Whatâs going on here? OpenAIâs December revenue put it on course to bring in $2 billion a year, a major milestone that puts the ChatGPT creator in the history books â and not for destroying humanity (yet). What does this mean? OpenAI is, ironically, not the most forthcoming with information. But on Friday, two loose-lipped sources pushed back the veil of ignorance, as head honcho Sam Altman would say. They revealed that OpenAIâs ârun rateâ â the amount a firm would make if every month was the same â was $2 billion based on Decemberâs figures, making it one of only a few tech firms to hit the $1 billion-plus mark in their first five years. That adds up: plenty of the biggest US firms already rely on OpenAIâs ChatGPT service to save time, make more money, and plan vacation itineraries. A cozy relationship with Microsoft, the biggest company in the world, wonât have hurt either. Why should I care? For markets: The chips are up. Big Techâs recent results were essentially marketing campaigns for AIâs money-making abilities. Microsoft, Amazon, and Google all made more from their cloud businesses than the year before, with their customers pouring money into super-smart solutions. Nvidia hasnât announced its results yet, but with semiconductor companies like ASML and Arm already benefiting from the AI sector, last yearâs market standout will be expected to stick to the tone. Mind you, with OpenAI floating ambitions of producing next-level chips itself, competition might be heating up. The bigger picture: Chuck the Versace glasses. When theyâre not checking out the price of underground bunkers, AI skeptics are warning that the furor looks eerily similar to the tech bubble of 1999. Thereâs one key difference, though. Back then, investors snapped up anything with âdot-comâ in its name, regardless of sales or profit. Todayâs runaway companies, in comparison, are practically bleeding profit. So while 1999âs vintage was chronically unstable, todayâs tech firms really have legs. |