aaronbrethorst a day ago
  • antoniuschan99 a day ago

    AI build out is more of an extension of datacenter build out though. All the hyperscalers lead AI build out.

    Fiber dailed because the telcos overbuilt and demand lagged. When Amazon introduced AWS it succeeded right away because there was lots of demand.

    Jeff Bezos Ted Talk 2003 - https://youtu.be/vMKNUylmanQ

  • polar8 a day ago

    Cloud and AI infra already pull in $300B+ a year. Data center vacancy under 1% and they’re power utility constrained. The fiber guys built ahead of demand, these guys are printing money and can’t build new printers fast enough.

    • hagbarth a day ago

      But Meta specifically needs returns from AI products to justify the capex. Google and Microsoft eg. have profitable cloud businesses from where they can rent out GPU compute. Meta’s bet is far more risky.

      • baxtr a day ago

        True. But then again they own the consumer side.

        If Meta hadn’t invested in AI recommendations a while back they would have lost against TikTok big time.

        • windexh8er 6 hours ago

          As the Facebook generation dies out, so does Facebook. I just don't see it. Meta will have to continue to buy competition and hope that the ad market stays a racket forever. The only reason Meta is still relevant is advertising, just the same as Google. Eventually enough people will realize it for what it's worth: anti-competitive enshittification in order to preserve multi-billion dollar companies that have products and services that suck so bad you'd have a hard time paying people to use if they were startups today.

          • robkop 4 hours ago

            Being skeptical of all the numbers I see - it still seems instagram is on roughly even footing with TikTok for upcoming generations.

            I don’t doubt they may destroy their own product (like google search) but I do think it’s going to take a long long time

          • matthewdgreen 6 hours ago

            Maybe the plan is to buy up all the companies that currently pay them for ads?

    • pfannkuchen 3 hours ago

      Is the edge node revenue in the customer/infra graph from investor spend or customer spend? Almost certainly the former, right?

asim a day ago

Tens of billions spent on AI data centers. But people still starve across the planet. Amazing.

  • pfannkuchen 2 hours ago

    Population numbers in all areas where this is widespread exploded after the introduction of efficient agriculture from outside. Like if lack of food was the root problem, we would expect population in these places to be decreasing, not increasing, right? Something other than food scarcity is at play here.

    • sigmoid10 an hour ago

      That's a logical fallacy. Population growth can outgrow food supply thanks to high fertility and access to better hygiene and medical treatment from outside combined with a lack of birth control. So you would still see population growth, but a growing fraction of this population could be malnourished.

      That being said, the most common reason is simply war. If you look at the famine in Sudan right now, it is a direct consequence of the civil war (which also happens to be the biggest and bloodiest war by far in the world right now). Lost crops from weather or diseases can also restrict local food production, but it only ever really turns into a problem when armed groups prevent outside food supplies from moving to affected areas like the military in Sudan does right now.

  • krona a day ago

    Capital misallocation do be like that, but I don't think that capital would be feeding children in the Congo if it wasn't for Facebook's latest folly.

    • loeg a day ago

      The issue is mostly the corrupt elites that control these impoverished counties, not foreign aid or lack thereof.

      • Eddy_Viscosity2 20 hours ago

        I wonder if there is any difference between the corrupt elites that control impoverished countries and the corrupt elites that control the biggest corporations. If the CEOs had full control over government (which seems to be their aim, and they are succeeding), what would they do with that power I wonder?

        • loeg 15 hours ago

          "Corrupt" doesn't mean what you seem to think it means.

        • drivingmenuts 11 hours ago

          Well, we in the US saw what happened when Elon Musk was handed a ridiculous amount of control and it wasn't good.

      • spwa4 a day ago

        The real issue is far more controversial than that. The issue is not even necessarily the corrupt elites but the culture. And specifically that any new elites that might displace the existing one would just do the same.

        Think of Afghanistan as an example, where the US really did create a modern tolerant state ... for a while. Locals didn't want to keep it going, or at least, not enough. Because the idea that there aren't very wealthy Afghans is just wrong. There's entire neighborhoods in Kabul full of luxury villas with people going into fancy restaurants constantly. That's effectively what the Taliban are fighting for.

        • Frieren an hour ago

          > Think of Afghanistan as an example,

          A country that has been destabilized by foreign invasions again and again. The last one from the USA.

