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There is always a "max adoption" point for any technology. Either it costs more than the companies think they are getting out of it or these companies have hit their "max adoption" point already and have no need to expand more adoption.

Archive: https://archive.today/EzOrI

From the post:

>For the past few years, the AI industry has been charging full steam ahead, in what can sometimes feel like a pell-mell mad dash to take over the world. Ever since the launch of ChatGPT in 2022, the industry has leveraged an ever-expanding arsenal of political, cultural, and economic power in its effort to lay claim to many different parts of society. Yet, despite the AI industry’s attempts to make itself seem omnipresent, a new report this week shows that adoption at large U.S. companies has declined.

There is always a "max adoption" point for any technology. Either it costs more than the companies think they are getting out of it or these companies have hit their "max adoption" point already and have no need to expand more adoption. Archive: https://archive.today/EzOrI From the post: >>For the past few years, the AI industry has been charging full steam ahead, in what can sometimes feel like a pell-mell mad dash to take over the world. Ever since the launch of ChatGPT in 2022, the industry has leveraged an ever-expanding arsenal of political, cultural, and economic power in its effort to lay claim to many different parts of society. Yet, despite the AI industry’s attempts to make itself seem omnipresent, a new report this week shows that adoption at large U.S. companies has declined.

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