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Comparing AI to 1995-era internet bandwidth, the hosts argue that selling raw 'intelligence' is a low-margin, commodity business. The significant financial upside will be captured not by the infrastructure providers, but by the creators who build novel applications and experiences using that intelligence as a building block.

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The massive capital expenditure by hyperscalers on AI will likely create an oversupply of capacity. This will crash prices, creating a golden opportunity for a new generation of companies to build innovative applications on cheap AI, much like Amazon utilized the cheap bandwidth left after the dot-com bust.

For an infrastructure business, the existential AI threat is not being replaced. It's having another company build the valuable "intelligence layer" on top of your platform, commoditizing your core service into a low-margin "dumb pipe."

Like containerization, AI is a transformative technology where value may accrue to customers and users, not the creators of the core infrastructure. The biggest fortunes from containerization were made by companies like Nike and Apple that leveraged global supply chains, not by investors in the container companies themselves.

AI infrastructure leaders justify massive investments by citing a limitless appetite for intelligence, dismissing concerns about efficiency. This belief ignores that infinite demand doesn't guarantee profit; it can easily lead to margin collapse and commoditization, much like the internet's effect on media.

Historical tech cycles like the cloud and mobile demonstrate a consistent pattern: the application layer ultimately generates 5 to 10 times the value of the underlying infrastructure capital expenditure. With trillions being invested in AI infrastructure, future value creation at the application layer will be astronomically larger.

If AI makes intelligence cheap and universally available, its economic value may collapse. This theory suggests that selling raw AI models could become a low-margin, utility-like business. Profitability will depend on building moats through specialized applications or regulatory capture, not on selling base intelligence.

Unlike cable or power companies that benefit from regional monopolies, AI intelligence is a globally competitive, frictionless market. This dynamic is 'so much worse' for business because it allows for perfect arbitrage, driving the price of intelligence toward zero and making it incredibly difficult to build a sustainable, high-margin business on the infrastructure layer.

The internet leveled the playing field by making information accessible. AI will do the same for intelligence, making expertise a commodity. The new human differentiator will be the creativity and ability to define and solve novel, previously un-articulable problems.

AI models are becoming commodities; the real, defensible value lies in proprietary data and user context. The correct strategy is for companies to use LLMs to enhance their existing business and data, rather than selling their valuable context to model providers for pennies on the dollar.

In a world where AI makes software cheap or free, the primary value shifts to specialized human expertise. Companies can monetize by using their software as a low-cost distribution channel to sell high-margin, high-ticket services that customers cannot easily replicate, like specialized security analysis.