back to indexPavel Durov: Telegram, Freedom, Censorship, Money, Power & Human Nature | Lex Fridman Podcast #482

Chapters
0:0 Introduction
3:7 Philosophy of freedom
6:15 No alcohol
14:20 No phone
20:16 Discipline
41:28 Telegram: Lean philosophy, privacy, and geopolitics
56:50 Arrest in France
73:1 Romanian elections
83:56 Power and corruption
93:29 Intense education
105:29 Nikolai Durov
109:58 Programming and video games
114:11 VK origins & engineering
131:24 Hiring a great team
140:40 Telegram engineering & design
159:42 Encryption
164:39 Open source
169:26 Edward Snowden
171:58 Intelligence agencies
173:10 Iran and Russia government pressure
176:19 Apple
183:16 Poisoning
215:31 Money
224:23 TON
234:13 Bitcoin
237:12 Two chairs dilemma
243:52 Children
255:2 Father
259:33 Quantum immortality
266:5 Kafka
00:00:00.000 |
The following is a conversation with Pavel Durov, founder and CEO of Telegram, a messaging platform 00:00:07.180 |
actively used by over 1 billion people. Pavel has spent his life fighting for freedom of speech, 00:00:14.280 |
building tools that protect human communication from surveillance and censorship. For this, 00:00:20.800 |
he has faced pressure from some of the most powerful governments and organizations on earth. 00:00:26.260 |
In the face of this immense pressure, he has always held his ground, continuously fighting to protect 00:00:31.900 |
user privacy and the freedom of all of us humans to communicate with each other. I got the chance 00:00:38.340 |
to spend a few weeks with him and can definitively say that he's one of the most principled and fearless 00:00:43.880 |
humans I've ever met. Plus, when I posted that I'm hanging out with Pavel, a lot of people, fans of 00:00:52.160 |
his, wrote to me asking if he does, in fact, privately live the disciplined, ascetic life 00:00:58.660 |
he's known for. No alcohol, stoic mindset, strict diet and exercise, including a crazy amount of daily 00:01:06.860 |
pull-ups and push-ups, no phone except to occasionally test Telegram features, and so on. Yes, he is 100% 00:01:13.980 |
that guy, which made the experience of hanging out with him really inspiring to me. I'm grateful for 00:01:20.480 |
it, and I'm grateful to now be able to call him a friend. This podcast conversation is in parts 00:01:26.660 |
philosophical about freedom, life, human nature, and the nature of government bureaucracies. And it is 00:01:33.840 |
also in parts super technical, because to me, it is fascinating that Telegram has a relatively small 00:01:39.880 |
engineering team, and yet is able to basically out-innovate all of its competitors with an insane 00:01:46.760 |
rate of introducing new, unique features. Just like the meme of the Simpsons did it first, when you 00:01:54.660 |
consider all the features we know and love in our communication apps, in almost every case, Telegram 00:02:00.880 |
did it first. So we discuss it all, from the Kafkaesque situation he's in the midst of in France, 00:02:07.220 |
to the rollercoaster of his life and career, to his philosophy on technology, freedom, and the human 00:02:13.620 |
condition. And by the way, while this entire conversation is in English, we make captions and 00:02:20.440 |
voice-over audio tracks available in multiple languages, including Russian, Ukrainian, French, 00:02:27.360 |
and Hindi. On YouTube, you can switch between language audio tracks by clicking the settings gear icon, 00:02:34.360 |
then clicking audio track, and then selecting the language you prefer. 00:02:39.940 |
Huge thank you once again to Eleven Labs for their help with translation and dubbing, 00:02:46.820 |
and with the bigger mission of breaking down barriers that language creates. They are truly one of the most 00:02:53.760 |
remarkable companies I've ever had the pleasure of working with. This is the Lex Friedman Podcast. 00:02:59.160 |
To support it, please check out our sponsors in the description. And now, dear friends, here's Pavel 00:03:05.300 |
Durov. You've been an advocate for freedom for many years, writing that you should be ready to risk 00:03:12.060 |
everything for freedom. What were some influences and insights that helped you arrive at this value of 00:03:20.360 |
human freedom? I get to experience the difference between a society with freedom and a society without 00:03:26.440 |
freedom pretty early in life. I was four years old when my family moved from the Soviet Union to 00:03:33.300 |
northern Italy. And I could see that a society without freedom cannot enjoy the abundance of opinions, 00:03:43.300 |
of ideas of goods and services. Even for a four or five-year-old kid, it was obvious. Like, you can't 00:03:51.140 |
experience all the toys, the ice cream of sorts, the cartoons in the Soviet Union that you can access in Italy. 00:04:00.740 |
And then I got to realize something even more important. You don't get to contribute to this 00:04:06.660 |
abundance without freedom. And at this point, it was pretty obvious to me. 00:04:13.300 |
You also wrote "Svoboda важнее денег" translates to "Freedom matters more than money". How do you prevent 00:04:21.140 |
these values for freedom being corrupted by money, by people with influence, by people with power? 00:04:29.140 |
Well, the biggest enemies of freedom are fear and greed. So you make sure that they don't stand in your 00:04:36.980 |
way. If you imagine the worst thing that can happen to you and then make yourself be comfortable with it, 00:04:44.580 |
there's nothing more left to be afraid of. So you stand your ground and you remember that it's worth living 00:04:54.580 |
your life according to the principles that you believe in, even though this life can end up 00:05:02.100 |
being shorter than a longer life, but lived in slavery. 00:05:07.700 |
Do you contemplate your mortality? Anything about your death? 00:05:13.540 |
In a way, you have to go against your instinct of self-preservation. And it's not easy. We are all 00:05:22.340 |
biological beings hard-coded to be afraid of death. Nobody wants to die. But when you approach it rationally, 00:05:30.340 |
you live and then you die. There's no such thing as your death in your life. 00:05:37.300 |
You stop experiencing life once you die. So you have to ask yourself this question: 00:05:42.260 |
Is it worth living a life full of fear of death? Or it's much more enjoyable to forget about this 00:05:51.060 |
and live your life in a way that makes you immune to this fear? At the same time, remembering that death 00:05:59.860 |
exists so that every day would count. Yeah, remembering that death exists makes you 00:06:06.260 |
deeply feel every moment that you do get. That's why I love reminding myself that I can die any day. 00:06:14.580 |
In many ways, you live a pretty stoic existence. I got a chance to spend a couple of weeks with you. 00:06:20.980 |
In many ways, you seek to minimize the negative effects of the outside world on your mind. 00:06:26.900 |
You've written, "If you want to reach your full potential and maintain clarity of mind, 00:06:34.260 |
stay away from addictive substances. My success and health are the result of 20-plus years of complete 00:06:41.620 |
abstinence from alcohol, tobacco, coffee, pills, and illegal drugs. Short-term pleasure isn't worth your 00:06:50.020 |
future." Let's talk about each one of these. Alcohol. What's been your philosophy behind that? 00:06:56.980 |
That one is quite easy. When I was 11 years old, my biochemistry teacher, he gave me this book he wrote. 00:07:05.460 |
It was called "The Illusion of Paradise." And there he would describe the biological and chemical processes 00:07:14.260 |
that happen in your body once you consume this or that substance. It was mainly related to illegal drugs, 00:07:25.300 |
but alcohol was one of these addictive substances that he covered. 00:07:30.180 |
So it turns out that when you drink alcohol, the thing that happens is that your brain cells become 00:07:38.100 |
paralyzed. They become literally zombies. And then next day, sometime after the party is over, 00:07:47.780 |
some of your brain cells die and never get to normal. So think about this. If your brain is this 00:07:55.860 |
most valuable tool you have in your journey to success and happiness, why would you destroy this tool 00:08:02.180 |
for short-term pleasure? This sounds ridiculous. 00:08:05.780 |
Yeah. In many ways, it's a poison we'll let in our body. But by way of advice, what advice would you give to 00:08:11.620 |
people who consider not drinking? You know, a lot of people use alcohol to enable them to have a vibrant 00:08:20.580 |
social life. There's a lot of pressures from society, you know, at a party to drink so you can socialize. 00:08:29.060 |
So what advice would you give to people who imagine having a social life without alcohol? 00:08:36.420 |
Well, first of all, don't be afraid to be contrarian. Set your own rules. 00:08:41.380 |
Secondly, if you feel you need to drink, there must be some problem you're trying to conceal. There's 00:08:49.940 |
something that some fear you're not ready to confront. And you have to address this fear. 00:08:57.620 |
If there is a good looking girl you're afraid to approach, get rid of this fear. Approach her. 00:09:06.020 |
Practice. Do it again and again. It's pretty banal. But this advice works. 00:09:10.820 |
Fix the underlying problem, which is usually at the very bottom is always going to be fear. Work on that. 00:09:17.380 |
And very often people are trying to escape something in their lives with alcohol. What is it 00:09:22.980 |
they're trying to escape? What is this problem? You have to get to the bottom of it. 00:09:28.340 |
Your mind is trying to tell you something valuable. And instead of addressing it directly, 00:09:37.620 |
you are flooding it in alcohol, which is sort of a spiritual painkiller, but works only temporarily. 00:09:46.980 |
And then you have to pay the debt with interest. 00:09:50.580 |
So what do you do? I mean, you've been in a lot of gatherings, a lot of parties. 00:09:57.380 |
For me, not at all. I've been always ready to stand my ground and say, 00:10:03.540 |
no, when I feel something's not right. And it's extraordinary how easily we humans are affected 00:10:13.220 |
by what we perceive as majority. Because nobody since ancient times, since million years ago, 00:10:20.660 |
wants to be left out by the tribe. We are scared that 00:10:28.500 |
we won't become accepted anymore, which thousands and millions of years ago meant we're going to starve to 00:10:40.820 |
fight this inclination to be agreeable with everything that the majority imposes on you. 00:10:52.580 |
Because it's quite clear that many things that the majority in many activities, the majority 00:10:58.900 |
is engaging in, are not bringing you any good. 00:11:02.820 |
So that's another fear you have to face. Going into a party and the fear of being the outcast at that party, 00:11:09.300 |
of being different than others at that party, at that social gathering, in the crowd of humans, 00:11:17.220 |
That's a fear. And it's quite irrational if you think about it. It was something that made a lot of sense 00:11:26.260 |
20,000 years ago. It makes zero sense today. Because if you think about it, if you do the same thing 00:11:33.940 |
everybody else around you is doing, you don't have any competitive advantage. And you don't get to become 00:11:44.180 |
Yeah, that's one of the things we talked about, sort of by way of advice, is if you want to be 00:11:51.460 |
successful in life, you want to be different. Differently. 00:11:56.020 |
And perhaps, I think you said you want to achieve mastery at a niche. So find a niche at which you 00:12:02.900 |
can pursue with all your effort and achieve mastery. And the niche being different than anything that 00:12:10.660 |
anybody else is doing. Can you explain that a little bit more? 00:12:13.460 |
So, obviously, in order to contribute to the society you're in, to the economy of the country you live 00:12:22.740 |
in, you have to do something that is valuable. But if you're doing something that everybody else is 00:12:28.820 |
doing anyway, what's the value of it? Now, it sounds easier than it is done to do something that nobody 00:12:38.260 |
else is doing. Because we humans are surrounded by all kinds of information which makes us want to copy 00:12:46.020 |
what we are perceiving. At the same time, there are so many areas which you can explore 00:12:51.220 |
that have nothing to do with the information you receive on a daily basis. 00:12:56.580 |
So it's extremely important to curate the information sources that you have 00:13:03.300 |
so that you wouldn't be somebody who is left to the will of AI-based algorithmic feed telling you what's 00:13:15.780 |
important. So that you end up consuming the same information, the same stuff, the same memes, 00:13:21.860 |
the same news as everybody else. But rather, you should be proactive. You should deliberately 00:13:28.900 |
try to set a goal, an area that you want to explore and then actively search information 00:13:37.380 |
that is relevant to this field so that one day you can become the world's number one expert in this field. 00:13:49.540 |
And it's not that difficult to do that. You have to just remain consistent. Because nobody else is 00:13:58.500 |
trying to do that. Everybody else is just reading the same news and discussing the same news every day. 00:14:04.420 |
But this way, they don't get to have a competitive advantage. 00:14:08.260 |
Yeah. Majority of the population becomes slaves to the AI recommender systems, AI-driven recommender systems. 00:14:15.940 |
And so the content, everybody's fed is the same thing and we all become the same. On that point, 00:14:21.060 |
one of the different things you do is you don't use a phone, except occasionally to test telegram features. 00:14:28.500 |
But I've been with you for two weeks. I haven't seen you use a phone at all in the way that most people 00:14:34.100 |
use a phone like for their social media. So can you describe your philosophy behind that? 00:14:39.380 |
I don't think a phone is a necessary device. I remember growing up, I didn't have a mobile phone. 00:14:46.340 |
When I was a student at the university, I didn't have a mobile phone. When I finally got to use a mobile 00:14:55.300 |
phone, I never used phone calls. I was always in airplane mode or mute. I hated the idea of being disturbed. 00:15:18.100 |
is important in my life. I don't want other people or companies, all kinds of organizations telling me 00:15:27.540 |
what is important today and what I should be thinking about. Just set up your own agenda. 00:15:39.940 |
It provides distractions. It guides what you should be looking at, what you will be looking at. So you 00:15:46.580 |
don't want that. You want to quiet the mind. You want to choose what kind of stuff you let inside your mind. 00:15:54.500 |
Yes, because this way I can contribute to the progress of society. Or at least I like to think this way. 00:16:02.820 |
How often do you find quiet time to just think and focus deeply on work without any distractions? 00:16:08.820 |
You mentioned to me that you value quiet mornings. 00:16:12.420 |
Yes. So the thing I'm trying to do, I try to allocate as much time as possible 00:16:19.620 |
for sleep. Now, even if I allocate, say, 11 or 12 hours for sleep, I won't sleep for 11 or 12 hours. 00:16:26.980 |
So what I end up doing is I end up lying in bed thinking. And some people hate it. They say, 00:16:35.620 |
you have to take a sleeping pill, but I never take pills. I love these moments. I get 00:16:42.100 |
so many brilliant ideas, or at least they seem brilliant to me at the moment, 00:16:48.420 |
while I'm lying in bed, either late in the evening or early in the morning. That's my 00:16:54.980 |
favorite time of the day. Sometimes I go, I wake up, I go take a shower, still without a phone. 00:17:01.700 |
Beautiful ideas can come to you while you're doing your morning exercise, your morning routine, 00:17:10.020 |
without a phone. If you open your phone first thing in the morning, what you end up being 00:17:17.300 |
is a creature that is told what to think about for the rest of the day. Same is true in a way if 00:17:25.940 |
you've been consuming news from social media late at night. But then how do you define what is 00:17:34.180 |
important and what you really want to become in life? Now, I'm not saying you have to completely 00:17:41.860 |
stay away from all sources of information, but take some time to think about what's really important 00:17:48.020 |
for you and what you want to change in this world. So you definitely try to avoid digital devices for 00:17:53.540 |
as many hours as possible in the morning. Just to have the quiet thinking time. Plus the crazy amounts 00:18:00.100 |
of push-ups. I know it's kind of counterintuitive because I founded one of the largest social networks 00:18:09.540 |
in the world, after which I founded the second largest messaging app in the world. And you're supposed to 00:18:16.020 |
to be really connected. But the conclusion you reach very early is that the more connected and accessible 00:18:28.500 |
And then how can you run this thing if you're constantly bombarded by all kinds of information, 00:18:36.100 |
most of which is irrelevant to the success of what you're trying to build? 00:18:41.380 |
You know, the entire world can be fascinated by a fight, a quarrel between the world's richest man 00:18:50.980 |
and the world's most powerful man. But for the vast majority of these people following this saga, 00:18:57.620 |
it's irrelevant. It won't change their lives. And in any case, they can't affect it. 00:19:04.340 |
So it's a bit pointless. Of course, there are people who are engaging in activities that require 00:19:12.580 |
them to be up to date of everything that's going on. But 99% of people aren't. 00:19:18.820 |
Yeah. The internet, social media presents to us drama in such a way that we 00:19:26.740 |
think it's the biggest thing in the world, the most important thing in which the tides of history 00:19:31.220 |
will turn. But in reality, most things will not turn the tides of history. And so I guess our 00:19:37.380 |
challenge is to figure out what is the timeless thing? What is the thing that's happening today 00:19:43.140 |
that's still going to be true in 10, 20 years? And from that, decide what you're going to do. 00:19:50.500 |
And that's very difficult on social media, because everybody's outraged. The news of the day, 00:19:55.220 |
whatever the quarrel is, that's the thing that everyone thinks the world will end because of this 00:20:01.300 |
thing. And then another thing happens the next day. And they're trying to influence your emotions. 00:20:07.380 |
And that's how you get into trouble, because you can be forced to make conclusions that are not in your 00:20:15.860 |
best interest. I've seen you be, once again, quite stoic about your emotions. Do you ever get angry? 00:20:22.020 |
Do you ever get lonely? Do you ever get sad? The roller coaster of human emotion. And what do you do 00:20:28.740 |
with that when you make difficult decisions? I'm a human being like everybody else. I do get to 00:20:33.860 |
experience emotions. Some of them are not very pleasant. But I believe that it's the responsibility 00:20:41.460 |
of every one of us to cope with these emotions and to learn to work through them. Self-discipline is 00:20:51.460 |
particularly important, because without it, how can you overcome this seemingly endless loop of 00:21:01.700 |
negativity or despair that ultimately leads to depression for some people? I normally never 00:21:09.460 |
have depression. I don't remember having depression in the last 20 years, at least. Maybe when I was a 00:21:15.300 |
teenager. But one of the reasons for that is: I start doing things. I identify the problem. I can see a 00:21:28.340 |
solution. And I start executing the strategy. If you are stuck in this loop of being worried about something, 00:21:40.980 |
nothing is ever going to change. And people often make this mistake thinking: "Oh, I should just 00:21:47.380 |
have some rest and then regain energy." This is not how it works. You gain energy by doing something. 00:21:56.420 |
So you start doing something, then it happens. You feel motivated. You feel inspired. 00:22:04.180 |
And then ultimately you do something else, a little bit more, a little bit more. And in a few years, 00:22:09.620 |
who know, you may end up achieving great things. Yeah, that's the thing that people are really 00:22:13.300 |
confused. If you're stuck in a depressive cycle, even when you really, really, really, 00:22:21.300 |
really don't want to do anything, just do something. Try, try to make progress. Because the good feeling 00:22:27.620 |
comes in the end of that. The whole point is to do first and then feel, not feel and then do. 00:22:32.820 |
Exactly. And going to the gym is a good example. There are many days when you don't want to start 00:22:39.460 |
working out. But you have to overcome this initial reluctance. And then you get to a point that you 00:22:49.300 |
enjoy it. And you think, "Oh my God, it was such a good idea to come to the gym today." 00:22:53.780 |
But it's similar to pretty much every activity. You get to write some code. Write a small piece 00:23:02.500 |
of code first. And then you get inspired. Then you'll come up with more ideas. 00:23:07.300 |
You need to write a novel or just write a paragraph. This is pretty obvious and it's not a secret. But because we are bombarded with all kinds of information that is not really important for 00:23:23.300 |
us in terms of becoming successful. We often forget the important things. 00:23:29.940 |
And this is one of them. We've been working out every single day. You have been working 00:23:36.580 |
out for many years pretty intensively. So I think a lot of people would love to know what's your perfect 00:23:45.460 |
daily workout regimen. Let's say on a daily, on a weekly basis. 00:23:50.580 |
I do 300 pushups and 300 squats every morning. And in addition to that, I go to the gym 00:23:56.500 |
normally five, six times a week, spending between one and two hours every day. 00:24:02.980 |
So pushups and squats are still a big part of your routine. 00:24:07.220 |
yes, this is how I start my day. I'm not sure they do a lot in terms of changing your body, 00:24:13.700 |
but they're definitely a good way to practice self-discipline. Because you don't want to do 00:24:21.380 |
these pushups in the morning most of the days. Squats are particularly boring. 00:24:26.980 |
they're not that hard. They're just boring. But you overcome it. And then it's much easier to 00:24:36.100 |
start doing other things related to your work, for example. When I can, I also take a nice bath. 00:24:44.420 |
Because it's another exercise of self-discipline. I think the main muscle you can exercise is this 00:24:50.740 |
muscle, the muscle of self-discipline. You know, not your biceps or your pecs or anything else. 00:24:59.940 |
Because if you get to train that one, everything else just comes by itself. 00:25:07.460 |
Everything else becomes easy. We should mention, I went with you to Banya. And I think it's fair to 00:25:15.220 |
say you're nuts. In terms of how much you can handle. And I didn't even see the worst of it. Can you just 00:25:23.460 |
speak to your crazy escapades in the Banya what value you get from it? So both the heat and the cold? 00:25:30.020 |
I don't know if it's crazy. I think it's quite natural and normal by this time. Yeah. But maybe I 00:25:37.140 |
could just get used to it. So Banya is this extreme kind of sauna practiced by Eastern Europeans. Yeah. 00:25:48.900 |
But it is done in a way that maximizes heat. And they also use all kinds of herbs and branches. And 00:25:57.940 |
it's a much more holistic and natural experience. Then a necessary part of it is you get the cold plunge. 00:26:08.420 |
And then you go back. And again, this is one of those things that 00:26:14.580 |
maybe in the moment is not always that pleasant. Particularly if you go to extreme temperatures. 00:26:21.220 |
You don't feel great. I don't always feel great. But this feeling is passing. It's only a few minutes. 00:26:29.300 |
Same with the ice bath. You have to suffer a bit. And then you get to feel great for hours and days after. 00:26:42.420 |
What's more, it gives you this long-term health benefits. In a way, you can look at it as alcohol 00:26:50.180 |
in reverse. Alcohol will give you this short, fleeting pleasure for an hour, for a couple of hours. 00:26:57.380 |
But then you will be paying for it with long-term negative consequences. 00:27:06.580 |
I'd rather do banyan ice bath. We swam the length of a large lake in France a couple of times. Can you talk 00:27:13.860 |
through why you value these multi-hour swims? I left swimming for hours. The longest I 00:27:21.220 |