          It is not about culture, it is about been ruled by outside powers that do not allow for internal development. Except for a few tax havens, former colonized countries struggle with violence, inequality, and corruption. That was the system that was setup for them and it will take decades to fix if they are left alone, it will never be fixed if other countries intervene to keep the status quo to profit from it.

        • tim333 20 hours ago

          Maintaining a modern tolerant state is probably harder than it looks. Like in the UK we take it for granted but it's the end result of centuries of sometimes bloody trial and error fixes. People think it's silly we still have a king but look what happened to Russia, France, Germany etc after they got rid of theirs.

          Afghanistan might have worked out if the US took a king like role sitting in a fort somewhere and saying ok, you're prime minister to some Afgan after each election. The king role may seem like nothing but if a UK prime minister says sod this I'm ruler for life then the king doesn't endorse them and the king is the head of the armed forces which makes it difficult to do such stuff.

          • foogazi 18 hours ago

            > and the king is the head of the armed forces which makes it difficult to do such stuff.

            How did that work out for Russia, France or Germany ?

            • tim333 16 hours ago

              Stalin, Napoleon and Hitler but they got over it eventually apart from Russia.

          • spwa4 13 hours ago

            Maybe, in Afghanistan Soviet communists invaded and destroyed Afghanistan's state structures and started a massacre that would last years. That's why the Taliban attacked ... and probably why they won, with overwhelming support by the population of Afghanistan, and even US support.

            But the details of the story expose a great many painpoints for many ideologies and parties so people don't like to talk about it. First it exposes that the US (and Europe, and many others, but of course not the UN or Russia) supported the Taliban ... because they were better than communists. My favorite stats is that the Taliban, as bad as they are, in 2.5 wars and ... still haven't killed as many people as the communists massacres killed in Afghanistan.

            So "capitalist" or more accurately US and UK support for the Taliban did indeed exist (was a lot less than reported though), but yes, that included supporting and training a certain Osama Bin Laden ... Of course what's never mentioned when this is brought up is why people supported the Taliban. It wasn't to destroy socialism ... or at least that wasn't the only reason.

            On the other side of the aisle it exposes that there was a time that socialism tried to eradicate religions ... using genocide (not just in Afghanistan). WITH the support of socialists in the west, the same socialist parties that still exist, were violently against immigration and protested against western states saving even one of those muslim men, women and children.

            Both ideologies, left, center and right, want to believe they're constant, rational, and right. So an extremely large change in policy ... especially leftist parties who supported Soviet/communist genocides against a decent chunk of their current electorate.

            Including famous current politicians like Antonio Guterrez, secretary general of the United Nations, who organised and personally physically attacked and hurt people for trying to give muslims sanctuary 40 years ago (he probably didn't even hate muslims, he just supported communism, including Soviet and Chinese genocides)

            So everybody denies it but that's how Afghanistan got where it is.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Afghanistan

        • hulitu 16 minutes ago

          > Think of Afghanistan as an example, where the US really did create a modern tolerant state

          Citation needed.

      • tim333 20 hours ago

        There may hope for some AI assisted governance software to improve things? Kind of like how Uber type apps have made if harder for cabbies to rip you off.

        • kylehotchkiss 7 hours ago

          Zero. Why do you think AI will overcome human nature in impoverished nations? Smartphone and cheap internet already happened in many, it hasn’t made a huge dent in outcomes.

        • nozzlegear 6 hours ago

          My favorite (fiction) book on this topic is Ray Nayler's Where The Axe Is Buried. The premise is that most western democracies have voted to "rationalize", which means installing an AI Prime Minister tuned specifically for their country's culture and economic interests.

        • bathtub365 16 hours ago

          Which corrupt leaders are going to give over their control to a machine?

          • tim333 16 hours ago

            You'd have to get rid of them first, but it might help the new lot stay straight?

        • loeg 8 hours ago

          Only if you think AI will be god.

    • notmyjob a day ago

      [flagged]

      • SR2Z a day ago

        Unless you're gonna no-true-Scotsman this, plenty of wealthy Christians are deeply unpleasant and selfish people. Going to church does not make people good.

        • pfannkuchen 2 hours ago

          They aren’t good Christians then, and if Christian social shame was still the dominant flavor of social shame we may not see such egregious behavior (not arguing there would be perfection, of course).

          • SR2Z an hour ago

            So, hypothetically, how many people do you think call themselves good Christians and then turn around a say that homosexuality sends people to hell? What does the Bible have to say about abortion, really?

            You say Christian social shame, those are the very first things that come to mind.

