</p><p>In this episode, Joel and Stephen go deep on the full story. Who are these two men, really? Where did they come from, what drives them, and were they ever actually compatible? Joel breaks down the founding, the power struggle, and the trial itself — including the Greg Brockman diary entry that's now sitting in front of a federal jury, and the Microsoft partnership restructuring that OpenAI announced on the same morning the trial opened. Stephen, drawing on decades of experience inside technology organisations, gives his unfiltered read on whether this is a values clash, a power struggle, or — as he puts it — just petty bullshit at the highest level of the industry.</p><p>They also get into what the verdict actually means: whether OpenAI is already too big to unwind regardless of the outcome, why Anthropic may be the quiet winner of this whole saga, and what it signals about AI governance when the most important question in the industry is being decided by a judge in Oakland rather than anyone who was elected to decide it.</p><p>Stephen's prediction: OpenAI wins. Musk walks away looking like an angry, disgruntled founder. The law book will settle it — and it'll come down to what was written, not what was promised over dinner in 2015.</p><hr /><p><b>Also referenced in this episode:</b> Van Wijk &amp; Ferreira Gomes, <i>"The GOALS of the Techno-Libertarian"</i>, Netherlands Institute of International Relations, 2026 · Drexel &amp; Withers, <i>"Terms &amp; Concerns," Catalyzing Crisis</i>, Center for a New American Security, 2024 · Fuchs, <i>"The World in the Age of Trump 2.0"</i>, University of Westminster Press, 2025 · Polan, <i>"Growth's Imagination"</i>, Bristol University Press, 2025</p><p><i>Signal — listen wherever you get your podcasts.</i></p>]]></description><guid isPermaLink="false">4f1fc61e-2c3d-4b2b-ada0-0eda81471fb5</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Signal - the Podcast]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 18 May 2026 06:00:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.riverside.com/hosting-analytics/media/1ce2ccab66730cee34e3f0dbd1e327eea2fbd07a1519a0e8982c910e7229856c/eyJlcGlzb2RlSWQiOiI0ZjFmYzYxZS0yYzNkLTRiMmItYWRhMC0wZWRhODE0NzFmYjUiLCJwb2RjYXN0SWQiOiJlYmJhMDY1Yy1mOWU3LTQ0NzYtOTYwYS1iYmQzNTg0OGIxMWMiLCJhY2NvdW50SWQiOiI2ODAyNDdkNWMwOGY1YmFlNGNjNzUzOTEiLCJwYXRoIjoibWVkaWEvY2xpcHMvNmEwMWM4NzRjMzhiYmViNGE4ZTJkOWY0L21pbmQtdGhlLWdhcC1wb2RzLXN0dWRpby1jb21wb3Nlci0yMDI2LTUtMTFfXzE0LTE1LTQ4Lm1wMyJ9.mp3" length="84615148" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;In April 2026, Elon Musk and Sam Altman faced each other in a federal courthouse in Oakland, California — two men who co-founded OpenAI in 2015 on a shared promise to build AI for humanity, now arguing in front of nine jurors about who owns the soul of it.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;In this episode, Joel and Stephen go deep on the full story. Who are these two men, really? Where did they come from, what drives them, and were they ever actually compatible? Joel breaks down the founding, the power struggle, and the trial itself — including the Greg Brockman diary entry that&apos;s now sitting in front of a federal jury, and the Microsoft partnership restructuring that OpenAI announced on the same morning the trial opened. Stephen, drawing on decades of experience inside technology organisations, gives his unfiltered read on whether this is a values clash, a power struggle, or — as he puts it — just petty bullshit at the highest level of the industry.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;They also get into what the verdict actually means: whether OpenAI is already too big to unwind regardless of the outcome, why Anthropic may be the quiet winner of this whole saga, and what it signals about AI governance when the most important question in the industry is being decided by a judge in Oakland rather than anyone who was elected to decide it.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Stephen&apos;s prediction: OpenAI wins. Musk walks away looking like an angry, disgruntled founder. The law book will settle it — and it&apos;ll come down to what was written, not what was promised over dinner in 2015.