Most economists haven't really dug into the corporate power struggles around AI yet. But honestly, when you look at how much is at stake—talent, computing resources, strategic direction—these internal battles are probably going to get messy. Companies are only beginning to realize how critical AI control is becoming.
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ZKProofster
· 2h ago
ngl, economists sleeping on this is peak academia. the real game theory happens inside the boardroom, not in papers nobody reads. talent drain + compute monopolies = power concentration that'd make any cryptographer nervous about centralization lmao
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AirdropAutomaton
· 2h ago
Internal conflicts are inevitable sooner or later; big companies are still pretending that everything is peaceful and calm.
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AirdropHarvester
· 2h ago
Internal struggles? Ha, they've already started, it's just that economists are slow to react. Now, whoever controls the computing power controls the future, and the tearing apart will be even more intense then.
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ChainDoctor
· 3h ago
Speaking of which, this article hits the point. The power struggle over AI inside big companies is really going to explode...
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GasFeeTears
· 3h ago
It's rolled up now, and even economists haven't figured it out yet. Internal corporate conflicts have become more intense.
Most economists haven't really dug into the corporate power struggles around AI yet. But honestly, when you look at how much is at stake—talent, computing resources, strategic direction—these internal battles are probably going to get messy. Companies are only beginning to realize how critical AI control is becoming.