Best Articles I Wrote (2024 Edition)

Best Articles I Wrote (2024 Edition)
New York City by air. Photo by Danny Crichton.

I write almost exclusively on Riskgaming by Lux Capital. If you aren't a subscriber, you should really sign up!

It was a year filled with milestones at Riskgaming in 2024, including the debut of our first scenario (and then numbers two and three), 47 newsletters and 69 podcast episodes plus several hundred of our Lux Recommends from across the Lux partnership.

I’ll list out my favorite newsletter columns and podcasts in a bit, but what were some other Riskgaming highlights this year?

  • Building an AI election security riskgaming scenario for senior leaders of CISA and the Department of Homeland Security plus officials from across local and state governments.
  • Hosting multiple three-star generals (including one who just got promoted to four stars), congressmen, think tank leaders and others around Pentagon procurement of AI technologies in partnership with Mike Bloomberg. “No Man’s Land” was my most synoptic game design ever, and it will be published publicly in early 2025.
  • Giving a briefing down at Fort Liberty on AI and national security for the U.S. Army.
  • Helping people all across the world host their own Riskgaming parties using our scenario materials available online on the Lux website.
  • Recruiting and installing Laurence Pevsner as our new Director of Programming.
  • Publicly launching our AI election security game in New York and DC with Senator Mark Warner.
  • Lecturing and seminar-ing at Yale, Cornell and Wharton — I’m really excited by the energy and intense intellect of the next generation.
  • Launching our China electric vehicle scenario by Ian Curtiss all around the world and having dozens of journalists, tech executives and policy leaders play out the future of the auto industry.
  • Finally, great profiles and coverage of our Riskgaming scenarios in The Wall Street Journal, The Information, NBC News and Foreign Policy.

As always, please sign up for future runthroughs of our scenarios – we’d love to have you (yes, you!) at our next events.

The Best Newsletters of 2024

  • Hochul Hokum — New York’s embarrassing governor became a laughing stock after reversing herself on congestion pricing and then reversing the reversal. Then she bombed at the Democratic National Convention. America’s most important state deserves better.
  • TechCrunch+ Termination — I built up Extra Crunch (later rebranded to TechCrunch+ by over-paid marketing Yahoos) and then watched as the media economy and company leadership tore a multi-million-dollar business asunder. Here’s the inside story.
  • TikTok Tantrum — TikTok appealed to the Supreme Court this week but in this column from March, I argued that moral grounds around free speech and market competition should be central in debates over the future of the Chinese company.
  • Democratizing WMD — I continue to fight back against the notion that somehow access to bioweapons manufacturing can be restricted in any meaningful way in the age of AI. This column pushed back against a new benchmark, while reminding everyone of the near impossibility of censoring information that we can all look up in textbooks.
  • Pacific Stratagems — It’s the Pacific century, and America still hasn’t mastered the tenor of a region at the center of the future. With South Korea’s president declaring and then un-declaring martial law this month, the crisis in U.S. diplomacy is only getting more acute.
  • The closing door to global tech riches — AI is an extraordinary development; it’s also leaving emerging markets behind. They lack the energy, talent and compute resources to catch-up with the industrialized world, and no one knows how to build a path forward for the billions of people in these countries.
  • AI and the Death of Human Languages — Almost all large language models are trained in English. So what happens with the thousands of human languages that are spoken by fewer people and lack the massive corpuses of data required for training? The answer is simply extinction – and so what can we do to save this diversity?
  • America’s reindustrialization dilemma — America needs to reindustrialize, but exactly who should join? The dilemma is that we need millions of workers to move back into factories at precisely the moment those workers are trying to secure remote jobs and more balanced lifestyles.
  • America’s mollycoddled industries – America used to be an industrial powerhouse, and then we protected our companies from global competition and guided them to failure in the international marketplace. We can’t make the same mistake again.
  • The Productivity Precipice — Productivity is the alchemical magic of economics, making more out of less. But inefficiency is spiraling in industries from construction to defense, and immediate action is necessary to fix the crisis.
  • “Founder Mode” is really Survivor Mode — Paul Graham’s essay unleashed a torrent of discussion earlier this year on the power of founders to run their companies. Here’s how I reconcile his notions with my own experience in venture and the tech industry.
  • What’s Next? — Trump’s election surprised some and shocked others, but either way, we are in the unique position of having a returning president re-enter the White House. What’s going to happen to the future of economic policy? In short, everything is changing.

The Best Podcast Episodes of 2024

We covered a massive gamut of topics in 2024, while also introducing our scientist-in-residence Sam Arbesman’s sub-series The Orthogonal Bet. It’s hard to highlight all the great episodes we published this year, but these were some of my favorites: