this post was submitted on 19 Feb 2026
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Unpopular Opinion

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It's in the title. I've been waiting and hoping for some counterexamples, but I've concluded, and I think people need to be ready for the eventuality that the AI bubble is NOT going to burst.

That's a bold claim, but I'm prepared to back it up.

  1. Not adopting the AI paradigm is going to become increasingly costly

First of all, it's not going to not burst because AI is good or useful. In fact, right now, we see lots of companies pushing away from AI because it is unreliable and problematic.

But the alternative costs from the other side are creeping up. If you are a company looking to hire developers to write software, you need to provide development machines to those developers. A development machine that might have cost $2000 a couple years ago is well on the way to $6000-$7000 in the near future.

And that's small potatoes. Even if you buy those for your developers, who are still highly paid, mind you, the software they're going to be writing will NOT be for PCs - regular people are NOT going to spend that for a PC. Which means most of the software that's going to be developed will target iOS and Android... and that's it. Which will continue to put 30% of all development profits RIGHT back into the locked down AI nightmare ecosystem. It's a disgusting, negative feedback loop that's about to accelerate in ways that would've made the most nightmarish predictions 5 years ago seem conservative. You might not want to swim in the ocean of crap, but they are actively eating the pier under your feet, and using the bodies that hit the water to take it apart even faster. They are going to change the world in ways that will FORCE you into their system - you don't get a choice.

  1. Bubbles don't HAVE to burst anymore

Tesla hasn't put out a successful new product in 20 years, and it continues to barrel right along, with its useless hack CEO hanging on as the richest person in the world. The old rules do not apply, and the sooner we acknowledge it, the sooner we can prepare for the new normal.

  1. NOBODY who is responsible for enforcing anything like responsible economic activity will EVER allow the bubble to burst

WHO is going to allow the bubble to burst? The investors who would lose everything? The SEC that would collapse the entire economy by not turning a blind eye? The captured politicians that are being paid billions to be complicit?

Let's be clear... the invisible hand of the market, to the extent it ever existed, certainly does not now. The idea the market is fair and responds properly to economic activity requires all actors to act, if not in good faith, at least SELF-INTERESTEDLY against each other as checks and balances on each other to verify the veracity of real claims about the economy. Is ANYBODY deluded enough to think that's happening? Everyone who could potentially blow the whistle or pop the bubble knows each other and they all have guns pointed at each other's heads knowing they all go down together. It will NOT be allowed to pop, and if that means making up numbers out of whole cloth, it's going to happen. If people won't rise up when their pedophile president is murdering people in the streets, they're certainly not going to when OpenAI claims 1 trillion in profit out of nowhere. Add to the fact that small investors who MIGHT get skittish are SUCH a small and irrelevant piece of the pie in these economic transactions that even if they all pulled out, the machine could not be stopped, and you realize that there is no stopping this nightmare.

It's not going to pop. Barring a revolution, we are on an inexorable course to the most awful tech dystopia imaginable. And even revolution is unlikely to be enough. Most people are so addicted to corporate tech that they're more likely to link arms and defend the headquarters of their favorite social media than take up arms against it. Make no mistake... the end of consumer facing open hardware is not a temporary redirection of resources to a failing bubble - it is a complete shift in the entire paradigm of how people use technology, bringing it under the complete control of a very few. This is not the latest salvo in an ongoing battle - it is the final bomb that has ended the war, and there's nothing left but slow attrition until personal computing and the very concept of devices you own and control sit in the dustbin of history with cars you could work on yourself.

I want nothing more than to be wrong. I am not happy to doomsay here. But to pretend this is some kind of blip in a machine that's going to stabilize someday is to ignore every single bit of functioning pattern recognition I have.

I don't have a good conclusion. I guess - hug your families, hoard what tech you can, and maybe make offgrid plans now. Good luck to all of us.

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[–] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 25 points 17 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago) (2 children)

That was an entirely different world that functioned under entirely different rules.

Was it? IIRC at the time, cisco was selling routers to ISP's it was investing in the same kind of circle jerk thats going on between NVidia, OpenAi, et al.

Hardware provider getting tickled by builder getting tickled by web dev who is getting ticked by the hardware.

I do think you are pointing out a difference, but its not going to last, which is these companies are trying to monopolize commodity hardware. But eventually, the music stops.

SOMEONE gets left holding the bag. Tulips aren't actually that value. The slop doesn't work.

(Also wtf you people downvoting for. This a space for unpopular opinions.)

[–] DrBob@lemmy.ca 20 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 16 hours ago)

I think OP is too young to remember Nortel.

I remember young people making this same argument during the real estate bubble in 2008.

[–] mycodesucks@lemmy.world 8 points 16 hours ago

(Also wtf you people downvoting for. This a space for unpopular opinions.)

Appreciate the defense, but I knew this would be touchy, and if I didn't expect downvotes I wouldn't have posted at all. I knew what I was getting into. I cared enough to see if anybody else was as despondent as me looking at things or if I'm an outlier.