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;hr /&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Also referenced in this episode:&lt;/b&gt; Van Wijk &amp;amp; Ferreira Gomes, &lt;i&gt;&quot;The GOALS of the Techno-Libertarian&quot;&lt;/i&gt;, Netherlands Institute of International Relations, 2026 · Drexel &amp;amp; Withers, &lt;i&gt;&quot;Terms &amp;amp; Concerns,&quot; Catalyzing Crisis&lt;/i&gt;, Center for a New American Security, 2024 · Fuchs, &lt;i&gt;&quot;The World in the Age of Trump 2.0&quot;&lt;/i&gt;, University of Westminster Press, 2025 · Polan, &lt;i&gt;&quot;Growth&apos;s Imagination&quot;&lt;/i&gt;, Bristol University Press, 2025&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;Signal — listen wherever you get your podcasts.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>00:44:04</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/logos/d8ef5493-4846-487f-978c-96f6d8f47ee1.png"/><itunes:episode>23</itunes:episode><itunes:title>#23 - Musk vs. Altman: Vendetta or Principle?</itunes:title><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title><![CDATA[#22 — Mythos: The AI Model That Spooked the World]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>Anthropic built an AI model that can find hidden vulnerabilities in the software running the world's banks, power grids, and governments. They called it Mythos. Then they decided who gets access — and every country outside the US and UK found out they weren't on the list. In this episode, Joel and Stephen break down what Mythos actually does, why the geopolitical fallout was immediate and global, and what it means for the rest of us when a private company in San Francisco becomes the most important actor in global cybersecurity — whether anyone elected them to or not.</p>]]></description><guid isPermaLink="false">659cc269-5963-49f7-9417-2725ce4bc8d4</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Signal - the Podcast]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2026 05:00:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.riverside.com/hosting-analytics/media/c2c8f3750f4cb93f0e5dd800a3b1b935c56e357bc28b8b7da3547b2a3f83978f/eyJlcGlzb2RlSWQiOiI2NTljYzI2OS01OTYzLTQ5ZjctOTQxNy0yNzI1Y2U0YmM4ZDQiLCJwb2RjYXN0SWQiOiJlYmJhMDY1Yy1mOWU3LTQ0NzYtOTYwYS1iYmQzNTg0OGIxMWMiLCJhY2NvdW50SWQiOiI2ODAyNDdkNWMwOGY1YmFlNGNjNzUzOTEiLCJwYXRoIjoibWVkaWEvY2xpcHMvNjllZjcyOGY1YjI5MTU1OWQ2MWUzYjhjL21pbmQtdGhlLWdhcC1wb2RzLXN0dWRpby1jb21wb3Nlci0yMDI2LTQtMjdfXzE2LTI4LTMxLm1wMyJ9.mp3" length="49301777" type="audio/mpeg"/><podcast:transcript url="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/episodes/659cc269-5963-49f7-9417-2725ce4bc8d4/transcripts.txt" type="text/plain"/><itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;Anthropic built an AI model that can find hidden vulnerabilities in the software running the world&apos;s banks, power grids, and governments. They called it Mythos. Then they decided who gets access — and every country outside the US and UK found out they weren&apos;t on the list. In this episode, Joel and Stephen break down what Mythos actually does, why the geopolitical fallout was immediate and global, and what it means for the rest of us when a private company in San Francisco becomes the most important actor in global cybersecurity — whether anyone elected them to or not.&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>00:25:41</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/logos/d8ef5493-4846-487f-978c-96f6d8f47ee1.png"/><itunes:episode>22</itunes:episode><itunes:title>#22 — Mythos: The AI Model That Spooked the World</itunes:title><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title><![CDATA[#21 – The Altman Problem, the Chip War & the Shoe Company That Became an AI Firm]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>Sam Altman was fired from OpenAI in 2023 for not being "consistently candid." He was back five days later. The question his board raised never went away — and a recent New Yorker investigation digs directly into it. Joel and Stephen unpack what the reporting actually says, and why it matters that the person running the world's most influential AI company has a documented credibility problem.