      • kylehotchkiss 7 hours ago

        The “richest country in the world” is already supposedly “Christian”. Interestingly enough, Christian nonprofits in international aid space are reporting historically low contributions (heard on a recent Russell Moore show). It turns out when secular leadership wants to become insular, many of the religious follow suit.

      • dns_snek a day ago

        Christian capitalist is an oxymoron.

      • esseph a day ago

        You cannot be both a good Christian and a good Capitalist. It is an "or", not an "and".

  • wewewedxfgdf a day ago

    No doubt you have a nice bike or computer or you spend money on something often like movies or board games or something.

    Do you argue that money should all go to feeding the hungry?

    • consp a day ago

      Poor argumentation. If I spend 25 billion on movies and still have enough money to never care you should ask me again.

    • windexh8er 6 hours ago

      Quite the stretch when you compare a bike to trillions wasted on products that 1) don't generally benefit humanity 2) could actually be used for real research instead of preserving an ad racket.

      But, yeah. Keep comparing the egregious billionaires looking to lock out competition and hold on to their billions with all their might! Clearly it has to be the bike or board games the normies own, though. FFS.

      • leovingi 30 minutes ago

        It's always so easy to argue about spending someone else's money, especially if you can present it as a moral crusade, isn't it?

    • asim a day ago

      I donate part of my wealth to the poor every year and whatever more I feel is adequate based on a code of law e.g religion. I am just an individual. If I was a multi billion dollar conglomerate that incentive would be much higher. To bring the world out of poverty is to enrich all of humanity and my work would benefit from that as more people would benefit from the technology I built. But if the incentive is to spend everything and borrow more to build data centers to fuel addictive services and exploit people then this is quite a disservice to mankind.

      • ponector a day ago

        Humanity is enormously rich. Compare to the state of humanity 200y ago. Pretty much everyone was struggling to survive, to get food and some heat.

        Nowadays even the poorest countries are not starving, unless there is a war going on.

        • baubino a day ago

          You’re demonstrating the problem of averages. While what you are saying might be true on average, it doesn’t negate the point being made, which is that millions of people continue to struggle to survive and live without adequate food, heat, water, healthcare, etc.

          Also, there are multiple wars going on across the world that are making the problem even worse.

          • eastbound a day ago

            No, really, there are fewer famines. The UN, who defined poverty in terms of basic necessities, had to review their definition because how do you make UN survive if there weren’t enough poor populations in scope.

            • Tarsul 20 hours ago

              yeah but what's it worth if our riches in 2025 are lent from the future with no way to pay back? That's climate change.

              • eastbound 14 hours ago

                Shifting the goal. The goal was commiseration for poverty, and you want a stable future.

                It’s difficult to reconcile the desires of 8bn people. Some don’t care about climate change, some would like to see their granddaughter, some will live through flooding or an earthquake, some would like better health. Most of misery in the world does not come from the lack of money. If anything, disagreements between people are the cause of the lack of money, not the result.

  • ponector a day ago

    Gambling market in US has $100bn+ revenue. Tobacco sales in US is $70bn+

    People starve and (almost) no one cares.

    • asim a day ago

      Yes also huge problems and many other industries to speak of. Unfortunately as technology dominates and the most valuable company in the world is producing GPUs we know where it's all headed. I think while gambling and narcotics are very addictive and terrible we have overlooked technology and it's crept up on us in a bad way. Screens are horribly addictive. Maybe even worse than those things mentioned because you can be indoctrinated from birth. Because the cost is almost zero and continuous and the advancements are only trying to drive further addiction e.g Meta's heavy investment in AR and VR. AR/VR plus AI is basically the recipe for virtual worlds which people will prefer over real life. So we'll become even more disillusioned to the worlds problems because we'll prefer to escape to some virtual reality where all our desires are serviced.

  • dolphinscorpion 5 hours ago

    And many spent hundreds of dollars on a dinner when they could feed x poor people. Slipery slope

    • all_factz 5 hours ago

      We need dinners, we don’t need AI

  • loeg a day ago

    Michigan has plenty of water. But California still has droughts sometimes. Amazing (if you're 14).

  • lenkite 3 hours ago

    Birth rates are >4 in most of those starving regions. Family planning needed first.

  • chii a day ago

    i think a good counter to this sort of argument is :

    https://launiusr.wordpress.com/2012/02/08/why-explore-space-...

