The article discusses AI not as an abstract form of intelligence but as a commercial product designed to generate profits. It argues that the significant capital investment in AI isnât merely predictive but actively shapes industry realities. The author highlights that major tech companies are not just responding to existing market demands but are rather architects of those markets, often manufacturing their own narratives and dictating terms. This phenomenon illustrates how contemporary capitalism operates, driven more by corporate interests and dynamics rather than genuine consumer need.
The promises alone create a future - not necessarily because they'll come true, but because enough capital, deployed with enough conviction, warps reality around it.
Big Tech firms investing in AI aren't simply responding to market forces; they're creating them, defining them, controlling them.
Collection
[
|
...
]