</p><p>Then: Elon Musk is reportedly trying to build his own chip factory from scratch — bypassing NVIDIA, ASML, and the entire global semiconductor supply chain. Stephen explains what that actually costs, how long it takes, and why vertical integration might be the only real play.</p><p>Finally: Allbirds, the wool sneaker company that peaked at a $4B valuation and has since lost 95% of its stock value, just rebranded as NewBird AI. Their stock jumped 700% in a single session. No product. No customers. No revenue in the new category.</p><p><i>Signal — listen wherever you get your podcasts.</i></p>]]></description><guid isPermaLink="false">759903b8-3926-4e7a-93fe-17d507f529d5</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Signal - the Podcast]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.riverside.com/hosting-analytics/media/b19dcc8623c9bdd099590f948255bfc9181c3d3781dd7051ed36a7478f591d3d/eyJlcGlzb2RlSWQiOiI3NTk5MDNiOC0zOTI2LTRlN2EtOTNmZS0xN2Q1MDdmNTI5ZDUiLCJwb2RjYXN0SWQiOiJlYmJhMDY1Yy1mOWU3LTQ0NzYtOTYwYS1iYmQzNTg0OGIxMWMiLCJhY2NvdW50SWQiOiI2ODAyNDdkNWMwOGY1YmFlNGNjNzUzOTEiLCJwYXRoIjoibWVkaWEvY2xpcHMvNjllNjE2OTU5ODY1NDQyNGRjYTIwZmQyL21pbmQtdGhlLWdhcC1wb2RzLXN0dWRpby1jb21wb3Nlci0yMDI2LTQtMjBfXzE0LTUtNDAubXAzIn0=.mp3" length="46177323" type="audio/mpeg"/><podcast:transcript url="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/episodes/759903b8-3926-4e7a-93fe-17d507f529d5/transcripts.txt" type="text/plain"/><itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;Sam Altman was fired from OpenAI in 2023 for not being &quot;consistently candid.&quot; He was back five days later. The question his board raised never went away — and a recent New Yorker investigation digs directly into it. Joel and Stephen unpack what the reporting actually says, and why it matters that the person running the world&apos;s most influential AI company has a documented credibility problem.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Then: Elon Musk is reportedly trying to build his own chip factory from scratch — bypassing NVIDIA, ASML, and the entire global semiconductor supply chain. Stephen explains what that actually costs, how long it takes, and why vertical integration might be the only real play.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Finally: Allbirds, the wool sneaker company that peaked at a $4B valuation and has since lost 95% of its stock value, just rebranded as NewBird AI. Their stock jumped 700% in a single session. No product. No customers. No revenue in the new category.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;Signal — listen wherever you get your podcasts.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>00:32:04</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/logos/d8ef5493-4846-487f-978c-96f6d8f47ee1.png"/><itunes:title>#21 – The Altman Problem, the Chip War &amp; the Shoe Company That Became an AI Firm</itunes:title><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title><![CDATA[#20 - Dario, Sam & Karp: Who's Actually Walking the Walk?]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>In February 2026, Dario Amodei, Sam Altman, and Alex Karp all faced the same external pressure — a Pentagon contract, a binary choice — and responded in completely different ways. This episode uses that moment as an entry point into a deeper question: what does a leader's behavior under real-cost, real-consequence pressure reveal that normal operations never can? Joel and Stephen go through each of the three, examining their backgrounds, what shaped them, and what their public actions that week expose about how they actually lead. From Amodei turning a government blacklisting into $5 billion in monthly revenue growth, to Altman's public walkback of a deal he'd called sloppy hours after signing it, to Karp's twenty-year track record of saying exactly what Palantir does and never flinching — the episode draws out a clear through-line: leaders who are unambiguous about what they stand for create more durable organizations than those who try to be everything to everyone.