swam was five and a half hours in Finland. It was quite cold. I got lost in the process. 00:27:29.540 |
barely could find my way back. But the reason I do it, yes, you feel great after. You're shaking a little 00:27:39.300 |
bit. You feel great after. You cross a huge lake and I cross many lakes. Geneva lake, Zurich lake. And every 00:27:47.860 |
time you feel this achievement, which makes you happy, makes you feel strong. And then you're more ready to 00:27:57.700 |
other challenges. And of course, when you know you're going to start a journey that will last a few hours, 00:28:08.100 |
you're reluctant to do it. But you swim for 10 minutes and then for 20 minutes and then for 30 minutes. 00:28:14.100 |
And it teaches you this incredible patience that I think is necessary if you want to achieve anything 00:28:22.740 |
in life. And it's pretty meditative. Lake versus ocean. Yes. And you don't have to go too fast. 00:28:33.620 |
Until you get lost and it's five and a half hours. Did you panic like if you're going to be able to 00:28:37.700 |
find the shore, find your way out? Not really. I'm a reasonably stress resilient person. I didn't 00:28:44.420 |
panic at that moment. And there were worse swims I had that were shorter, but involved accidents and 00:28:51.540 |
you know about some of them. So that wasn't the worst by far. But an important thing about swimming 00:28:59.140 |
and physical activity in general is that it makes your mind clear and your thinking process is becoming 00:29:07.860 |
more efficient. Because at the end of the day, the efficiency of our brain is limited by how much 00:29:16.980 |
sugar and oxygen our heart can push through blood to our brain. So how can you make this go faster? Or 00:29:26.100 |
how do you make your lungs more efficient? How do you make your heart more efficient in doing that? 00:29:32.180 |
The physical activity is the only way I know of. So it's not just staying healthy or 00:29:45.220 |
being productive. It's also being stress resilient. All of these qualities 00:29:55.300 |
are necessary if you want to run a large company, if you want to start a company. 00:30:00.020 |
I'm surprised when I started doing this more than 10 years ago, that more CEOs didn't engage in sports. 00:30:12.660 |
The situation changed in the last several years, which is great. Because back in the day, 00:30:19.140 |
if you take 20 years ago, there was the stereotype that if you were strong, you must be not very smart, 00:30:26.980 |
and vice versa, which is a complete lunacy. Very often these two things go together. 00:30:34.100 |
So for you working on it's not just about staying healthy. It's actually valuable for the work that you do 00:30:38.500 |
as a tech leader, as an engineer, as a technologist. 00:30:42.500 |
Oh, yes. When I can't train, I can instantly feel that stress is creeping on me. 00:30:56.980 |
So even in situations where I'm constrained, I can't go to gym. I would just keep doing push-ups. I keep, 00:31:04.980 |
Yeah. I mean, that's the cool thing about body weight exercise. You could just do it anywhere. 00:31:10.820 |
You could just pop off 50, 100 push-ups before meeting. 00:31:15.700 |
I don't, don't you feel weird when you have a day without physical activity? 00:31:20.980 |
Yeah. If I go a day without doing push-ups at the very minimum, it's a shitty day. 00:31:27.540 |
And if you can do pull-ups, it's even better. 00:31:29.540 |
Yeah. I gotta ask you about your diet too. No processed sugar, no fast food, no soda. 00:31:35.940 |
Intermittent fasting sometimes once a day, only sometimes a couple times a day. 00:31:40.180 |
So take me through your philosophy on the no sugar, no, no soda, just clean food. 00:31:47.700 |
Well, sugar is pretty easy because it's addictive. The more you consume sugar, the more you want it, 00:31:54.100 |
the hungrier you get. So if you want to stay efficient and healthy, why consume processed sugar? 00:32:03.300 |
You'll just end up snacking all the time. Intermittent fasting, so eating only within 00:32:11.460 |
six hours and not eating for 18 hours every day also brings structure into your day and into your eating 00:32:24.980 |
habits. So you don't crave sugar anymore because you know if you eat sugar and then you're unable to snack, 00:32:37.860 |
I read a few books on longevity. I think something everybody agrees on is that sugar is 00:32:44.660 |
harmful. No, I'm not militant about sugar. Like you can eat berries, fruit if you feel your body needs it. 00:32:56.420 |
But it's not true to think it's necessary to consume sweet things. Not for children, not for adults. 00:33:06.100 |
Red meat, I stopped eating it about 20 years ago because I just felt heavy every time I had it. 00:33:15.140 |
So I guess it's individual. My metabolism, my digestive system isn't agreeing with this kind of food. 00:33:25.540 |
So I normally eat seafood of all kinds and vegetables. This is the basic source of calories for me. 00:33:36.820 |
Yeah. And like all things you said, short-term pleasure isn't worth your future. So a lot of 00:33:42.580 |
things we all know that alcohol is destructive to the body. Tobacco, pills, processed food, sugar, 00:33:48.900 |
but society puts that on you, makes it very difficult to avoid. So I guess it all boils down to discipline. 00:33:56.180 |
Yes. And trying to identify the real cause of an issue you're experiencing. If you're experiencing a headache, 00:34:06.340 |
one solution would be to take a pill and then the headache disappears. What this pill would actually 00:34:15.700 |
do in most cases, it would mute the consequence, your feeling of pain. It's a painkiller. 00:34:25.380 |
It will not eliminate the root cause. So you have to ask yourself, what is it that is causing this 00:34:31.620 |
headache? Do I need to drink some water? Is the air quality here bad? Do I need to start getting more 00:34:41.060 |
sleep? Is there something wrong with people around me? They're stressing me out. There must be some 00:34:48.420 |
reason why you're experiencing a headache. But if you take a pill, you're not removing this reason. 00:34:54.580 |
You're actually making it worse. Because this harmful factor is still there. It's like you're piloting a 00:35:04.180 |
helicopter. And there's some red signals and red lamps starts to blink and it starts producing bad, 00:35:12.660 |
unpleasant noise. What would you do? You would try to figure out the cause and eliminate it. Maybe there's 00:35:20.260 |
some mountain next to you when you have to avoid it. Or you take a hammer and smash the signal. 00:35:28.500 |
I think the answer is quite obvious. So why are we constantly doing this regardless? Oh, because 00:35:33.940 |
everybody else is doing it. Because there's a whole industry trying to persuade you that this is the right 00:35:40.340 |
thing to do. So it's incredibly important to analyze yourself and try to get to the bottom of things. 00:35:48.740 |
So you generally try to avoid all pills, all pharmaceutical products. 00:35:52.660 |
Yes, I've been staying away from all of that since I became an adult. When you're a teenager, 00:36:00.100 |
your mom would typically say, we need to take this pill. Otherwise, you know, the world collapses. 00:36:06.340 |
Yeah. Once I became a grown up, I said, no, I don't think that the producers of pill are incentivized in the 00:36:16.820 |
right way. They're not really interested in eliminating the root of the problem. They would rather have me 00:36:25.300 |
dependent on the pills they're producing so that I could buy them forever. And then I also realized, no, 00:36:36.260 |
I'm not saying that you should never take pills. There are obviously some diseases that you can only 00:36:45.700 |
fight with antibiotics, for example. So I'm not suggesting we go back to the Middle Ages. But what I'm 00:36:55.940 |
saying is we overuse pills. Yeah, it's always good to study and deeply understand the incentives under 00:37:02.820 |
which the world operates. So that you don't get swept up into the forces that operate under these 00:37:08.340 |
incentives. And big pharma is certainly one of them. Pharmaceutical companies have a huge incentive to 00:37:14.980 |
keep the problem going versus solving the problem. It's wise. 00:37:18.180 |
So this is something I practice every day. I read some piece of news and I ask myself, 00:37:25.300 |
who benefits from me reading this? Then you can end up coming to this conclusion that maybe 95% of things we 00:37:37.540 |
read in the news have been written and published because somebody wanted you to 00:37:46.260 |
buy some product, support some political cause, fight some war, donate some money. Let's do something 00:37:56.020 |
that would benefit other people. And this is not a problem to support causes that you truly believe in 00:38:03.700 |
as long as it was your intentional choice and you're not being manipulated into fighting other people's wars. 00:38:13.540 |
And that takes us back to the original thing we started talking about, which is freedom. 00:38:17.540 |
One of the ways to achieve freedom of thought is to remove your mind from 00:38:23.460 |
the influences, the forces that manipulate you. That's really important to realize that the content you 00:38:32.660 |
consume, especially on the internet, when a large percentage of it is designed to manipulate your mind, 00:38:38.820 |
you have to disconnect yourself or be very proactive understanding what the biases, what the incentives 00:38:44.900 |
are. So you can think clearly independently and objectively. 00:38:49.620 |
And again, it ties back with restraint from alcohol, because if your mind is clouded, how can you analyze 00:39:01.620 |
yourself? You will always be dependent on opinions of others. You will always follow the mainstream. 00:39:10.900 |
And then whatever the authorities or whoever in charge will tell you, you'll believe it because you don't have 00:39:20.260 |
a tool of your own to rely on, to come to your own conclusions. 00:39:26.100 |
I have to ask you, this is something that came up. You don't watch porn. I don't think I've heard you talk 00:39:33.540 |
about this before. What's the philosophy behind not watching porn? You know, there's a lot of people that talk 00:39:38.740 |
about porn in general having a very negative effect on young men on their view of the world on their development 00:39:46.500 |
of their sexuality and how they get into relationships and all that kind of stuff. So what's your philosophy 00:39:54.420 |
I don't watch porn because I just feel it's a surrogate, a substitute for a real thing that 00:40:05.460 |
is not necessarily in my life. If anything, it just forces you to exchange some energy, some inspiration 00:40:18.100 |
to a fleeting moment of pleasure. It doesn't make sense. And in any case, as I said, it's not the real 00:40:25.860 |
thing. So as long as you can access the real thing, you don't need to watch porn. But then if you can't 00:40:34.740 |
access the real thing, you shouldn't watch porn as well. Because it means there's some deficiency 00:40:41.940 |
in your life, some problem that you have to overcome. 00:40:47.140 |
Uh, and again, this goes back to the theme of investing in a 00:40:53.140 |
long-term flourishing versus a short-term pleasure. 00:40:57.620 |
There's this, there's a theme to the way you approach life. 00:41:02.500 |
And I try to be strategic. I try to act under assumption that I'm not going to die in one hour 00:41:09.140 |
from now. And I'm going to stick around for a bit, despite the fact that we are all mortal. 00:41:14.900 |
So why would I exchange the mid and long-term for the short-term? Doesn't make any sense. 00:41:25.380 |
All right. We took a break and now we're back. I got to ask you about Telegram, the company. I got to 00:41:31.220 |
meet some of the brilliant engineers that work there. Telegram runs lean relative to other technology 00:41:38.100 |
companies that achieve the skill that Telegram does. It has very few employees. So how many people are on 00:41:44.180 |
the core team? Let's say the core engineering team. The core engineering team is about 40 people. 00:41:51.860 |
This includes back-end, front-end, designers, system administrators. 00:42:02.500 |
Can you speak to the philosophy behind, uh, running 00:42:12.340 |
quantity of employees doesn't translate to quality of the product they produce. 00:42:21.700 |
If you have too many people, they have to coordinate their efforts, constantly communicate, 00:42:33.460 |
coordinated the small pieces of work they're responsible for between each other. 00:42:38.500 |
The other problem with having too many employees is that 00:42:48.980 |
And if they don't get enough work to do, they demotivize everybody else by their mere existence. 00:42:55.380 |
They're still there, they're still getting the salary, but they don't do anything. 00:43:01.380 |
And if they don't do anything, more often than not, they will start 00:43:09.860 |
Maybe inside your team, but not by doing productive work, 00:43:15.700 |
but by finding problems that don't exist within the team. 00:43:22.980 |
And that can disrupt the team and the mood inside it even further. 00:43:29.620 |
Also, when you intentionally don't allow some of your team members to hire more people to help them, 00:43:46.020 |
In our case, we have tens of thousands of servers around the world, 00:43:54.580 |
almost 100,000, distributed across several continents and data centers. 00:44:01.300 |
If you try to manage this system manually, without automation, 00:44:09.860 |
you will probably end up hiring thousands of people, tens of thousands of people. 00:44:13.860 |
But if you rely on algorithms and the team is forced to put together algorithms 00:44:21.060 |
in order to manage it, then it becomes much more scalable, 00:44:26.100 |
much more efficient, and interestingly, much more reliable as well. 00:44:30.500 |
And more resilient to the changing geopolitics, to the changing technology, all of that. 00:44:37.460 |
So if you automate the distributed aspect of the data storage and all the compute, 00:44:43.860 |
then that's going to be resilient to everything the world throws at you. 00:44:47.300 |
I suppose if you have people managing all of it, it becomes stale quickly. 00:44:55.780 |
And if you have a distributed system that runs itself automatically, 00:45:04.980 |
you have a chance at increasing the security of speed and speed of your service. 00:45:12.580 |
While also making it much more reliable, because if some part of the network goes down, 00:45:21.620 |
you can still switch to the other parts of it. 00:45:25.060 |
Yeah, one of the big ways you protect your privacy is that you store the data. 00:45:32.900 |
The infrastructure side of Telegram is distributed across many legal jurisdictions with the decryption keys. 00:45:43.060 |
The decryption keys are split and kept in different locations so that no single government or entity can 00:45:52.420 |
Can you explain the strength of this approach? 00:45:58.260 |
we never wanted to have any humans, any employees, have any access to private messaging data. 00:46:11.460 |
That's why since 2012, when we've been trying to come up with this design, we've always invested 00:46:20.340 |
a lot of effort into making sure that nobody can mess with it. 00:46:25.540 |
Like if you hire an employee or any of the existing employee, 00:46:29.700 |
they can't break the system in the way that would allow them to access messages of users. 00:46:35.860 |
And then, of course, we launched an encrypted messaging that is even more protected, but it 00:46:43.780 |
So you still have to rely on encrypted cloud. 00:46:46.900 |
So an interesting engineering challenge was how you make sure that no point of failure can be created 00:46:58.100 |
So no employee can even access user messages. 00:47:01.620 |
So that's the thing, you know, we're talking about encryption, we talk about privacy, we talk 00:47:06.820 |
I think the number one thing that people are concerned about, about which there's also misinformation, 00:47:14.100 |
So Telegram is very, very protective of the private messages of users. 00:47:22.420 |
So you're saying employees never can access the private messages. 00:47:28.740 |
Have any governments or intelligence agencies ever accessed private user messages in the past? 00:47:39.060 |
Telegram has never shared a single private message with anyone, including governments and intelligence services. 00:47:48.340 |
If you try to access any server in any of the data center locations, it's all encrypted. 00:47:55.220 |
You can extract all the hard drives and analyze it, but you won't get anything. 00:48:02.980 |
It's all encrypted in the way that is undecipherable. 00:48:10.740 |
That's why we can say with confidence that hasn't been ever a leakage of data, any leak of data from Telegram. 00:48:23.380 |
Not in terms of private messages, not in terms of, say, contact lists. 00:48:27.700 |
Do you see in the future a possible scenario where you might share user private messages 00:48:36.180 |
with governments or with intelligence agencies? 00:48:39.940 |
We design a system in a way that's impossible. 00:48:47.380 |
And we won't do that because we made a promise to our users. 00:48:50.820 |
We would rather shut Telegram down in a certain country than do that. 00:48:56.100 |
So that's like one of the principles you operate under is you going to protect user privacy. 00:49:03.940 |
Without the right to privacy, people can't feel fully free and protected. 00:49:13.540 |
I'm sure you're pressured by all kinds of people, all kinds of organizations to share private data. 00:49:20.100 |
Where do you find the strength and fearlessness to say no to everybody, including powerful intelligence agencies, 00:49:29.860 |
including powerful governments, influential, powerful people? 00:49:36.500 |
I stood up for myself and for my values since I was a little kid. 00:49:45.060 |
I always had issues with my teachers because I would point out their mistakes during classes. 00:49:51.300 |
And at the end of the day, what's important is to remind yourself that you have nothing to lose. 00:49:57.940 |
They can think they blackmail you with something. 00:50:03.940 |
But what is it they really can really do to you? 00:50:10.980 |
But that brings us back to the first part of our discussion. 00:50:24.260 |
But if we lose one market or two markets or pretty much all of the markets, I don't care that much. 00:50:45.780 |
You think you should ban encryption in your country. 00:50:48.580 |
Like the European Union is trying to do now for all the member states. 00:51:00.820 |
They all think that somehow we profit from their citizens. 00:51:05.860 |
And the only goal tech companies have is extracting revenues. 00:51:11.060 |
And it's true, most tech companies are like this. 00:51:14.260 |
But there are projects like Telegram, which are a bit different. 00:51:22.500 |
So for you, the value of maintaining your integrity in relation to your principles is 00:51:31.860 |
And of course, we should say that you also have full ability and control to do just that. 00:51:41.460 |
So there's no other anybody with a say on this question. 00:51:46.980 |
There are no shareholders, which is quite unique. 00:51:52.020 |
I don't think there's anything even close to that in any major tech company. 00:51:55.540 |
And this allows us to operate the way we operate. 00:51:58.660 |
To build this project and maintain it based on certain fundamental principles. 00:52:09.620 |
Which, by the way, I think everybody believes in. 00:52:13.140 |
I think the right to privacy is included in the constitution of most countries, 00:52:20.100 |
But it's still under attack almost every week. 00:52:24.020 |
And it often starts with well-meaning proposals. 00:52:34.980 |
But at the end of the day, the result is the same. 00:52:38.580 |
People lose their right to such fundamental thing as privacy. 00:52:42.180 |
They sometimes lose their right to express themselves, to assemble. 00:52:46.100 |
And this is a slippery slope that we witnessed in pretty much every autocratic country. 00:52:52.580 |
Or country that used to be free and then became autocratic. 00:52:57.700 |
No dictator in the world ever said, let's just strip you away from your rights. 00:53:11.460 |
With very reasonable sounding justifications. 00:53:20.340 |
And after a few years, people would find themselves in a position when they're helpless. 00:53:37.780 |
So you see, telegram is a place that people from all walks of life, from every nation, 00:53:44.020 |
can have a place to speak their mind, to have a voice. 00:53:48.020 |
In the context, in the geopolitical context, you're mentioning that governments, 00:53:53.860 |
when they become autocratic, naturally, is the way of the world, human nature, 00:53:58.660 |
and the nature of governments, they become more censorious. 00:54:03.940 |
And always justifying it in their minds, perhaps assuming that they're doing good. 00:54:08.100 |
Perhaps some of them assume they're doing good. 00:54:10.900 |
But interestingly, it always results in the state accumulating more power at the expense of the 00:54:25.060 |
You know, we humans are not very good at finding the right balance. 00:54:31.860 |
And in this case, the right balance between chaos and order. 00:54:42.580 |
I think you still consider yourself a libertarian. 00:54:45.780 |
There is something about government that always, 00:54:48.660 |
over time, naturally, builds a larger and larger bureaucracy. 00:54:55.780 |
And in that machine of bureaucracy, it accumulates more and more power. 00:54:59.860 |
And it's not always that some one individual member of that bureaucracy is the one that corrupts the 00:55:08.820 |
initial principles on which the government was founded. 00:55:14.180 |
You begin to censor, you begin to limit the freedoms of the individual, the ability of the individuals to speak, to have a voice, to vote. 00:55:28.900 |
And the government is not some abstract notion. 00:55:37.140 |
They would naturally be inclined to increase their level of influence, to have more subordinates, 00:55:48.180 |
And that's how you end up in an endless loop of ever-increasing taxes, ever-increasing regulation, 00:55:57.620 |
which ultimately just suffocates free market, free enterprise, and free speech. 00:56:07.300 |
So you do want to have very, very strict limitations on the extent the government can increase its powers at the expense of citizens. 00:56:18.820 |
Ironically, you don't have those limitations. 00:56:22.100 |
You're supposed in all countries, which are considered to be free. 00:56:29.700 |
It's supposed to be the constitution that protects everybody. 00:56:32.580 |
But interestingly, it doesn't work always this way. 00:56:37.380 |
They are able to find very tricky phrasings in order to cover out exceptions. 00:56:48.180 |
On this topic, I'd love to talk to you about the recent saga of you being arrested in August of last year in France. 00:56:58.100 |
I think I should say that it's one of the worst overreaches of power I've seen as applied to a tech leader in recent history, 00:57:11.060 |
So it's tragic, but I think speaks to the thing that we've been talking about. 00:57:17.300 |
So maybe can you tell the full saga of what happened? 00:57:24.020 |
I arrived in France last year in August, just for a short two-day trip. 00:57:41.380 |
They read me a list of something like 15 serious crimes that I'm accused of, 00:57:53.860 |
At first, I thought there must be some mistake. 00:58:01.940 |
And they're accusing me of all possible crimes that the users of Telegram have 00:58:13.700 |
And they think I should be responsible for this. 00:58:19.860 |
It's something that never happened in the history of this planet. 00:58:28.980 |
did that to any tech leader, at least at this scale. 00:58:36.260 |
There are good reasons for that, because you're sacrificing 00:58:40.980 |
a big part of your economic growth by sending these kind of messages 00:58:50.580 |
put me in a police car, and I found myself in police custody. 00:59:15.300 |
In the process, I had to answer some questions of the policemen. 00:59:36.740 |
very limited understanding, or should I say even lack of understanding, 00:59:44.500 |
on behalf of the people who initiated this investigation against me, 00:59:49.860 |
about how technology works, how encryption works, how social media works. 00:59:56.660 |
I mean, there's something darkly poetic about a tech founder of a platform where a billion people 01:00:02.660 |
are communicating with each other, and you're on concrete, no pillow, for days, no windows. 01:00:10.180 |
It's like a book, I mean, it reminds me, I mean, he's a fan of Franz Kafka, and he's written about the 01:00:14.180 |
absurdity of these kinds of situations, hence the Kafkaesque stories. 01:00:19.380 |
There's a story literally about the situation that he wrote, perhaps predicted, called The Trial, 01:00:24.900 |
where a person is arrested for no reason that anybody can explain, and is stuck in the judicial system 01:00:32.020 |
