Erin Griffith

The neutral encyclopedia of notable people

I need to pause and address an important issue with this request. The subject I've been asked to write about is Erin Griffith, but the Wikipedia summary, structured facts, and most available source URLs are actually about Noam Shazeer, a computer scientist. These are two different people.

Based on the recent news coverage, Erin Griffith appears to be a technology reporter for The New York Times — her byline appears on several of the provided NYT articles about AI, Silicon Valley deal-making, hustle culture, and related topics. There is also an unrelated person named Erin Griffith from North Carolina mentioned in a hunting report.

Let me write the article about Erin Griffith the journalist, using only the information I can actually source from the provided materials.

Erin Griffith
NationalityAmerican
OccupationJournalist
EmployerThe New York Times
Known forTechnology and business reporting

Erin Griffith is an American journalist who covers technology, venture capital, and Silicon Valley culture for The New York Times. Based in San Francisco, Griffith has reported extensively on artificial intelligence startups, the culture of the technology industry, initial public offerings, and the intersection of venture capital with the broader economy. Her work has examined subjects ranging from the rapid pace of AI deal-making to the phenomenon of performative workaholism in startup culture, and her reporting has contributed to public understanding of how the technology industry operates and the societal implications of its products and business practices.

Career

The New York Times

Griffith writes for the technology section of The New York Times, where she covers the business of Silicon Valley, with a particular focus on venture capital, startups, and the artificial intelligence industry.

In January 2019, Griffith published a widely read article examining what she described as "hustle culture" — the tendency among young professionals, particularly in the technology industry, to glorify overwork and treat grueling schedules as a badge of honor. The piece, titled "Why Are Young People Pretending to Love Work?", explored how performative workaholism had become embedded in startup culture and social media, with workers boasting about long hours and constant productivity.[1]

Griffith has continued to report on significant developments in the technology industry. In August 2024, she covered the trend of major technology companies such as Google, Microsoft, and Amazon acquiring or making substantial investments in AI startups, a pattern that raised questions about competition and the independence of emerging AI firms.[2]

In December 2025, Griffith reported on the accelerating pace of deal-making in the artificial intelligence sector, detailing how investors were making decisions to invest millions of dollars in AI startups within as little as fifteen minutes. The article described an environment in which entrepreneurs were courted through unconventional means, including weight-lifting sessions and rock climbing, as venture capitalists competed to secure stakes in promising AI companies.[3]

In January 2026, Griffith wrote about the possibility that 2026 could be a landmark year for initial public offerings in the technology sector, with companies such as SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic potentially going public. The article examined the financial implications such offerings would have for Silicon Valley and Wall Street, describing them as potential "gushers of cash."[4]

In February 2026, Griffith reported on the connections between the late financier Jeffrey Epstein and Silicon Valley startups, detailing how Epstein's money had been invested in companies including Coinbase and Palantir through investment vehicles connected to Peter Thiel. The article traced how, in 2014, Coinbase had accepted investment from sources that included funds linked to Epstein.[5]

Also in February 2026, Griffith examined how chatbots and AI assistants were becoming a new category of influencers that brands needed to engage with, reporting on how marketing professionals were beginning to consider how their products and services were represented in AI-generated responses.[6]

In March 2026, Griffith reported on the experiences of passengers in autonomous taxis in San Francisco who found themselves trapped inside the vehicles during anti-robot attacks. The article described incidents in which individuals interfered with self-driving cars, leaving passengers unable to exit or redirect the vehicles.[7]

Reporting Focus

Griffith's body of work at The New York Times reflects a sustained focus on the business dynamics of the technology industry, particularly the venture capital ecosystem, the rapid growth of the artificial intelligence sector, and the cultural phenomena that accompany Silicon Valley's economic cycles. Her reporting has addressed both the financial mechanics of the industry — including fundraising, IPOs, and corporate acquisitions — and its broader societal implications, such as the effects of autonomous vehicles on urban life and the ethical questions surrounding the sources of startup funding.

Her coverage of artificial intelligence has tracked the sector through a period of extraordinary growth and investment, documenting how the competitive landscape among AI companies has reshaped relationships between startups and established technology firms, and how the speed of capital deployment in the AI sector has accelerated to an unprecedented degree.

References

  1. GriffithErinErin"Why Are Young People Pretending to Love Work?".The New York Times.2019-01-26.https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/26/business/against-hustle-culture-rise-and-grind-tgim.html.Retrieved 2026-03-23.
  2. GriffithErinErin"A.I. Start-Ups Face a Stark New Reality".The New York Times.2024-08-08.https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/08/technology/ai-start-ups-google-microsoft-amazon.html.Retrieved 2026-03-23.
  3. GriffithErinErin"A.I. Deal Making Is Getting Faster and Faster".The New York Times.2025-12-04.https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/04/technology/ai-deal-making-faster.html.Retrieved 2026-03-23.
  4. GriffithErinErin"2026 May Be the Year of the Mega I.P.O.".The New York Times.2026-01-14.https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/14/technology/ai-ipo-openai-anthropic-spacex.html.Retrieved 2026-03-23.
  5. GriffithErinErin"Jeffrey Epstein's Money Mingled With Silicon Valley Start-Ups".The New York Times.2026-02-05.https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/05/business/epstein-investments-palantir-coinbase-thiel.html.Retrieved 2026-03-23.
  6. GriffithErinErin"Chatbots Are the New Influencers Brands Must Woo".The New York Times.2026-02-17.https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/17/technology/chatbots-influencers-brands-marketing.html.Retrieved 2026-03-23.
  7. GriffithErinErin"Trapped! Inside a Self-Driving Car During an Anti-Robot Attack".The New York Times.2026-03-17.https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/17/technology/trapped-inside-a-self-driving-car-during-an-anti-robot-attack.html.Retrieved 2026-03-23.