"The AI bubble is reaching a tipping point", says Sequoia Capital.
AI companies paid billions of dollars for top engineers, data centers, etc. Meanwhile, companies are running out of 'free' data to scrape online and facing lawsuits for the data they did scrape. Finally, the novelty of chatbots and image generators is wearing off for users, and fierce competition is leading to some product commoditisation.
No major AI lab is making a profit yet (while downstream GPU providers do profit). That's not to say they won't make money eventually from automation.
It looks somewhat like the run-up of the Dotcom bubble. Companies then too were awash in investments (propped up by low interest rates), but most lacked a viable business strategy. Once the bubble burst, non-viable internet companies got filtered out.
Yet today, companies like Google and Microsoft use the internet to dominate the US economy. Their core businesses became cash cows, now allowing CEOs to throw money at AI as long as a vote-adjusted majority of stakeholders buys the growth story. That marks one difference with the Dotcom bubble. Anyway, here's the scenario:
How would your plans change if we saw an industry-wide crash?
Let's say there is a brief window where:
- Investments drop massively (eg. because the s-curve of innovation did flatten for generative AI, and further development cycles were needed to automate at a profit).
- The public turns sour on generative AI (eg. because the fun factor wore off, and harms like disinformation, job insecurity, and pollution came to the surface).
- Politicians are no longer interested in hearing the stories of AI tech CEOs and their lobbyists (eg. because political campaigns are not getting backed by the AI crowd).
Let's say it's the one big crash before major AI labs can break even for their parent companies (eg. because mass-manufacturing lowered hardware costs, real-time surveillance resolved the data bottleneck, and multi-domain-navigating robotics resolved inefficient learning).
Would you attempt any actions you would not otherwise have attempted?
Update: back up to 60% chance.
I overreacted before IMO on the updating down to 40% (and undercompensated when updating down to 80%, which I soon after thought should have been 70%).
The leader in turns of large model revenue, OpenAI has basically failed to build something worth calling GPT-5, and Microsoft is now developing more models in-house to compete with them. If OpenAI fails on the effort to combine its existing models into something new and special (likely), that’s a blow to perception of the industry.
A recession might also be coming this year, or at least in the next four years, which I made a prediction about before: https://bsky.app/profile/artificialbodies.net/post/3lbvf2ejcec2f