Alphabet praises DeepSeek, but it’s massively ramping up its AI spending

Date:

Share post:


Booming AI budgets seemed at risk last week when DeepSeek crashed Nvidia’s stock based on speculation that its cheaper AI models would lower demand for AI chips and data centers.

Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai has certainly noticed the Chinese AI company, praising its work as “tremendous” in Alphabet’s latest earnings call (while adding that some of Gemini’s models are just as efficient).

But just like Meta, Alphabet isn’t throwing down the towel in Big Tech’s AI spending wars. In its latest earnings report, Alphabet announced it would boost capital expenditures to $75 billion — a whopping 42% increase — to accelerate its AI progress.

Alphabet is betting that cheaper AI will massively boost demand for its services, rather than making it basically free and threatening its business models. The company noted it stands to benefit from this rise in usage — known as inference — thanks to its billions of existing users.

“Part of the reason we are so excited about the AI opportunity is we know we can drive extraordinary use cases because the cost of actually using it is going to keep coming down, which will make more use cases feasible,” Pichai said during the earnings call. “And that’s the opportunity space. It’s as big as it comes, and that’s why you’re seeing us invest to meet that moment.”

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg made similar comments in Meta’s earnings call last week, pledging to spend “hundreds of billions” on AI in the long term despite all the DeepSeek buzz.

Whether this all pans out is unclear, but for now, tech giants can afford the AI bills, and when (or if) they’ll slow down is anyone’s guess.



Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

Neom is reportedly turning into a financial disaster, except for McKinsey & Co.

A new WSJ report suggests that Saudi Arabia’s now eight-year-old Neom project — a futuristic, carbon-neutral, 105-mile-long...

Manus probably isn’t China’s second ‘DeepSeek moment’

Manus, an “agentic” AI platform that launched in preview last week, is generating more hype than a...

Japan’s service robot market projected to triple in five years

Faced with an aging population and labor shortages, Japanese businesses are increasingly relying on service robots to...

Colossal CEO Ben Lamm says humanity has a ‘moral obligation’ to pursue de-extinction tech

The CEO of Colossal, a startup that aims to use genetic editing techniques to bring back extinct...

Tammy Nam joins AI-powered ad startup Creatopy as CEO

Creatopy, a startup that uses AI to automate the creation of digital ads, has brought on a...

Apple’s smart home hub reportedly delayed by Siri challenges

Apple announced this week that the “more personalized” version of Siri that it promised last year has...

Musk may still have a chance to thwart OpenAI’s for-profit conversion

Elon Musk lost the latest battle in his lawsuit against OpenAI this week, but a federal judge...

How to stop doomscrolling

The world is bad sometimes, but it feels even worse if you can’t stop staring into the...