• After the bubble pops how much would our lives be impacted?

  • Would AI vanish or still be there?

  • How exactly do you think the bubble will pop? Will AI companies simply run out of money? Or will it be because of the environmental effects?

  • When do you think the “pop” will take place?

  • After the bubble pops, in future there will be companies/people who will try the AI thing again? What will that be like?

  • venusaur
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    18 hours ago

    Anybody thinking AI goes away is just wishfully thinking, and/or ignorant.

    • tal@lemmy.today
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      15 hours ago

      While I agree that AI is here to stay, he did say the bubble popping. I could believe that there could be a reduced level of investment for a while. In the past, we did have periods where we thought that various AI tasks would be easier to solve than they were, and investment fell back as we discovered that there were more hard problems to solve before we could accomplish a particular feat. Didn’t go away, but did see a decrease in work on it for a while.

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

      In the history of artificial intelligence (AI), an AI winter is a period of reduced funding and interest in AI research.[1] The field has experienced several hype cycles, followed by disappointment and criticism, followed by funding cuts, followed by renewed interest years or even decades later.

      The term first appeared in 1984 as the topic of a public debate at the annual meeting of AAAI (then called the “American Association of Artificial Intelligence”).[2] Roger Schank and Marvin Minsky—two leading AI researchers who experienced the “winter” of the 1970s—warned the business community that enthusiasm for AI had spiraled out of control in the 1980s and that disappointment would certainly follow. They described a chain reaction, similar to a “nuclear winter”, that would begin with pessimism in the AI community, followed by pessimism in the press, followed by a severe cutback in funding, followed by the end of serious research.[2] Three years later the billion-dollar AI industry began to collapse.

      There were two major “winters” approximately 1974–1980 and 1987–2000,[3] and several smaller episodes, including the following:

      • 1966: failure of machine translation

      • 1969: criticism of perceptrons (early, single-layer artificial neural networks)

      • 1971–75: DARPA’s frustration with the Speech Understanding Research program at Carnegie Mellon University

      • 1973: large decrease in AI research in the United Kingdom in response to the Lighthill report

      • 1973–74: DARPA’s cutbacks to academic AI research in general

      • 1987: collapse of the LISP machine market

      • 1988: cancellation of new spending on AI by the Strategic Computing Initiative

      • 1990s: many expert systems were abandoned

      • 1990s: end of the Fifth Generation computer project’s original goals

      Enthusiasm and optimism about AI has generally increased since its low point in the early 1990s. Beginning about 2012, interest in artificial intelligence (and especially the sub-field of machine learning) from the research and corporate communities led to a dramatic increase in funding and investment, leading to the current (as of 2026) AI boom.

      Obviously, we did achieve a number of those — like, we have pretty solid machine translation of human language today. I remember, pre-Brexit, a senior EU translator for the UK talking about EU translation work. One thing he mentioned was that he did all of his first drafts via Google Translate and then just did manual cleanup by hand — and I’d call that a fairly prestigious translation position. But it took more time and research than we initially expected.