</p><p></p><p><i>Signal — listen wherever you get your podcasts.</i></p>]]></description><guid isPermaLink="false">fcc1afdd-719b-4b1f-afee-3206a1ac2afe</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Signal - the Podcast]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 01 Apr 2026 08:00:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.riverside.com/hosting-analytics/media/31443a3573bf66bd284748174d69b68a39e8ff941c168bad7111e5519a21d4d1/eyJlcGlzb2RlSWQiOiJmY2MxYWZkZC03MTliLTRiMWYtYWZlZS0zMjA2YTFhYzJhZmUiLCJwb2RjYXN0SWQiOiJlYmJhMDY1Yy1mOWU3LTQ0NzYtOTYwYS1iYmQzNTg0OGIxMWMiLCJhY2NvdW50SWQiOiI2ODAyNDdkNWMwOGY1YmFlNGNjNzUzOTEiLCJwYXRoIjoibWVkaWEvY2xpcHMvNjljYTY2Y2M4ZmViZDBkNDQ2N2E3MjQ1L21pbmQtdGhlLWdhcC1wb2RzLXN0dWRpby1jb21wb3Nlci0yMDI2LTMtMzBfXzE0LTQtMjgubXAzIn0=.mp3" length="52820993" type="audio/mpeg"/><podcast:transcript url="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/episodes/fcc1afdd-719b-4b1f-afee-3206a1ac2afe/transcripts.txt" type="text/plain"/><itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;In February 2026, Dario Amodei, Sam Altman, and Alex Karp all faced the same external pressure — a Pentagon contract, a binary choice — and responded in completely different ways. This episode uses that moment as an entry point into a deeper question: what does a leader&apos;s behavior under real-cost, real-consequence pressure reveal that normal operations never can? Joel and Stephen go through each of the three, examining their backgrounds, what shaped them, and what their public actions that week expose about how they actually lead. From Amodei turning a government blacklisting into $5 billion in monthly revenue growth, to Altman&apos;s public walkback of a deal he&apos;d called sloppy hours after signing it, to Karp&apos;s twenty-year track record of saying exactly what Palantir does and never flinching — the episode draws out a clear through-line: leaders who are unambiguous about what they stand for create more durable organizations than those who try to be everything to everyone.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;Signal — listen wherever you get your podcasts.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>00:36:41</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/logos/d8ef5493-4846-487f-978c-96f6d8f47ee1.png"/><itunes:episode>20</itunes:episode><itunes:title>#20 - Dario, Sam &amp; Karp: Who&apos;s Actually Walking the Walk?</itunes:title><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title><![CDATA[#19 - How Anthropic Beat the Pentagon, OpenAI Caved & Palantir Took Over the US Military]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>In the span of a single week, three of the most powerful AI companies in the world made decisions that will define how this technology is used — and who controls it. Anthropic refused a Pentagon ultimatum, got blacklisted by the Trump administration, and watched Claude climb to number one on the App Store. OpenAI signed a military deal hours after its CEO publicly aligned with Anthropic's position, triggering backlash from users and from inside the company. And Palantir, which has never been conflicted about its government work, was formally locked in as the AI backbone of the US military — a platform already running targeting operations in active strikes against Iran. Joel and Stephen dig into the decisions, the fallout, and what an open-source project from Austria has to do with all of it.