The A.I. Bubble Is Coming for Your Browser

The New Yorker 

The A.I. Bubble Is Coming for Your Browser Artificial-intelligence startups, like the makers of the "smart" web browser Dia, are being acquired for vast sums. There's an old business maxim dating to the California gold rush: it's easier to make money selling picks and shovels to aspiring miners than to strike it rich finding gold. Artificial intelligence is in a picks-and-shovels phase right now. If gold, in this metaphor, is artificial general intelligence--a machine smarter than a human--or some version of a digital god, then tech companies are snapping up the tools to create one, including graphics-processing units, data centers, and trained A.I. models. That scramble is why Mark Zuckerberg is paying a twenty-four-year-old A.I. researcher two hundred and fifty million dollars to work at Meta, and why Sam Altman, the C.E.O. of OpenAI, recently said that the company would spend "trillions of dollars" building infrastructure.