    • frm88 20 hours ago

      Wow! This has aged really, really badly. 50 years and many billions of dollars later and we're neither on the Moon or Mars or have significantly enhanced the distribution of food to those in need, let alone international cooperation.

      Higher food production through survey and assessment from orbit, and better food distribution through improved international relations, are only two examples of how profoundly the space program will impact life on Earth.

      As good counters go, this underperforms.

  • kcaseg a day ago

    Last time I commented something very similar thinking it was the least controversial no brainer thing and multiple people reacted as if it was some Leninist ragebait lol

    • t0lo a day ago

      Conditioning- America is a capitalist social experiment and I mean that literally

      • senordevnyc 8 hours ago

        It's also one of the countries with the highest percentage of people who give to charity and volunteer, fwiw.

        • piva00 18 minutes ago

          People in the USA have to volunteer to provide social services not provided by the government though, stuff like food banks which many other developed countries have services in place to take care of their citizens.

          Charitable donations follow a similar pattern, the USA is a different system so not really comparable to some other developed countries which have public systems in place to cover these cases.

      • edm0nd a day ago

        Seems pretty successful then no for being such a young country. America is literally where all the major tech and internet companies are.

        • mmooss 4 hours ago

          That is partly attributed to being by far the largest single market for much of the 20th century - European countries have at most ~30% of the population - and being the only major economy not destroyed by the end of WWII, which resulted in the US producing half of world GDP at the time.

          US businesses have had a much larger market to sell to, and that attracts investment and talent.

        • molteanu a day ago

          Where I'm pretty sure that the definition of "successful" that you have in mind is one given by America itself.

          • t0lo a day ago

            Yep- this is my point- it's becoming far more obvious how the game is being run now everything is going to shit and they're pulling the plug.

        • no_wizard 13 hours ago

          A young country that inherited old values, cultural norms, traditions and ethos.

          It’s not like the US rose in a vacuum. It sees impressive on its face and to some extent I believe it is, but it has more to do with being a resource rich nation (lots of plentiful raw material within our borders) and the fact the last time we had a foreign invasion was during the war of 1812.

          We aren’t some near unbelievable anomaly of history, we built on our British roots

        • gherkinnn a day ago

          "Hub for all the major tech companies" isn't the only metric that matters, not in the face of its current administration. It so is not.

        • GolfPopper a day ago

          Like TSMC and ASML?

          • yugioh3 11 hours ago

            Both of those were funded by and built off of American technology and investment. TSMC as an outsourcing of American made chips and ASML as a direct result of DoD research.

            • piva00 15 minutes ago

              ASML is responsible for all the engineering side of the research from EUV LLC, painting it as "direct result from DoD research" as to minimise the achievement is way backhanded. Without ASML the whole EUV LLC research would be dead in the water, it's a symbiotic relationship, and the amount of engineering R&D that ASML had to do to actually deploy the technology shouldn't be understated like that.

              I don't think ASML was "funded" by American technology, it's actually ASML who has to pay for licencing...

      • CamperBob2 16 hours ago

        One great thing about America is that we won't shoot you at the border for trying to leave.

  • ehnto 7 hours ago

    In their own country, even.

    Even just to save face, I would have expected one of the billionaires to have started a foundation tackling the problem in some way.

  • fvgvkujdfbllo 8 hours ago

    There is no shortage of food anymore. Unless genocide, no one is starving.

  • CamperBob2 a day ago

    And there you are with your fancy computer! Sell it and feed the poor.

    • steve_adams_86 a day ago

      Their fancy computer's value is a mote compared to the billions of dollars being poured into AI software and infrastructure. It's a dead horse that shouldn't be beaten anymore. Individual choices are so insignificant as to be effectively meaningless in contexts like this.

      • CamperBob2 15 hours ago

        Their fancy computer is the tip of a trillion-dollar spear, forged by our precursors who were trying to invent new and innovative ways to blow up half the world while keeping that half from blowing our half up.

        There are no clean hands here. Any attempt to claim the moral high ground by dictating how other people should spend their money (or their machine cycles) will meet with the usual degree of success.

    • asim a day ago

      What if what I donate every year is 100x the value of a laptop I've owned for 5 years? Your logic is illogical.

      • CamperBob2 16 hours ago

        Well, you know, we're all doing what we can.

  • anon291 a day ago

    People in other countries starve because the people in charge of them are evil not because the people with resources lack benevolence. If you've ever tried to do charity in a foreign country with a foreign culture and language you would be aware of the issues. No amount of outside money in the world could fix these problems. In fact they will make it worse. People need to grow up.

