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Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian describes where he sees the internet and the ‘next wave’ of social apps heading

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 29: Alexis Ohanian speaks onstage during WSJ's Future of Everything 2025 at The Glasshouse on May 29, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images)
Alexis Ohanian is an investor in Airbuds.

  • Alexis Ohanian, a cofounder of Reddit, has his eye on the “next wave” of social networking apps.
  • Ohanian’s VC firm, Seven Seven Six, recently announced it backed social music app Airbuds.
  • Business Insider spoke with Ohanian about where he thinks the internet is headed.

What’s the future of the internet going to look like?

Alexis Ohanian, one of the cofounders of Reddit, thinks there’s an opportunity for a new generation of apps to shake up how we’re connecting online.

“The most potent form of social today is basically in group chats, which is obviously not new technology, but what it’s highlighting is the fact that that’s a trusted group of people who you actually know, who are verifiably human,” Ohanian told Business Insider in a recent interview. “This next wave of apps — Airbuds is a great example — is going to be about that.”

Airbuds, a social music app gaining traction with teens, recently announced that Ohanian’s venture capital firm, Seven Seven Six, led its latest $5 million investment round.

How younger generations are using social apps is “one of the best bellwethers” for understanding internet trends, Ohanian said.

“This generation coming up has learned, and has a preference for, a less gamified version of life,” he said, opting out of the chase for followers or likes. “They’re choosing a healthier type of paradigm for social.”

Earlier this year, Ohanian also revived the social network Digg with its original founder, Kevin Rose.

It’s not just younger users who are yearning for a new social media experience, Ohanian said.

“Everyone, especially if you’re a geriatric millennial like me, you’re kind of tapped out,” Ohanian said. “You’re looking for that next wave. There’s a real hunger there.”

The next wave of social companies

Some new social media startups are challenging the attention economy with technology designed to get us out into the real world. Others are building platforms that evoke nostalgia for older versions of the internet, or are focused on connecting people with their closest friends rather than millions of people.

“We just have a chance to do it better, to build more thoughtfully, and to really build something that ultimately has us feeling better when we get off of it,” Ohanian said.

In an era when artificial intelligence is infiltrating nearly every social media feed — yes, I’m talking about AI slop — true human connection online is starting to feel more scarce.

It’s why some tech executives like Ohanian and even OpenAI’s Sam Altman are talking about the “dead internet theory,” which attempts to explain what would happen in a scenario in which the internet is more AI than human.

“I think you are seeing increased value in these more closed networks,” Ohanian said. “I’m not saying we’re going back to AOL walled internet garden, but my hunch is it’s going to be less about how do you get to growth and billions of users … and more about: How do you really build a tool that allows communities to emerge and drive tremendous engagement?”

New internet companies will be able to monetize this experience, too, he added.

“It’s not about needing to get to billions of users and just selling them ads,” Ohanian said. “There’s going to be much more creative and constructive ways to monetize that’s sustainable, and hopefully actually ends up aligning the goals of the userbase with the goals of the platform, which is something that we’ve seen at odds in all the predecessors.”

Read the original article on Business Insider
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A mom went viral for co-parenting her kids with AI. More parents are using it for to-do lists and even coaching.

Lilian Schmidt with daughter
Lilian Schmidt said she uses AI to handle menial tasks so she can be fully present for her kids.

  • Overwhelmed mothers are increasingly using ChatGPT to help with parenting tasks.
  • Lilian Schmidt and her fiancé balance full-time work with raising two kids together.
  • She said ChatGPT helps with organizational tasks like meal planning and creating to-do lists.

For the first few years of her daughter’s life, Lilian Schmidt remembers bedtime as a daily battle.

She and her fiancé spent about three hours every night trying to create a calm environment before bed, leading to power struggles and tears.

Then, Schmidt got some parenting advice from an unlikely source: ChatGPT. It suggested the opposite: letting her daughter jump around and exert energy before bed. The first night Schmidt tried it, she said her daughter fell asleep in five minutes.

