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Slate EV, Discord IPO, AI Copyright, and Tailscale: Tech Trends from This Week in Startups

2026-01-21濱本

Angel investor Jason Calacanis covers five topics from his "This Week in Startups" podcast: the $20K Slate EV truck backed by Bezos, Discord's leadership change signaling an IPO push, Volkswagen/Uber autonomous vehicle partnership, NYT vs. OpenAI copyright litigation, and Tailscale's mesh VPN growth from 5,000 to 10,000 enterprise customers.

Slate EV, Discord IPO, AI Copyright, and Tailscale: Tech Trends from This Week in Startups
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Hello, I'm Hamamoto from TIMEWELL.

Jason Calacanis's "This Week in Startups" podcast covered several technology topics in a single episode that are worth examining together — each one relevant to business leaders tracking where capital and attention are moving in the tech sector.


Slate: The $20K "Anti-Feature" EV Truck

The electric vehicle market has generally moved upmarket — higher prices, more features, more complexity. Slate is going in the opposite direction.

Reported to be backed by Jeff Bezos, Slate is a small, modular electric truck designed around a $20,000 post-incentive price point. What's absent from the base configuration: luxury display screens, seat cooling, autonomous driving features, and by some accounts even cupholders. The truck is a platform — buyers configure and add accessories after purchase.

Calacanis compared the concept to Japanese kei trucks (軽トラック): small, practical, inexpensive, widely used in both urban and rural settings. The target isn't the luxury EV buyer; it's the second-car, third-car buyer, the young buyer, and the DIY buyer who wants to customize.

Notably, Slate's promotional materials barely mention that the truck is electric. The focus is on price, simplicity, and customization. Calacanis reads this as a sign that EV status is no longer a selling point in itself — the relevant comparison is value delivered per dollar, not environmental credentials.

The business model implication: low margin on the vehicle, high margin on accessories. Tesla's accessories business is a profitable precedent.


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Autonomous Vehicles: Volkswagen/Uber Partnership and Safety Standards

Volkswagen — the world's second-largest automaker — announced a partnership with Uber to supply autonomous vehicles (likely based on the ID.Buzz) to Uber's ride-share network. This is Uber's re-entry into robotaxi operations following its earlier withdrawal after a fatal accident during autonomous vehicle testing.

Calacanis uses the Waymo/Tesla/Zoox competitive landscape to raise a concern: as competition intensifies, the temptation to rush technology to market before it's fully validated increases. The consequences of an autonomous vehicle accident are disproportionately severe compared to human driver accidents — the public and regulatory response is magnified.

His proposed standard: any city deploying autonomous vehicles should require at least one year of operation with a safety driver before transitioning to unattended operation in limited areas. Co-host Alex Wilhelm pushed back — if autonomous vehicles are statistically safer than humans, regulation that delays deployment costs lives. Calacanis's counter: logical correctness and social acceptability aren't the same thing. Building trust requires transparency and gradualism even when the technology is ready.


Discord: Leadership Change and IPO Signal

Discord co-founder Jason Citron stepped down as CEO. His replacement is Humam Sakhnini, who previously worked at King and Blizzard — both established gaming companies with public market experience.

The interpretation most analysts share: this is IPO preparation. Bringing in an executive with mature company management experience suggests Discord is positioning for public markets.

Discord by the numbers:

  • 200 million monthly active users
  • ~$600M annual revenue (Bloomberg)
  • Last private valuation: $15B (2021)

The revenue gap between the current number and the valuation implies growth expectations that an IPO would need to validate. Investors including Benchmark, Greylock, and Spark Capital need a liquidity event.

What's notable about Discord's growth: it evolved from gaming chat to a general community platform. Calacanis describes watching a Yankees fan YouTube channel where listeners joined live voice discussion through Discord — high audio quality, interactive, genuinely engaging. The platform has demonstrated product-market fit beyond its original base.


The New York Times sued OpenAI for copyright infringement, alleging that OpenAI trained on NYT content without authorization and that ChatGPT now reproduces content in ways that substitute for NYT subscription.

Calacanis discloses a personal data point: he used to subscribe to Wirecutter (NYT subsidiary). Now he asks ChatGPT for the same information. The substitution is real.

His assessment: OpenAI should have established licensing agreements before training on commercial content. He predicts a difficult outcome for OpenAI — potentially a $1B+ settlement. The litigation trend has spread: Ziff Davis (PC Magazine, IGN, and others) has also filed against OpenAI.

The structural question: how does the AI industry compensate content creators whose work trained the models? Oregon has proposed legislation requiring large tech companies to share AI-generated profits with local news organizations. Some form of licensing framework appears inevitable — the question is whether it emerges through litigation or negotiated agreement.

On a related note: Butterfly Effect (creator of AI agent Mantis, a Chinese-founded company) raised $75M from Benchmark. The fact that a top US VC invested in a Chinese-founded AI company amid tightening investment restrictions is itself notable. Mantis has been demonstrated doing task automation but has been reported to run on Anthropic technology, raising questions about its independent technical differentiation.


Tailscale: Mesh VPN and the AI Infrastructure Opportunity

Tailscale CEO Avery Pennarun appeared on the podcast to discuss the company's growth and technology.

The technical distinction: Traditional VPN is hub-and-spoke — traffic routes through central servers. Tailscale uses WireGuard protocol to create a mesh network where devices connect directly to each other. The result: lower latency, simpler network architecture, better performance in distributed environments.

The growth story: Tailscale offered a generous free tier targeting technically sophisticated individuals and small teams. Those users brought the product into their workplaces — classic bottom-up enterprise adoption. The company grew from 5,000 to 10,000 paying enterprise customers (at time of recording, since grown further). It raised $100M in a Series C to accelerate.

The AI infrastructure tailwind: AI model training requires large GPU clusters that are often physically separate from a company's primary cloud infrastructure (AWS, Azure, GCP). Tailscale enables secure, location-independent connectivity between these environments without complex network configuration. As AI infrastructure becomes more distributed, the value of this capability increases.

Pennarun's longer-term thesis: once network complexity is solved, it enables further distributed computing innovations — P2P storage, distributed compute — that were previously impractical.


The "Less is More" Pattern

Calacanis mentioned purchasing a Light Phone — a minimal device with only calls, maps, music, and notes, explicitly excluding social media. This connects to the Slate truck's positioning: both are products that compete through deliberate reduction rather than feature addition.

The pattern is visible in enough places to notice: in a market saturated with maximum-feature products, minimum-viable products with clear positioning are finding audiences. This includes product categories as different as cameras (SIGMA BF), phones, and electric vehicles.

For business leaders: the question worth asking isn't always "what should we add?" but "what would the product be better without?"

Reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=93mIj-6-FwM

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