By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
World of SoftwareWorld of SoftwareWorld of Software
  • News
  • Software
  • Mobile
  • Computing
  • Gaming
  • Videos
  • More
    • Gadget
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
Search
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. World of Software.
Reading: AI Is the Bubble to Burst Them All
Share
Sign In
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
World of SoftwareWorld of Software
Font ResizerAa
  • Software
  • Mobile
  • Computing
  • Gadget
  • Gaming
  • Videos
Search
  • News
  • Software
  • Mobile
  • Computing
  • Gaming
  • Videos
  • More
    • Gadget
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. World of Software.
World of Software > Gadget > AI Is the Bubble to Burst Them All
Gadget

AI Is the Bubble to Burst Them All

News Room
Last updated: 2025/10/27 at 8:47 PM
News Room Published 27 October 2025
Share
SHARE

In the nearly three years since AI took center stage in Silicon Valley, the major players, with the exception of Nvidia, whose chips would likely still be in use post-bust, still haven’t demonstrated what their long-term AI business model will be. OpenAI, Anthropic, and the AI-embracing tech giants are burning through billions, inference costs haven’t fallen (those companies still lose money on nearly every user query), and the long-term viability of their enterprise programs are a big question mark at best. Is the product that will justify hundreds of billions in investment a search engine replacement? A social media substitute? Workplace automation? How will AI companies price in the costs of energy and computing, which are still sky-high? If copyright lawsuits don’t break their way, will they have to license their training data, and will they pass on that additional cost to consumers? A recent MIT study made waves—and helped stoke this most recent wave of bubble fears—with a finding that 95 percent of firms that adopted generative AI did not profit from the technology at all.

“Usually over time, uncertainty goes down,” Goldfarb says. People learn what’s working and what’s not. With AI, that hasn’t been the case. “What has happened in the last few months,” he says, “is that we’ve realized there is a jagged frontier, and some of the earliest claims about the effectiveness of AI have been mixed or not as great as initially claimed.” Goldfarb thinks the market is still underestimating the difficulty of integrating AI into organizations, and he’s not alone. “If we are underestimating this difficulty as a whole,” Goldfarb says, “then we will be more likely to have a bubble.”

AI’s closest historical analogue here may be not electric lighting but radio. When RCA started broadcasting in 1919, it was immediately clear that it had a powerful information technology on its hands. But less clear was how that would translate into business. “Would radio be a loss-leading marketing for department stores? A public service for broadcasting Sunday sermons? An ad-supported medium for entertainment?” the authors write. “All were possible. All were subjects of technological narratives.” As a result, radio turned into one of the biggest bubbles in history—peaking in 1929, before losing 97 percent of its value in the crash. This wasn’t an incidental sector; RCA was, along with Ford Motor Company, the most high-traded stock on the market. It was, as The New Yorker recently wrote, “the Nvidia of its day.”

Pure Play

Why is Toyota valued at $273 billion while Tesla is worth $1.5 trillion to investors—when Toyota shipped more cars than Tesla last year, and brought in three times as much revenue? The answer is tied to Tesla’s status as a “pure-play” investment in electric (and to a lesser extent, autonomous) cars. In the 2010s, Elon Musk harnessed all the exciting uncertainty around EVs to tell a story about a future free of internal combustion engines that was so alluring that investors were willing to bet enormously on a volatile startup over proven workhorses. A pure play company is one whose fate is bound to a particular innovation panning out, about which entrepreneurs might tell more exciting and fantastic stories, and you need them for a bubble to inflate. They’re the vehicle through which narratives turn into material bets.

So far this year, according to Silicon Valley Bank, 58 percent of all VC investment has gone to AI companies. There aren’t a ton of obvious pure-play investments available to retail investors—another criteria for pumping up a bubble—but there are some big ones. Nvidia is at the top of the list, having staked its future on building chips for AI firms, and becoming the first $4 trillion company in history in the process. When a sector is seeing a lot of pure plays, according to Goldfarb and Kirsch’s framework, it’s more likely to overheat and have a bubble. SoftBank has plans to sink tens of billions of dollars into OpenAI, the purest AI play there is, though it’s not yet open to retail investments. (If and when it finally is, analysts speculate that OpenAI may become the first trillion-dollar IPO.) Investors have also backed pure-play companies such as Perplexity (now valued at $20 billion) and CoreWeave ($61 billion market cap). In the case of AI, these pure-play investments are especially worrying, because the biggest companies are increasingly bound up with one another. Nvidia just announced a $100 billion proposed investment in OpenAI, which in turn relies on Nvidia’s chips. OpenAI relies on Microsoft’s computing power, the result of a $10 billion partnership, and Microsoft, in turn, needs on OpenAI’s AI models.

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article Windows 11 Pro is down to just $15 — save $184 on your upgrade
Next Article iVANKY’S Thunderbolt 5-level dock brings triple external display support and more to your MacBook Pro – 9to5Mac
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

248.1k Like
69.1k Follow
134k Pin
54.3k Follow

Latest News

The Best Waterproof Fitness Trackers We’ve Tested for 2025
News
MiniMax releases M2 open-source model , offering double speed at 8% of Claude Sonnet’s price
Computing
Google Home acting
News
AI’s Next Frontier? An Algorithm for Consciousness
Gadget

You Might also Like

Gadget

AI’s Next Frontier? An Algorithm for Consciousness

6 Min Read
Gadget

AI and the End of Accents

5 Min Read
Gadget

Claude Goes to Therapy

4 Min Read
Gadget

The Argument for Letting AI Burn It All Down

4 Min Read
//

World of Software is your one-stop website for the latest tech news and updates, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Quick Link

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Topics

  • Computing
  • Software
  • Press Release
  • Trending

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

World of SoftwareWorld of Software
Follow US
Copyright © All Rights Reserved. World of Software.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?