Since then, she started using ChatGPT to help with everything from organizing to-do lists to tweaking meal-prep recipes. “I’m definitely feeling so much calmer,” Schmidt, 33, told Business Insider. “My brain has finally stopped running.”

Schmidt, who makes TikToks about using ChatGPT prompts and sells a “vault” of pre-made ones for other parents to use, said she uses her spare time to exercise, read, or just enjoy moments with her daughter and stepson without worrying about parenting logistics.

Schmidt isn’t alone. Parents have been using AI tools for everything, from homework help to activity ideas.

“Parents are being pulled in a lot of different directions with sometimes 10, 15 emails from the school per day, job stressors, just keeping those different tasks organized, ” Lorain Moorehead, a licensed therapist and Arizona State University professor, told Business Insider. She said she’s seen more parents use AI tools as a “great support” for tasks like maintaining schedules for their kids.

As more parents use AI for help, it can be a handy tool — when used correctly.

The tightrope of working and parenting

For many parents, balancing childcare with a full-time job feels untenable. They also don’t feel like they have any other choice.

Schmidt and her family live in Zurich, the 5th most expensive city in the world. In addition to a very high cost of living, daycare for her 4-year-old daughter is about 30,000 Swiss francs a year — over $37,000.

“Almost everyone I know works,” Schmidt said, while moms also feel pressure to be more present at home. “It’s like ‘You need to work, but actually, it would also be really nice if you stayed home.'”

This lifestyle brings up logistical challenges. Like many parents in the US, Schmidt and her partner live hours away from both sets of grandparents. Outside of daycare and school, they are solely responsible for their daughter and Schmidt’s 14-year-old stepson.

Lilian Schmidt holding daughter
Schmidt said that balancing work and raising kids led to burnout.

Moorehead, who said a lot of her clients use AI tools for co-parenting, said a common prompt is asking for scheduling help. One example is: “Create a sample schedule for a child who has 30-45 minutes of homework, is home at 3:30 pm, and is in bed at 8 pm. Bath time takes 20 minutes, and they need to rinse the dishes after dinner.”

She recommends the prompt to parents because “as soon as they’ve executed it, there might be a change in the schedule.”

Schmidt said that ChatGPT is especially helpful for families like hers, where her kids have a huge age gap and require completely different schedules and care. “They’re in different universes, basically,” she said.

Tools like ChatGPT can quickly tweak the schedule to accommodate baseball practice starting later, rather than a frustrated parent doing it on their own — and burning out in the process.

An on-demand parenting coach

Moorehead said she generally recommends prompts like these that “are clear, stick to the facts, and don’t use phrases like ‘what do you think?'” or seek reassurance. The best use is to look at examples and options when you’re stuck as a parent.

“As a busy mom, I find meal planning to often be a mental drain, especially when trying to cater to selective eater,” Ijeoma Nwaogu, a mother of three, wrote in an essay for Business Insider. An example of a prompt she uses is “I have picky eaters that don’t like spicy foods. Meal needs to be delicious for kids. I have chicken, rice, seasoning, oil. Create a recipe.”

Ijeoma Nwaogu and her family.
Ijeoma Nwaogu and her family.

For example, Schmidt said she uses ChatGPT for to-do lists or meal-planning — running an inventory of everything she has at home, to generate lists of cheaper ingredient swaps or factor in discounts from a nearby grocery store, and to tweak existing recipes to accommodate every family member’s dietary preferences.

Moorehead said these kinds of prompts are generally OK. She advised against asking ChatGPT to weigh in on a parenting scenario, because AI tools are likely to be very biased. She also recommended looking into AI platforms like Perplexity, which are known for citing their sources.

Of course, AI is not a substitute for a real-life pediatrician or mental health professional.

“De-identifying the kid or the school seems like a good safety practice, just as we’re learning more about these models,” Moorehead said, adding that a good rule of thumb is never to include information that would make your child trackable if it appeared on another platform.

