DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Major AI Companies Aren’t Even Pretending to Make Money

January 31, 2026
in News
Major AI Companies Aren’t Even Pretending to Make Money

In a way, Silicon Valley has always asked investors to suspend disbelief to fund pie-in-the-sky projects, but the AI boom calls for something closer to a full break from financial reality.

It’s 2026. Last year, investors lavished $80 billion on foundation AI companies — the ones building huge, general-purpose AI systems. They all have yet to even break even, let alone turn a profit. That being the case, you may ask yourself: is anyone even trying to make money from all this AI stuff?

The answer, as TechCrunch AI editor Russell Brandom explains, is a resounding “not really, no.”

In order to keep track of who‘s doing what in the AI space, Brandom came up with a five-level scale to grade AI companies. Of course, with so few projects actually bringing in revenue, financial success isn’t very helpful for tracking performance. Instead, Brandom went with a vibes-based system, rating companies based on how hard they’re trying to make money.

“The idea here is to measure ambition, not success,” he writes.

The scale maxes out at level five — “we are already making millions of dollars every day, thank you very much” — and goes down to level one, where “true wealth is when you love yourself.”

Brandom starts with humans&, a relatively quiet AI company with a name that looks like a typo which has received plenty of good press lately. Despite raising $480 million for a valuation of $4.48 billion, the company has yet to articulate an actual product it plans on shipping, earning it a rating of level three, meaning “we have many promising product ideas, which will be revealed in the fullness of time.”

Safe Superintelligence (SSI), a hazy “superintelligent AI” company founded by Ilya Sutskever, the eccentric former chief scientist of OpenAI, gets a level one. SSI is so committed to its vague vision that it turned down a $32 billion acquisition from Meta — an incredibly generous offer for a company that had yet to generate any revenue at the time of its $20 billion valuation.

“There are no product cycles, and, aside from the still-baking superintelligent foundation model, there doesn’t seem to be any product at all,” Brandom writes. “With this pitch, [Sutskever] raised $3 billion!”

Meanwhile, the $2 billion company Thinking Machines Lab could be due for a downgrade from level four to level two, “we have the outlines of a concept of a plan.” Thinking Machines Lab was co-founded by Mira Murati, who had served as the chief technology officer — and very briefly as CEO, during the mutiny against Sam Altman — at OpenAI. Now Thinking Machines is suffering something of a coup of its own over recent weeks, the New York Times reported, with high-level officials defecting to other AI companies as the much-hyped startup descends into a “perpetual soap opera.”

One thing’s for sure: if confidence could be bottled and sold, these companies would be profitable on day one.

More on AI: Scientist Horrified as ChatGPT Deletes All His Research

The post Major AI Companies Aren’t Even Pretending to Make Money appeared first on Futurism.

Georgia high school teacher arrested in alleged sex case involving student
News

Georgia high school teacher arrested in alleged sex case involving student

by New York Post
February 21, 2026

A Georgia high school teacher was arrested Wednesday after allegations of inappropriate contact between a teacher and a minor student surfaced at ...

Read more
News

Gym Bros Are Ditching Dinner for ‘Boy Kibble’

February 21, 2026
News

Even After Supreme Court Ruling, Trump Insists He Can Do as He Wishes

February 21, 2026
News

With Tariff Changes, Consumers May Be Stuck in a Waiting Game

February 21, 2026
News

Police Chief Placed Millions in Bets as He Embezzled, Investigators Say

February 21, 2026
OpenAI forecasts its revenue will top $280 billion in 2030

OpenAI forecasts its revenue will top $280 billion in 2030

February 21, 2026
Judge Blocks Texas Law Banning L.G.B.T.Q. Clubs in Some School Districts

L.G.B.T.Q. Clubs in Some Texas Schools Can’t Be Banned, Judge Says

February 21, 2026
Trump Plans to Impose Tariffs a Different Way After Supreme Court Loss

After Stunning Setback, Trump Finds Other Ways to Impose Tariffs

February 21, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026