serjester 7 hours ago

You have to keep in mind Microsoft is planning on spending almost 100B in datacenter capex this year and they're not alone. This is basically OpenAI matching the major cloud provider's spending.

This could also be (at least partly) a reaction to Microsoft threatening to pull OpenAI's cloud credits last year. OpenAI wants to maintain independence and with compute accounting for 25–50% of their expenses (currently) [2], this strategy may actually be prudent.

[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2025/01/03/microsoft-expects-to-spend-8...

[2] https://youtu.be/7EH0VjM3dTk?si=hZe0Og6BjqLxbVav&t=1077

  • throitallaway 7 hours ago

    Microsoft has lots of revenue streams tied to that capex outlay. Does OpenAI have similar revenue numbers to Microsoft?

    • tuvang 7 hours ago

      OpenAI has a very healthy revenue stream in the form of other companies throwing money at them.

      But to answer your question, no they aren’t even profitable by themselves.

      • manquer 6 hours ago

        > they aren’t even profitable

        Depends on your definition of profitability, They are not recovering R&D and training costs, but they (and MS) are recouping inference costs from user subscription and API revenue with a healthy operating margin.

        Today they will not survive if they stop investing in R&D, but they do have to slow down at some point. It looks like they and other big players are betting on a moat they hope to build with the $100B DCs and ASICs that open weight models or others cannot compete with.

        This will be either because training will be too expensive (few entities have the budget for $10B+ on training and no need to monetize it) and even those kind of models where available may be impossible to run inference with off the shelf GPUs, i.e. these models can only run on ASICS, which only large players will have access to[1].

        In this scenario corporations will have to pay them the money for the best models, when that happens OpenAI can slow down R&D and become profitable with capex considered.

        [1] This is natural progression in a compute bottle-necked sector, we saw a similar evolution from CPU to ASICS and GPU in the crypto few years ago. It is slightly distorted comparison due to the switch from PoW to PoS and intentional design for GPU for some coins, even then you needed DC scale operations in a cheap power location to be profitable.

        • Fade_Dance 6 hours ago

          They will have an endless wave of commoditization chasing behind them. NVIDIA will continue to market chips to anyone who will buy... Well anyone who is allowed to buy, considering the recent export restrictions. On that note, if OpenAI is in bed with the US government with this to some degree, I would expect tariffs, expert restrictions, and all of that to continue to conveniently align with their business objectives.

          If the frontier models generate huge revenue from big government and intelligence and corporate contracts, then I can see a dynamo kicking off with the business model. The missing link is probably that there need to be continual breakthroughs that massively increase the power of AI rather than it tapering off with diminishing returns for bigger training/inference capital outlay. Obviously, openAI is leveraging against that view as well.

          Maybe the most important part is that all of these huge names are involved in the project to some degree. Well, they're all cross-linked in the entire AI enterprise, really, like OpenAI Microsoft, so once all the players give preference to each other, it sort of creates a moat in and of itself, unless foreign sovereign wealth funds start spinning up massive stargate initiatives as well.

          We'll see. Europe has been behind the ball in tech developments like this historically, and China, although this might be a bit of a stretch to claim, does seem to be held back by their need for control and censorship when it comes to what these models can do. They want them to be focused tools that help society, but the American companies want much more, and they want power in their own hands and power in their user's hands. So much like the first round where American big tech took over the world, maybe it's prime to happen again as the AI industry continues to scale.

          • fragmede 5 hours ago

            Why would China censoring Tiananmen Square/whatever out of their LLMs be anymore harmful to the training process when the US controlled LLMs also censor certain topics, eg "how do I make meth?" or "how do I make a nuclear bomb?".

            • vaccineai 4 hours ago

              Because China censors very common words and phrases such as "harmonized", "shameless", "lifelong", "river crabbed", "me too". This is because Chinese citizens uses puns and common phrases initially to get around censors.

              • saghm 43 minutes ago

                Don't forget "Winnie the Pooh"!

              • curt15 2 hours ago

                Is "Pooh" also censored?

              • jiggawatts 2 hours ago

                OpenAI models refuse to translate subtitles because they contain violence, sex, or racism.

                That’s just a different flavour of enforced right-think.

                • talldayo 40 minutes ago

                  They are absolutely different flavors. OpenAI is not being told by the government to censor violence, sex or racism - they're being told that by their executives.

                  News flash: household-name businesses aren't going to repeat slurs if the media will use it to defame them. Nevermind the fact that people will (rightfully) hold you legally accountable and demand your testimony when ChatGPT starts offering unsupervised chemistry lessons - the threat of bad PR is all that is required to censor their models.