    In the United States, starvation doesn't exist so we've expanded the definition to include more people because we really care to feed people. If you've been to countries where actual starvation is a possibility, you'd understand. So tired of this self hating unaware self flagellation.

    • bombcar a day ago

      This is seen in that starvation is effectively solved in the USa (and now runs the other direction; the poor in the US often tend toward obesity instead of starvation).

      The “solution” to countries with starvation today is likely massive full-scale invasion and domination; something the modern world doesn’t have an appetite for.

      • mmooss 4 hours ago

        Can you give an example of that working? The fact is that the 'modern world' - at least before recent phenomena - created by far the greatest expansion of freedom and prosperity, and greatest reduction in poverty, in human history. Way, way beyond anything else, including colonial eras.

        Also, when ideas like yours are tried, it turns out that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely, and powers - including the US - serve their own interests. How could you imagine otherwise at this point?

        And without democracy, they can't help it - self-determination provides better outcomes because the people who are subject to the 'help' have a seat at the table and they have power. The issues that others dismiss or make secondary (or tertiary) are the ones the self-determined people can insist on in a democracy.

        > modern world doesn’t have an appetite for

        It's not a lack of appetite, it's counter to our goals of freedom and self-determination, and all experience of prosperity.

      • gherkinnn a day ago

        Sure. As if the massive full-scale invasion and domination of Iraq and Afghanistan worked so well. And throwing in more firepower and loosening the rules of engagement won't fix it either.

        It boggles the mind how anybody over the age of 20 can think this way.

        • phil21 a day ago

          The primary reason the invasion of Afghanistan failed was because the US tried to pretend it wasn’t an invasion or domination. Telling the local warlords and factions beforehand they just had to outlast things was a plan doomed to failure before it even began.

          If the government had sold “we are making this place the 51st state and it will take 100 years to make that happen” there would be an entirely different outcome.

          I’m not saying that’s what should have happened. I actually feel nothing should have happened. But if you are going to take extensive lethal action like that, at least man up and be honest over what it will take to be successful.

          The US populace is bizarrely afraid of admitting they live the amazing lives they do due to empire. It’s politically untenable to actually state the reality of what it takes to subjugate a population, no matter if the death numbers are similar for abject pointless failure versus eventual success.

          • bombcar a day ago

            Exactly. There's no country on the Earth today with the empire dreams and ability of the British colonial period. And nobody is willing to bring it back (and perhaps for very good reasons, mind you).

            What we did in Iraq and Afghanistan is an embarrassment and black stain; had we been openly evil and empirical (?) we'd have killed less with a better result.

            • mmooss 4 hours ago

              > There's no country on the Earth today with the empire dreams and ability of the British colonial period.

              The colonial Brits weren't trying to feed the world, but aggregate power and wealth. Their former colonies didn't do too well, except wealthy ones like the US, Canada, etc.

              After the colonial period ended, many of those countries have utterly transformed economically. Look at Brazil, China, India, South Korea, Taiwan, .... all prospered after embracing democracy (or at least moving in that direction, in China's case).

            • anon291 18 hours ago

              Imperial is the word you are looking for.

          • foogazi 18 hours ago

            > If the government had sold “we are making this place the 51st state and it will take 100 years to make that happen” there would be an entirely different outcome.

            Such hubris - nobody would have signed up for that

            • anon291 12 hours ago

              Exactly the point he was making. Americans have no will to colonize or empire build

      • anon291 a day ago

        Yeah America has no ability to colonize other countries. We are not unified enough as a culture to do that. Look at the debacle of Afghanistan.

        Like right now there is starvation in Nigeria because Islamofascists from the north are hunting Christians in the south. Exactly how will any amount of American money convince religious zealots to stop being zealots? If anything, a large influx of money from infidels will just make the clerics claim that their victims are foreign operatives. There is nothing we can do other than pray or stage a full scale military invasion. At that point we can either choose to fully administer the place (unsustainable) or we would have to destroy the apparatus that made the situation possible, which is going to look a helluva lot like a genocide. An impossible situation and only one of many across the globe.

        • mmooss 4 hours ago

          > there is starvation in Nigeria because Islamofascists from the north are hunting Christians in the south

          Can you provide some evidence that that's a cause of hunger problems in Nigeria? It's such a politicized claim onw, it's

          > There is nothing we can do other than pray or stage a full scale military invasion.