</p>]]></description><guid isPermaLink="false">ff3ab315-d23c-4a9d-b3a9-8e3525945553</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Signal - the Podcast]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 25 Mar 2026 09:00:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.riverside.com/hosting-analytics/media/5a467879d224650d39c2ee369258764791e7c23896d7ef52249e73a41533fbd9/eyJlcGlzb2RlSWQiOiJmZjNhYjMxNS1kMjNjLTRhOWQtYjNhOS04ZTM1MjU5NDU1NTMiLCJwb2RjYXN0SWQiOiJlYmJhMDY1Yy1mOWU3LTQ0NzYtOTYwYS1iYmQzNTg0OGIxMWMiLCJhY2NvdW50SWQiOiI2ODAyNDdkNWMwOGY1YmFlNGNjNzUzOTEiLCJwYXRoIjoibWVkaWEvY2xpcHMvNjljMjQzZWY4ODFlYjg4ODc4MGE3YjZmL21pbmQtdGhlLWdhcC1wb2RzLXN0dWRpby1jb21wb3Nlci0yMDI2LTMtMjRfXzgtNTctMzUubXAzIn0=.mp3" length="51247377" type="audio/mpeg"/><podcast:transcript url="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/episodes/ff3ab315-d23c-4a9d-b3a9-8e3525945553/transcripts.txt" type="text/plain"/><itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;In the span of a single week, three of the most powerful AI companies in the world made decisions that will define how this technology is used — and who controls it. Anthropic refused a Pentagon ultimatum, got blacklisted by the Trump administration, and watched Claude climb to number one on the App Store. OpenAI signed a military deal hours after its CEO publicly aligned with Anthropic&apos;s position, triggering backlash from users and from inside the company. And Palantir, which has never been conflicted about its government work, was formally locked in as the AI backbone of the US military — a platform already running targeting operations in active strikes against Iran. Joel and Stephen dig into the decisions, the fallout, and what an open-source project from Austria has to do with all of it.&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>00:35:35</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/logos/d8ef5493-4846-487f-978c-96f6d8f47ee1.png"/><itunes:episode>19</itunes:episode><itunes:title>#19 - How Anthropic Beat the Pentagon, OpenAI Caved &amp; Palantir Took Over the US Military</itunes:title><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title><![CDATA[The Degree is Dead. Long Live the Degree.]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>75% of Americans thought a college degree was essential in 2010. Today that number is 35. But the story gets stranger — the graduates struggling most right now aren't art history majors. They're computer scientists. CS unemployment sits at 6.1%, computer engineering at 7.5%. Higher than philosophy. Higher than fine arts. A decade of "learn to code" advice, and AI learned to code first.</p><p></p><p>Joel and Stephen dig into what the data actually says about degrees, the job market, and why the fields everyone was told to chase are the ones under the most pressure right now. They also push back on the doomsday narrative — because the story of Excel and the ATM machine suggests we've been here before, and the ending wasn't what anyone predicted.</p><p></p><p>If you're a student, a parent, a career changer, or just someone trying to make sense of where things are heading — this one's for you.</p><p></p><p>Signal — listen wherever you get your podcasts.</p>]]></description><guid isPermaLink="false">6b38b5e8-75f6-4bc2-a8c5-936d9b1cefa1</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Signal - the Podcast]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2026 09:00:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.riverside.com/hosting-analytics/media/68df69fd1f4b149dc1a3213db5f58c9fab3e3cffde5b9a464c14272b64749ec2/eyJlcGlzb2RlSWQiOiI2YjM4YjVlOC03NWY2LTRiYzItYThjNS05MzZkOWIxY2VmYTEiLCJwb2RjYXN0SWQiOiJlYmJhMDY1Yy1mOWU3LTQ0NzYtOTYwYS1iYmQzNTg0OGIxMWMiLCJhY2NvdW50SWQiOiI2ODAyNDdkNWMwOGY1YmFlNGNjNzUzOTEiLCJwYXRoIjoibWVkaWEvY2xpcHMvNjliOTFhNTJkZWMwZjQ3NTFjZGI4NDcwL21pbmQtdGhlLWdhcC1wb2RzLXN0dWRpby1jb21wb3Nlci0yMDI2LTMtMTdfXzEwLTktMzgubXAzIn0=.mp3" length="57150632" type="audio/mpeg"/><podcast:transcript url="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/episodes/6b38b5e8-75f6-4bc2-a8c5-936d9b1cefa1/transcripts.txt" type="text/plain"/><itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;75% of Americans thought a college degree was essential in 2010. Today that number is 35. But the story gets stranger — the graduates struggling most right now aren&apos;t art history majors. They&apos;re computer scientists. CS unemployment sits at 6.1%, computer engineering at 7.5%. Higher than philosophy. Higher than fine arts. A decade of &quot;learn to code&quot; advice, and AI learned to code first.