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John Loeber
Co-Founder & CEO at Limit (We’re Hiring!)
John Loeber is the Co-Founder and CEO of Limit, a digital platform that provides AI tools to insurance brokers.12 Limit aims to streamline the insurance process, making it faster, easier, and more cost-effective for insurance professionals.1 The platform offers a digital wholesale insurance marketplace with a universal application for various markets and instant quoting, and it now features Limit AI, an AI assistant specializing in the insurance sector.1
Loeber attended the University of Chicago, where he studied mathematics and developed a passion for building software.2 He also spent five years in San Francisco, where he learned the importance of grit and optimism in building successful ventures.2 Currently, Loeber resides in New York.2
Before Limit, Loeber was a Founding Engineer at Coalition, Inc., where he focused on building scalable systems.34 He also worked as an Angel Investor, supporting early-stage founders.34 Additionally, Loeber held positions as an Analyst Intern at Hyde Park Venture Partners, a Research Assistant at Harvard University, and an Algorithmic Trading Intern at Quantopian Inc.3
Loeber's LinkedIn username is jloeber.1
Highlights
A cynical observer of California politics might say that Gavin Newsom, early on in his career, shrewdly figured out that Homelessness is the perfect campaign issue:
- Always a visible problem, will never go away
- Creates an industry of services that depend on gov spending and will reliably vote for it
- This industry can absorb any amount of money
- People will feel bad about spending less on it, if ever proposed
This apparatus now consumes several billion dollars a year, produces very unclear results -- it is really not clear to me if any homeless people are being helped by any of this spending -- while building a political, emotional, and financially dependent voting bloc that gets larger every year.
Is he bad at public policy? Is he good at political gamesmanship? Perhaps both.
Jevons Paradox is fundamentally about leverage on an existing resource. As AI improves, the leverage on my engineering skill gets greater. This means that the value that I can output per unit time gets greater.
If I'm using my time rationally, then the value of my work/time increasing means I work more and more and more -- until the value of my skill begins to decrease, in which case even all that leverage isn't helping anymore.
This is like working up to a crescendo -- the total value of my skills as measured by (leverage * skill) becomes greater and greater and all-consuming until my skill is worth 0.


