Revenue growth has been dramatic. OpenAI generated $3.7 billion in revenue in 2024 before jumping to $13.07 billion in 2025. By the end of that year, monthly...
Right. Corporations do not pay taxes on income; they pay taxes on profits, and the tax code gives them significant flexibility in determining what counts as profit. Loans are not taxed. “Buy, borrow, die” is legal. We have weak antitrust enforcement. Politicians can trade stocks despite occupying positions that give them access to information the public does not have. Competition in many industries has declined, reducing incentives to prioritize consumers. We even have private healthcare.
So what is your point?
Companies, especially in the tech industry, have historically operated at a loss during their first several years. Even after becoming established, a 4% profit margin is often considered respectable. Revenue and profit are not the same thing, and investing heavily for growth is a normal business practice.
I was talking about people criticizing LLMs while clearly knowing very little about them. The bandwagon effect on this platform is strong. Many people dislike LLMs, call everything “AI,” and often do not understand the underlying technology, the economics behind it, or the fact that there are multiple companies competing in the space. I push back when I see criticism based on misunderstandings rather than facts.
Right. Corporations do not pay taxes on income; they pay taxes on profits, and the tax code gives them significant flexibility in determining what counts as profit. Loans are not taxed. “Buy, borrow, die” is legal. We have weak antitrust enforcement. Politicians can trade stocks despite occupying positions that give them access to information the public does not have. Competition in many industries has declined, reducing incentives to prioritize consumers. We even have private healthcare.
So what is your point?
Companies, especially in the tech industry, have historically operated at a loss during their first several years. Even after becoming established, a 4% profit margin is often considered respectable. Revenue and profit are not the same thing, and investing heavily for growth is a normal business practice.
I was talking about people criticizing LLMs while clearly knowing very little about them. The bandwagon effect on this platform is strong. Many people dislike LLMs, call everything “AI,” and often do not understand the underlying technology, the economics behind it, or the fact that there are multiple companies competing in the space. I push back when I see criticism based on misunderstandings rather than facts.