Leaders | A trillion-dollar AI arms race

Big tech’s capex splurge may be irrationally exuberant 

Beware of overhype and overbuild

Model of an LLM kinda falling, drooping off a cliff
Illustration: Michael Haddad

From the 19th-century railway mania to the telecoms boom at the dawn of the internet age, cautionary tales abound of over-investment in infrastructure fuelled by excitement over a new technology. With the rise of generative artificial intelligence (AI), history is repeating itself. In recent weeks four tech giants—Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft—have pledged to spend close to a total of $200bn this year, mostly on data centres, chips and other gear for building, training and deploying generative-AI models. That is 45% more than last year’s blowout. Tech barons such as Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg admit that it may be years before this investment generates returns. It is an AI arms race.

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This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “A trillion-dollar arms race”

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