- by New Deal democrat
“Most people liken the AI boom to the dot com bubble. But the right comparison is the lesser-known portal wars. …
“Let’s go back to 1998. The internet had just gone mainstream, and a new kind of company was taking over the web: AltaVista, Excite, Lycos and Yahoo were each racing to become your home base online–the ‘interface’ to the internet. They competed on adding vertical workflows: features like news, email, weather and shopping. Venture capital poured in and they grew fast. For a moment, it looked like any one of them, or all of them, could win, each differentiating themselves in domains in which they were marginally better from the other.
Then a pair of Stanford graduate students created a new model, a search algorithm called PageRank, which used the web’s own link structure as a proprietary data signal. … [W]ithin a few years, PageRank became what we know as Google and every other portal had been rendered irrelevant.
“We are watching the same movie with AI startups today. Thousands of companies are building products on top of the same AI foundation models — OpenAI’s GPT, Google’s Gemini, Anthropic’s Claude – with no added proprietary content or data, only workflows, each aiming to be the “portal” for their vertical. They have different names, different user experiences, different pitches to investors. What most of them share is that the intelligence powering their product is available to every competitor, every established company, and increasingly to ordinary consumers at low or no cost because they’ve added nothing proprietary to enhance their offerings.”
It’s as if people build 20 Hoover Dams, when only 1 was needed. And the rest will ultimately sit idle - and probably fail.
So, dear reader, let me conclude. This aforementioned AI buildout, and that buildout (vs. whatever software value AI has) is all but certain to crash. When, and over what period of time, we do not know.
Hopefully not while the rest of the economy, as it is now, is downstream.
