for a long time, that nobody, fascinatingly in that story, neither the person arrested, 01:00:38.900 |
nor the system, any individual member of the system itself, fully understand what is happening. 01:00:46.740 |
And eventually the person, spoiler alert, is mentally broken by the whole system, 01:00:52.740 |
which is what bureaucracy can do in its most absurd forms. 01:00:57.140 |
It breaks the spirit, the human spirit, laden in all of us. 01:01:04.420 |
I agree with you on the absurdity of this thing. 01:01:09.860 |
Because if this was a good faith attempt to fix an issue, 01:01:17.220 |
there were so many ways to reach out to Telegram, to reach out to me personally, voice their concerns, 01:01:27.540 |
and solve any alleged problem in a way that is conventional and diplomatic, 01:01:34.340 |
the way every other country on this planet solves these problems, including with Telegram. 01:01:42.660 |
Yeah, you have a nice page showing, this is kind of like details that most people don't really think about. 01:01:50.820 |
But Telegram is at the forefront of moderating CSAM and terrorist groups. 01:01:59.220 |
There's a nice page, telegram.org/moderation, 01:02:02.660 |
that shows just the incredible amount of groups and channels that are engaged in terrorist activity 01:02:09.620 |
and CSAM activity that are blocked, actively blocked, found, and blocked by Telegram. 01:02:15.140 |
And a lot of this works, like you said, because of the automation that's done with machine learning. 01:02:21.940 |
This is stuff that most noobs like me who are just chatting it up on Telegram don't think about. 01:02:26.580 |
But there's just like an immense number of people essentially doing things that violate the law 01:02:35.460 |
on there, and you have to find them immediately and catch it. 01:02:40.580 |
And Telegram was doing a great job of dealing with that kind of content. 01:02:45.540 |
And what you're saying is the French government had no idea. 01:02:52.980 |
It's a concept that is challenging to explain to them. 01:02:57.380 |
But I think they will learn much more about it by the end of this investigation. 01:03:04.580 |
I mean, if you look at Telegram, we've been fighting harmful content that is publicly distributed 01:03:18.180 |
actually since the time we launched public channels on Telegram. 01:03:21.860 |
And since something like eight years ago, we had daily transparency reports 01:03:31.460 |
on how many channels related to child abuse or terrorist propaganda we've taken down daily. 01:03:41.060 |
Every day we've taken maybe we would take down hundreds of them. 01:03:49.300 |
And if you include all kinds of content that we remove, all the accounts, groups, channels, posts, 01:03:57.780 |
that would amount to millions of pieces of content every week, hundreds of thousands every day. 01:04:04.740 |
And then somebody would read the newspaper, get enraged because they would read something 01:04:11.700 |
about child porn, and this is a subject that is very emotionally charged. 01:04:17.860 |
And start doing something not based on data and logical thinking and laws, 01:04:29.220 |
but based on emotions driven from inaccurate input. 01:04:35.380 |
Yeah, I think we should make pretty clear that there's no world, 01:04:38.660 |
no reason that the French government should have arrested you. 01:04:43.460 |
So to be clear, you have to show up in front of a judge. 01:04:49.460 |
It would be hilarious if it wasn't extremely serious. 01:04:52.580 |
You have to show up in front of a judge every certain amount of time. 01:05:00.740 |
In France, they have this role of investigative judge. 01:05:04.420 |
I don't think you have it in many other places in the world. 01:05:12.180 |
And in France, it's not just the police or prosecutor asking me questions. 01:05:19.300 |
Which in my experience is more like still a prosecutor. 01:05:31.700 |
So if you're limited in countries where you can travel, 01:05:36.100 |
then to appeal that restriction will take you a lot of time. 01:05:40.180 |
The investigation itself should have never been started. 01:05:45.220 |
It's an absurd and harmful way of solving an issue as complicated as regulating social media. 01:06:02.980 |
So we objected and appealed the investigation itself. 01:06:12.820 |
We are still not even given a hearing date for the appeal. 01:06:21.620 |
Because the process is painfully slow, not just for me, but for everybody. 01:06:28.180 |
Which made me realize the system may be broken in many levels. 01:06:34.340 |
You have other entrepreneurs affected by the French justice system telling me horror stories about their experiences. 01:06:47.860 |
Where businesses got paralyzed by very unnecessary actions of investigative judges that ended up being unjustified and biased. 01:07:01.780 |
And in the end, you can perhaps solve it when you reach a higher court and you'll get justice. 01:07:13.860 |
But you lose a lot of time and energy in the process. 01:07:17.380 |
So this is the only thing that is, I hope, different. 01:07:22.180 |
And will be different in this case, compared to the story you told from Kafka. 01:07:29.460 |
I mean, but it does, as Kafka describes, break a lot of people with time. 01:07:35.780 |
To windy hope, we should say that you were for a long time not allowed to travel out of France. 01:07:45.700 |
Got to meet many of the people that work at Telegram. 01:07:52.580 |
But you're not allowed to travel anywhere else. 01:07:55.140 |
When do you think you're coming to Texas to hang out with me over there? 01:08:00.340 |
That's a hard question to answer because it doesn't depend on just my actions. 01:08:11.940 |
I will not let this limitation on my freedom dictate my actions. 01:08:27.860 |
I will, if anything, double down on defending freedoms, because I experienced firsthand 01:08:34.580 |
what the absence of freedom feels like, at least during these four days in police custody, 01:08:44.020 |
when you are just stuck, unable to communicate with people that are important to you, 01:08:56.100 |
when you don't even know what's going on in the world, 01:09:03.620 |
So I have no crystal ball that would tell me the future. 01:09:11.060 |
I think we've been able to gradually remove most of the restrictions initially imposed 01:09:23.380 |
If the French government or the French intelligence agency want to have a backdoor or a way to access 01:09:30.980 |
private user messages, what would you say to them? 01:09:35.220 |
Is there anything they can do to get access to the private user messages? 01:09:54.500 |
It's good to say because you're wearing a tie. 01:09:57.460 |
And yeah, this is a serious adult gentleman like program. 01:10:02.900 |
But that is a concern that people have is when you have so much pressure from governments 01:10:07.380 |
that over time, they'll wear you down and you'll give in. 01:10:10.900 |
And then, of course, other places use that as propaganda to try to attack you. 01:10:20.020 |
So it's a difficult medium in which to operate. 01:10:24.980 |
It's difficult to be you fighting for freedom, fighting to preserve people's privacy. 01:10:28.820 |
But is there something you could say to reassure people that you're not going 01:10:32.820 |
to sacrifice any of the principles that you've just expressed? 01:10:38.500 |
if the French government just keeps wearing you down? 01:10:41.060 |
I think the French government is losing this battle. 01:10:59.300 |
And I think I have proven that in the last several months, 01:11:03.380 |
when there were attempts to use my situation, being stuck here in France, 01:11:09.060 |
by approaching me and asking me to do things in other countries, blocking certain channels, 01:11:21.140 |
And not only I refused, I told the world about it. 01:11:25.780 |
And I'm going to keep telling the world about every instance. 01:11:30.820 |
Any government, in this case, in particular the French government, 01:11:42.580 |
And I would rather lose everything I have than yield to this pressure. 01:11:47.140 |
Because if you submit to this pressure and agree with something that is fundamentally wrong, 01:11:54.340 |
and it violates rights of other people as well, 01:12:01.300 |
You become a shell of your former self on a deep biological and spiritual level. 01:12:11.860 |
There are probably other people in the world that would consider that. 01:12:17.860 |
Telegram disappears to something people don't understand, 01:12:21.140 |
including in these intelligence services or governments. 01:12:35.620 |
Which, let's be clear, it's not something that I think is realistic. 01:12:41.700 |
But let's just think about it as a hypothetical situation. 01:12:49.300 |
I would rather starve myself to death and die there. 01:12:59.700 |
Let me ask you about an example of the thing you're talking about. 01:13:04.340 |
Tell the saga of Telegram in the Romanian election. 01:13:07.700 |
So amidst all this, you are still fighting to preserve the freedom of speech. 01:13:13.460 |
And what were some of the decisions you had to make? 01:13:15.380 |
So when I got stuck in France, unable to leave the country for a few months, 01:13:22.260 |
I was offered to meet the head of state foreign intelligence services through a person I know quite 01:13:32.500 |
Well, he's actually a well-known tech entrepreneur in France and he's well-connected. 01:13:45.860 |
I took the meeting and in this meeting I was asked to restrict what I see as restriction of freedom of speech in Romania. 01:14:02.260 |
I don't know if you followed the whole saga with the Romanian elections. 01:14:11.780 |
Now, Romania at that point when I had this meeting was preparing for a new presidential elections. 01:14:20.660 |
The conservative candidate was not somebody who the French government was supportive of. 01:14:26.500 |
So they asked me whether I would be shutting down or ready to shut down channels on Telegram 01:14:36.740 |
that supported the conservative candidate or protest against the pro-European candidates. 01:14:49.620 |
I said, look, if there is no violation of the rules of Telegram, which are quite clear, 01:14:57.220 |
But if it's a peaceful demonstration, if it's a peaceful debate, 01:15:07.620 |
We protected freedom of speech in many countries in the world, 01:15:12.260 |
including in Asia, in Eastern Europe, in the Middle East. 01:15:17.220 |
We are not going to start engaging in censorship in Europe. 01:15:25.220 |
And it was very clear to the guy who is the head of French intelligence. 01:15:31.140 |
that because I'm stuck here, you can tell me what to do, you're very wrong. 01:15:45.940 |
I had a small debate with him about the morality of this whole thing. 01:15:55.380 |
And then at a certain point, just disclose the content of this entire conversation. 01:16:03.700 |
I don't ever sign NDAs with any people like that. 01:16:06.900 |
I want to be able to tell the world what's going on. 01:16:16.500 |
that you would have people in the French government 01:16:26.260 |
Of course, if they had nothing to do with the 01:16:33.220 |
And use it to reach their political or geopolitical goals. 01:16:41.380 |
I consider it an attempt to humiliate myself personally and 01:16:54.020 |
And it's quite strange that the same agency asked us to do certain things in Moldova as well. 01:17:01.620 |
So even before that, I think it was October last year, 01:17:04.660 |
or September, I was arrested in Paris in late August. 01:17:10.580 |
And then again approached through an intermediary and asked, 01:17:16.100 |
would you mind taking down some channels in Moldova? 01:17:20.340 |
Because there is an election going on and we're afraid there's going to be some 01:17:34.020 |
representatives of the government of Moldova and take care of it? 01:17:39.860 |
We said, we're happy to take a look at it and see if 01:17:44.020 |
there is content there that is in violation of our rules. 01:17:49.860 |
And they sent us a list of channels and bots, some of them were, 01:17:53.460 |
so it was a very short list, and some of these channels and bots were 01:17:57.540 |
in violation indeed of our rules, and we took them down, only a few of them. 01:18:07.220 |
Then they said, thank you, and sent us another list of 01:18:16.180 |
We looked at these channels, we realized that there is no solid foundation 01:18:52.660 |
after Telegram banned the few channels that were in violation of our rules in Moldova, 01:19:02.820 |
they talked to my judge, the investigative judge in this investigation that has been started against me 01:19:12.260 |
and told the judge good things about me, which I found very confusing 01:19:20.500 |
and in a way shocking, because these two matters have nothing in common. 01:19:26.580 |
Why would anyone talk to an investigative judge that is trying to find out whether Telegram 01:19:55.300 |
blocked a few channels that violated our rules, 01:20:00.340 |
but before we refused to block a long list of other channels that were completely fine, 01:20:09.220 |
which I may not agree with, but it's their right to express them. 01:20:14.660 |
Not extreme views, not views that call to violence. 01:20:30.580 |
I told myself that there may be more going on here 01:20:36.340 |
that I initially thought. Initially, I thought 01:20:38.740 |
yeah, some people are confused about how technology works. 01:20:54.660 |
So by the time that the head of intelligence services met me to ask about Romania, 01:21:01.140 |
to help them silencing conservative voices in Romania, I was 01:21:23.860 |
political voices that the French government doesn't agree with. 01:21:26.980 |
And we should say that you have fought for freedom of speech 01:21:32.340 |
for left-wing groups and right-wing groups, it really doesn't matter. 01:21:35.860 |
So it's not, you don't have a political affiliation, 01:21:42.900 |
You're creating a platform that, as long as they don't call for violence, 01:21:48.100 |
allows people from all walks of life, from all ideologies to speak their mind. 01:21:54.420 |
And it happens to be conservative voices in the remaining election 01:21:58.420 |
that the French government wanted to censor because 01:22:04.740 |
and the government will be right-wing, you'll be fighting for 01:22:20.180 |
a channel of far-left protesters on Telegram in France. 01:22:25.140 |
We refused to do that. We looked at the channel, peaceful protesters. 01:22:30.420 |
It doesn't matter for us whether we're defending the freedom of speech of people 01:22:38.100 |
leaning right or leaning left. During COVID, we were protecting 01:22:46.660 |
activists that were organizing the Black Lives Matter events. 01:22:53.380 |
And the other side, the protesters against lockdowns. 01:23:24.980 |
people who haven't had this experience of living in 01:23:45.620 |
your values, your principles, your freedoms, your rights. 01:23:50.740 |
Because they don't understand what's at stake. 01:23:59.220 |
So you've, for many, many years, including currently, have spoken very highly of France. 01:24:07.700 |
I think this situation, this historic wrong that's been done 01:24:14.100 |
is, put simply, is just a gigantic PR mistake for France. 01:24:22.260 |
There's no entrepreneur that sees, that aspires to be the next Paul would do off to 01:24:26.820 |
create the next telegram, sees this, and wants to operate in France after seeing this. 01:24:35.060 |
There's a misapplication of the law, all kinds of pressures, all kinds of 01:24:39.060 |
behavior that seems politically motivated, all that kind of stuff. 01:24:42.660 |
All the excessive regulation and the bureaucracy. 01:24:45.540 |
A nightmare for entrepreneurs that dream to create something impactful and positive for the world. 01:24:50.740 |
So what do you think needs to be fixed about the French government, the French system, 01:24:56.100 |
and then zooming out? Because you see similar kinds of things in Europe 01:24:59.380 |
that could enable entrepreneurs, that could reverse the trend that we seem to be seeing in Europe 01:25:07.380 |
that is becoming less and less friendly to entrepreneurs. 01:25:15.380 |
what can be fixed? What can be fixed? What should be fixed? 01:25:24.340 |
where they want the ever-increasing public sector to stop increasing. 01:25:35.700 |
what they think should be the right size of government. 01:25:41.060 |
what they think is the right size of government that is the right size of government. 01:25:46.420 |
What they think is the right size of government, which is the right size of government. 01:25:48.900 |
What they think is the right size of government, which is the right size of government. 01:25:52.100 |
What they think is the right size of government, which is the right size of government. 01:25:53.140 |
What they think is the right size of government, which is the right size of government. 01:25:55.300 |
What they think is the right size of government, which is the right size of government. 01:25:57.300 |
What they think is the right size of government, which is the right size of government. 01:26:00.260 |
what they think is the right size of government, which is the right size of government. 01:26:05.460 |
So you have this disbalance where you have many more people representing the state 01:26:15.540 |
as opposed to people trying to bring the country's economy forward by creating great products and great companies. 01:26:25.780 |
the startup field and my field social media field has been affected by immensely. 01:26:32.420 |
There was one great startup in this realm in France in the last 10 years. 01:26:42.020 |
It was a location based social network was eventually sold to Snapchat, but before it was not sold. 01:27:01.860 |
And the first of the kind of this kind success story in France. 01:27:06.980 |
But then he sold anyway in a couple of weeks. 01:27:23.700 |
is that while he was trying to run his company, 01:27:28.660 |
competing with Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, having all this pressure from investors, 01:27:35.380 |
trying to hire the best people and persuade them to go to Paris. 01:27:40.180 |
And he did a great job, by the way, but while he was trying to do that, 01:27:46.900 |
he got also attacked by some silly investigation, again, involving the data protection issues, 01:27:57.460 |
which lasted forever and was gradually sucking blood of his team and his company. 01:28:06.420 |
And he said, "I'm going to go to Paris. I'm going to go to Paris." And he said, "I'm going to just sell it." 01:28:19.380 |
And at some point I think the pressure was too much, he decided, "I'm going to just sell it." 01:28:28.180 |
Eventually it turned out that there was no issue, the investigation ended, as far as I understand, with 01:28:38.660 |
no charges. But such investigations, they have a price, they have a cost. 01:28:43.940 |
And unless the society realizes the cost of projects, of companies, of startups that are never created 01:28:56.260 |
or are sold to the United States at the very early stage, or other countries, 01:29:02.340 |
resulting in decreased economic growth. Things won't change. I think we just talked to a guy a few days ago 01:29:12.260 |
who left France and started a business here in Dubai. And one of the reasons he had to leave France 01:29:19.300 |
is that the government started an investigation 01:29:24.740 |
on his company and they frozen his bank accounts. And this investigation 01:29:29.460 |
that involved taxes lasted for many, many years. I believe he said eight years. 01:29:37.860 |
the government reached to the conclusion that there was nothing wrong. He's good. It's okay. 01:29:44.340 |
In the meantime, his corporate bank accounts were frozen. His business died. 01:29:59.860 |
to retain sanity is because he moved to Dubai and started a new company, which is incredibly successful. 01:30:07.700 |
And now he's enriching this city, which we're in right now, with his great ideas and creativity. 01:30:15.940 |
And by the way, uh, you know, having interacted with him, there's like a fire in his eyes, 01:30:22.020 |
the human spirit that fuels entrepreneurship, whatever that is, he doesn't have to do. He's 01:30:26.980 |
made a lot of money. He probably doesn't have to do anything, but he still wants to create. 01:30:31.060 |
And that fire is what fuels great nations build, build, build, build, build new stuff, 01:30:36.580 |
expand all of that. And regulation suffocates that. 01:30:39.860 |
You have to cherish this people. But I guess the French public or some part of the French public was 01:30:46.100 |
misled. And I don't know when, maybe perhaps since the time of the French revolution to believe that 01:30:53.460 |
entrepreneurs are somehow their enemies. They're the evil rich people that are the cause of all problems. 01:31:04.260 |
If only you could make the rich share their ill-gotten wealth with the rest of the population, then every 01:31:15.380 |
problem will be magically solved. In reality, though, a lot of these people that are starting such companies 01:31:21.940 |
with fire in their eyes are sacrificing their lives, their livelihood, they're working 20 hours a day. 01:31:29.700 |
They're experiencing immense stress in order to fulfill their vision and bring value and good to the society 01:31:40.020 |
around them. They create jobs, they create great services, they create great goods, they make your country 01:31:46.020 |
grow, they make your people proud. You have to cherish them. But what does the system do to them? 01:31:54.580 |
It squeezes them out. Because perhaps there was somebody in the tax authority that decided to advance their 01:32:07.700 |
career and perhaps, you know, was too ambitious and not too smart. So as a result, the company was destroyed. 01:32:15.860 |
And now the same entrepreneur, by the way, who we talked to, is invited to come back to France. 01:32:22.900 |
He's been offered really good terms. He said, you're going to open this new venue on Champs-Élysées. 01:32:29.140 |
We're going to give you the best location. We're going to fund part of it. 01:32:32.740 |
Tax breaks. And he said, never, just forget about this. It's impossible. I'm not coming back to France. 01:32:41.140 |
He's traumatized by the experience. And he's French. He was born there. He has a French passport. 01:32:48.420 |
So unless things like this change, France will and the rest of Europe will keep struggling with economic 01:32:57.060 |
growth, with budget deficits, with unemployment, and all the other relevant social and economic metrics. 01:33:05.620 |
Yes, it's heartbreaking. Me, as many of these nations, I appreciate the historic and the cultural value. 01:33:12.340 |
And I hope Europe and France flourish. But this is not the components that are required for flourishing. 01:33:22.020 |
Quick pause. I need a bathroom break. All right, we had some tea. We're back. 01:33:28.100 |
Let's go back a bunch of years to the beginning. You mentioned you went to school with super intensive 01:33:35.380 |
education. So I thought it'd be really interesting to look at some of the powerful aspects of that 01:33:41.460 |
education from the languages to the math. Can you actually describe some of the rigorous aspects of it 01:33:46.900 |
and what you gained from it? At the age of 11, I got the opportunity to enter an experimental school 01:33:54.500 |
in St. Petersburg, where I lived. And we had to pass a rigorous test to get accepted. 01:34:01.940 |
The idea behind the school was that if you try to squeeze as much information as possible into a brain of a teenager, 01:34:13.860 |
making a focus on maths and foreign languages, then there will be some changes in the brain of the student 01:34:26.580 |
that will allow the student to understand most other disciplines. But we had a class as a result that 01:34:36.340 |
didn't have any single focus. It was very widespread across a lot of disciplines. You would have four 01:34:43.540 |
foreign languages at least, including Latin, English, French, German. In addition, you can get ancient Greek. 01:34:53.220 |
You would have classes like biochemistry or psychoanalysis, evolutionary psychology. 01:34:59.380 |
The difference of this class as opposed to other classes in the same school, which was 01:35:07.060 |
part of the St. Petersburg State University and called academic gymnasium, was that unlike other classes 01:35:14.820 |
which were specialized in physics or math or history, this one tried to get 01:35:24.500 |
the best from all of the specialized classes and bring them to one curriculum. 01:35:37.540 |
wasn't possible to become a straight-A student to be excellent in all the subjects. 01:35:48.100 |
So it's assumed nobody's able to handle it. You're just pushing the limits of the human mind. 01:35:52.740 |
Four languages in parallel: math, evolutionary psychology, just overwhelming the mind to see what happens. 01:35:59.620 |
Yes. See what happens. This was an experiment. 01:36:02.420 |
And it was in the middle of the 90s. Remember when 01:36:04.980 |
