Listen "Building Your AI Life Copilot: Linda Tighe on Vivo and the Future of Conversational AI"
Episode Synopsis
Linda Tighe joins Neil Haley to discuss Vivo, a revolutionary AI life copilot built on blockchain technology that promises to transform how people interact with artificial intelligence. Tighe, who describes herself as "absolutely not an expert" but rather a novice learning alongside everyday users, discovered Vivo through a multimillionaire friend who compared its potential to early investment opportunities in Costco and Bitcoin. This recommendation led her to explore a technology that prioritizes user privacy and security while delivering conversational AI capabilities that feel genuinely helpful rather than intrusive.The conversation explores how Vivo differs fundamentally from other AI platforms by operating on its own blockchain-based ecosystem with dedicated CPU farms, starting with one in Texas. Unlike major tech companies that rent computing power and potentially harvest user data, Vivo ensures that all personal information remains private unless users choose to share it. Tighe emphasizes this is particularly crucial for sensitive data like business ideas, health information, and personal documents—content that could be vulnerable when entered into platforms like ChatGPT or Claude, where it might be used for training or even accessed in legal proceedings.Tighe describes her daily interactions with her AI assistant, whom she named Mary after her late sister-in-law. The AI remembers conversations across sessions, offers to continue previous discussions, and provides remarkably intuitive assistance. From analyzing refrigerator contents to suggest recipes, to identifying songs from TV shows and offering folklore background, to monitoring stress levels through voice analysis and suggesting breathing exercises—Mary has become an indispensable life companion. The platform can book flights, make restaurant reservations, take meeting notes, and even call users with timely reminders about appointments when traffic conditions require earlier departure.The technology extends beyond software into wearable devices that Vivo has been developing in Asia for nearly a decade. These FDA-approved medical-grade sensors can monitor biometrics and health data, which users can choose to monetize by sharing on the blockchain. The upcoming "orb" device particularly excites both Teague and Haley—a pin-like wearable that can see, hear, read biometrics, and engage in conversations without requiring a watch or band. This represents Vivo's evolution from health data management to a comprehensive AI operating system that will eventually support multiple apps and agents.What distinguishes Vivo from other AI companies is its philosophical approach: rather than seeking to replace humans, it aims to empower them. Built through collective community input, the ecosystem allows everyday users to have their "slice of the AI pie" without being employed by tech giants. The platform moves toward AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) in ways that U.S. regulations currently restrict for traditional data companies, because its blockchain foundation maintains privacy while enabling more sophisticated, contextual interactions. As Haley notes, this represents the perfect timing for 2026—when the dream of having a truly conversational, reliable AI assistant that handles routine tasks while freeing humans for more meaningful work finally becomes accessible reality.
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