          Warfare doesn't solve any problems, as anyone who knows its history or experiences it will express. It's the worst problem for humanity.

          Are you really claiming that problems aren't otherwise solved? It's absurd. Your plan is almost never done and the correlation, between peace (and the outlawing of war) the growth of freedom and prosperity - including in West Africa - is the opposite.

  • ivape a day ago

    Technological innovation veils our failed morality. I don’t ever see this resolving without God literally showing up to Earth.

emilsedgh a day ago

What was their vision for AI to begin with?

I totally understand what OpenAI and Google are trying to do with AI but I never understood Meta's angle.

What's Meta's AI product?

  • daniel_iversen a day ago

    What is NOT their angle; ads, UGC, entertainment experience (algo etc), Metaverse and gaming, communication (WhatsApp, insta etc) and I’m sure they’ll take advantage anything that’s close to their core areas of interest or anything else big. AI is definitely the tide that lifts all boats but if you’re one of the top 5 tech companies in the world then the prize is incredibly large and not yet known.

    • diamond559 a day ago

      The investors don't seem to agree, it seems to be sinking rn... Ads? They already sell ads, is their "AI" algorithm better than the current one developed over years by some of the smartest phds on the planet? I very much doubt that.

  • utopiah a day ago

    > What's Meta's AI product?

    They have several actually, from computer vision in glasses (RayBan or Quest) to Speech To Text to get commands on such glasses, to "improved" translation via LLMs, to just chat bots in most of their chat solutions. They do integrate into products, it's not just research.

    Is it good? No idea as I don't use them but I believe their angle is literally what Zuckerberg said publicly, roughly "Can't miss AI if it's real! Have to be first." which isn't exactly a very deep strategy but they have deep pockets.

    • dangus 5 hours ago

      More importantly, do these AI integrations they have make money or even have the potential to in the future?

      It might surprise you to find out that Ray-Ban Meta glasses don't offer any sort of subscription service, not even as an option. Every Meta AI user is just costing Meta money, Meta isn't even giving them the option to buy the product from them.

      I have no idea why. The kind of people who would buy Meta glasses would probably happily blow $10-20 on a subscription they forget about. You can get a subscription service for a robot litter box but you can't get one for AI glasses? Does Meta hate money?

      Meta uses AI to search through Facebook and Instagram which...just makes searches cost them more money, I guess?

      Sounds like they have pockets so deep that they are going into debt, which is an interesting sort of pocket depth.

      IMO Zuckerberg's amateur founder status is more blatant as time goes on. He had his one moonshot and thinks he can do it again just as easily. Nobody told him that a large chunk of his success is owed to fortuitous timing.

      I think there's been something of a cancerous ideology that you must be a first mover. It's a bit odd considering that Facebook itself was not a first mover in pretty much everything that it does that is successful and highly profitable.

andro_dev a day ago

Think of your 401k getting wiped out, they will let your 401k pay for these data centers. Think about it, these bonds have a 40-year lifespan.

"The social media group had hired Citigroup and Morgan Stanley to raise up to $25bn in debt, ranging from five to 40 years in maturity, "

  • ares623 a day ago

    AI will either steal retirement funds by making scams more realistic, or it will steal them by purchasing OpenAI's IPO.

ic_fly2 a day ago

Waiting for the lack of returns on LLM investments to come and bite back.

Together with the debt payments needed then, this will do wonders for the stock. I’m sure.

LarsDu88 a day ago

I think Zuckerberg understands something that most people on this forum seem to not understand at all.

Facebook, Instagram, etc... these are all only valuable as network effect monopolies.

Investment into AI can torch billions of dollars and still be worthwhile so long as it's done in the service of protecting those monopolies, because LLMs are both intrinsically threatening to Meta's existence and intriniscally valuable for building better recommender systems when platform monopolists like Apple add privacy protections (cutting Meta off from the data spigot that powers its revenue streams).

Once AIs with no wallets outnumber humans on Facebook, Meta has an existential problem. There is no way to avoid the inevitable, the best one can do is embrace it, and 25 billion is nothing compared to losing your platform.

  • diamond559 a day ago

    So, burn tens of billions to infest your own site w/ bots bc it is somehow "inevitable" anyway? Why not spend that to try and make the user experience better for users with wallets? The investors are clearly fed up w/ burning cash and racking up debt w/ no profits to show for it.

