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As AI makes software creation accessible to everyone, Silicon Valley's historical edge—knowing how to code—disappears. The new defensible moats are assets like proprietary data, trust, or network effects, not the software itself, threatening the region's dominance.
Wilkinson argues that the traditional moat for software—the high cost and difficulty of hiring programmers—has vanished. He compares it to a machine that makes perfect pizza cheaply: consumer quality rises, but business margins plummet. Lasting value must now come from other sources like brand or distribution.
By releasing powerful, open-source AI models, China may be strategically commoditizing software. This undermines the primary advantage of US tech giants like Microsoft and Google, while bolstering China's own dominance in hardware manufacturing and robotics.
As AI and better tools commoditize software creation, traditional technology moats are shrinking. The new defensible advantages are forms of liquidity: aggregated data, marketplace activity, or social interactions. These network effects are harder for competitors to replicate than code or features.
The long-held belief that a complex codebase provides a durable competitive advantage is becoming obsolete due to AI. As software becomes easier to replicate, defensibility shifts away from the technology itself and back toward classic business moats like network effects, brand reputation, and deep industry integration.
The term "unsloppable" describes companies whose competitive advantage isn't their codebase, which AI can replicate. Instead, their strength comes from durable moats like hardware, strong network effects (Uber), exclusive IP (Disney), or physical infrastructure, which are difficult for AI-powered startups to clone.
As AI makes software development nearly free, traditional engineering moats are disappearing. Businesses must now rely on durable advantages like network effects, economies of scale, brand trust, and defensible IP to survive, becoming "unsloppable."
AI makes the technical 'doing' of business, like coding, accessible to everyone. The durable competitive edge is no longer the ability to build a product, but the ability to reach and acquire customers. Audience and distribution channels are the new defensible assets.
Software's main competitive advantage isn't code, but its deep integration into customer data and workflows, creating high switching costs. AI threatens this moat by automating those integrated tasks, reducing customer stickiness and pricing power.
AI doesn't kill all software; it bifurcates the market. Companies with strong moats like distribution, proprietary data, and enterprise lock-in will thrive by integrating AI. However, companies whose only advantage was their software code will be wiped out as AI makes the code itself a commodity. The moat is no longer the software.
Advanced AI tools have made writing software trivially easy, erasing the traditional moat of technical execution. The new differentiators for businesses are non-technical assets like brand trust, distribution networks, and community, as the software itself has become instantly replicable.