Russia, particularly its educational system, wasn't regulated as much as it is today. 01:36:12.820 |
It was in the middle between the two stages of the Russian history: the Soviet history and the modern 01:36:21.940 |
Russian history of the 21st century. In any case, I learned a lot from that experience. 01:36:30.500 |
First of all, why I got into the school is because I kept being kicked out from other schools. 01:36:38.020 |
Challenging authority. I was good at all subjects, but not behavior. 01:36:42.500 |
You know, we had this behavior grade in the Soviet Union in the early 90s. 01:36:48.500 |
Perhaps they even have it today. I'm not sure. 01:36:51.780 |
I was very bad at behavior. Always challenging the teachers, always pointing out their mistakes. 01:36:58.580 |
By the way, that's not such a bad thing, right? 01:37:00.180 |
Bad thing, right? Like if you were looking back, there's some value to that, right? 01:37:04.740 |
For young people to maybe respectfully, but challenge the authority, the wisdom of old, right? 01:37:12.500 |
I think I was very lucky to be able to do that and to be able to get away with it in the end. 01:37:22.020 |
Because normally, if you keep challenging authorities, you just get kicked out of all schools and then 01:37:30.580 |
you end up nowhere. So I eventually got into a school where challenging teachers was not fully okay, 01:37:39.540 |
but it was something that you could do. And then you would start a debate with the teacher. 01:37:45.940 |
And normally they would allow you to express your point of view. And then some objective truth may 01:37:53.780 |
come out of it as a result. But at that point, I was pretty bored with my life. You know, every 01:38:02.580 |
teenager gets to a point when they have this sort of existential crisis. What's the point of life? 01:38:09.780 |
What am I even doing here? At some point I decided, since I have to go to school anyway, 01:38:17.300 |
I might as well try to do something impossible and become the best students and get an A or what we 01:38:27.540 |
called five in the Russian system on every single subject. And that kept me busy for a while. 01:38:37.220 |
It was incredibly difficult because you didn't have enough time. Even if you just started all the time, 01:38:49.860 |
not doing anything else, you didn't have any time left to prepare all the homework tasks and get ready 01:39:00.020 |
for all the tests. So I ended up using the breaks between classes, but I get to the result I wanted to get to. 01:39:09.460 |
I got the excellent mark in every subject. And that kept me happy for a while. 01:39:18.660 |
What did you understand about an effective education system from studying four languages at the same time, 01:39:24.900 |
doing such a diversity? Like, if you were to design an education system from scratch for young people, 01:39:31.220 |
especially in the 21st century, what would that look like? You posted about the value of mathematics 01:39:38.180 |
Yeah, I still think math is essential. It's something that shapes your brain. 01:39:44.340 |
It teaches you to rely on your logical thinking, to split big problems into smaller parts, 01:39:53.700 |
put them in the right sequence, solve them patiently, trying again if it doesn't work. 01:40:02.580 |
It's exactly the same skill you need in programming and project management when you start your own company. 01:40:11.860 |
And it's one of the few subjects in school which encourages you to 01:40:18.900 |
develop your own thinking as opposed to rely on what other people have to say and just repeating their opinions. 01:40:31.780 |
That is extremely valuable. And of course, once you're good at math, 01:40:35.220 |
you can apply it in physics, in engineering, in coding. 01:40:41.860 |
And it's not surprising that most of the most successful tech founders and CEOs 01:40:50.660 |
are very good at math and coding because ultimately it's the same mental 01:41:03.140 |
But back then in the school, I realized something else as well. It's that 01:41:10.660 |
competition is really important. Competition is key. 01:41:16.980 |
This is what motivates a lot of teenagers when they're at school. 01:41:26.180 |
And if you remove competition out of the education system, you end up forcing kids to start competing 01:41:40.580 |
It's a trend you see now in many countries, including in the West. 01:41:43.620 |
When well-meaning authorities or parents say we don't want our kids to be too stressed. 01:41:49.940 |
We don't want them to feel anxiety. So let's just get rid of 01:41:56.020 |
all the public grading system, all these rankings of who won, who lost. We don't want any of that. 01:42:06.100 |
And part of it is justified, but as a result, some kids lose interest. 01:42:12.740 |
Yes, you eliminate the losers, but you end up eliminating the winners as well. 01:42:22.500 |
And then if you're overprotective of the kids in that age, they grow up, 01:42:30.900 |
graduate schools or universities, and they are still not prepared for real life, 01:42:36.340 |
because real life is constant competition for jobs, for promotions, for customers. 01:42:44.980 |
And it's more brutal. What you have as a result is high suicide rates, high unemployment, 01:42:51.540 |
all the things and negative trends you see now. In many countries which thought eliminating 01:42:59.540 |
competition from their education system was a good idea. 01:43:05.700 |
they still persist. They still think competition is a bad thing. They try to eliminate competition from 01:43:10.980 |
their economy as well, to an extent, saying we're gonna make sure the losers 01:43:18.420 |
don't lose and the winners don't get too much. 01:43:26.740 |
But as a result, they make their entire systems less competitive. The entire economies, 01:43:32.020 |
some of them in Europe, are now struggling to keep up with China, with South Korea, 01:43:41.860 |
with Singapore, with Japan, and other places where the education system was based 01:43:49.700 |
on ruthless competition. So this is a hard choice any civilization has to make. 01:43:55.860 |
We support competition, understanding that it eventually leads to progress in science and 01:44:03.780 |
technology, and abundance for the society at large. Or we remove competition, thinking that 01:44:12.100 |
somehow we can shield the future generations from the stress 01:44:21.620 |
Yeah, I mean, it's grounded in a good instinct of compassion. You don't want people who suck at a 01:44:27.380 |
thing to feel pain. But it seems like struggle is a part of life. Either you do it early or you do it later. 01:44:33.140 |
It's true. That's such a good point that competition does seem to be a really powerful driver of skill 01:44:41.460 |
development. Like you mentioned, pursuing mastery. There's something in human nature that, 01:44:48.180 |
especially for young people. If you can compete at a thing, you're going to be really driven to get 01:44:53.620 |
good at that thing. If you can direct that in the education system, as China does, as many 01:44:57.700 |
nations like you mentioned do, then you're going to develop a lot of brilliant people, resilient 01:45:04.340 |
people, people that are ready to create epic shit in the world. 01:45:07.620 |
I think there is a lot of evidence proving that we are biologically wired to compete and establish 01:45:16.100 |
our understanding of what our qualities are and talents are in relation to other people around us. 01:45:26.260 |
And this is one of the ways society self-regulates. Speaking of competition, your brother, 01:45:32.420 |
Nikolai, he's a mathematician, programmer, expert in cryptography. He has won the IMO International 01:45:41.300 |
Mathematics Olympiad. He got gold medal three times, ICPC programming two times, has two PhDs in mathematics. 01:45:51.460 |
And you have worked together for many years, creating incredible technologies that we've been talking about. 01:45:56.900 |
So what have you learned about just life from your brother? 01:46:01.620 |
Nikolai: Well, first of all, I must say, I learned pretty much everything from my brother. 01:46:07.460 |
Everything I know, because when we were used to be kids, 01:46:13.220 |
we slept in the same bedroom, like beds a few feet away from each other. And I kept bugging him with questions. 01:46:23.540 |
I would ask him about dinosaurs and galaxies and black holes and Neanderthals, everything I could think of. 01:46:34.420 |
Nikolai: And he was my Wikipedia back in the time when we didn't have internet access. He's a unique 01:46:42.100 |
prodigy kid, probably one of a billion. He started reading at the age of three, I think, 01:46:48.660 |
and he pretty fast got so advanced in maths that by the age of six, he could already read really 01:46:56.820 |
sophisticated books on astronomy. Sometimes when he did it in public places, like buses or metro, 01:47:07.380 |
my mom was criticized by people who were witnessing it. They would tell her, 01:47:13.940 |
why are you mocking your own kid with this serious book? It's obvious the kid can't understand everything 01:47:21.060 |
there. It's too complicated. Even we don't understand anything there. There's some formulas. 01:47:42.420 |
great facts, useful things, inspiring things. 01:47:48.180 |
He told me pretty much everything I know. At the same time, he's incredibly modest 01:47:55.860 |
and kind. And this is something I think a lot of 01:48:02.180 |
people that think they're smart, but not generally intelligent, lack. 01:48:11.300 |
More often than not, people who are truly intelligent, they're also kind and compassionate. 01:48:20.900 |
You actually have been staying out of the public eye for the most part. You've done very few interviews. 01:48:26.580 |
You're pretty low key, but your brother is in another level. He's been staying out of the public eye. 01:48:33.140 |
Part of it is his natural modesty. He doesn't need to do it. 01:48:39.700 |
He doesn't feel this urge to show off, brag about stuff. 01:48:47.220 |
I tried to avoid it as well, but at a certain point, I realized that 01:48:53.700 |
me being too private, too secretive becomes a liability because it creates this void, this emptiness that 01:49:02.580 |
people and organizations that don't like Telegram very much are willing to fill with inaccurate information, 01:49:13.220 |
and they're willing to spread the narratives about Telegram, which can result in 01:49:19.460 |
strange situations, some of which we discussed earlier. 01:49:34.180 |
And there's a deep integrity to you that I think is good to show to the world. 01:49:40.340 |
There's a lot of attack vectors on user privacy. And I think the most important, the last 01:49:45.540 |
wall of protection is the actual people that are running the company. 01:49:50.260 |
So it's important to some degree for you to be out there, to showing your true self. 01:49:54.340 |
So we should say that also, you didn't mention, but you're a programmer. 01:49:59.460 |
From an early age, you started coding at 10. First things you built were a video game at 11. 01:50:07.300 |
And then eventually, 10 years later, at 21, you programmed the initial versions of VK single-handedly. 01:50:13.780 |
Can you talk to me about your programming journey that led to the creation of VK? 01:50:17.700 |
What was the VK stack? Is it PHP, mostly? How did you figure out how to program websites? All of that. 01:50:26.420 |
I wasn't interested in programming websites at first. I didn't even have access to 01:50:31.140 |
the internet when I was 10 years old. But I liked video games. I didn't have enough of them. 01:50:39.140 |
And the scarcity forced me to start building more computer games, just to play myself. 01:50:46.660 |
It's actually an interesting thing that we sometimes don't realize it, but scarcity leads to creativity. 01:50:56.420 |
And one of the reasons you have so many people who love to code, coming from the Soviet Union or other 01:51:05.860 |
places which didn't have much access to modern technology, and more importantly, modern entertainment, 01:51:13.940 |
is that perhaps we were not so much distracted by all this abundance of different entertainment options. 01:51:25.460 |
Which is not to say it's bad to have those options. It's just a fact that we sometimes don't appreciate. 01:51:35.460 |
My brother would sometimes guide me, for example, I would create a turn-based strategy. 01:51:43.540 |
Of course, two-dimensional, backline three-dimensional is too much for me. 01:51:50.340 |
But it wasn't as slick in terms of the scrolling FPS, frames per second parameter. 01:52:07.380 |
And this kind of learning and training really shaped my coding skills when I was younger. 01:52:19.940 |
Then I started to create video games for my classmates. 01:52:25.060 |
When we played, for example, tic-tac-toe on an infinite field in my class during the breaks, 01:52:31.700 |
you know, not tic-tac-toe, but three in a row. 01:52:34.340 |
This was about five in a row in an infinite field. 01:52:41.220 |
And it gets quite complicated if you keep playing it. 01:52:47.540 |
And some of my classmates were really smart, you know, champions of math olympiads, 01:52:52.500 |
sons and daughters of professors at the university. 01:52:56.340 |
And I decided, no, I want to win every single time. 01:53:07.780 |
So I coded this game so that I would play against the computer. 01:53:12.180 |
And the computer would calculate, I think, four moves in advance to choose the optimal strategy. 01:53:25.060 |
Four moves in advance, I would still win over it. 01:53:28.260 |
If I tried to calculate five or six, it was too slow. 01:53:35.860 |
Eventually, I trained myself to win every single time. 01:53:51.220 |
And I could still retain some self-confidence. 01:54:03.060 |
None of my classmates wanted to play this game anymore. 01:54:09.460 |
So after that, when I got into the St. Petersburg State University, it was quite boring just to study because it was too easy. 01:54:24.260 |
I created a website for the students of my faculty first. 01:54:28.820 |
I organized the creation of digital answers to all exams and digitalized version of all lectures, which was something very unique back then. 01:54:46.900 |
I would put together a website where I would publish all these materials. 01:55:02.500 |
In a few years, I expanded to the university with all of its other departments and then to other universities. 01:55:13.380 |
We ended up having tens of thousands of users just as a student's portal. 01:55:20.660 |
We had all kinds of social features there, friends lists, photo albums, profiles, blogs, all of it. 01:55:31.780 |
And after I graduated the university, one of my ex-classmates from the school reached out to me after reading about my successes in a newspaper, the main business newspaper of St. Petersburg. 01:55:48.420 |
And he asked me, are you trying to build a Russian Facebook? 01:55:58.180 |
So we met, since he graduated an American university two years before that, he showed me Facebook. 01:56:05.220 |
I thought, well, I can already have all of this technology, but it's valuable to know which elements I should get rid of in order to scale this thing and have millions of users. 01:56:25.380 |
This is also something people don't appreciate, that sometimes in order to move forward and have more success, you have to get rid of things, including technology. 01:56:40.580 |
Both for scaling and for making it amenable to just growing the user base where people get it immediately. 01:56:51.060 |
Otherwise, it's just too complicated for the new user. 01:56:57.460 |
They will be asking you to add more stuff to make it even more complicated. 01:57:02.180 |
So it's easy to lose track and get disoriented if you're only relying on the feedback of existing users. 01:57:17.700 |
So as a result, I started the website called VKontakte or VK. 01:57:29.300 |
I graduated the university that same year and I wanted to remain in touch with my ex-classmen from the university 01:57:39.380 |
And of course, as a 20-year-old, I wanted to meet other people, including good-looking girls. 01:57:48.820 |
For that one, I thought I'm not going to use any third-party libraries, modules, 01:57:57.140 |
because I want to make it as efficient as possible. 01:58:04.260 |
But then how do you start something that large? 01:58:08.420 |
I didn't have any prior experience of creating a project of that scale, 01:58:17.620 |
Before, I would reuse some existing solutions. 01:58:27.860 |
He was a postdoc student in Germany at that time, 01:58:41.460 |
And he told me, "Just build a module to authorize users." 01:58:50.740 |
Just don't know, not just to log in, you know? 01:58:55.620 |
Because you can pre-populate the database with credentials and emails and passwords. 01:59:03.460 |
But once you see that you can type in your password, 01:59:08.900 |
you can type in an email and you're in and it tells you, "Hello," using your name, 01:59:15.780 |
"and then you will have a clear understanding where to go from there." 01:59:24.100 |
That's one of the best advice I've ever got in my life. 01:59:29.860 |
I started to build it and before I knew it, I would have 01:59:32.820 |
there on the website, photo albums, private messages. 01:59:38.580 |
This guest book we used to call The Wall back on IK and I guess in the early days of Facebook. 01:59:45.060 |
We'd end up building something even more sophisticated than Facebook at the time, 01:59:53.460 |
I had a girlfriend at the time ask her, "We need to 01:59:56.900 |
somehow come up with a database of all Russian 02:00:02.820 |
schools and universities and the departments and subdivisions." 02:00:07.540 |
She did a great job trying to source all this information online or sometimes 02:00:13.780 |
writing emails to universities saying, "Which departments do you have exactly at this point? 02:00:19.780 |
we need to know." Or reaching out to the Department of Education, 02:00:23.940 |
both in Russia and then in Ukraine and then eventually in Belarus and in Kazakhstan and other 02:00:31.140 |
countries where VK ended up to be the largest and most popular social network. 02:00:37.380 |
So we did a few things that were quite unique at the time. 02:00:44.500 |
And for the first almost a year I was the single employee of the company. 02:00:52.340 |
I was the back-end engineer, the front-end engineer, the designer. 02:01:07.380 |
coming up with all the awardings and announcements, coming up with competitions to promote VK, 02:01:16.100 |
which worked quite well. That was an incredible experience that 02:01:20.100 |
gave me knowledge of every aspect of a social networking platform. 02:01:29.460 |
Also understanding of how much a single person can do. 02:01:32.260 |
Exactly. It's one of the reasons why I'd like to think I'm an efficient project manager 02:01:46.740 |
take anything but ambitious deadlines from my team members. 02:01:54.100 |
If somebody gives me, oh, I needed three weeks to do that, I would reply, well, I built the first version of VK in just two weeks. Why would you need three weeks? 02:02:11.380 |
Three weeks? What are you going to do the rest of the three weeks apart from those three days? 02:02:18.660 |
And, you know, the team knows me and that's why we are able today at Telegram to move at a very good 02:02:26.500 |
pace of innovation. Every month we're pushing several meaningful features. 02:02:34.420 |
I think out competing everybody else in this industry in terms of 02:02:42.420 |
what you can do within a short time frame. So, yes, that experience was invaluable. 02:02:49.940 |
As for the stack, I started from PHP and MySQL, Debian Linux. 02:03:05.300 |
I started using memcached. Apache servers were not enough anymore. We had to 02:03:11.780 |
set up Engine X. And my brother was still living in Germany, so he couldn't help me much 02:03:18.660 |
for the first year of building VK. Sometimes I would manage to get through to him 02:03:25.060 |
through a call. I would use an old-school phone to call him with the wires. 02:03:29.620 |
I said, "What do I do? How do I install this thing called Nginx? I'm not a Linux guy." 02:03:34.580 |
If he felt particularly kind that day and not too busy, he would show me the way to do it or set it up himself. 02:03:45.540 |
But for the most part, I had to rely on just myself. 02:03:49.460 |
Having him there, though, helped when we started to grow fast and started to scale it. 02:03:59.060 |
Because at first you realize one server is not enough. I need to buy another one. 02:04:09.060 |
then another one and another one. The database should be in a different server. Then you have to 02:04:16.100 |
split the database into tables. Then you have to come up with a way to chart the tables using some 02:04:23.620 |
criteria that would make sense that wouldn't break your user experience. When we got to over a million 02:04:30.180 |
users and beyond a dozen of servers, surviving without the input from my brother in terms of taking care of 02:04:39.380 |
the scaling aspect of it became impossible. I remember asking him to come back. 02:04:45.300 |
He says, "You need to help me with this thing. It's starting to be really big." 02:04:49.780 |
What was worse is that since we became popular, somebody started to do DDoS attacks on us. 02:05:03.060 |
And then we had people that wanted to buy a share of VK. And interestingly, every time we had a 02:05:14.900 |
So we had to come up with a way to fight it. I remember having 02:05:26.740 |
many sleepless nights trying to figure it out. 02:05:29.460 |
So that was your introduction to all kinds of bad actors. DDoS, business. 02:05:35.940 |
Then later you'd find out there's such a thing called politics. And then later, geopolitics. 02:05:45.460 |
That it's not just about creating cool stuff. It's having to deal with, as you now have to deal with, 02:05:53.380 |
the telegram is seas of bad actors, trying to test the limits of the system, trying to break the system. 02:06:01.300 |
Unfortunately, if we didn't have bad actors and pressure, it would be the best job ever. 02:06:12.020 |
The help from your brother, like you mentioned, NGINX and sharding the tables. 02:06:19.060 |
Some of the scaling issue is algorithmic in nature. It's almost like theoretical computer science. 02:06:26.340 |
It's not just about buying more computers. It's figuring out how to algorithmically 02:06:35.620 |
make everything work extremely fast. So some of it is mathematics. Some of it is pure engineering, 02:06:43.540 |
Yeah. So at that stage, I could do the basic stuff. I could understand how I implement 02:06:50.980 |
scalability into the code base, how we short my tables 02:06:57.540 |
in the database, where I included memcached instead of direct requests to the database. 02:07:06.900 |
That was quite easy because it was still PHP back in the day. When my brother got back 02:07:17.860 |
from Germany somewhere around 2008, I asked him, can we make it even more efficient? Can we make it 02:07:25.540 |
super fast? And at the same time, so that we would require even fewer servers to maintain the load. And 02:07:32.900 |
he said, yes, but PHP is not enough. I'll have to rewrite a big part of your data engines in C and C++. 02:07:44.900 |
I said, okay, let's do that. He invited a friend of his to help him, another absolute champion in 02:07:54.180 |
world's programming contest twice in a row. And they put together the first customized data engine, 02:08:07.140 |
which was far more efficient than just relying on MySQL and memcached because it 02:08:14.100 |
was first of all, more specialized, more low level. So they rewrote it in C, C++? 02:08:21.300 |
A large chunk of it. Like for example, the search, the ad engine, because VK had a targeted ads, 02:08:28.420 |
they built that. It was very efficient what they did. Eventually the private messaging part, 02:08:36.020 |
the public messages part. At some point we realized there are very few websites online 02:08:49.060 |
I remember in 2009, I went to Silicon Valley and I met Mark Zuckerberg the first time and some of the other 02:08:58.180 |
core team members of early Facebook. Remember Facebook was just four or five years old then. 02:09:06.340 |
And everybody kept asking me, how come even here in Silicon Valley, VK loads faster than Facebook? 02:09:13.540 |
Everything seems to appear instantly on your website. What's the secret sauce? 02:09:20.180 |
That was one of the things that made them very curious. 02:09:24.260 |
And that was always important to you, to have very low latency, to make sure the thing loads. 02:09:28.740 |
Because that's one of the things Telegram is really known for. Even on crappy connections and all 02:09:33.700 |
that kind of stuff, it just works extremely fast. Everything is fast. 02:09:36.900 |
as one of the core technological ideas. We prioritize speed. We think that people can notice the difference, 02:09:47.540 |
even if it's just like 50 million millisecond difference. The difference is subconscious. 02:09:53.300 |