  • ares623 a day ago

    Or, the guy who cheats at Catan just needs the constant ego boost to be able to say "yeah I'm kind of a big deal in Next Big Thing"

    • xnx 19 hours ago

      Facebook Libra, Metaverse, etc.

      Zuck is having a real hard time admitting to himself that Facebook was just luck.

      • bdangubic 19 hours ago

        Bezos is also having a hard time admitting amazon was just luck and gates is having a hard time admitting windows was just luck and … :)

kcaseg a day ago

Ok, Metaverse and AI didn’t work out. But maybe betting billions on the Next Big Thing, while your actual product is descending into anarchy will pay off!

  • whatsupdog a day ago

    Kek. (Before you downvote me for low effort comment, that's the entirety of my argument.)

JonathanBeuys a day ago

I have not looked into Meta, but when I look at the growth of Alphabet's cloud revenue, it looks pretty solid:

https://x.com/JonathanBeuys/status/1984882268817519036

That is revenue from real world usage of their datacenters. Usage their customers would not pay for if it did not have a positive ROI.

A pretty stable growth of 30% per year for the last 5 years. At a current level of about $50B per year.

What is the value of it, if it continues like this for another decade? Revenue would be at roughly $1T/year then.

In the face of this real usage and the growth of it, spending tens of billions of dollars on building out infrastructure looks ok to me.

  • ares623 a day ago

    That's literally just a line go up graph with no details whatsoever? Also, "According to Perplexity" why is it not "according to Alphabet"?

    • JonathanBeuys a day ago

      Which additional details would you like to see?

      According to Perplexity because instead of going through 20 earnings reports myself, I outsourced the task to Perplexity and then manually checked a few of the numbers to be reasonably sure they were correct.

      • ares623 a day ago

        Oh, gotcha. I thought it was Perplexity themselves reporting about Google's earnings or something.

        Like how much of it is actually the "AI" part of the business for a start?

        • JonathanBeuys a day ago

          I would think that no matter what the percentage of AI in the revenue is - mankind keeps automating their work via software. And so far, we automated only very little. We probably can keep increasing it at 30% pa for 10 years. That would mean we just automate 14x more than we do now. In 10 years, that seems not even fast to me.

  • logankeenan 8 hours ago

    > Usage their customers would not pay for if it did not have a positive ROI.

    I don't think we can assume that's true. Their customers are paying for it, but we don't know how profitable they are being with the AI compute they pay for.

  • oskarkk a day ago

    > What is the value of it, if it continues like this for another decade? Revenue would be at roughly $1T/year then.

    That's a big "if", usually things don't grow at 30% per year for 15 years.

    • JonathanBeuys a day ago

      Do I understand your logic correctly that after 14 years of 30% growth another year is extremely unlikely and after 14.99 years it is almost impossible?

      My logic is that we only have to take the next 10 years into account when calculating the probability.

      And lots of things grew 30% or more for 10 years.

      Bitcoin's market cap grew over 70% pa for 10 over years now.

      Amazon's revenue grew over 60% pa for over 10 years in their early days.

      I can think of many numbers, but would have to check: global solar installations, smartphone usage are examples that come to mind.

      • oskarkk a day ago

        My logic is that past results don't indicate future results, and assuming that the growth rate from the last 5 years will stay the same for the next 10 years is a big "if". For new companies, new products, high growth rates over many years are normal, but we're talking about an established market that has already seen big growth rates over a long time (as the other commenter pointed out). Smartphone sales today are the same as in 2015, because there's an obvious ceiling to growth in that market, and it has been reached a long time ago. Number/power of solar installations is also a very different thing than revenue, because the growth in that market is caused by the rapidly falling prices (~10x in the last 15 years), so the installed power grows much faster than the cumulative cost of that power. As the computing power is still getting cheaper, and cloud usage is already high, with many competitors, I'd expect the revenue growth to slow down in the next 10 years.

        • JonathanBeuys a day ago

          Is cloud usage really high?

          Look at all the stuff people do. Almost none of it is automated via software. Look at people on construcion sites, cashiers, cleaning stuff, cab drivers ... all of it is done manually. I am writing this manually, even though I would prefer to just say it while doing the dishes. But there is no good voice interface for browsers yet. And hey, why do I even do the dishes?

          I would say we haven't even started automating the world via software.

          10 years of 30% growth just means we will spend 14x more on software in 10 years than we do now. Considering we have not even really started using software for automating work, I would be surprised if we stay below that.

