PERSON
Patrick Collison
The co-founder of Stripe who built the financial plumbing of the internet and then turned to a stranger problem—why human progress slowed even as we grew richer and smarter—supplying the AI age with its most disciplined question: capability is necessary, but what else is required?
Stripe, the company Patrick Collison co-founded with his brother John in 2010, is invisible by design: a layer of code beneath millions of businesses that lets money move. Its mission, to increase the GDP of the internet, is not marketing but a falsifiable strategy—the goal is not to capture existing commerce but to cause economic activity that would not otherwise have occurred at all, by removing the friction that silently kills businesses before they begin. This is the lens through which Collison thinks about artificial intelligence, and it produces a stance radically different from both the triumphalist and the catastrophist positions that dominate the discourse. He takes seriously that large models represent a genuine and surprising leap. He resists, with equal seriousness, the move from capability to consequence as though it were automatic. A model that can reason is an input, not an outcome; whether it raises the
GDP of the