1. Demis Hassabis (DeepMind)
If Sergey Brin built a company to organize the world's information, Demis Hassabis is building one to understand intelligence itself. The founder of DeepMind, now a semi-autonomous research unit within Google, is perhaps the purest modern heir to the Brin archetype.
Hassabis isn’t just a coder; he’s a former child chess prodigy with PhDs in cognitive neuroscience. His life’s work isn’t about a product, but a scientific mission: to “solve intelligence” and then use that artificial general intelligence (AGI) to solve everything else. This mirrors the academic, problem-first DNA of early Google. Brin and Larry Page began with a theoretical computer science problem—how to rank web pages—and built a business around the solution. Hassabis started with the even bigger problem of creating true AI. His company's breakthroughs, like AlphaGo, feel less like product launches and more like scientific publications come to life, a spirit Brin championed with Google’s famous “20% time” and its ambitious X research lab, which he personally led.
2. Jensen Huang (NVIDIA)
While Sergey Brin focused on the software of search, Jensen Huang built the hardware that now powers the AI revolution. The NVIDIA co-founder embodies Brin’s brand of long-term technical conviction. For years, NVIDIA’s graphics processing units (GPUs) were primarily for gaming. But Huang saw their potential for parallel processing and made a massive, company-risking bet that they could be used for general-purpose computing. He effectively built a church for a religion that didn’t exist yet. This foresight is classic Brin, who famously pursued “moonshot” projects at Google X that seemed commercially unviable for decades—from self-driving cars to delivery drones. Huang’s relentless focus on a single, powerful technical idea, and his willingness to invest in its ecosystem long before the market caught up, is a masterclass in how deep technical insight, when paired with unwavering belief, can create not just a company, but an entire industry infrastructure.
3. Patrick and John Collison (Stripe)
The magic of early Google was the partnership between two brilliant engineers, Brin and Page. The Collison brothers, co-founders of Stripe, are their modern equivalent. Like Brin, they were young prodigies who saw a complex, messy corner of the internet—online payments—and believed it could be fixed with elegant code. Stripe’s initial seven lines of code to process a payment was the developer-focused equivalent of Google’s clean, simple search homepage. It signaled a company built by engineers, for engineers. This deep respect for the craft of software is a hallmark of Brin's philosophy. While other companies focused on sales and marketing, Google and Stripe won by having a fundamentally better, more powerful technical product. The Collisons, much like Brin and Page, created a system so effective that it became the underlying plumbing for a huge swath of the digital economy, proving that a superior engineering culture can be the most powerful competitive advantage.
4. Vitalik Buterin (Ethereum)
Sergey Brin and Larry Page’s PageRank was laid out in a white paper that created a new protocol for information. Vitalik Buterin’s Ethereum white paper did the same for digital trust and computation. Buterin is a founder in the purest, most academic sense: an intellectual architect who designed a foundational layer upon which thousands of other projects could be built. Like Brin, he isn’t a traditional CEO focused on quarterly earnings. Instead, he operates as the philosophical and technical guide for a decentralized ecosystem. His focus has always been on the elegance and potential of the underlying technology—the blockchain and smart contracts—rather than a specific consumer application. This is the spirit of the Google founders, who were more obsessed with the mathematical beauty of their algorithm than with ad revenue in the early days. Studying Buterin offers a look at what it means to create not just a company, but a platform so fundamental that it enables entirely new forms of organization and commerce.
5. Daniel Ek (Spotify)
Daniel Ek might seem like an outlier, as he’s less of a public-facing academic. But his founding journey at Spotify reflects one of Brin’s most important traits: tackling a problem so big and messy it seems impossible. In the mid-2000s, the music industry was being destroyed by piracy. The prevailing belief was that no one would ever pay for digital music again. Ek’s hypothesis was that a product superior to piracy—instant, seamless, and comprehensive—could win. This required not only immense technical problem-solving to reduce latency but also a decade of brutal, painstaking negotiations with record labels. It was an audacious, almost naive goal, much like Google’s mission to “organize the world’s information.” Brin and Page didn’t just build a search engine; they took on the chaotic, unstructured nature of the entire web. Ek took on the chaotic, broken economics of an entire creative industry. His story is a powerful lesson in how stubborn vision and a superior product can overcome seemingly insurmountable market dysfunction.