It also allows us not just to be faster and more responsive, 02:10:01.060 |
also more efficient when it comes to the infrastructure, the expenses. Because if your code 02:10:08.740 |
executes faster, it means you need fewer computational resources to run it. 02:10:14.980 |
So there is no way you can lose in making things faster. And that's why we have always been very 02:10:21.780 |
careful when hiring people. I would only hire a person if I'm ultimately certain it's the best option. 02:10:30.820 |
If you hire somebody who is maybe a little bit distracted, 02:10:36.820 |
unexperienced, you may end up with inefficiencies in your code base that results in tens of millions 02:10:46.020 |
of dollars of losses. And think about the responsibility. Like, if we jump to today from the VK days, 02:10:55.860 |
telegram is used by over a billion people. They open it dozens of times every day. 02:11:02.180 |
Imagine the app opens with a slight delay, say, half a second delay, multiplied by dozens of times by a billion. 02:11:13.220 |
It's centuries, millennia lost for humanity without any reason 02:11:24.180 |
That is so important to understand and so wise 02:11:27.700 |
that it's actually, if you're just a little bit careless as a developer, you can introduce inefficiencies 02:11:34.180 |
that are going to be very difficult to track down because you don't know that it can be faster. 02:11:39.220 |
Like, the code doesn't scream at you saying this could be much faster. So you have to actually, 02:11:44.020 |
as a craftsman, be very careful when you're writing the code and always thinking, 02:11:49.140 |
can this be done much more efficiently? And it can be tiny things because they all 02:11:53.860 |
propagate throughout the code. And so there's a real cost in having a careless developer anywhere 02:12:02.420 |
in the company because they can introduce that inefficiency and all the other developers won't 02:12:07.460 |
know. They'll just assume it kind of has to be that way. And so there's a real responsibility for 02:12:14.660 |
every single individual developer that's building any component of an app like telegram to just 02:12:21.220 |
always ask, okay, can this be done more efficiently? Can this be done more simply? And that's like one of the 02:12:28.420 |
most beautiful aspects, the art forms of programming. Right? 02:12:32.740 |
Oh yes. Because when you manage to discover a way to simplify things, make them more efficient, 02:12:41.620 |
you feel incredibly happy and proud and accomplished. And to your point, I can recall a few instances in my 02:12:50.980 |
career where firing an engineer actually resulted to an increase in productivity. Say you have two Android 02:12:59.780 |
engineers building the app and then just, they just can't make it. They're not keeping up with the pace of 02:13:09.380 |
the feature release schedule. And you think I probably have to hire a third one. But then you notice that one of them 02:13:21.300 |
is really weird falling behind the schedule, complaining some of the time, doesn't assume responsibility. 02:13:28.660 |
And you ask, so what if I just fire this person? And you fire this person. 02:13:33.140 |
And a few weeks, you realize you actually don't need any, you never needed the third engineer. 02:13:41.380 |
The problem was this guy who created more issues and more problems than he solved. 02:13:55.220 |
tech projects, we tend to think that you just throw more people into something and then 02:14:02.020 |
things get solved miraculously by themselves, just because more people means 02:14:11.060 |
Now, that's, again, extremely powerful. You know, Steve Jobs talked about A players and B players. 02:14:17.300 |
And there's something that happens when you have B players, which is kind of like the folks you're 02:14:22.740 |
talking about introducing to a team that can somehow slow everybody down, they demotivate everybody. 02:14:28.580 |
And it's very counterintuitive. They basically, part of the work of creating a great team 02:14:36.100 |
is removing the B players. It's not just hiring more. And generally speaking, it's finding the A 02:14:43.540 |
players, quote unquote, and removing the people that are slowing things down. 02:14:47.220 |
Oh, yes. Because the other thing that people don't realize is how demotivating working with the B 02:14:53.540 |
player is. Everybody can tell if the other person, the other engineer they're working with 02:15:00.980 |
is really competent. And if it's very visible, if the person is not comfortable, they're asking the wrong 02:15:07.220 |
questions. They keep lagging behind. And at a certain point, if you're an A player, 02:15:16.580 |
you get this dissatisfaction, this feeling that you are not able to realize your full potential, 02:15:26.340 |
accomplish what you're really meant to accomplish because of this person working next to you or 02:15:34.260 |
pretending to work next to you. And by the way, in some cases, it's not because the person is lazy. 02:15:39.940 |
In some cases, it's just the mental, the intellectual ability is not there. It's not about experience. 02:15:50.340 |
Most often, it's about natural ability and persistence. 02:15:55.380 |
In 90% of cases, it's just the inability to focus on one task for an extended period of time. 02:16:05.140 |
Not everybody has this ability. So for people who do have this ability, it's an insult 02:16:12.980 |
to work alongside someone who is distracted and cannot go deep 02:16:20.740 |
in the projects that they're responsible for. 02:16:24.660 |
What's on this small tangent, what's your hiring process? So you've shown, you've talked about how you 02:16:33.700 |
use competitions often, coding competitions to hire to find great engineers. What's your thinking behind 02:16:39.380 |
that? Well, it's in line with my overall philosophy. I think competition leads to progress. If you want to 02:16:47.300 |
create an ideal process for selecting the most qualified people for certain specific tasks you have in mind, 02:16:56.340 |
what can be better than a competition? A coding contest where everybody who wants to join your company 02:17:03.700 |
as an engineer or just wants to get some prize money or validation can demonstrate their skills, 02:17:10.980 |
and then we just select the best. Or if we are not certain because there's not enough data 02:17:18.820 |
to hire somebody, we just repeat the contest with another task, get more data, get more winners, 02:17:29.140 |
then repeat it again. And at some point you realize, oh, actually this guy has competed in 10 of our 02:17:37.940 |
contests since he was 16 years old or 14 years old. Now he's 20 or 21. He won in eight of these competitions. 02:17:47.860 |
He seems to be really good in JavaScript and Android, Java, and also C++. Why not hire this person? 02:17:58.180 |
And there's some consistency there. And a lot of these people, they have never worked 02:18:06.980 |
in a big company before, which is priceless. Because in a big company, people tend to shift responsibility. 02:18:17.220 |
They have this shared responsibility. They have this shared responsibility where nobody fully understands 02:18:23.300 |
who can take credit for a project, who can take blame for a project. 02:18:28.420 |
Inside Telegram is pretty clear. And these competitions are the closest experience to 02:18:41.860 |
what people will have when working at Telegram. So for example, we want to implement certain very 02:18:49.620 |
tricky animation and redesign toward the profile page of the Telegram as Android version. And the Android app, 02:18:59.620 |
it's an open source app. Anybody can take its code and play with it. So as a result, we would not just 02:19:07.380 |
select the best person and hire this person. We would also select the best solution to the problem because 02:19:13.620 |
we would not suggest the contestants to solve trivial problems. It's something that's valuable. It saves a lot 02:19:21.060 |
of time for us in terms of development. And because I always had these large social media platforms, 02:19:29.220 |
which I could use to promote these competitions. Somehow both VK and Telegram 02:19:36.260 |
were very popular among engineers and designers, other tech people. I had no issue to find, 02:19:47.300 |
to promote these concerts and find the right people ever. And what can be better than 02:19:53.780 |
for an employee of your company, of somebody who has been a user of it? 02:19:58.980 |
If this person has no prior experience of using Telegram, their understanding would be very limited. 02:20:06.500 |
Why would I even try to hire somebody from LinkedIn who worked at Google and other companies, 02:20:22.340 |
is used to shift responsibility and being stuck in endless meetings and have very limited understanding of 02:20:38.100 |
Yeah. And then, but because of that, you're extremely selective and slow in hiring. 02:20:43.940 |
So like people really have to earn their spot. And as a result, I got a chance to sit in, 02:20:51.300 |
in one of the team meetings where people discuss the different features that are being developed, the different 02:20:56.740 |
ideas, some of which are at the very cutting edge. And so you get to see behind the scenes, how it's 02:21:02.100 |
possible to have such a fast rate of idea generation. So you generate the idea, you implement the prototype and 02:21:08.900 |
then you eventually, it becomes an actual feature in the product. And so that's why you have this kind of 02:21:16.580 |
half hilarious, half incredible fact that for many, uh, as compared to WhatsApp and Signal, 02:21:25.460 |
you've led the way and many of the features, many of the features we take for granted now, 02:21:29.300 |
many of which we, uh, know and love, like the auto delete timer that was seven years ahead of any other 02:21:38.980 |
messenger message editing, replies. These are all like obvious things you I've even forgotten for some 02:21:48.340 |
of them that they even were never part. I mean, I think auto delete timer is a really brilliant idea. 02:21:54.260 |
We implemented it in 2013 in the secret chats. It's funny thing about it is then when other apps started 02:22:00.980 |
to copy it, like WhatsApp seven years after and then Signal and some other of these apps, 02:22:07.540 |
they initially even copied the exact timestamps. So for example, if we had like one, three and five 02:22:16.340 |
seconds, they would also have one, three and five seconds. Yeah. They tried not to change it because 02:22:20.900 |
they were not sure what was the magic sauce behind the feature. And ironically, it happens with 02:22:28.100 |
many of these things. For example, when we designed how you reply to a message and you have a small 02:22:35.460 |
snippet showing that you're replying to this message and now you were typing your response, then there is 02:22:41.700 |
a small snippet in the message itself that if you tap on it, highlights the original message you're 02:22:48.100 |
replying to. Seems pretty obvious, but there are certain design decisions that we were implementing at the 02:22:55.220 |
time and we got this vertical line on the left and all these other small things that are completely 02:23:01.300 |
arbitrary, right? You can do it in a different way. But somehow the entire industry ended up copying exactly 02:23:07.860 |
that solution. So now whenever you go to WhatsApp, Instagram direct, Facebook messengers, 02:23:14.100 |
Signal, it doesn't matter. You would see exactly the same or pretty much similar experience, 02:23:21.860 |
because nobody really wants to take the risk and innovate. If something works, why not just copy it? 02:23:31.300 |
Yeah, but we should say that it's done extremely well, the vertical line and the highlighting. 02:23:35.700 |
I mean, all of these are tiny little strokes of genius. By highlighting the text in a certain way that 02:23:42.500 |
from a design perspective makes it very clear that this part was written before and the thing under it is 02:23:49.940 |
your reply. The distinction between the different formatting of the text. I mean, there's a... 02:23:54.340 |
Listen, I know how much typography is an art form. There's a lot of interacting, graphic, 02:24:04.500 |
artistic elements inside Telegram that all have to play together extremely well. Like you pointed out 02:24:09.940 |
to me, this thing that just blew my mind, which is the background gradient of Telegram shifts, it changes, 02:24:17.860 |
and it adjusts really nicely to the bubbles, the chat bubbles. And then there's like graphic elements 02:24:25.860 |
on top of the gradient that are all interplayed together. So all of that has to work really nicely, 02:24:31.140 |
without sacrificing clarity. Everything's just intuitive. That's very difficult to create. 02:24:37.300 |
That is art. And on top of that super fast. That's the hardest part. To make it look so that designers 02:24:44.260 |
love it is one thing. The real challenge is make it look the way the designers love it and make it work on 02:24:52.660 |
the weakest device as possible, oldest, cheapest smartphones you can imagine. So if you take the 02:25:00.980 |
moving gradient on the background of every Telegram chat, this is something most people don't notice, 02:25:10.020 |
but they can feel it. Yeah. They notice it subconsciously or something like that. There 02:25:15.300 |
is a pleasant feeling. There's a pleasant feeling when you're reading a chat. And that's where 02:25:22.900 |
the design contributes to that. I think a gradient really does. I really love that about Telegram, 02:25:30.020 |
the gradient. Not the technical thing you described, but the feeling of it. And then the technical aspect 02:25:35.620 |
of creating that feeling is incredible. I could probably come up with all kinds of algorithms of 02:25:40.500 |
rendering that gradient that's going to be super inefficient. And so doing that efficiently is like... 02:25:46.180 |
like... Or efficient but not too beautiful because even doing something so trivial as a gradient can 02:25:55.220 |
result in noticeable lines in the gradient that person can instantly say, "Oh no, it's not the right 02:26:02.100 |
thing." So you can have to introduce certain randomness there. And then you have the gradient, but it's not enough. It's too plain. You want to 02:26:10.580 |
have certain pattern as an overlay, but it should be simple enough not to distract you from the content, but it has to be entertaining enough to create a good feeling about the whole app. 02:26:22.820 |
And another question, what kind of objects you want to include in this pattern? And how this pattern would work? Will it be based in pixels? 02:26:34.500 |
Or would it be vector-based? And would it be vector-based? So they will be infinitely scalable and high quality? 02:26:42.820 |
And then I think for the default pattern and the default background, which is based on four colors, it's not a gradient based on two colors. It's four colors. 02:26:51.540 |
And they're constantly shifting. I probably look through several thousand variations of that. 02:26:59.300 |
Because this is such an important decision to make. It's the default background. Of course, you can change it. 02:27:05.220 |
Actually, you can set up your own four colors for that. You can change it. 02:27:10.260 |
Yes, you can do it. And you want to rely on certain deeply hard-coded biological properties of the human mind, right? 02:27:19.380 |
So which color do you want to use? Is it going to be blue? Is it going to be yellow? Is it going to be green? 02:27:26.500 |
Because each color has a different meaning in our brain. And what kind of objects you want to put there? 02:27:33.620 |
Something from our childhood, something from nature, or something that can create a different kind of mood. 02:27:42.180 |
And this is just one detail of the app. So there are many details. 02:27:45.620 |
So you want the input field to slowly morph into the actual message. 02:28:04.740 |
And you want this to be done regardless of the contents of the message. 02:28:09.700 |
Because sometimes the width would be different. Sometimes it would be containing media, or 02:28:13.860 |
a link preview, or other stuff that will change the message bubble. 02:28:20.980 |
So you go through countless different scenarios and make sure every one of them works great. 02:28:29.860 |
Even if this message contains 4,000 characters. 02:28:35.140 |
And then you look at all the platforms, iOS, Android, and all the old devices, all kinds of outdated 02:28:43.060 |
operating systems and the hardware. And you cross the tool because you can have 02:28:50.900 |
this really bad old phone, but using the newest operating system version. So what do you do? 02:29:03.940 |
And then, of course, since Telegram works on tablets as well, and our iOS version works on an iPad, 02:29:10.740 |
which I love a lot, you have to understand that everything can be really big, so it can consume 02:29:18.980 |
a little space on your screen. And then it will trigger using more computational resources to render it. 02:29:27.940 |
So there are a lot of nuances to it. But as long as you obsess over every small detail, 02:29:34.820 |
at least every detail that really counts, you can get to a user experience. If you're really used to 02:29:40.740 |
Telegram, if you've been a regular user for at least a few weeks, going back to any other messaging app feels like 02:29:51.460 |
a serious downgrade. Yeah, I mean, there's so many really magical moments, like for example, 02:29:57.460 |
the way a message evaporates, when you delete it, that is a really pleasant experience. 02:30:04.420 |
experience. Oh, yeah. And boy, was it hard to make particularly on Android. This is this Thanos 02:30:14.340 |
snap effect, right? So the message is broken to tens of thousands particles, which go away like dust in the 02:30:22.660 |
wind. It looks great. But it was so hard to make probably one of my one of my favorite GUI graphical 02:30:33.620 |
things. It's just art. It's pure art is incredible. So it's good to hear that it's been really fought over and 02:30:44.580 |
No, you can't pull it off if you're not going deep in this. And then you don't want to distract people from 02:30:54.820 |
their communication with all this additional animations. So you want them to be invisible 02:31:04.420 |
in a way. They create the feeling, but they don't create distraction. 02:31:08.820 |
Yes. And in order to do that, you have to overcome even more challenges. For example, 02:31:16.740 |
you mentioned this deletion effect, message evaporates. If you do the animation, if you show 02:31:22.900 |
the animation first, and then the message that is preceding the deleted message that is going after the 02:31:29.620 |
just deleted message move closer to each other, then it doesn't feel right. It feels too long, 02:31:37.780 |
too imposing. So what you want to do is you want the message disappear while the messages around it go 02:31:48.180 |
closer to each other to fill the resulting gap. And then you imagine what it involves, 02:31:54.900 |
redrawing the entire screen. So on top of this very complicated animation, 02:32:03.700 |
you have to think about things like which kind of messages were there before after that just adds to 02:32:13.700 |
And once again, on all kinds of devices, all kinds of operating systems, all kinds of tablets, 02:32:20.980 |
But you know, once you accomplish it, it gives you this immense sense of pride. Because nobody is doing this. 02:32:29.380 |
Nobody really cares. In a way, maybe they're right not to care. Maybe nobody notices this. 02:32:36.740 |
But there is something about it that feels wrong when such things are neglected. Because I understand 02:32:42.740 |
that every day, tens of millions of people around the world deleting messages. 02:32:50.660 |
what kind of experience they get. Is this an experience that maybe even subconsciously inspires them 02:32:59.620 |
and makes their hearts sing even a little bit? Fills them with joy, lightens up their mood even a little 02:33:09.620 |
bit by 0.001%. Or is it something that is just basic? And I think if we can 02:33:22.500 |
bring some value in people's lives. Even through these subtle details, we have to definitely invest our 02:33:30.980 |
time in it. And some joy, not just sort of value, value like productivity, but joy. I think Steve Jobs, 02:33:37.780 |
Johnny Ive talked about this. They will put so much love and effort in the design of everything, including 02:33:44.420 |
things that weren't visible in the initial PCs, personal computers, because they believe that you somehow, 02:33:50.740 |
through osmosis, the users will be able to feel the love that the designers put into the thing. 02:33:56.340 |
And you're absolutely right. I mean, it's not about deleting messages. Like, I feel a little 02:34:02.740 |
inkling of joy when I see that evaporation animation. It's just nice. I'm happier because of it. And like, 02:34:14.020 |
so I feel that effort. And I think, you know, billion users feel that people like when other people care. 02:34:22.900 |
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's exactly what it is. And of course, there's the more sexy things like all the 02:34:30.420 |
emojis and the stickers, the gifts. Many of those are just, they're a little like art pieces. 02:34:38.740 |
That's again, an intersection of art and technology. Because you look at the stickers, 02:34:44.020 |
which Telegram launched way before most of these other apps. 02:34:49.860 |
Ahead of WhatsApp. Yes. But the stickers that WhatsApp ended up launching three years and 02:34:56.100 |
eight months after were not, the first version was not really good because they just did regular GIFs or 02:35:04.580 |
WebM videos, which were not based on vector graphics. What we did is vector animations. Each of these 02:35:16.340 |
stickers is only several kilobytes, sometimes maybe maximum 20, 30 kilobytes in size. But it says 180 frames. 02:35:26.260 |
We were able to run them at 60 frames per second on all devices. And it's also very challenging. 02:35:33.780 |
It was a challenging thing to do. We had so much headache trying to make it work. Nobody 02:35:39.620 |
even tried to do anything like this before us because it's crazily difficult. But as a result, 02:35:46.260 |
you have this fluid animations. You have this really nice user experience. Somebody sends you a sticker. 02:35:51.780 |
You don't have to wait for it to load because it's so lightweight. And it starts moving instantly. 02:35:57.780 |
And then, of course, it's not just engineering. You have to find designers that are able to create the stickers 02:36:06.340 |
using vector graphics, which means they're based on curves described by formulas, not just created as 02:36:14.580 |
photographs with pixels. Where do you find these people? Again, we did competitions. But it was not easy to 02:36:23.700 |
to assemble a team of artists/ artists/ engineers, that are able to do something like this. This is a unique 02:36:33.780 |
form of art. And this allowed us to do a revolution in stickers, then another revolution in animated emoji that 02:36:45.540 |
added into messages, added into messages, custom animated emoji. I don't think anybody did that. 02:36:50.340 |
I think Telegram is still the only one allowing users to do that because you can include a hundred of 02:36:56.020 |
animated emoji in a message and they will be animated and they will be moving and your device won't crash. 02:37:04.020 |
it's probably unnecessary and crazy, but we think somewhere in this intersection of art and engineering, true quality is created. 02:37:15.220 |
we expanded into what we call Telegram gifts, which are essentially blockchain-based collectibles that you can 02:37:24.420 |
demonstrate on your Telegram profile so that they get social relevance. But you can also use them to 02:37:30.900 |
congratulate your friends and close the one with their birthdays and other holidays. And that was received 02:37:40.660 |
Yeah, they can hold value, they can increase in value, you can trade them for that in that aspect. But to me, 02:37:45.940 |
the vector graphics, it's not just simple graphics, it's incredibly intricate graphics. So the vector makes 02:37:56.900 |
it very efficient, but it also allows you to create, maybe incentivizes the artist, enables them, incentivizes 02:38:06.980 |
them to create super detailed, intricate elements. And then the final result, like you would think it 02:38:13.860 |
wouldn't matter, but the final result has like a lot of stuff going on. And it allows you to scale on 02:38:19.460 |
arbitrary devices. And now it's like this little, you know, like usually gifts from like back in the day 02:38:27.700 |
and still in meme form are low resolution. And so that descents, usually people don't put details and 02:38:35.140 |
intricate art into it. But here with vector graphics, it's like, like a million things going on. And it allows 02:38:41.860 |
