this post was submitted on 30 Dec 2025
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[–] tal@lemmy.today 3 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago)

It's all of Nvidia's customers that are mini-Enrons.

I don't think that those are faking profit. Well, I don't have some comprehensive list, and maybe somewhere someone is, but not for the majority of purchases. It's possible that they won't wind up being long-term profitable, but there isn't fraud involved in that.

I don't think that the Enron analogy is very applicable in general. Like, what people who are critical of the extent of AI investment are worried about is analogous to the dot-com bubble, where the returns to investors from companies didn't warrant the level of investment and stock prices for many companies shot way up and then fell back down.

EDIT: It's fair to say that Nvidia is driving demand for its products. But..that may be quite sensible, since if you have a killer app or two explode, it can drive massive demand for the hardware that runs it. If you have capital available and control the best hardware out there, it may well make more sense to use that capital on building more demand for your product than to go and try and improve the product more. There's only so many chip engineers available that Nvidia can hire, and unless they want to get into the "writing AI software" game themselves, which would have them compete with their customers, I'd think that that's potentially a reasonable place to put their capital if they're trying to improve their business potential.

Nvidia sold a lot of hardware when cryptocurrency became popular. I think that it's probably fairly safe to say that AI applications have considerably more potential to provide utility than does cryptocurrency.