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LLM Inevitabilism

(tomrenner.com)
1613 points SwoopsFromAbove | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.351s | source
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lsy ◴[] No.44568114[source]
I think two things can be true simultaneously:

1. LLMs are a new technology and it's hard to put the genie back in the bottle with that. It's difficult to imagine a future where they don't continue to exist in some form, with all the timesaving benefits and social issues that come with them.

2. Almost three years in, companies investing in LLMs have not yet discovered a business model that justifies the massive expenditure of training and hosting them, the majority of consumer usage is at the free tier, the industry is seeing the first signs of pulling back investments, and model capabilities are plateauing at a level where most people agree that the output is trite and unpleasant to consume.

There are many technologies that have seemed inevitable and seen retreats under the lack of commensurate business return (the supersonic jetliner), and several that seemed poised to displace both old tech and labor but have settled into specific use cases (the microwave oven). Given the lack of a sufficiently profitable business model, it feels as likely as not that LLMs settle somewhere a little less remarkable, and hopefully less annoying, than today's almost universally disliked attempts to cram it everywhere.

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alonsonic ◴[] No.44570711[source]
I'm confused with your second point. LLM companies are not making any money from current models? Openai generates 10b USD ARR and has 100M MAUs. Yes they are running at a loss right now but that's because they are racing to improve models. If they stopped today to focus on optimization of their current models to minimize operating cost and monetizing their massive user base you think they don't have a successful business model? People use this tools daily, this is inevitable.
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dbalatero ◴[] No.44570964[source]
They might generate 10b ARR, but they lose a lot more than that. Their paid users are a fraction of the free riders.

https://www.wheresyoured.at/openai-is-a-systemic-risk-to-the...

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Centigonal ◴[] No.44572286[source]
This echoes a lot of the rhetoric around "but how will facebook/twitter/etc make money?" back in the mid 2000s. LLMs might shake out differently from the social web, but I don't think that speculating about the flexibility of demand curves is a particularly useful exercise in an industry where the marginal cost of inference capacity is measured in microcents per token. Plus, the question at hand is "will LLMs be relevant?" and not "will LLMs be massively profitable to model providers?"
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magicalist ◴[] No.44572586[source]
> LLMs might shake out differently from the social web, but I don't think that speculating about the flexibility of demand curves is a particularly useful exercise in an industry where the marginal cost of inference capacity is measured in microcents per token

That we might come to companies saying "it's not worth continuing research or training new models" seems to reinforce the OP's point, not contradict it.

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Centigonal ◴[] No.44572756[source]
The point I'm making is that, even in the extreme case where we cease all additional R&D on LLMs, what has been developed up until now has a great deal of utility and transformative power, and that utility can be delivered at scale for cheap. So, even if LLMs don't become an economic boon for the companies that enable them, the transformative effect they have and will continue to have on society is inevitable.

Edit: I believe that "LLMs transforming society is inevitable" is a much more defensible assertion than any assertion about the nature of that transformation and the resulting economic winners and losers.

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1. johnnyanmac ◴[] No.44574055[source]
>what has been developed up until now has a great deal of utility and transformative power

I think we'd be more screwed than VR if development ceased today. They are little more than toys right now who's most successsful outings are grifts, and the the most useful tools are simply aiding existing tooling (auto-correct). It is not really "intelligence" as of now.

>I believe that "LLMs transforming society is inevitable" is a much more defensible assertion

Sure. But into what? We can't just talk about change for change's sake. Look at the US in 2025 with that mentality.