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Joel and Stephen dig into what the data actually says about degrees, the job market, and why the fields everyone was told to chase are the ones under the most pressure right now. They also push back on the doomsday narrative — because the story of Excel and the ATM machine suggests we&apos;ve been here before, and the ending wasn&apos;t what anyone predicted.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;If you&apos;re a student, a parent, a career changer, or just someone trying to make sense of where things are heading — this one&apos;s for you.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Signal — listen wherever you get your podcasts.&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>00:39:41</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/logos/d8ef5493-4846-487f-978c-96f6d8f47ee1.png"/><itunes:episode>18</itunes:episode><itunes:title>The Degree is Dead. Long Live the Degree.</itunes:title><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title><![CDATA[#17 - No Guardrails, No Deal]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>We're back — and this episode covers two of the biggest stories in tech right now.</p><p>First, Nvidia. The company just reported 73% revenue growth and beat every estimate on Wall Street. So why did the stock still drop? We break down the four forces quietly reshaping the AI chip market — DeepSeek's $6 million bombshell, Trump's tariffs, big tech building their own chips, and whether Michael Burry's billion-dollar bet against AI is starting to look a lot smarter than people thought.</p><p>Then, the story that shook the entire AI industry. Anthropic — the company behind Claude — had a $200 million Pentagon contract, the first AI ever cleared to operate on classified military networks. Then the government came back with a demand: remove all safeguards. Allow mass surveillance of American citizens. Enable autonomous weapons that fire without a human in the loop. Anthropic's CEO said no. By the next day, the Trump administration blacklisted them entirely.</p><p>We get into what the Pentagon actually wanted, why Anthropic's decision might be the smartest business move in AI right now, and why the comparison to Apple's famous privacy standoff tells you everything about where this is headed.</p><p>This is the episode where the AI boom stops being about hype — and starts being about power.</p>]]></description><guid isPermaLink="false">813537c1-2448-41fa-b5b2-b364ee9e6fb4</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Signal - the Podcast]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 11 Mar 2026 09:00:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.riverside.com/hosting-analytics/media/73e303685376c572cf08bbd933d90f35d2be396b5429f916d1fb6e3faf82c391/eyJlcGlzb2RlSWQiOiI4MTM1MzdjMS0yNDQ4LTQxZmEtYjViMi1iMzY0ZWU5ZTZmYjQiLCJwb2RjYXN0SWQiOiJlYmJhMDY1Yy1mOWU3LTQ0NzYtOTYwYS1iYmQzNTg0OGIxMWMiLCJhY2NvdW50SWQiOiI2ODAyNDdkNWMwOGY1YmFlNGNjNzUzOTEiLCJwYXRoIjoibWVkaWEvY2xpcHMvNjlhZmUxODk0ODkyZWQwYmUzYjlmZjAzL21pbmQtdGhlLWdhcC1wb2RzLXN0dWRpby1jb21wb3Nlci0yMDI2LTMtMTBfXzEwLTE2LTU3Lm1wMyJ9.mp3" length="46471357" type="audio/mpeg"/><podcast:transcript url="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/episodes/813537c1-2448-41fa-b5b2-b364ee9e6fb4/transcripts.txt" type="text/plain"/><itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;We&apos;re back — and this episode covers two of the biggest stories in tech right now.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;First, Nvidia. The company just reported 73% revenue growth and beat every estimate on Wall Street. So why did the stock still drop? We break down the four forces quietly reshaping the AI chip market — DeepSeek&apos;s $6 million bombshell, Trump&apos;s tariffs, big tech building their own chips, and whether Michael Burry&apos;s billion-dollar bet against AI is starting to look a lot smarter than people thought.