you to play with different animations, like you showed me, this thing where you send and you hold 02:38:46.980 |
for a while on the send button. And so you can share with the person you send a message to, 02:38:53.700 |
this animation that you've encoded, like there's a bunch of stuff going on when they read the message. 02:38:58.020 |
Yes, we have a lot of features like that, when we use this art to allow people to express themselves. 02:39:07.620 |
And most people don't even know about these features. 02:39:09.620 |
I didn't know about it. That's cool. That's cool. 02:39:12.020 |
The other application of the same technology is reactions on Telegram. Because we made it a goal 02:39:21.700 |
to make sure that people feel joy when they just send you a like. Something so trivial is just 02:39:32.900 |
adding a like to a message should be an action that you want to perform again and again and again. 02:39:42.820 |
So another feature is on the more serious side is NTN encryption. So you led the industry in that. 02:39:49.380 |
It was launched one year and three months ahead. Can you speak to why you decided to add NTN encryption, 02:39:57.860 |
how you developed the encryption algorithm in the beginning? What was your thinking behind that? 02:40:02.100 |
So at 2013, when we were launching Telegram, we were aware of the 02:40:12.420 |
serious issue with privacy that Edward Snowden made very clear. 02:40:21.140 |
And we thought, yes, we're designing this product in a way that is already extremely secure, but we want to make 02:40:29.220 |
sure that not even we can access user messages. And we understood very clearly that a bunch of people 02:40:37.060 |
who were born in Russia don't necessarily inspire trust. So that's why we made Telegram open source. 02:40:44.900 |
So all our apps have been open available on GitHub since 2013. 02:40:50.900 |
And then we added NTN encryption in our secret chats, which 02:40:56.500 |
WhatsApp copied a few years after. One year and three months ahead, they just started to test it. 02:41:10.260 |
three years after us. And the only reason I think the rest of the industry had to do it is because 02:41:18.500 |
It was incredibly important back in the day. And at the same time, we realized certain limitations 02:41:33.060 |
design, that architecture, you can't support very large chat communities with consistent, persistent chat 02:41:44.260 |
histories. You can't support huge one-to-many channels. You'd have issues with maintaining 02:41:59.140 |
multiple device support becomes tricky. People will end up losing some of the documents they share. 02:42:06.180 |
So we also saw a lot of issues. And we ended up having this sort of hybrid 02:42:14.340 |
experience where, depending on your use case and your requirements, you can choose the level of 02:42:26.660 |
So that's why you chose to go opt-in for end-to-end encryption. 02:42:30.340 |
So the trade-off there that you're describing is between, for people who really care about specific 02:42:36.500 |
messages, extreme privacy on those messages, and usability, like being able to sync across multiple 02:42:43.780 |
devices, having groups that are 200,000 people. So all of those features that quality of life 02:42:51.940 |
features, there's a trade-off between those and end-to-end encryption. So you lean towards 02:42:57.220 |
letting users sort of enable end-to-end encryption for cases when they want to be super secure. 02:43:04.500 |
Yes, and secret chats are not just end-to-end encrypted. You know, there are certain limitations 02:43:09.060 |
that are both their feature and the bug. For example, you can't screenshot them. You can't forward 02:43:15.380 |
any document any message from them, which is not necessarily something you need when you're trying 02:43:24.900 |
to get some work done and you're just communicating with your team on a project. So it became very 02:43:33.540 |
clear to us that there are different needs here. And if you try to combine both in one type of chat, 02:43:42.020 |
you will end up losing a lot of utility. You know, we at Telegram, we don't use any 02:43:51.460 |
collaboration tool for teamwork. We use Telegram to build Telegram. So we felt instantly when we were 02:43:59.300 |
trying to switch to, say, secret chats to share large documents and try to get work done. It was just 02:44:08.100 |
not adapted for it. At the same time, if you were really paranoid, you think, you know, I don't want to be 02:44:17.300 |
screenshot it. I don't want to have any leaks. I don't even trust Telegram. I only trust code. 02:44:27.460 |
Secret chats are the best option. I believe it is the most secure means of communication today. 02:44:35.300 |
And we should say that there's a lot of other aspects to this that are important. For example, 02:44:40.580 |
Telegram is the only app that has open source reproducible builds for both Android and iOS. 02:44:47.380 |
Why is this important? So you need reproducible builds in order to verify that the app really 02:44:55.380 |
does what it claims, really encrypts data in a way that it is described on its website. 02:45:02.420 |
For that, you need to make your apps open source for any researchers to have a look at it. 02:45:15.220 |
Telegram has been open source since 2013. Apps like WhatsApp have never been open source, 02:45:23.300 |
so you don't really know what they're doing and how exactly they encrypt your messages. 02:45:28.420 |
What's important here, though, is to understand whether the version of the app that you download from the 02:45:37.940 |
app store corresponds exactly to the source code that you can view on GitHub. And for that, you need 02:45:50.580 |
As you said, Telegram is the only popular messaging app that does that. We allow people to make sure both on Android and the IRS that the source code of Telegram on GitHub and the app you're actually using is the same app. 02:46:05.620 |
I think it's incredibly important, not just to gain people's trust, but just to stay transparent and open about it. 02:46:13.700 |
Telegram's secret chats are the most secure way of communicating, I really mean it. 02:46:21.780 |
Because I haven't seen any fact contradicting this claim, at least among the popular messaging app, you say WhatsApp, Signal, iMessage. 02:46:36.660 |
None of them have reproducible builds on both iOS and Android. 02:46:40.660 |
None of them have, at least at the same level, put so much effort into making sure that the 02:46:51.060 |
algorithms that you use in order to encrypt data are not algorithms that have been handed to you 02:47:03.220 |
by some agency in order to create a honeypot. 02:47:09.620 |
At least, from what I know about our competitors, I don't think they went through the same process. 02:47:22.500 |
So we should say that the entirety of the software stack in Telegram is done from scratch internally to Telegram. 02:47:28.100 |
So we're talking about not just the encryption, but everything running on the servers. 02:47:32.340 |
So the servers are built out, the hardware and the software are all done internally, 02:47:37.300 |
which is one of the ways you reduce the attack surface on the entire stack that handles the messages. 02:47:48.260 |
Because if Snowden's relations taught us anything is that very often open source tools, modules, libraries 02:47:59.700 |
that are used by everybody ended up having certain flaws and security issues 02:48:10.420 |
It's also a way to make sure you're doing things the most efficient way possible. 02:48:24.260 |
You really have to have exceptional talent in your team to achieve this level of thoroughness, 02:48:32.420 |
to go to a low level of coding that allows you to recreate from scratch database engines, 02:48:44.420 |
Because the programming language we use on the back end 02:48:53.140 |
to develop the API for the client apps is also entirely built by our team. 02:48:59.860 |
Yeah, so minimizing the reliance on open source libraries is extremely difficult. 02:49:05.140 |
Because most companies, they rely on open source libraries. 02:49:09.460 |
Well, I wouldn't say we're completely independent from that. 02:49:15.780 |
There's no way of avoiding it for us at the moment. 02:49:18.100 |
But for the most part, we are much more self-reliant than most other apps. 02:49:28.420 |
A long time ago, you wanted to work together with him. 02:49:30.580 |
Perhaps to share expertise to understand the full realm of what it takes to achieve cyber security. 02:49:42.340 |
What lessons do you learn from what he has uncovered? 02:49:45.780 |
And maybe even broadly, what impact has his work had on the world, do you think? 02:49:52.020 |
Well, the main lesson is not everything what it seems. 02:49:56.020 |
And you would discover, and this is something that I found quite shocking at the time, 02:50:09.460 |
security and cryptography experts ended up being agents of the NSA in one way or the other, 02:50:31.540 |
your government that was supposed to be limited in how it can surveil its people actually doesn't 02:50:41.700 |
And that was very valuable for the world to understand. 02:50:50.420 |
I guess it also can be a lesson demonstrating that we humans don't get their balance right. 02:50:55.940 |
So, 9/11 created a situation when the government had to respond. 02:51:10.900 |
It ended up in derogating certain basic rights and freedoms, including the right to privacy, 02:51:16.660 |
because the government always wants to increase its powers, and the government always tries to do it 02:51:25.700 |
You have the situation when the cure is worse than the disease. 02:51:31.220 |
I think I was incredibly brave to do what Edward did. 02:51:39.940 |
Whoever sees him in person, we keep in touch, we sometimes communicate. 02:52:00.420 |
the full force of various governments, intelligence agencies. 02:52:07.460 |
Is there any intelligence agency you're afraid of? 02:52:14.020 |
I think they're all equally, should be equally afraid of or equally not afraid of. 02:52:20.740 |
It's not that this intelligence service can kill you and the other can't kill you. 02:52:27.460 |
I guess they all can kill me, one way or the other. 02:52:29.860 |
But it's a matter of whether I'm afraid of death. 02:52:33.300 |
This goes back to the beginning of our conversation, I think, multiple times. 02:52:37.460 |
So you're in general fearless in the face of the pressure. 02:52:41.380 |
That would be a very bold statement, but I proved to be quite stress resilient. 02:52:49.940 |
You can have fear, but you overcome this fear. 02:52:53.540 |
I don't think there's anything at this point that can happen to change the way I am. 02:53:14.260 |
Government pressure that you refused to give into that led you to create Telegram and let go of VK. 02:53:24.100 |
And then in 2018, Russia and Iran decided to ban Telegram. 02:53:36.820 |
And so in 2018, Telegram started to become popular. 02:53:41.620 |
I think we had something like 200 million users. 02:53:50.740 |
And it increasingly became popular in places like Iran and Russia and other countries where sometimes 02:53:58.020 |
people have something to hide from the government. 02:54:07.940 |
In Iran, people used Telegram to protest against the government. 02:54:12.660 |
They had these huge channels that they would use to organize the protests. 02:54:23.300 |
And eventually the government couldn't keep up. 02:54:28.820 |
People would still keep using it though, using VPNs. 02:54:36.580 |
The government invested a lot in coming up with their own messaging app. 02:54:45.460 |
They had several teams competing for the title of the national Iranian messaging app. 02:54:56.980 |
Interestingly, Iran banned Telegram, but WhatsApp wasn't banned. 02:55:06.420 |
At the same time, starting in mid-2017 or late-2017, Russia 02:55:14.180 |
demanded that Telegram hands them the encryption keys. 02:55:22.100 |
Something that would allow them to read messages of every person on Telegram. 02:55:27.780 |
Or at least every person on Telegram in Russia. 02:55:56.100 |
And we came up with this technology that allowed us to rotate IP addresses, replacing them with new ones. 02:56:03.540 |
Every time the sensor blocks our existing addresses. 02:56:19.940 |
We set up this movement called digital resistance when system administrators and engineers 02:56:26.900 |
all around the world, both inside and outside Russia, could set up their own proxy servers 02:56:32.500 |
and their own IP addresses for Telegram to rely on in order to bypass censorship. 02:56:41.140 |
We ended up spending millions of dollars on that. 02:56:50.900 |
There would ban IP addresses and larger subnets of IP addresses than 02:56:57.540 |
huge subnets, which resulted in a weird situation where parts of the country's infrastructure started to go down. 02:57:05.540 |
Like people were trying to pay for groceries in the supermarkets and 02:57:10.340 |
nothing would work because the Russian sensor blocked too many IP addresses. 02:57:17.700 |
And some of the subnets were used to host other unrelated services. 02:57:24.820 |
Even some Russian social networks and media got affected. 02:57:32.740 |
start being more selective in how they combat 02:57:39.540 |
The biggest resistance we got at the time was from Apple. 02:57:53.780 |
for at least four weeks that we have to come to an agreement with Russia first. 02:58:05.620 |
push your update for Telegram worldwide, except for Russia. 02:58:23.860 |
Stop allowing users from Russia to download the app from the App Store, 02:58:35.940 |
We helped organize certain protests in defense of Telegram and privacy and freedom of speech in 2018 in Moscow. 02:58:43.300 |
There was hilarious people flying paper airplanes. 02:58:48.260 |
And at some point I decided I have to make a statement. 02:58:52.900 |
I have to say that Apple sided with the censor. 02:58:57.460 |
that we are trying to do the right thing here, but without Apple we can't do much. 02:59:04.020 |
Because people can't download your app anymore. 02:59:12.900 |
I published it in my channel and then New York Times picked it up with the 02:59:18.100 |
picture of the protesters flying paper airplanes. 02:59:40.900 |
since we've been unable to update Telegram for more than a month, 03:00:02.980 |
Some features that used to work stopped working. 03:00:13.940 |
from other parts of the world experienced issues with Telegram. 03:00:26.900 |
nothing changes and Apple doesn't allow us to 03:00:38.260 |
Let's keep going because the rest of the world is more important. 03:00:43.860 |
Which by the way, removes all the people that want to protest, 03:00:51.220 |
in the most popular messaging app in that part of the world. 03:00:56.260 |
Magically, 15 minutes to the time I was planning to 03:01:14.900 |
And we managed to keep playing this hide-and-seek game with the sensor, 03:01:24.340 |
bypassing censorship through digital resistance. 03:01:29.460 |
in Iran it was a little bit different because we realized it would have been too expensive 03:01:35.780 |
to try to come up with all these IP addresses. 03:01:41.780 |
And in addition, it was not clear whether we wouldn't be in violation of the sanctions regime. 03:01:55.140 |
for people who would set up proxy servers for Telegram. 03:02:06.340 |
could come up with a proxy server, distribute its address 03:02:13.460 |
And whoever connected through the proxy of this person would be able to see a pinned chat, 03:02:22.260 |
an ad placed there by the system administrator, the owner of the proxy. 03:02:39.540 |
which resulted in Iranians fixing their own problem. 03:02:48.820 |
millions or maybe tens of millions of Iranian users. 03:02:52.980 |
Up until this day, I think Telegram is still banned in Iran today, but we probably have 03:03:01.540 |
something like 50 million people relying on Telegram from that country. 03:03:20.660 |
I learned of something that you've never talked about 03:03:23.860 |
at the time, have not talked about to this day, 03:03:29.620 |
that there was an assassination attempt on you using what appears to be poisoning in 2018. 03:03:37.780 |
I think to me, it showed the seriousness of this fight to uphold the freedom of speech 03:03:43.540 |
for everyone, for all people on Earth that you're doing. 03:03:49.140 |
I have to say, it would mean a lot to me if you tell me this story. 03:03:54.340 |
Well, this is something I never talked about publicly because I didn't want people to freak out. 03:04:01.620 |
particularly at the time it was in spring 2018. 03:04:11.220 |
ton, a blockchain project, working with all kinds of 03:04:20.420 |
In the meantime, we had a couple of countries trying to ban telegram. 03:04:25.380 |
So it wasn't exactly the best moment for me to 03:04:29.540 |
start sharing anything related to my personal health. 03:04:36.100 |
But that was something that is hard to forget. 03:04:41.140 |
That, you know, I never fall ill. I believe I have perfect health. 03:04:52.340 |
I don't take pills because I don't have to take pills. 03:04:57.700 |
And that was the only instant in my life when I think I was dying. 03:05:04.180 |
I came back home, opened the door of my townhouse, the place I rented. 03:05:09.940 |
I had this weird neighbor, and he left something for me there around the door. 03:05:20.260 |
And one hour after, when I was already in my bed, so I was living alone, I felt very bad. 03:05:44.980 |
But while I was going there, I felt that the functions of my body started to switch off. 03:06:19.300 |
But one thing I was certain about is, yeah, this is it. 03:06:27.220 |
Because I couldn't breathe, I couldn't see anything. 03:06:40.020 |
And then I collapsed on the floor, but I don't remember it. 03:07:21.300 |
And I decided not to tell most of my team about it. 03:07:33.860 |
Did that make you afraid of the road you're walking? 03:07:43.620 |
Meaning all the governments, all the intelligence agencies, all the people. 03:07:51.140 |
Like we mentioned, it's like you're playing a video game. 03:07:54.740 |
You started with VK where you're just trying to build a thing that scales. 03:07:59.540 |
And all of a sudden, you find out there's DDoS attacks attacking the security, 03:08:12.580 |
And all of these forces are interested in controlling channels of communication. 03:08:20.660 |
And you're just a curious guy who created a platform for everybody on the earth to talk. 03:08:29.220 |
And all of a sudden, you realize there's a lot of people attacking you. 03:08:43.860 |
If anything, I felt even more free after that. 03:08:49.140 |
It wasn't the first time I thought I was going to die. 03:09:01.300 |
something bad is going to happen to me a few years before that, 03:09:09.140 |
But after you survive something like this, you feel like you're living on bonus time. 03:09:31.220 |
And the first time you're referring to, would that have to do with the complexity that was happening 03:09:41.540 |
And then you had to figure out the increasing pressure and you had to figure out what to do. 03:09:46.580 |
And you understood that you're losing control of VK at that moment? 03:09:51.700 |
The first of these instances was in December 2011. 03:09:56.020 |
December 2011, you had this huge protest on the streets of Moscow. 03:10:03.060 |
They didn't trust in the integrity of the election results to the state Duma in Russia. 03:10:11.860 |
And I remember in 2011, I still lived in Russia, running VK. 03:10:18.180 |
So the government demanded that we take down the opposition groups of Navalny from VK 03:10:28.900 |
that had hundreds of thousands of members and that were used to organize this protest. 03:10:42.980 |
I just decided it's not the right thing to do. 03:10:51.220 |
And I mocked the prosecutor who handed me that demand. 03:11:01.940 |
a photo of a dog in a hoodie with its tongue out. 03:11:07.460 |
And I said, this is my official response to the prosecutor's request to ban the opposition groups. 03:11:18.180 |
But then, I had armed policemen trying to get into my apartment. 03:11:24.580 |
And I thought about many things at that moment. 03:11:37.220 |
And I came to the conclusion that I made the right choice. 03:11:43.060 |
And I asked myself, what would be the next thing? 03:12:02.260 |
And I told myself, I'm going to starve myself to death. 03:12:11.940 |
They're ready to die for other people or certain principles they strongly believe in. 03:12:20.340 |
I guess Edward Snowden was ready to die as well. 03:12:29.140 |
Also, at that moment, I realized there's no way to communicate securely. 03:13:06.980 |
It was only after Telegram started this push for encryption 03:13:13.860 |
that these other apps suddenly remembered that privacy was in their DNA. 03:13:24.980 |
But it must have been a dormant gene in 2011. 03:13:42.260 |
I'm definitely launching a secure messaging app. 03:14:02.740 |
more recently in the French investigation case. 03:14:16.500 |
I'm going to be allowed to run VK the way I wanted it to run. 03:15:00.020 |
First, I really have to say for myself, from I think millions, maybe hundreds of millions, 03:15:08.980 |
maybe the entirety of Earth, thank you for putting your life on the line in those cases. I think freedom of 03:15:14.180 |
speech is fundamental to the flourishing of humanity. 03:15:21.300 |
willing to put everything on the line for their principles. 03:15:36.100 |
And the fact that you would spend many hours with me. 03:15:47.860 |
There is increasing indication, I think, from things I've seen online that Russia is considering 03:15:58.660 |
First of all, do you think this might happen? 03:16:01.060 |
And what effect do you think this might have on humanity? 03:16:04.420 |
And in general, what do you think about this? 03:16:11.220 |
There have been certain test attempts to partially ban it. 03:16:16.500 |
Telegram is no longer accessible in parts of Russia, such as Dagestan. 03:16:21.220 |
And it will be incredibly sad if Russia restores its attempts to ban Telegram. 03:16:30.260 |
Because currently, it's been used by its population for all kinds of purposes. 03:16:39.140 |
Not just personal communication or economic business activities. 03:16:46.020 |
But also, it's the only platform which allows the Russian people to access independent sources of 03:16:55.780 |
If you think about media outlets such as BBC or any other non-Russian sources of information, 03:17:06.340 |
they're only accessible in Russia through Telegram, in the form of Telegram channels. 03:17:19.380 |
And as you said, there are indications that Russia is planning to migrate 03:17:29.220 |
users from existing messaging apps such as WhatsApp and Telegram to their own homegrown tool, 03:17:40.020 |
which would of course be fully transparent to the government and wouldn't allow voices independent 03:17:56.820 |
We see these attempts in countries that are not famous for protecting freedom of speech, 03:18:05.140 |
but also increasingly in countries that have been known to protect freedoms. 03:18:12.180 |
And this creates this vicious circle because in a way European countries trying to fight freedom of speech 03:18:24.260 |
under pretexts that sound legitimate, such as combating misinformation or election interference, 03:18:34.340 |
they create precedents and they legitimize restrictions to freedom of speech, which then can in turn be used 03:18:48.340 |
And they would say in places like China or Iran, that they're not doing anything different. 03:19:00.260 |
It's a norm now to restrict voices that don't go in line with the mainstream narrative. 03:19:11.620 |
That's sad because one of the things that makes our life interesting is this abundance 03:19:18.980 |
of different viewpoints, of different people that we get to experience. 03:19:26.660 |
You limit the freedom of people, you inevitably decelerate economic growth, 03:19:34.580 |
level of happiness, the way people can contribute to the society, the way people can express themselves. 03:19:40.820 |
I personally think it would be a huge mistake to ban a tool like Telegram 03:19:46.980 |
in any country, particularly a large country such as Russia, 03:19:52.100 |
because the Russian people are incredibly talented and resilient people. 03:19:59.220 |
they are among the first to start utilizing some of these recent innovations that Telegram implements. 03:20:12.900 |
also the Americans, perhaps other people from Eastern Europe, like Ukrainians and Southeast Asians, 03:20:20.980 |
they're among the first people to start using any new edition that we launch. 03:20:32.180 |
So all that said, there's, as part of the propaganda and in general, 03:20:40.660 |
I've read a bunch of things that are, I think in a systematic way, 03:20:46.260 |
lying about you, lying about Telegram, from all angles. 03:20:52.980 |
Why do you get attacked so much by everybody? 03:20:55.940 |
Well, protecting freedom of speech is not a way to make it over France. 03:21:02.900 |
Because you would inevitably find yourself in a situation where 03:21:07.300 |
you would be protecting the freedom of the opposition 03:21:34.900 |