Freed up for more quality time

Prior to using ChatGPT, Nwaogu felt like she was being a good-enough mother.

“I found myself trapped in a cycle of questioning whether I was doing things right, whether I was doing enough,” she said.

Schmidt felt she couldn’t give her kids as much attention as she wanted to. “I’m the kind of mom who wants to make their childhood feel magical, and that they remember me in a very positive way,” she said. “But for the first three and a half years, I was stuck in survival mode.”

Schmidt felt that instead of spending time with her daughter, her priority was managing the household and her job. She said she often gets similar feedback from other parents, most of whom have very young children.

“I hear ‘I’m trying to be a good wife, I’m giving it my all, and I still feel like a complete failure,'” Schmidt said. She feels like parents just don’t have enough support, and that AI isn’t just a productivity tool: it’s a permission slip to do less, so that parents can focus on fully showing up for their kids.

Schmidt sledding with daughter
Schmidt has more time to spend with her kids.

Moorehead said that when parents are trying a routine or parenting technique, it often takes a few tries and reconfigurations to get into the groove. But they might give up quickly when it doesn’t work out. AI can be great for making real-time adjustments or offering quick alternatives.

“If we can eliminate some of that fatigue with AI, then that can have a really positive outcome,” Moorehead said.

Schmidt said days with her kids feel more special, now that she’s not simultaneously thinking of her to-do lists. She recently took her daughter horseback riding, with Schmidt holding the horse. Before bedtime, she asked ChatGPT to write an age-appropriate story in the voice of a published author, recounting the day. It included her daughter’s first name and the emotions she felt, like pride or courage.

“When you’re old and your kids are all grown up, what will they remember you for?” Schmidt said. “Probably not for writing the perfect grocery list. They will remember you if you were present with them.”

Read the original article on Business Insider
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Wharton AI expert says young job seekers need to focus on something other than skills

Wharton professor Ethan Mollick
Ethan Mollick said young people should think more about tasks than skills.

  • AI expert Ethan Mollick said the technology can help young job seekers with “task distribution.”
  • The skills people gain to work with AI can quickly become irrelevant since the technology evolves.
  • Mollick said AI can help with tasks that employees struggle with, freeing up time for other duties.

If you’re a young person trying to land a job in the age of AI, one expert says you should focus on mastering tasks, not skills.

Wharton professor Ethan Mollick, a prominent figure in the AI revolution and author of “Co-Intelligence,” said that a lot of the skills people learn related to AI aren’t all that useful, because the technology evolves and quickly makes the skill somewhat irrelevant.

“It would be helpful for young people to think more about what tasks they’re actually really good at, because that’s where they stay ahead of machines,” Mollick told Business Insider. “And then you can find a job where the machine helps you with the other pieces of your task.”

Every job, he said, requires many tasks, and it’s unlikely that a single applicant will excel at all of them. AI can help with “task distribution” and help in the areas where applicants struggle. Knowing how to provide clear instructions is crucial for maximizing the benefits of AI as it completes tasks.

“Being able to be an expert enough in something to know whether it’s good or bad turns out to be really important,” Mollick said about judging AI’s output.

He also advised that young people should focus on gaining broad knowledge and developing expertise in specific topics. Since AI machines are trained on such a wide array of information, having a strong base in the humanities is useful, he said.

AI is threatening entry-level jobs across industries, making it especially hard for Gen Zers to find work. Mollick — who has consulted with JPMorgan, Google, and the White House on AI usage — told Business Insider that he’s most concerned about whether we’re tackling the question of how to restructure jobs with enough urgency.

As AI automates some technical abilities, soft skills are newly crucial for job applicants. Communication, leadership, and organizational prowess were among the top skills identified by Indeed’s Hiring Lab. Some leaders who celebrate the promise of AI worry that employees could lose the ability to complete certain tasks.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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