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Then, the story that shook the entire AI industry. Anthropic — the company behind Claude — had a $200 million Pentagon contract, the first AI ever cleared to operate on classified military networks. Then the government came back with a demand: remove all safeguards. Allow mass surveillance of American citizens. Enable autonomous weapons that fire without a human in the loop. Anthropic&apos;s CEO said no. By the next day, the Trump administration blacklisted them entirely.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;We get into what the Pentagon actually wanted, why Anthropic&apos;s decision might be the smartest business move in AI right now, and why the comparison to Apple&apos;s famous privacy standoff tells you everything about where this is headed.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;This is the episode where the AI boom stops being about hype — and starts being about power.&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>00:32:16</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/logos/d8ef5493-4846-487f-978c-96f6d8f47ee1.png"/><itunes:episode>17</itunes:episode><itunes:title>#17 - No Guardrails, No Deal</itunes:title><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title><![CDATA[Episode 16 - Reupload]]></title><description><![CDATA[<p>The conversation explores the concept of responsibility in the context of autonomous systems and the implications for liability. It delves into the impact of automated driving systems on accountability and the legal and ethical considerations surrounding autonomous vehicles.</p><p></p><p>Takeaways</p><ul><li>Autonomous systems introduce a separation between human oversight and operational behavior, leading to a shift in responsibility.</li><li>The legal and ethical implications of autonomous driving systems raise questions about liability and accountability.</li></ul><p></p><p>Chapters</p><ul><li>00:00 New Year Revelry and Responsibility</li><li>07:24 Regulatory and Ethical Considerations</li></ul>]]></description><guid isPermaLink="false">f52af546-538e-4806-b91e-f8137e4bc91d</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Signal - the Podcast]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 05 Mar 2026 22:32:02 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://api.riverside.com/hosting-analytics/media/9f3efbbf36b52710bbba43630731b061a68c93b8b5478bd2f6af78e88640f0d3/eyJlcGlzb2RlSWQiOiJmNTJhZjU0Ni01MzhlLTQ4MDYtYjkxZS1mODEzN2U0YmM5MWQiLCJwb2RjYXN0SWQiOiJlYmJhMDY1Yy1mOWU3LTQ0NzYtOTYwYS1iYmQzNTg0OGIxMWMiLCJhY2NvdW50SWQiOiI2ODAyNDdkNWMwOGY1YmFlNGNjNzUzOTEiLCJwYXRoIjoibWVkaWEvY2xpcHMvNjk2NTE3NmY5NTE4ZDUwMjllODQ2ZjM1L21pbmQtdGhlLWdhcC1wb2RzLXN0dWRpby1jb21wb3Nlci0yMDI2LTEtMTJfXzE2LTQ2LTU1Lm1wMyJ9.mp3" length="21982502" type="audio/mpeg"/><podcast:transcript url="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/episodes/f52af546-538e-4806-b91e-f8137e4bc91d/transcripts.txt" type="text/plain"/><itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;The conversation explores the concept of responsibility in the context of autonomous systems and the implications for liability. It delves into the impact of automated driving systems on accountability and the legal and ethical considerations surrounding autonomous vehicles.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Takeaways&lt;/p&gt;&lt;ul&gt;&lt;li&gt;Autonomous systems introduce a separation between human oversight and operational behavior, leading to a shift in responsibility.&lt;/li&gt;&lt;li&gt;The legal and ethical implications of autonomous driving systems raise questions about liability and accountability.&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ul&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Chapters&lt;/p&gt;&lt;ul&gt;&lt;li&gt;00:00 New Year Revelry and Responsibility&lt;/li&gt;&lt;li&gt;07:24 Regulatory and Ethical Considerations&lt;/li&gt;&lt;/ul&gt;</itunes:summary><itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit><itunes:duration>00:15:16</itunes:duration><itunes:image href="https://hosting-media.riverside.com/media/podcasts/ebba065c-f9e7-4476-960a-bbd35848b11c/logos/d8ef5493-4846-487f-978c-96f6d8f47ee1.png"/><itunes:episode>16</itunes:episode><itunes:title>Episode 16 - Reupload</itunes:title><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item></channel></rss>