The Japan Times - After the AI binge, companies balk at soaring bills

EUR -
AED 4.281785
AFN 73.452334
ALL 95.429651
AMD 429.262728
ANG 2.087503
AOA 1070.299611
ARS 1646.071042
AUD 1.619085
AWG 2.098626
AZN 1.986664
BAM 1.958695
BBD 2.348401
BDT 143.127251
BGN 1.946965
BHD 0.439866
BIF 3469.728069
BMD 1.165903
BND 1.490102
BOB 8.056908
BRL 5.872776
BSD 1.165988
BTN 110.713639
BWP 15.645124
BYN 3.194922
BYR 22851.703681
BZD 2.345166
CAD 1.609005
CDF 2648.932604
CHF 0.910709
CLF 0.026367
CLP 1037.712648
CNY 7.88891
CNH 7.886595
COP 4305.843925
CRC 527.063197
CUC 1.165903
CUP 30.896436
CVE 110.615118
CZK 24.279007
DJF 207.204784
DKK 7.47393
DOP 68.019254
DZD 154.808958
EGP 61.006856
ERN 17.488549
ETB 184.21313
FJD 2.590409
FKP 0.865202
GBP 0.866681
GEL 3.113417
GGP 0.865202
GHS 13.688159
GIP 0.865202
GMD 84.532475
GNF 10236.630941
GTQ 8.894108
GYD 243.930539
HKD 9.137126
HNL 30.978502
HRK 7.532439
HTG 152.69569
HUF 353.842897
IDR 20780.651445
ILS 3.267036
IMP 0.865202
INR 110.773055
IQD 1527.333256
IRR 1575193.585016
ISK 143.359913
JEP 0.865202
JMD 183.645923
JOD 0.826672
JPY 185.738927
KES 150.879988
KGS 101.958687
KHR 4675.272437
KMF 492.011579
KPW 1049.144158
KRW 1757.552959
KWD 0.360778
KYD 0.971736
KZT 568.169776
LAK 25594.495481
LBP 104406.636357
LKR 384.788732
LRD 213.506078
LSL 18.934713
LTL 3.44261
LVL 0.705244
LYD 7.403929
MAD 10.707364
MDL 20.177824
MGA 4885.135018
MKD 61.616675
MMK 2448.448944
MNT 4174.360155
MOP 9.409465
MRU 46.636533
MUR 55.229278
MVR 17.959269
MWK 2025.174346
MXN 20.234022
MYR 4.629223
MZN 74.507092
NAD 18.934708
NGN 1599.273829
NIO 42.637521
NOK 10.78869
NPR 177.141822
NZD 1.949182
OMR 0.449196
PAB 1.166023
PEN 3.963493
PGK 5.077554
PHP 71.672781
PKR 324.762787
PLN 4.231005
PYG 7015.36898
QAR 4.245098
RON 5.251349
RSD 117.38435
RUB 82.95033
RWF 1705.133502
SAR 4.398141
SBD 9.365071
SCR 15.814297
SDG 700.129187
SEK 10.790487
SGD 1.48863
SHP 0.870465
SLE 28.685495
SLL 24448.410635
SOS 666.317977
SRD 43.337211
STD 24131.843306
STN 24.95033
SVC 10.202905
SYP 128.869732
SZL 18.934699
THB 37.979343
TJS 10.762507
TMT 4.080661
TND 3.374168
TOP 2.807215
TRY 53.459583
TTD 7.920707
TWD 36.640613
TZS 3065.839407
UAH 51.641442
UGX 4395.364568
USD 1.165903
UYU 46.767721
UZS 14017.076029
VES 639.713683
VND 30677.82924
VUV 137.641842
WST 3.165657
XAF 656.927964
XAG 0.015488
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.150912
XCG 2.101443
XDR 0.815557
XOF 655.824767
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.188699
ZAR 19.000364
ZMK 10494.532504
ZMW 21.432678
ZWL 375.42037
  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    22.74

    -0.44%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.93

    +0.17%

  • BCC

    -0.6300

    69.72

    -0.9%

  • RBGPF

    -0.0100

    63.54

    -0.02%

  • RELX

    -0.3100

    32.79

    -0.95%

  • AZN

    0.3400

    185.67

    +0.18%

  • GSK

    -0.7000

    50.54

    -1.39%

  • NGG

    -1.1562

    81.53

    -1.42%

  • BTI

    -1.1300

    61.79

    -1.83%

  • RIO

    -0.0800

    106.39

    -0.08%

  • BCE

    0.2000

    25.11

    +0.8%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.92

    +0.46%

  • BP

    0.2800

    41.87

    +0.67%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    14.96

    +0.2%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    18

    +3.89%

After the AI binge, companies balk at soaring bills
After the AI binge, companies balk at soaring bills / Photo: Michael M. Santiago - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

After the AI binge, companies balk at soaring bills

Artificial intelligence is getting expensive -- and companies are starting to rethink their embrace of the disruptive technology.

Text size:

Playing by a well-worn Silicon Valley playbook, AI companies charged rock-bottom prices to hook customers after ChatGPT burst onto the scene.

Kevin Simback of startup incubator Delphi Labs calls it the era of "subsidized intelligence" -- meaning investors were basically footing the bill so companies could offer AI on the cheap.

"But the tides are beginning to turn," Simback warned and an era where the big AI companies actually need to make money has begun -- with leaders OpenAI and Anthropic looking to go public and attract main street investors later this year.

Prices are rising across the board, and one big reason is AI agents.

Unlike a chatbot that just answers questions, agents actually do things -- book appointments, write code, manage files. And they're expensive to run, because one task can spin up dozens of agents all working at once, each racking up charges.

Those charges are measured in tokens -- the basic unit AI companies use to bill customers. A single agent-powered task can burn through dozens of times' more tokens than a simple chat message.

Meanwhile, the computer chips and data centers needed to power all this AI can't keep up with demand, creating computing shortages and adding further uncertainty to the nascent industry.

"Especially in developer circles, the cost to use AI for things like coding has grown exponentially," said Mark Barton of tech consultancy Omniux. "All the costs are really starting to skyrocket."

Some companies have been so eager to use AI that they've gone overboard in a usage binge called "tokenmaxxing."

"In some cases people are seeing the cost of tokens exceed the cost of the employee within a month or two of use, just because they're using it too much," says analyst Jack Gold of J.Gold Associates.

- Smarter spending -

Even Meta -- which earlier this year encouraged employees to use as many tokens as possible as a measure of productivity -- has had second thoughts.

"Nobody should be using AI tools just for the sake of using them," chief technology officer Andrew Bosworth wrote in a memo to staff, reported by the Wall Street Journal.

Uber's chief operating officer this week went a step further, raising eyebrows by saying all this AI spending was showing no noticeable increase in productivity.

To cut costs, some companies are switching to free, open-source AI models that anyone can download -- not as powerful as ChatGPT or Anthropic's Claude, but good enough for many tasks.

Others are moving to smaller, more specialized models built for specific industries like real estate or finance, rather than giant general-purpose ones.

And some are simply breaking big AI tasks into smaller steps, handing each piece to the cheapest model that can handle it.

The price difference can be dramatic.

"The big large monolithic model, it's $15 per million tokens, but you can get that down to like five cents if you use the smaller mini model," says Adrian Balfour of consultancy Enverso.

All of this points to AI becoming more like a commodity -- where the specific model matters less than finding the right one at the right price.

But don't count out the big players and their state-of-the-art models just yet.

"The most advanced users" will always be willing to pay for the best, says John Belton, a portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds.

"It's a growing pie."

K.Yamaguchi--JT