AI has yet to turn a profitable number. The largest AI firms are running staggering losses (on the order of billions) despite getting basically subsidized energy costs. AI is a solution looking for a problem. It's entire integration is largely based on a deceptively low entry cost to displace existing structures in the hopes that it can capture enough market share to justify the real computing cost.
The amount of cash it is burning will eventually exceed the hype machine required to entice more investors. It's being called a bubble for a reason.
Agree with all of it.
It definitely has uses but whether it can currently justify the costs is another thing that you have rightly highlighted.
I am curious how much of it is really for surveillance.
Then again, Amazon kept reinvesting everything until finally "turning a profit" in 2016 or so. Somehow it got away with expensing investments.
I see this as kind of the same. The major question is how long until the chips become obsolete, and require replacement, or what they will be able to do at that point.
Then you have companies like Microsoft which are stopping the use of it because it is costing more than the human employees would.
It definitely has uses, but I don't think how it should be used is fully understood by the C-suites etc, so for now its more of buzz word bingo. Most don't really understand the difference between automation vs AI anyways.
I guess we'll see how it goes. But as long as these companies are generating heavy cash flow, they can afford to invest even if it doesn't pan out. How many billions did Facebook spend on the Metaverse? Around $80B, but of course some of that is still used in other stuff, VR, and probably tech developed to be used elsewhere. But still, the scale of how much money these companies make is really unfathomable by most.
If a normal restaurant makes $150k/y (totally guessing no real idea), that is about 7 restaurants to make $1M, 7000 to make $1B.
Google, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Facebook, had made about $670B in operating Cash Flow in 2025. Free Cash Flow (After capital investments) was probably about 30% of that.
Just oeprating cash flow would take approx 4.7M restaurants to do the same operating cash flow.
If each restaurant had 4 employees, that would be around 15M jobs out of the ~160M participating in the labour market.
It really is mind boggling.