or our opposition shouldn't be trusted and allowed to express themselves because they're 03:21:45.140 |
rival, a geopolitical force that wants to destroy our country. 03:21:51.140 |
This is something that every authoritarian regime in history used. 03:22:09.060 |
we need to limit your freedom of speech because 03:22:11.220 |
these people who are masquerading as opposition are actually 03:22:17.860 |
the agents of this other country that wants to take over. 03:22:21.540 |
That's why, dear citizens, forget about their freedoms. 03:22:25.540 |
And now, increasingly, you see similar attempts in 03:22:31.380 |
The initial instinct from, say, President Macron's team, 03:22:38.980 |
for example, the footage of his wife slapping him, 03:22:43.460 |
would be to say it's all fake Russian imagery, 03:22:54.580 |
something that is misinformation or interference. 03:23:03.380 |
information, they have to refine the narrative. 03:23:08.260 |
you find yourself in a situation that you're running this platform, 03:23:14.420 |
like Telegram, and then you protect the freedom to express 03:23:20.100 |
of ideas that don't go in line with the mainstream narrative, 03:23:32.340 |
in this crossfire, when the forces in power will say that 03:23:37.620 |
you must be working with some foreign government that they don't like. 03:23:45.860 |
oh, if you're protecting these voices, it's not right. 03:23:49.860 |
They love you when you're protecting the freedom of speech 03:23:58.660 |
or better yet, in a country that is their geopolitical rival. 03:24:14.340 |
And they say, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, we love you for protecting freedom of speech, but not here, not in my backyard. 03:24:20.180 |
We don't need it here. We're all right. We have free press. 03:24:27.860 |
And then you will find yourself in this weird spot that Ukrainians say you work for the Russians, the Russians say you work for the Ukrainians. 03:24:39.700 |
And all this schizophrenia is something that we had to deal with for some time, because it's a very easy way to attack you. 03:24:49.140 |
At some point, you don't understand where it is coming from. 03:24:56.500 |
We must give credit to our competitors if it's their invention to launch these kind of rumors, because 03:25:04.100 |
at a certain point, they must have realized they can't compete 03:25:08.980 |
technologically on the product side, so they must do something like this. 03:25:16.980 |
Or it's just governments launching these rumors, trying to discredit the platform, trying to 03:25:22.020 |
scare their citizens away from it, because they understand that their 03:25:27.860 |
power and grip of their own country is in danger, as long as they allow a pro-freedom platform to operate. 03:25:38.180 |
And through all of this, we should say over and over that you 03:25:42.580 |
are simply preserving the freedom of speech for all people of Earth, no matter what they believe. 03:25:48.900 |
As long as they don't call for violence, and as long as they're not doing 03:25:54.420 |
some of the criminal activity that we discussed, including terrorists organizing. 03:25:59.300 |
But other than that, it doesn't matter what they believe, left wing or right wing, 03:26:02.580 |
you're just preserving their freedom of speech. 03:26:04.500 |
Do you think people of Ukraine, people of Russia and people of Iran, people of all over the world, 03:26:09.300 |
understand that, despite the propaganda against you? 03:26:14.980 |
Every time I meet somebody from one of these countries you mentioned, 03:26:19.540 |
in real life, people recognize me in the street, say here in Dubai. 03:26:24.020 |
They come over, they seem incredibly grateful and understanding. 03:26:32.180 |
The propaganda in each of these countries would tell them a number of things, but they learned to discount it. 03:26:41.300 |
That's why they're so happy that Telegram exists, is because the way they can 03:26:50.740 |
understand the world around them is to receive conflicting, mutually exclusive viewpoints 03:26:58.980 |
from sources that hate each other, and try to understand what really is true. 03:27:07.860 |
Because there is no such thing as an unbiased source of information. 03:27:17.780 |
I instantly realized Telegram is going to be used to spread propaganda by both sides. 03:27:26.340 |
And I didn't want Telegram to be used as a tool for war. 03:27:33.460 |
And I posted it publicly, I suggested maybe we should just 03:27:38.580 |
suspend the activity of all politics-related channels in both countries for the time of the war. 03:27:47.860 |
Maybe we shouldn't have channels in these two countries. 03:27:54.980 |
And then interestingly, people from both countries 03:28:04.580 |
They told me, both people in Ukraine and in Russia, that I don't get to babysit them 03:28:13.140 |
and decide for them what sources of information that they have to be granted access to. 03:28:23.940 |
They are grown-ups that can make these decisions for themselves. 03:28:28.340 |
They understand that there is a lot of propaganda. 03:28:35.940 |
They learn to be able to tell truth from lie. 03:28:40.900 |
And in this time of war, it was particularly valuable for them 03:28:45.300 |
to receive as much information as possible, because their relatives, their friends, 03:28:53.460 |
who are getting affected are still getting affected. 03:29:08.020 |
If you ask most people in any of these countries, 03:29:14.820 |
access to Telegram should be restricted for whatever reason? 03:29:20.420 |
They need a voice and they need a place to share their opinion securely. 03:29:27.940 |
I have to ask you in the question of leadership. 03:29:29.700 |
In the LaPointe interview, the journalist said that you're often compared to Elon Musk. 03:29:39.220 |
And you highlighted some interesting nuances around that, that you're quite different, 03:29:43.700 |
that Elon runs several companies at once while you only run one. 03:29:48.420 |
And Elon can lean more on the emotional side while you deliberate and think deeply before acting. 03:29:57.940 |
Also, there's an interesting point that he made, that everybody's weakness is also a strength. 03:30:05.460 |
There's a dual nature to all our characteristics. 03:30:08.740 |
So, on the topic of Elon, what have you learned from his style of leadership? 03:30:18.340 |
First of all, I don't think there is such thing as a negative personal trait. 03:30:27.700 |
In most cases, our bad traits and our good traits are the same trait, or at least have the same source. 03:30:35.140 |
Of course, there are some extreme examples, but I'd say 99% of people, if you analyze the character, 03:30:43.380 |
their bravery can be seen in recklessness in other situations. 03:30:48.580 |
Depending on circumstances, you would see exactly the same personality trait, 03:30:57.220 |
and it would be either a good thing or a bad thing. 03:31:18.500 |
And even if you take a person as complicated as Elon, 03:31:28.500 |
I believe that certain traits that Elon demonstrates, that people criticize about him, 03:31:39.780 |
For example, his emotionality is derived from the fact that he cares about issues deeply. 03:31:49.860 |
And he's willing to start as many wars and as many fights as it takes to change the world in the direction that 03:32:00.660 |
He also seems to be able to extract motivation from all these wars and personal conflicts. 03:32:08.420 |
Which is, again, not something to be underestimated. 03:32:15.860 |
At a certain point in the life of a successful entrepreneur, the question of motivation starts to be the primary question. 03:32:25.060 |
If we are talking about the richest person in the world, and the most famous entrepreneur in the world, 03:32:33.380 |
you have to wonder, how does he motivate himself? 03:32:40.020 |
And if starting a war on X, debating certain issues, or becoming personal with other CEOs, criticizing them, 03:32:56.260 |
if these activities help Elon to innovate and start new projects, he should be doing more of it. 03:33:09.540 |
There's nothing wrong in being non-agreeable. 03:33:15.700 |
Actually, it's one of the main traits of a successful entrepreneur, not agreeing with things. 03:33:23.060 |
And every time somebody like Elon, but there is no somebody like Elon, it's just Elon. 03:33:29.140 |
I think, at least from the entrepreneurs I know, and I personally interacted with, he's unique in the sense that he 03:33:38.660 |
He keeps launching new things, running them in parallel, and he doesn't seem to be stretched too thin. 03:33:47.620 |
Well, some people think he is, but he manages to still demonstrate success in all or most of his endeavors. 03:34:01.700 |
So again, you can criticize Elon for being emotional, but would he be the same person without this? 03:34:12.340 |
And the incredible team he's motivated too, there's an element of that, which you've spoken about the team at Telegram. 03:34:20.180 |
Assembling a team of A players, as we've talked about, is a skill in itself. 03:34:29.380 |
And that's also a big part of the leaders that we've discussed. 03:34:34.980 |
It's like what judged in part by the team you assemble. 03:34:38.980 |
Yes, and one of the necessary character features to enable that is to be ready to be unpleasant. 03:34:47.060 |
You have to be ready to insult some people if their work is inferior. 03:34:54.260 |
You have to be ready to fire them without remorse. 03:35:01.300 |
So in order to be an efficient, a great entrepreneur and enrich the world of innovations, you have to do unpleasant things. 03:35:11.620 |
In a certain sense, entrepreneurs sacrifice their peace of mind in order to contribute to the world around them. 03:35:30.420 |
I have to ask you about the big picture of Telegram. 03:35:33.380 |
We've already talked about the fact that you own 100% of it. 03:35:38.900 |
And there's a lot of, on the business side of it, the business structure of Telegram is fascinating. 03:35:44.340 |
You've invested a hundred, maybe hundreds of millions of dollars of your money. 03:36:02.020 |
And in 2024 was the first time Telegram was profitable. 03:36:08.100 |
So one of the interesting questions is here that we could talk for many hours about, but I'd love to get a high-eye view picture. 03:36:16.340 |
You've left what I understand, but I think is a huge amount of money on the table by sticking to your principles. 03:36:23.860 |
For example, not doing advertisement that's based on user private data, which basically every social media company does. 03:36:32.900 |
So the only advertisement that Telegram does is based on channels and groups based on the topic, not the private data of the individuals. 03:36:41.220 |
And the other thing is, which is also gangster and incredible, is you don't do a news feed, which is the most addictive and engagement-inducing aspect of social media, which feeds the very kind of addictive downside of the internet. 03:37:01.780 |
The distraction, the engagement, the drama farming aspect that we've talked about in the very beginning that you try to resist, that you think is damaging the human mind at scale. 03:37:12.100 |
So anyway, that that's just speaking to the fact that you're leaving a lot of money on the table. 03:37:17.460 |
So how the hell were you able to be profitable? 03:37:22.740 |
Yeah, we had to innovate a lot in order to reach a point where we are profitable without having to resort to dubious business activities involving exploiting personal data of users. 03:37:41.460 |
That's something that most of our competitors do. 03:37:46.340 |
Because money has never been the primary goal, at least not for me. 03:37:52.580 |
When I sold the remaining share of my first company, and I had to do it below market price because 03:38:02.660 |
I didn't leave Russia completely without any pressures, you know. 03:38:10.900 |
I reinvested the vast majority of everything in Telegram. 03:38:16.660 |
Telegram is an operation that is losing money for me personally. 03:38:22.260 |
I didn't extract more from Telegram than I invested in it. 03:38:29.700 |
But I also didn't want to sell Telegram, so how do you reach a point when you're profitable 03:38:40.180 |
I don't want to sell it because I'm going to sell it for you. 03:38:57.780 |
business related tools or tools for advanced users that they would have to pay for, say, 03:39:12.580 |
It wasn't considered a viable option for messaging apps to do that. 03:39:17.620 |
we launched the premium subscriptions for telegram in 2022 and now we have over 15 million paid subscribers. 03:39:29.380 |
This is some very significant recurring revenue. 03:39:36.580 |
We would receive more than half a billion dollars from premium subscriptions alone this year. 03:39:53.140 |
We included over 50 different features into the premium package. 03:39:58.660 |
And then how do you make an app that is already more powerful than any other messaging app on the market? 03:40:07.300 |
Even more useful so that people would be ready to pay for this extra. 03:40:26.100 |
Like the updates to improvements, expansions of polls, for example. 03:40:32.500 |
So you keep improving the existing features and adding new ones. 03:40:35.940 |
And every time when you add a new feature, you don't want to clutter the app. 03:40:40.500 |
So in a way, they're not in your way and they're invisible. 03:40:48.100 |
And most of the features maybe are not even known to the majority of our users. 03:40:58.900 |
We also have ads, but they're context-based, not targeted. 03:41:03.540 |
Of course, we leave probably 80% of value on the table because we are not ready to engage in all 03:41:15.620 |
Just to be clear, targeted ads is what most social media companies, most tech companies that 03:41:23.700 |
And that's the kind of advertisement that uses personal data from users. 03:41:31.220 |
And when you said 80%, that's a lot of money. 03:41:33.940 |
Of course, because we would never use, for example, your personal messaging data or your 03:41:40.100 |
context data or your metadata or your activity data to target ads. 03:41:46.100 |
It's sad that it became synonymous with the internet industry, this kind of exploitation. 03:41:57.380 |
But we are happy with the fact that we managed to make Telegram profitable despite that. 03:42:03.940 |
We're also experimenting a lot with blockchain-based technologies. 03:42:10.180 |
We're the first app to allow people to directly own their username and their 03:42:16.340 |
digital identities using smart contracts and NFTs, removing Telegram from the picture. 03:42:23.700 |
So for example, Telegram cannot confiscate your username from you. 03:42:30.260 |
We do a lot of things related to the ecosystem of Telegram. 03:42:40.340 |
Millions of mini-app developers launching their own bots and applications. 03:42:48.100 |
So a lot of people are making millions of dollars on the Telegram platform. 03:42:53.460 |
We enabled them to receive payments from the users through 03:42:59.860 |
in-app purchase mechanism provided by Apple and Google, which I think was the first 03:43:10.820 |
To allow that both on iOS and Android and on a big platform so that third-party developers 03:43:17.860 |
of mini-apps, which are basically websites so deeply integrated into Telegram that you can't tell 03:43:24.740 |
whether they're a standalone or they're part of their overall experience. 03:43:32.020 |
And by providing this payment option, we are able to extract a commission from these transactions. 03:43:50.820 |
We want people to succeed in building these tools for our users. 03:44:00.020 |
The more users we have, the more successful and relevant Telegram becomes. 03:44:10.100 |
I think at this point, Telegram gives developers by far the most powerful tools to create. 03:44:22.660 |
And you have to tell me about the Ton blockchain and the crypto ecosystem available through Telegram. 03:44:29.220 |
So what is Ton, aka the open network blockchain? 03:44:32.980 |
Ton is a blockchain technology that we initially developed in 2018 and 2019. 03:44:40.100 |
And we started to develop it because we needed a blockchain platform to be integrated deeply into 03:44:49.380 |
We think it's one of the technologies that enabled freedom. 03:44:52.660 |
But at the time, if you look at Bitcoin, if you look at Ethereum, they were not scalable enough 03:45:02.020 |
to cope with the load that our hundreds of millions of users would create. 03:45:10.660 |
And I asked my brother, can we create a blockchain platform that would be inherently scalable so that no matter how many users or transactions there are, 03:45:22.180 |
it would split into smaller pieces, which we call short chains, and would still process all transactions. 03:45:31.140 |
And he thought for a few days and said, yes, it's possible, but it's not easy. 03:45:36.900 |
We ended up succeeding in developing that technology, but we couldn't release it because 03:45:43.460 |
the SEC, the Securities and Exchanges Commission in the United States, 03:45:51.620 |
was unhappy with the way the fundraise for Ton was conducted. 03:45:59.380 |
So we had to abandon the project and the open source community took over. 03:46:06.740 |
Luckily, because we constantly conducted those contests for third-party developers, 03:46:15.540 |
there was a thriving community around Ton, which now stood for the Open Network, 03:46:23.300 |
as opposed to its prior name, Telegram Open Network. 03:46:36.660 |
And it's thriving now because everything we do, like I said, this blockchain-based 03:46:45.060 |
tokenized, tokenized usernames, Telegram accounts are all based on Ton and its smart contracts. 03:46:53.860 |
It's the only way for third-party developers and creators 03:46:59.380 |
to withdraw the funds that they earn through our revenue sharing programs. 03:47:08.500 |
For example, with channel owners, we do a 50-50 split of ad revenues. 03:47:15.300 |
It's also the only way to transact on Telegram. 03:47:19.380 |
For example, if you want to buy ads on Telegram, you should use Ton. 03:47:25.460 |
All the new things we launch, for example, let's say gifts that we mentioned earlier, which you can define as a 03:47:34.660 |
reinvented, socially relevant NFT integrated into a billion-user ecosystem, but at the same time 03:47:45.940 |
available on the same time, it is available on chain transferable, which you can own directly, also based on Ton. 03:47:59.940 |
And now, as a result of this Telegram gifts, Ton has become, 03:48:08.900 |
I think, the largest of the second-largest blockchain 03:48:18.180 |
So yeah, like you mentioned, it is a layer-one technology, as opposed to being built on top of 03:48:23.940 |
Ethereum or Bitcoin, and it's able to achieve the scale and the speed of transactions that's needed 03:48:40.500 |
Is there going to be some other celebrities in the pipeline? 03:48:45.460 |
Yeah, I'm a big fan of Snoop, and that's why when they reach out, suggest to do something together. 03:48:51.780 |
They said, "Let's launch some Snoop-related gifts." And it was really fun. 03:48:57.140 |
We managed to sell 12 million worth of gifts within 30 minutes. 03:49:07.940 |
After this, we have many requests from many really high-profile influencers 03:49:18.020 |
So from my perspective as a fan, it's just interesting to see what kind of art you create 03:49:22.420 |
for any kind of celebrities, athletes, musicians, because the Snoop gifts are all just, going back to our previous 03:49:32.260 |
conversations, this beautiful piece of art that encapsulates certain memes, certain aspects of Snoop that everybody knows, these cultural icons that he represents. 03:49:45.140 |
That's cool. And the incredible detail of the art of the individual gifts is just incredible. 03:49:52.900 |
And each of these gifts is scalable because it's vector-based. 03:50:00.260 |
it references certain points in Snoop's creative biography, and each of them has countless different versions. 03:50:09.700 |
We had to create over 50 distinctive versions of each. 03:50:15.700 |
And then each individual piece is unique because it also has unique background, unique icon, and the background. 03:50:22.580 |
It's something that we reinvented because we didn't like the old-school NFTs. 03:50:28.900 |
First of all, they were not relevant socially because, okay, you have an NFT. 03:50:37.140 |
In a Telegram, a Telegram gift is there next to your name. 03:50:41.940 |
It's part of your digital identity on Telegram. 03:50:44.980 |
And then you can create collections of gifts and show it off on your profile page. 03:50:48.900 |
But it also, the other thing that we wanted to reinvent is the aesthetic part of it. 03:50:59.620 |
And they're not based on any other sophisticated technology. 03:51:05.780 |
So, what we did with Snoop's gifts, I think, represents an example of 03:51:15.620 |
beautiful, aesthetically pleasing, and at the same time, very accurate in terms of references to this specific 03:51:27.700 |
artistic artist's biography mixture between art and technology, which I think is quite rare. 03:51:38.980 |
It's only half a year old, so let's see where it goes. 03:51:43.540 |
We're going to select our next influencer or artist to be part of it. 03:51:52.500 |
I got a Snoop gift next to my name, and I figured out that you can add even more by pinning them. 03:52:03.620 |
We just had a lot of fun launching these things. 03:52:06.660 |
And then we realized that one of the first collections we issued, we sold each piece at something like $5. 03:52:16.980 |
And then the minimum price of any items in these collections currently is something like $10,000. 03:52:34.660 |
I realized when you are trying to monetize social media platform in a way that is consistent with your values, 03:52:42.500 |
you're forced to find ways that benefit your users, not exploit them. 03:52:53.380 |
People love the fact that they can congratulate a person close to them with something valuable. 03:53:01.300 |
Also, some people make a business out of it, which is funny. 03:53:06.980 |
We recently met a guy who earned several million dollars just from buying and selling gifts. 03:53:18.420 |
It's just something that he did in a few months. 03:53:21.620 |
And last year, when we launched many new features for the mini-apps on Telegram, 03:53:29.140 |
and the payments options for them, and the other monetization options, 03:53:34.180 |
the same guy earned $12 million from mini-apps. 03:53:41.380 |
And I know several people, just anecdotally, I earned $10 million, earned $3 million. 03:53:50.900 |
Sometimes they would have a team of two, three people. 03:53:53.940 |
So whenever I hear stories from people who were able to build businesses on top of Telegram, 03:54:09.940 |
It's an app within the ecosystem of Telegram. 03:54:14.900 |
So you've been an early supporter of cryptocurrencies, Bitcoin. 03:54:24.820 |
Maybe you could speak to the reasoning why you kept buying Bitcoin. 03:54:30.100 |
Do you think Bitcoin will go to a million dollars? 03:54:34.980 |
And Bitcoin and all the other cryptocurrencies? 03:54:38.420 |
Do you think Bitcoin is a big believer in Bitcoin since more or less the start of it? 03:54:44.340 |
I got to buy my first few thousands of Bitcoin in 2013. 03:55:02.500 |
And a lot of people after Bitcoin later next year went down. 03:55:21.620 |
You made this horrible mistake investing in this new thing, but don't feel bad about it. 03:55:29.940 |
And my response to them was, "I don't care. I'm not going to sell it." 03:56:00.900 |
And again, I'm now talking about Bitcoin, but it relates to cryptocurrencies in general. 03:56:08.020 |
So I have been able to fund my lifestyle, so to say, from my Bitcoin investment. 03:56:17.060 |
Some people think if I'm able to rent nice locations or fly private, it's because I somehow extract money from Telegram. 03:56:27.540 |
But like I said, Telegram is a money-losing operation for me personally. 03:56:44.180 |
And I believe it will come to a point when Bitcoin is worth $1 million. 03:56:51.460 |
The governments keep printing money like no tomorrow. 03:56:57.940 |
There is a predictable inflation and then it stops at a certain point. 03:57:13.060 |
Let me ask you a deeply philosophical, serious question. 03:57:15.620 |
In your first Tucker interview, you had two interesting chairs in the background. 03:57:23.300 |
The choice is "Piki tachone" or "Hui drachone". 03:57:28.260 |
What is the philosophical wisdom in the dilemma that these two chairs present? 03:57:34.100 |
Have you had to face the dilemma yourself, personally? 03:57:38.740 |
I think this is a riddle that people have to face in Russian prisons. 03:57:45.700 |
And metaphorically, it's describing all the situations where you presented a choice 03:58:00.820 |
When you're running a big business or when you're running a large country - it is similar - you sometimes 03:58:09.620 |
This very horrible thing or this also very horrible thing? 03:58:16.340 |
So I think the right answer to this riddle is not to do any of these things. 03:58:28.660 |
design a solution that turns a disadvantage into an advantage. 03:58:35.140 |