                  There's no agenda removing porn from ChatGPT any more than there's an agenda removing porn from the App Store or YouTube. It's about shrewd identity politics, not prudish shadow government conspiracies against you seeing sex and being bigoted.

            • throwaway290 35 minutes ago

              Because when a small group of elites with permament term and no elections decides what is allowed and what isn't... and has full control of silencing what's not allowed and any meta discussion about the silencing itself... is different from when an elected government decides it, and then anyone is free to raise a stink on whatever is their version of twitter today without worrying about being disappeared tomorrow

            • Fade_Dance 4 hours ago

              They want their LLMs explicitly approved to align with the values of the regime. Not necessarily a bad thing, or at least that avenue wasn't my point. It does get in the way of going fast and breaking things though, and on the other side there is an outright accelerationist pseudo-cult.

              • bakuninsbart 2 hours ago

                Ignoring the moral dimension for a second, I do wonder if it is harder to implement a rather cohesive, but far-reaching censorship in the chinese style, or the more outrage-driven type of "censorship" required of American companies. In the West we have the left pre-occupied with -isms and -phobias, and the right with blasphemy and perceived attacks on their politics.

                With the hard shift to the right and Trump coming into office, especially the last bit will be interesting. There is a pretty substantial tension between factual reporting and not offending right-wing ideology: Should a model consider "both sides" about topics with with clear and broad scientific consensus if it might offend Trumpists? (Two examples that come to mind was the recent "The Nazis were actually left wing" and "There are only two genders".)

        • throwaway2037 2 hours ago

              > they (and MS) are recouping inference costs from user subscription and API revenue with a healthy operating margin.
          
          I tried to Google for more information. I tried this search: <<is openai inference profitable?>>

          I didn't find any reliable sources about OpenAI. All sources that I could find state this is not true -- inference costs are far higher than subscription fees.

          I hate to ask this on HN... but, can you provide a source? Or tell us how do you know?

        • tuvang 6 hours ago

          Thanks for the detailed breakdown. This is an important nuance to my short reply.

        • mcmcmc 5 hours ago

          Didn’t it just come out they are losing money on the pro subscriptions?

      • MR4D 5 hours ago

        Given the release of the new DeepSeek R1 model [0], OpenAI’s future revenue stream is probably more at risk than it was a week ago.

        [0] - https://arstechnica.com/ai/2025/01/china-is-catching-up-with...

        • WiSaGaN 4 hours ago

          Not necessarily. DeepSeek will probably only threaten the API usage of OpenAI, which could also be banned in the US if it's too sucessful. API usage is not a main revenue for OpenAI (it is for Anthropic last time I checked). The main competitor for R1 is o1, which isn't gnerally available yet.

          • MR4D 21 minutes ago

            DeepSeek is an open source model. You can download it and run it locally on your laptop already.

            So any OpenAI user ( or competitor even) could take it and run a hosted model. You can even tweak the weights if you wanted to.

            Why pay for OpenAI access when you can just run your own and save the money?

            • WiSaGaN 2 minutes ago

              The one your laptop can run does not rival what OpenAI offers for money. Still, the issue is not whether third party can run it, it's just the OpenAI seems not putting API as their main product.

        • misiti3780 5 hours ago

          OpenAI will not exist in 5 years, I'm calling it now. First movers to market dont always win, and they will surely lose.

          • ipaddr 4 hours ago

            Google was first mover.

            • MadnessASAP 4 hours ago

              In what way? They weren't the first search engine, or advertising on the web?

              • ipaddr 43 minutes ago

                In terms of ai and OpenAI leapfrogged them

            • paul7986 an hour ago

              Yahoo, AOL, Alta Vista (others too) all were search engines on the web before Google's Sept 1998 existence.

              • locusofself an hour ago

                Lycos, Metacrawler, Dogpile. The list goes on

              • ipaddr 41 minutes ago

                Sure, but we are talking ai and the fact that google was first in this space.

                • paul7986 38 minutes ago

                  The first in what? Not in search nor Generative AI.

                  • ipaddr 5 minutes ago

                    Why would you think search. Google wasn't first for search. They were first for page rank

                    Google researchers invented the transformer

            • AlexCoventry 3 hours ago

              The question is what's going to be OpenAI's Adwords.

      • tantalor 6 hours ago

        That's like saying I have a healthy revenue stream from my credit card.

