TechCrunch News 11月03日 11:02
投资AI硬件需谨慎,关注情感共鸣与社会接受度
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

风险投资人Kevin Rose对AI硬件投资持谨慎态度,认为产品应具备情感共鸣和社会可接受性,而非仅仅技术领先。他以自身经历为例,指出过度依赖AI可能破坏人际关系和隐私,并担忧AI的广泛应用可能重蹈社交媒体早期覆辙。尽管如此,Rose看好AI降低创业门槛、革新风投模式的潜力,并强调未来VC的价值将体现在高情商和对创业者的情感支持上,而非单纯的技术能力。他偏爱拥有“健康的不可能无视精神”的创业者,敢于追求宏大愿景。

💡 **投资AI硬件的“反感度”原则**:Kevin Rose提出一个直观的投资筛选标准——如果戴着某款AI硬件会让你产生“想要揍人”的冲动,那么就不应投资。这一原则旨在规避那些在设计、功能或用户体验上脱离人类情感和社会规范的产品,强调AI硬件的情感共鸣和用户接受度是关键。

🚫 **AI可穿戴设备的隐私与社交考量**:Rose认为,许多AI可穿戴设备倾向于“全天候倾听”,这会破坏人类交流中的隐私界限和社会规范。他以自己使用AI吊坠试图在争论中“赢”的经历为例,说明过度依赖AI记录和回溯对话,反而损害了人际关系,强调AI应用需审慎考量其对社会互动的影响。

🚀 **AI赋能创业与重塑风投格局**:Rose坚信AI正在极大降低创业门槛,使个人能以前所未有的速度和效率开发应用。他预测AI将彻底改变风投行业,创业者能更灵活地选择融资时机,甚至可能跳过外部融资。他认为,风投的未来价值将体现在高情商(EQ)和对创业者的情感支持上,而非单纯的技术评估。

🌟 **寻找敢于挑战不可能的创业者**:Rose在评估创业者时,看重他们是否拥有“健康的不可能无视精神”。他偏爱那些怀揣宏大、大胆愿景,即使在他人看来是“糟糕的主意”也敢于尝试的创业者。这种精神能够驱动创新,即使项目未达预期,其思维方式也具有极高的价值,值得持续支持。

Kevin Rose has a visceral rule for evaluating AI hardware investments: “If you feel like you should punch someone in the face for wearing it, you probably shouldn’t invest in it.”

It’s a typically candid assessment from the veteran investor, and one born from watching the current wave of AI hardware startups repeat mistakes he’s seen before. Rose, a general partner at True Ventures and early investor in Peloton, Ring, and Fitbit, has largely avoided the AI hardware gold rush that’s consumed Silicon Valley. While other VCs rush to fund the next smart glasses or AI pendant, Rose is taking a decidedly different approach.

“A lot of it is just like, ‘Let’s listen to the entire conversation,’” Rose says of the current crop of AI wearables. “And to me, that breaks a lot of these social constructs that we have with humans around privacy.”

Rose speaks from experience. He was on the board of Oura, which now commands 80% of the smart ring market, and he’s witnessed firsthand what separates successful wearables from failed ones. The difference isn’t just technical capability; it’s emotional resonance and social acceptability.

“As an investor, you kind of have to not only say, okay, cool tech, sure, but emotionally, how does it make me feel? And how does it make others feel around me?” he explained on stage at TechCrunch Disrupt last week. “And for me, a lot of that is lost in all the AI stuff, where it’s just always on, always listening, trying to be the smartest person in the room. And it’s just not healthy.”

He admits to trying various AI wearables himself, including the failed Humane AI pendant that briefly caught the world’s attention a year ago. But the breaking point came during an argument with his wife. “I was like, I know I didn’t say that. And I was trying to use it to actually win an argument,” he recalled. “That was the last time I wore that thing. You do not want to win a battle by going back and looking at the logs of your AI pin. That doesn’t fly.”

The tourist use case — asking your glasses what monument you’re looking at — isn’t good enough, Rose said. “We tend to bolt AI onto everything and it’s ruining the world,” he said, pointing to features like photo apps that let you erase people from the background. “I had a friend who erased a gate from behind him to make the picture look better. I’m like, ‘That’s your yard! Your kids are gonna look at that and be like, ‘Didn’t we have a gate there?’”

Rose worries we’re in an “early days of social media” moment with AI — making decisions that seem harmless now but will haunt us later. “We’re gonna look back and be like, ‘Wow, that was weird. We just slapped AI on everything, and thought it was a good idea,’ similar to what happened in the early days of social. We look back a decade or two later, and you’re like, ‘I wish I would have done that differently.’”

Techcrunch event

San Francisco | October 13-15, 2026

He’s experiencing these tensions firsthand with his young children. Using OpenAI’s video generation tool Sora to create videos of tiny Labradoodles, his kids asked where they could get those puppies. “I’m like, that’s not really Dad there. How do you have that conversation? Very awkward,” he says. His solution, he said, is treating AI like movie magic, explaining that just as actors aren’t really flying on screen, Dad’s puppies aren’t real either.

But Rose isn’t a Luddite. He’s deeply optimistic about how AI is transforming entrepreneurship itself, and by extension, the venture capital industry that funds it.

“The barriers to entry for entrepreneurs are just shrinking with every day that goes by,” Rose observed. He recounted a colleague who had never used AI coding tools before building and deploying a complete app during a drive from LA to San Francisco. Six months ago, the same task would have taken ten times as long and required navigating dozens of errors.

“In three months, when [Google’s] Gemini 3 hits the market, there’s going to be zero errors or next to it,” Rose predicted. “High school coding classes are no longer coding classes — they’re vibe coding classes, and they will build the next billion-dollar business launched out of some random high school. It will happen. It’s just a matter of time.”

These developments utterly change the venture capital equation, Rose said. Entrepreneurs can now delay fundraising until they absolutely need it, or potentially skip raising outside funding altogether. “It’s really going to change the world of VC, and I think for the better,” Rose said.

Many venture firms have responded by hiring armies of engineers—Sequoia Capital, for instance, now employs as many developers as investors. But Rose doesn’t think that’s the answer. Instead, he believes the value proposition for VCs shifts to something more fundamental. “At the end of the day, the entrepreneur is going to have issues that are not technical,” he argued. “They’re very emotional problems. And so I think the VCs with the highest EQ that can show up best for the founders as their long term partner — that have been with firms and aren’t hopping around, that aren’t just fly-by-night VCs but have been around and seen these problems at scale — they’re going to be sought after.”

So what does Rose look for when making investments? He circles back to something Larry Page told him years ago when Rose was at Google Ventures, his first institutional investing job after co-founding the social news platform Digg and before joining True Ventures in 2017. “A healthy disregard for the impossible is what’s important to look for.”

“We want founders that aren’t just sanding down the rough edges, but they’re really swinging for the fences with big, bold ideas that everyone else says, ‘That is a horrible idea. Why are you doing this?’” Rose said. “That’s what I’m drawn to. Because even if it doesn’t work, we love your mind. We love where you are, and we gladly back you the second time.”

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

Kevin Rose AI硬件 投资 可穿戴设备 风险投资 创业 AI 隐私 社会接受度 Kevin Rose AI Hardware Investment Wearables Venture Capital Entrepreneurship AI Privacy Social Acceptance
相关文章