The era of cheap AI is about to end - consumers and companies may experience a harsh reality very soon
Consumers have jumped on board as AI users worldwide, with clear evidence such as how ChatGPT quickly became the world's fastest-growing service.
Companies have also joined the bandwagon - especially those involved in software development. The end of 2025 is generally considered a major turning point in software development, when Claude Code made such a huge leap in AI-assisted programming that it managed to win over even those coders who had previously been skeptical of AI's programming skills.
But the hype has hidden an unpleasant truth that AI companies have barely dared to speak aloud.
Almost all current AI services are, in fact, loss-making businesses for the companies offering them. This means that consumers are currently able to use AI solutions that they might not be able to afford - or be willing to pay for.
Information about this financially unsustainable situation is hidden in companies' financial figures. And digging out precise data is made more difficult by the fact that the industry's largest independent players, OpenAI and Anthropic, are not publicly listed companies.

An essential part of business culture is that only a small portion of founded companies survive. The rest go bankrupt or their business just quietly shuts down.
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