          • oskarkk a day ago

            You may be right, especially with the growth of applications of software. Personally I'd rather bet on slower revenue growth than the current 30%. Not necessarily much slower, but even 25% yearly growth over 10 years would be a big difference in the end compared to 30%. My thinking is that usage of cloud compute can grow greatly, but with revenues growth lagging behind, because of falling costs of compute (more powerful/efficient CPUs etc), economies of scale, and competition putting pressure on prices. For example AWS operating margin is 34% currently, I expect that to fall as the market matures (but Google's cloud margins are much lower right now).

            • JonathanBeuys a day ago

              Ok, let's say 25% growth over 10 years. That is a factor of 9.

              9*$50B = $450B yearly revenue.

              What could be the margin Alphabet makes from that? Last quarter, Alphabet had $100B revenue and $35B net income. So 35% margin.

              $450Bx0.35 = $158B

              What is $158B in annual profit worth? Currently Alphabet's p/e is about 30. If we take that, it would be $158Bx30 = $4740B. So around $5T.

              If we are heading towards the creation of $5T in value via cloud revenue, investing $100B per year to build it seems not particularly high to me.

    • anilgulecha a day ago

      Cloud spend overall has - CAGR of 30-35% from 2007 to 2025.

dmix a day ago

> Oracle sold $18bn of bonds in September.

Why is Oracle going into debt for AI? What are they doing

  • donavanm a day ago

    financing huge deals for use of OCI https://finance.yahoo.com/news/oracle-corp-orcl-q4-2025-0701.... See Q4 FY25

    > Total Cloud Revenue (SaaS + IaaS): $6.7 billion, up 27%. CapEx (Full Year): $21.2 billion. The company is facing supply constraints, unable to meet the high demand for its cloud services, leading to scheduling customers into the future.

    Much lower name recognition for smaller customers. But there are some big big name "AI" & B2C companies who have _huge_ spend with OCI. This isnt "rent a couple of instances" its much more like "provide a couple GW of compute for X years."

  • lordofgibbons a day ago

    Building data centers for OpenAI, but it requires a lot of upfront capital.

  • diamond559 a day ago

    Pumping the stonk one last time.

tim333 19 hours ago

>Zuck... “the right strategy to aggressively frontload building capacity” as part of the tech group’s bid to be the first to build artificial superintelligence.

There's one problem. They seem unlikely to be first to build ASI given that Google and OpenAI seem a fair bit ahead and there's stiff competition from xAI, Anthropic, DeepSeek et al.

The leaderboard seems to have Google, OpenAI and Antropic ahead, then X and four Chinese firms, Z, DeepSeek, GLM and Kimi, with Meta behind that.

I'm not sure if they have a decent strategy to get ahead? It seems to me the best bet would be to have some very smart people do a better algorithm rather than building more data centers.

mdhb a day ago

If Meta manages to die in the coming AI apocalypse it will make me extremely happy. They are an absolute cancer on society.

  • zkmon a day ago

    It used to have some survival instincts. It was gobbling young companies such as whatapp and insta to keep itself alive. But with metaverse they lost the plot and now desperate to cling on to AI wave. Yep, this dino is gone.

    • ares623 a day ago

      Not even a cloud platform to keep it going indefinitely. At least IBM had enterprise customers.

      • esseph a day ago

        You say that like IBM is gone. They are an enterprise platform and cloud giant (tooling), among many other things. (Quantum, O/T division, etc.)

  • edm0nd a day ago

    I honestly think the world would be better without Meta if it did die.

    I'm sure other corpos would snatch up all their properties like Threads and IG but still it would be a net positive.

  • apples_oranges a day ago

    But I just use Instagram to look at photography content. Am I helping to destroy society?

    • Waterluvian a day ago

      I think everyone has a right to opt out of politics. Nobody should have to pay attention or have opinions or be an activist. But that doesn’t mean their actions aren’t affecting the politics, nor does it make them immune from being judged.

    • bzzzt a day ago

      Every click you send to Meta is used to build your personal profile to generate ad revenue. So yes, you’re helping them in a very small way…

    • ares623 a day ago

      Unironically yes? A very small amount, sure. But every eyeball counts.

    • DecentShoes a day ago

      How on earth are you still getting Instagram to serve you photos and not month old tiktok videos? I haven't seen a photo in Instagram in years.

hulitu 18 minutes ago

> Meta readies $25B bond sale as soaring AI costs trigger stock sell-off

Insider trading ? /s