this post was submitted on 21 May 2026
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https://www.axios.com/2026/04/26/ai-cost-human-workers Uber's chief technology officer already blew through his full 2026 AI budget due to token costs, according to The Information.

Lol. Lmao even

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[–] kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world 68 points 20 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago) (2 children)

This feels predictable. AI is one of, if not the most invested in yet unprofitable industries in the history of humanity.

The last few years have been the beta and the tech demo. But that is not paying for itself yet. US companies are competing with (and falling behind) Chinese state-sponsored companies. OpenAI in particular, a company whose revenue doesn't even cover half of their operating costs, has extended themselves into owing more than a TRILLION dollars to the entirety of big tech who are building chips and data centers on these IOUs, and will need to be paid sooner or later. The bills will come due.

Other corporations are already paying massive bills for licensing, tokens, training, and infrastructure changes to accommodate this shift to AI while laying off massove chunks of skilled workers on the idea that AI is cheap and will get cheaper over time. But that is simply not the case. This is the "first taste is free" part of this deal. Once they have companies deeply invested in AI and have destroyed the fabric of the labor economy in favor of it, that price is going to skyrocket because OF COURSE IT WILL.

Maybe at some point this will all level out. AI bubble will pop. Prices will sky rocket. Companies will try to backpedal, which will be slow and difficult, they'll end up paying AI companies huge sums while they work to decouple themselves after just forming the bond, they'll also end up paying stupid money to professionals who are suddenly in high demand, and many companies won't survive the chaos. But the ones that do will settle into a new equilibrium.

AI will eventually get cheaper (but probably never this cheap again, at least not in the near future), and it will probably be a permanent fixture in our lives and work to some degree. But it's usefulness and cost effectiveness will be limited in scope, with specialized purposes. It will not ultimately be the great labor replacement companies think/thought it would be, even as stupid and short sighted as that desire is in the first place (if 30% of the global work force is unemployed, how do you think that will effect your revenue, morons!?). But that also is assuming that the coming chaos doesn't turn out so bad that AI is permanently legislated into oblivion after the chaos it's about to cause.

[–] Ramenator@lemmy.world 15 points 19 hours ago (4 children)

AI is one of, if not the most invested in yet unprofitable industries in the history of humanity.

I think there are some Dutch tulip farmers who would like a word with you

[–] MeThisGuy@feddit.nl 1 points 6 hours ago

hey you leave us out of this!
that was a long time ago, and now approx a 3rd of flowers worldwide come through here in one of the top ten largest open buildings in the world (still) and we invented the Dutch auction..

so suck it

[–] kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world 20 points 18 hours ago* (last edited 18 hours ago) (1 children)

Not quite the same. The tulip industry was making money hand over foot. It was the speculators that ended up being shafted. Tulip mania was more comparable to the beanie babies craze, or even NFTs. AI companies, on the whole, are making no profit at all.

[–] TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today 7 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

It makes more sense if you position Ai companies as the speculators and chip makers as the actual tulip producers.

[–] kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world 6 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 16 hours ago)

It would if all the the chip makers weren't making chips on credit from a broke ass industry. Though they'll likely get paid with a bailout including interest, so... they will probably still make out alright regardless

[–] LodeMike@lemmy.today 2 points 13 hours ago

Didn't that last a month (shorter by a factor of 50 so far)?

[–] Folstar@lemmus.org 14 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

Good stuff. One small note: I'm not sure how useful the distinction of "Chinese state-sponsored companies" is in recent history when comparing to the US, let alone now. The US has retooled much of federal research engine toward promoting US AI. Even fired the NSB (among many other long standing, expert driven advisory boards) to replace it with a bunch of tech baron stooges. States are offering unprecedented payouts to data centers. The AI hyperscalers already have a bailout all but guaranteed when the bubble pops. It's all state-sponsored, just with extra steps.

[–] kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world 7 points 18 hours ago

The Chinese AI companies being state sponsored just means that they can go longer and throw more money at development without turning profit than other investor driven companies.

The US is certainly throwing a bloated amount of money at AI too. And a much as it infuriates me, they'll almost certainly absorb the bubble pop with tax another bailout for criminal corporate behavior. But it's not quite been a direct pipeline of openly flowing cash, just yet. They're still paying for discrete contracts which have to be approved in the budget. They've been massive contracts, but they're still making these companies compete e each other for them too. Like with the recent flip from DOJ contracts with Anthropic to OpenAI, for example.

In China, they're buying in supporting the entire industry. They're building infrastructure for AI data centers, giving them grants and subsidies, have direct ownership in the companies, and had made specific carve outs in their laws to give AI development deregulated room to do what it needs. I'm not in favor of either approach. Just pointing out that China's approach does seem to have been an advantage in the AI race, or at least was enough of one that they made up a ton of ground, and maybe passed their US counterparts.