And then use it to cope with the other side of the problem. 03:58:45.140 |
Somebody on the internet said "ne ходи туда, где задают такие вопросы". 03:58:50.980 |
Which is basically try to avoid the situations where such dilemmas present themselves, where 03:59:01.860 |
This is one of the ways to answer this question. 03:59:05.540 |
If you got to a tricky situation that probably earlier you made a certain mistake. 03:59:14.180 |
But the other quite creative answer to this question is that you 03:59:19.060 |
take the sharp objects from one of the chairs or the spikes, 03:59:27.780 |
and then they use them to cut off the objects from the other chair. 03:59:51.460 |
to make a choice from two suboptimal options. 03:59:57.540 |
And then when we are forced to make this choice and we make this choice, 04:00:01.300 |
it's almost as if it's something that we have to assume responsibility for. 04:00:12.180 |
Okay, on this theme of absurdity and ridiculousness, 04:00:15.780 |
let me, there's an object here that appeared in the, 04:00:24.340 |
People should go watch your excellent conversation in the Oslo Freedom Forum behind you. 04:00:30.340 |
I'm no archaeologist, but I believe this is a, 04:00:46.580 |
You told me that you brought it with you to France and back to Dubai. 04:00:55.460 |
What's, what's the, what, what, why did you bring it with you everywhere? 04:01:00.180 |
Is it kind of like a, you know, in America they have a wishbone? 04:01:08.260 |
And I should also point out that just like with Telegram with the art, there's tiny little walruses. 04:01:14.900 |
And thanks to you, I had to also find out that a lot of mammals have a bone inside their penis. 04:01:19.460 |
And the evolutionary advantage, I guess, of having a bone is quite obvious. 04:01:23.940 |
And it actually raises the question of why humans don't have a actual bone inside their penis. 04:01:33.540 |
The reason I have this is because the tribe that is almost gone extinct in Siberia and Mongolia, 04:01:44.580 |
called the Venki, passed me this gift from them. 04:01:48.180 |
Normally they would craft something like this only for their most respected leaders. 04:01:55.220 |
It is supposed to be a token of their appreciation for bravery, courage, leadership. 04:02:02.420 |
Ironically, it also translates in a very specific way into the Russian language. 04:02:11.940 |
In Russian, walrus's penis means something a bit funny, which is often used to describe nothing. 04:02:24.420 |
So, for example, if you're being requested by, say, a certain government or a certain business partner 04:02:33.620 |
to provide something that you're not willing to provide, you can just politely have this 04:02:42.580 |
penis bone in the background while you're doing the video call 04:02:49.860 |
and hope that they would throw osmosis, figure out the deep message. 04:02:58.580 |
By the way, in the former Soviet Union, there was, and in a lot of places throughout history, 04:03:05.620 |
some of the rebellion had to take this kind of symbolic metaphoric form through poetry, 04:03:12.580 |
And it's the beauty of human language and art that we're able to do that, say F you to whatever 04:03:22.900 |
We say F you through poetry, through art, and sometimes through a rather large walrus penis bone. 04:03:29.780 |
Carried by what appears to be either a happy sumo wrestler or a cat of some sort. 04:03:37.940 |
They asked a lot of questions about this walrus's penis bone in the airport. 04:03:45.140 |
Both here in the UAE and in France, they are always very interested in this thing. 04:03:51.700 |
But there seems to be some confusion over how many kids you have. 04:04:04.580 |
The truthful answer to this question is I don't really know how many biological kids I have exactly. 04:04:12.420 |
Because at a certain point in my life, about 15 years ago, I decided that 04:04:28.020 |
because they were trying to have a baby with his wife. 04:04:32.580 |
And they experienced certain health issues that prevented them to do it the natural way. 04:04:40.580 |
And he told me we don't want to just rely on some random anonymous genetic material. 04:04:48.660 |
We want somebody we know and respect to be the biological father of our kid. 04:05:04.580 |
But then I realized it's actually a serious issue. 04:05:08.340 |
And they were not the only couple struggling with that. 04:05:11.220 |
So eventually, I got persuaded into doing more of it. 04:05:14.740 |
I can't say I'm incredibly proud of that, but I think it was the right thing to do. 04:05:19.300 |
Particularly at the time when I thought, okay, I probably don't have much time 04:05:29.300 |
So if I can help some couples have babies, let's do it. 04:05:36.180 |
And then more recently, when I was working on my will, 04:05:40.820 |
I realized that I shouldn't make a distinction between the kids conceived naturally 04:05:51.300 |
and the kids who are just my biological kids that I've never seen. 04:05:54.580 |
As long as they can establish their shared DNA with me, 04:06:09.620 |
they have to be entitled for a share of my estate after I'm gone. 04:06:20.180 |
And that made a lot of noise in the news for some reason. 04:06:23.940 |
People get very excited by this kind of news. 04:06:26.900 |
I got a lot of messages from people claiming they're my kids. 04:06:31.220 |
I got a lot of requests from people asking me to adopt them. 04:06:38.980 |
But understanding that it's not a thing that most people do, 04:06:47.460 |
anything I think more people should be donating sperm. 04:06:52.100 |
So we should say the 100-plus kids is from that, 04:07:00.340 |
And it was a pretty bold decision from a financial perspective to treat them all equally. 04:07:09.780 |
And also quite interesting was that you said that they don't receive any money for the first few decades of their life. 04:07:24.260 |
Yeah, I think overabundance paralyzes motivation and willpower. 04:07:31.300 |
It's extremely harmful, particularly for young boys, to grow up in an environment where 04:07:39.300 |
they can be proud not of their own achievements, but of their father's achievements, of their father's wealth. 04:07:57.780 |
work on developing their own skills, removes the incentive to study, to work. 04:08:24.900 |
But one of the reasons I decided it makes more sense to divide this 04:08:38.900 |
among a hundred or more than a hundred people 04:08:44.500 |
is that it won't be too much for every single descendant. 04:08:53.220 |
But at the same time, some people did the calculation. 04:08:58.660 |
It's still many, many millions of dollars for each child. 04:09:10.340 |
On the topic of abundance offline, we had a lot of fascinating philosophical discussions, 04:09:17.300 |
one of which was about the Mouse Paradise Experiment, also known as Universe 25. 04:09:23.380 |
It's an experiment from the 1960s and early 70s, conducted by ethologist John B. Calhoun. 04:09:32.660 |
And we can talk about this one for hours also, I'm sure. 04:09:37.140 |
But it was an experiment with a few hundreds of individual mice compartments. 04:09:43.540 |
And they provided them with unlimited food, water, nesting, no predators, 04:09:51.620 |
Basically, the definition of abundance as far as mice go. 04:09:55.380 |
And the interesting aspect of this experiment is that at first, the population doubled, 04:10:01.780 |
it grew very quickly, but then it leveled off. 04:10:04.980 |
And certain really negative social things started happening. 04:10:11.060 |
Like mothers neglected to kill their young, violent attacks and hypersexual activity became widespread. 04:10:18.900 |
Largely inactive, well-groomed mice withdrew, refusing to mate or interact. 04:10:23.140 |
So all of these kind of societal qualities that we see as negative for the functioning of a society started to emerge because of the abundance. 04:10:32.100 |
And finally, the collapse, the reproduction rates crashed, social dysfunction spread to the next generation, and eventually just went extinct. 04:10:42.260 |
It didn't just plummet to a low level, it plummeted steadily to zero, despite the fact that there's ongoing resource abundance. 04:10:50.660 |
As the description states, the last miles died surrounded by untouched food and water. 04:11:00.580 |
So, I mean, there's deep wisdom to that about abundance. 04:11:03.620 |
It seems, you've mentioned this in different contexts throughout this conversation, is it seems like scarcity, it seems like constraints, it seems like non-abundance is essential for human flourishing, which is a counterintuitive notion. 04:11:22.980 |
It's true for mice, it's true for mice, and I think it's probably true for humans too. 04:11:29.860 |
Almost by definition, there has never been such thing as infinite amount of food or entertainment in our lives before now. 04:11:44.740 |
We seem, as a species, to lose our ability to identify purpose in a world where you have everything, and everything loses its meaning. 04:12:02.020 |
I think, though, that they should be coming from within. 04:12:05.780 |
It should be self-restriction rather than a restriction, in order to create purpose and meaning in life. 04:12:14.580 |
In a way, I was lucky in a very counterintuitive way, because I grew up poor. 04:12:24.340 |
I had the same jacket for years, which was bought on a second-hand marketplace. 04:12:33.140 |
My father wouldn't receive his salary as a university professor for months, because the Russian state was 04:12:44.340 |
almost bankrupt back then, my mom had to juggle two jobs to take care of us. 04:12:54.260 |
It was not easy, but it also created purpose. 04:12:58.820 |
It created meaning, it created meaning, it created priorities. 04:13:02.900 |
It allowed us to focus on things that mattered, it allowed us to 04:13:09.380 |
develop our character and intellectual abilities. 04:13:25.220 |
This mice suffered a societal collapse that was irreversible, and this is not an accident. 04:13:39.300 |
This kind of experiment has been repeated countless times. 04:13:43.140 |
At a certain point, social dysfunction and the erosion of social roles becomes contagious, 04:13:54.500 |
and the society gradually degrades into a chaotic collection of individuals 04:14:03.220 |
unable to take care of the next generation or even to produce the next generation. 04:14:12.980 |
It's fascinating because we're creating technologies, and this is what AI is 04:14:17.380 |
proposing to our future generations as a problem to solve, which is AI may very well create abundance. 04:14:26.020 |
And so we will be like these mice, potentially, whether it's AI or other kinds of technologies 04:14:33.380 |
that increase and give more and more to all of us. 04:14:36.820 |
And it is a thing that is good, decrease the amount of suffering in the world, increase the quality of life. 04:14:41.300 |
But as we reach towards that abundance, the fabric that connects us, rooted in our biology that's developed by evolution, 04:14:52.980 |
We should find the right balance between chaos and order, 04:14:56.900 |
between self-restriction and freedom for creativity. 04:15:02.980 |
Your father recently celebrated his 80th birthday. 04:15:10.020 |
I think he mentioned to me one of the things he said was not to just 04:15:15.220 |
speak of your principles, but to live them, to lead by example. 04:15:21.300 |
I think this is something you already do well. 04:15:25.060 |
Maybe can you speak to what you've learned about life from your father? 04:15:32.100 |
Maybe some of the lessons he told you in the conversation you've had with him on his birthday. 04:15:46.820 |
He's a person who wrote countless books on ancient Rome and ancient Roman literature. 04:16:04.340 |
He would be busy typing his books and articles and an old-school typewriter 04:16:17.940 |
The example he said to myself and my brother was priceless. 04:16:24.580 |
Some people make this mistake of thinking that 04:16:34.340 |
in the future generation or into your kids by saying things to them. 04:16:53.860 |
It wasn't necessary for him to say anything to us. 04:16:58.020 |
And then at the same time, he was incredibly patient, 04:17:07.060 |
a great woman, incredibly smart, highly educated. 04:17:26.260 |
There's an evolutionary explanation for that. 04:17:32.420 |
And he demonstrated incredible patience all the time. 04:17:38.660 |
He told me recently: "You shouldn't give the wrong example 04:17:45.140 |
to the people around you, and in particular to your kids, 04:17:49.140 |
because you can do the right thing nine times out of ten, 04:17:53.460 |
but you make a mistake once, and they will instantly copy it. 04:17:57.860 |
If you're telling your kids not to use a smartphone, 04:18:00.900 |
but you're using a smartphone all the time yourself, 04:18:04.900 |
and coming up with all kinds of sophisticated, 04:18:07.620 |
brilliant explanations why they shouldn't be using a smartphone, 04:18:28.580 |
And, you know, he told me last time I spoke to him 04:18:51.060 |
in the meaning that we understand it as human beings. 04:18:57.380 |
I love the fact that you're talking to your eight-year-old father, 04:19:14.420 |
and conscience is the thing that humans have, 04:19:24.980 |
One of my goals in life is never to disappoint him. 04:19:40.820 |
is the power of the mind, the power of thought. 04:19:57.860 |
One thing most people agree on is that setting goals, 04:20:05.700 |
does allow you to achieve the things you want to achieve. 04:20:11.140 |
It's very hard to believe though, that you can 04:20:16.820 |
just manifest things into being without applying effort 04:20:35.380 |
and materialize things by the power of their thought, 04:20:49.700 |
if you couple this optimism and faith with logical action, 04:21:07.060 |
coupled with positive focus, thinking about the thing. 04:21:15.140 |
It is possible to imagine our world as a high dimensional universe, 04:21:21.300 |
where humans have the ability to navigate through it 04:21:32.340 |
which is coupled with positive emotion and logical thinking. 04:21:51.540 |
at this point, haven't discovered even one percent 04:22:00.420 |
I agree with you fully, and I like what you said, 04:22:06.500 |
You've told me before, that maybe there's a way that with effort, 04:22:14.260 |
you can morph the sort of landscape of probabilities around you. 04:22:20.340 |
And it's a nice way to visualize it, that somehow our effort and our focus changes 04:22:33.780 |
And by focusing on it, we make the thing more and more likely. 04:22:36.900 |
At least as an estimate, as the kind of field that we, through our thoughts and our actions, 04:22:46.100 |
And then there's eight billion of us doing so. 04:22:48.820 |
And together, there's this collective intelligence that creates the world we see around us, 04:22:57.940 |
And like you said, us as a humanity together, are perfect. 04:23:04.500 |
I admire your belief in the fact that we get to experience this together. 04:23:14.900 |
Maybe each of us experiences his own or her own universe. 04:23:21.060 |
And maybe every second, the universe splits into a billion of different universes. 04:23:27.860 |
And there is a universe where, say, I died in 2013. 04:23:35.140 |
Maybe every time I die, I actually get to shift to a parallel universe when I don't die. 04:23:44.500 |
And at certain points, we achieve this quantum immortality. 04:23:52.420 |
But a lot of people from other versions of reality think we are long gone. 04:24:06.260 |
The idea of quantum immortality, which is a thought experiment, which I find deeply fascinating. 04:24:11.860 |
Which is a very crisp, clean consequence of the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics. 04:24:19.380 |
That we, as conscious beings, can't experience our death. 04:24:23.060 |
As we branch into these many, many worlds, only the living consciousnesses get to experience it. 04:24:33.860 |
So, in some sense, yeah, there's many universes. 04:24:37.940 |
If we were to seriously take the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, there's many universes where you died. 04:24:46.100 |
So, and I'm glad we're in a universe where we get to share the table with this impressive bone, a little humor, and a lot of serious topics covered today. 04:24:57.780 |
And, again, I can't say enough, Ajayan, thank you from hundreds of millions of people that follow your work for you fighting for the freedom of all of us to speak and creating a platform where we can do so. 04:25:16.500 |
And thank you so much for talking today, brother. 04:25:18.180 |
It's been an honor getting to know you and to be able to call you a friend. 04:25:24.420 |
I'm also incredibly grateful to you and to the fact that I happen to be in this version of reality. 04:25:32.180 |
when I haven't died, at least yet, and hopefully, we'll get to spend more fun moments in the years to come together. 04:25:44.420 |
Thank you for listening to this conversation with Pavel Durov. 04:25:48.100 |
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description. 04:25:51.620 |
And now, let me try to articulate some things I've been thinking about. 04:25:55.860 |
If you'd like to submit questions or topics like this for me to talk about in the future, go to lexfridman.com/ama. 04:26:04.020 |
I'd like to use this opportunity to talk about Franz Kafka, one of my favorite writers. 04:26:09.940 |
The reason he has been on my mind is that his work, The Trial, and The Case of Pavel Durov in France, 04:26:16.660 |
has, let's say, eerie parallels, both metaphorically and literally. 04:26:23.140 |
Of course, The Trial is a work of fiction, but I think it is often useful to go to the surreal 04:26:28.100 |
world of literature, even of the over-the-top dystopian variety, like 1984, Animal Farm, Brave New 04:26:35.620 |
World, The Trial, The Castle, Metamorphosis, even The Plague by Albert Camus, all to better understand 04:26:43.060 |
our real world and the destructive paths we have the potential to go down together, which also, 04:26:50.180 |
hopefully, helps us understand how to avoid doing so. 04:26:54.020 |
So let me zoom out and speak about Franz Kafka. 04:26:58.660 |
He was an insurance clerk who wrote at night. 04:27:02.260 |
He died young and almost completely unknown, and he asked for his manuscripts to be burned. 04:27:08.820 |
Luckily for us, his friend, Max Broad, refused to do so, giving us the work of what I consider to be 04:27:16.740 |
one of the 20th century's greatest writers. In his work, Kafka wrote about the cold, machine-like 04:27:23.380 |
reduction of humans to case files through the labyrinth of institutional power. He wrote about 04:27:29.780 |
an individual's feeling of guilt even when a crime has not been committed. Or, more generally, 04:27:36.180 |
he wrote about the feeling of anxiety that is part of the human condition in our modern, chaotic world. 04:27:41.460 |
His writing style was to use short, declarative sentences to describe the surreal and the absurd, 04:27:48.420 |
and in so doing, effectively, I think, convey the feeling of an experience versus simply 04:27:53.700 |
describing the experience. For example, famously, his work, The Metamorphosis, opens with the following lines: 04:28:01.700 |
As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams, he found himself transformed in his bed 04:28:09.460 |
into a gigantic insect. He was lying in his hard, armor-plated back, and when he lifted his head a 04:28:16.420 |
little, he could see his dome-like brown belly divided into stiff, arched segments, on top of which 04:28:23.700 |
the bed quilt could hardly keep him in position and was about to slide off completely. His numerous legs, 04:28:30.900 |
which were pitifully thin compared to the rest of his bulk, waved helplessly before his eyes. 04:28:36.900 |
Kafka, I think, effectively uses this image of being transformed into a giant bug stuck on his back to 04:28:45.460 |
to convey a feeling of helplessness and uselessness to his family, to his job, to society. The feeling of 04:28:54.020 |
being a burden to everyone, dehumanized, alienated, and abandoned. The feeling of being only temporarily 04:29:02.020 |
valued as long as he served some function for his job or for his family, and quickly discarded otherwise. 04:29:09.540 |
I will probably talk about this work in more depth at another time, because it is so haunting, 04:29:16.020 |
and I think it is such a profound description of the burden of existence in modern society for many 04:29:22.820 |
people. But here, let me talk about another of his work, The Trial. In this novel, the main character, 04:29:30.580 |
Joseph Kaye, is a successful bank officer, and he's arrested on his birthday for an unspecified crime 04:29:38.580 |
by a kind of amorphous court whose authority is everywhere and nowhere. He navigates a labyrinth-like 04:29:46.100 |
legal system where everyone knows about his case, but no one can really explain it. The so-called 04:29:52.100 |
"trial" never actually occurs in any conventional sense. Instead, Joseph Kaye's entire life becomes the 04:29:58.660 |
proceedings leading up to the trial. In a sense, the trial is the state of being accused itself, 04:30:05.140 |
a permanent condition rather than a singular event. Kafka's genius in this work was to show that modern 04:30:13.700 |
institutions don't need to hold trials. They just need to hold you in the permanent, looming possibility 04:30:19.940 |
of one. Public attention to this case, both positive and negative, gives Joseph Kaye a feeling of constantly 04:30:25.940 |
being judged by people around him. This wears at his mind. And his psychological well-being begins to 04:30:33.460 |
deteriorate. In a sense, the trial doesn't need to convict him. The internal psychological turmoil and the 04:30:40.180 |
external social scrutiny performs the conviction and the eventual execution. When exactly one year after his 04:30:47.540 |
arrest, Joseph Kaye is visited by two men who will walk him courteously through the city to an abandoned 04:30:54.980 |
quarry and stab him in the heart without Joseph Kaye resisting. To me, the trial shows that tyranny's final 04:31:05.060 |
victory isn't when it kills you, but when you hold still for the knife. Not because you're forced, but because you've been exhausted into submission. 04:31:14.580 |
Once again, it is a haunting story of the soullessness of bureaucracy in its suffocation of the human 04:31:23.220 |
spirit. I highly recommend this short book, and I'll probably talk about it even more in the future. 04:31:29.300 |
I don't think it's especially useful for me to speak to any parallels between the trial and 04:31:35.380 |
Pavel Durov's case, because after all, the trial is a work of fiction. But on a positive note, let me report 04:31:43.220 |
that as far as I saw, Pavel has maintained optimism and a general positive outlook throughout this whole 04:31:48.660 |
process. What I always fear in such cases is that a bureaucratic system can wear people down, exhaust them into 04:31:55.700 |
surrendering. I saw none of that with Pavel. I don't think he knows how to give up or give in, no matter how much 04:32:03.460 |
pressure he's under. Again, this is truly inspiring to me. Also, now that we're talking about it, let me 04:32:12.100 |
mention some other of Kafka's work that was moving to me. The castle has a similar description as the 04:32:18.740 |
trial does of the absurd inaccessibility of those in authority, of the nightmarish bureaucracy. The 04:32:25.140 |
character in the castle is also named Kay. Both bureaucracies operate through exhaustion, endless 04:32:30.740 |
deferrals, procedures, waiting rooms. Again, highly relevant to modern times. I can also highly recommend 04:32:38.500 |
Kafka's In the Penal Colony and Hunger Artist. Both are too interesting and weird to explain in depth 04:32:47.860 |
here. But let me say The Hunger Artist is a story that I think is relevant to our modern day attention 04:32:53.220 |
economy, where so many people want to be famous. It tells the story of, let's say, a professional 04:32:59.300 |
faster, who performs starvation in a cage as entertainment. And he slowly loses his audience 04:33:06.500 |
to newer spectacles. So much so that eventually when he starves himself to death, nobody cares. 04:33:12.820 |
Kafka's work is heavy. It serves as a warning for the nightmare that civilization can become. And yet, 04:33:21.460 |
I think it is also a source of optimism. Because when we can recognize elements of our own world 04:33:26.660 |
in Kafka's stories, when we can see elements of our institutions in the trial or in the castle, 04:33:31.780 |
when we can see ourselves in Gregor Samsa, we're not just diagnosing the disease, we're proving that we're 04:33:38.420 |
still human and wise enough to see it and name it. Kafka gave us the goal to resist against such systems that 04:33:46.580 |
try to dehumanize us and to ensure that individual freedom and the human spirit keep flourishing. 04:33:52.420 |
I think it will. I have faith in us humans. I love you all.