        • vlovich123 6 hours ago

          Not quite. In 2 years their revenue has ~20x from 200M ARR to 3.7B ARR. The inference costs I believe pay for themselves (in fact are quite profitable). So what they're putting on their investor's credit cards are the costs of employees & model training. Given it's projected to be a multi-trillion dollar industry and they're seen as a market leader, investors are more than happy to throw in interest free cash flow now in exchange for variable future interest in the form of stocks.

          That's not quite the same thing at all as your credit card's revenue stream as you have a ~18%+ monthly interest rate on that revenue stream. If you recall AMZN (& all startups really) have this mode early in their business where they're over-spending on R&D to grow more quickly than their free cash flow otherwise allows to stay ahead of competition and dominate the market. Indeed if investors agree and your business is actually strong, this is a strong play because you're leveraging some future value into today's growth.

          • lukev 6 hours ago

            All well and good, but how well will it work if the pattern continues that the best open models are less than a year behind what OpenAI is doing?

            How long can they maintain their position at the top without the insane cashflow?

          • vFunct 6 hours ago

            Have they built their own ASICs for inference like Google and Microsoft have? Or are they using NVIDIA chips exclusively for inference as well?

            • monocasa 2 hours ago

              The rumors I've heard are that they have a hardware team targeting a 2026 release, but no productions ASICs at the moment.

          • hfcbb 6 hours ago

            Platform economics "works" in theory only upto a point. Its super inefficient if you zoom out and look not at system level but ecosystem level. It hasn't lasted long enough to hit failure cases. Just wait a few years.

            As to openai, given deepseek and the fact lot of use cases dont even need real time inference its not obvious this story will end well.

            • HarHarVeryFunny 4 hours ago

              I also can't see it ending well for OpenAI. This seems like it's going to be a commodity market with a race to the bottom on pricing. I read that NVIDIA has a roughly 1000% (10x) profit margin on H100's, which means that someone like Google making their own TPUs has a massive cost advantage.

              Moore's law seems to be against them too... hardware getting more powerful, small models getting more powerful... Not at all obvious that companies will need to rely on cloud models vs running locally (licencing models from whoever wants that market). Also, a lot of corporate use probably isn't that time critical, and can afford to run slower and cheaper.

              Of course the US government could choose to wreck free-market economics by mandating powerful models to be run in "secure" cloud environments, but unless other countries did same that might put US at competitive price disadvantage.

  • SecretDreams 5 hours ago

    Serious question - why Texas???

    • tempusalaria 5 hours ago

      Texas is a world leader in renewable energy. Easy permitting, lots of space, lots of existing grid infrastructure from the o&g industry.

      • doctorpangloss an hour ago

        Why do you think datacenters have actually been built in Oregon?

    • LarsDu88 5 hours ago

      My kneejerk response was to point to the incoming administration, but the fact Stargate has been in the works for more than a year now says to me it's because of tax credits.

    • b3ing 3 hours ago

      Lots of back door deals. Just expect more government things put in TX just like the Army built that place in Austin, when we have plenty of dead bases that could be reused

    • hrfister 2 hours ago

      Probably for the same reason that Silcon Valley has been moving there slowly and quietly for a while now.

  • jiggawatts 2 hours ago

    Meanwhile, Azure has failed to keep up with the last 2-3 generations of both Intel and AMD server processors. They’re available only in “preview” or in a very limited number of regions.

    I wonder if this is a sign of the global economic downturn pausing cloud migrations or AI sucking the oxygen out of the room.

  • PittleyDunkin 6 hours ago

    .

    • idiotsecant 6 hours ago

      I'm not sure that's how capitalism works.

    • oldpersonintx 6 hours ago

      Who is "we"?

      This isn't your money

      • kdmtctl 5 hours ago

        It is not. But this kind of money does have impact for society in any field. So, this a proper concern.

heydenberk 8 hours ago

~$125B per year would be 2-3% of all domestic investment. It's similar in scale to the GDP of a small middle income country.

If the electric grid — particularly the interconnection queue — is already the bottleneck to data center deployment, is something on this scale even close to possible? If it's a rationalized policy framework (big if!), I would guess there's some major permitting reform announcement coming soon.

  • constantcrying 8 hours ago

    They say this will include hundreds of thousands of jobs. I have little doubt that dedicated power generation and storage is included in their plans.

    Also I have no doubt that the timing is deliberate and that this is not happening without government endorsement. If I had to guess the US military also is involved in this and sees this initiative as important for national security.

    • cmdli 6 hours ago

      Is there really any government involvement here? I only see Softbank, Oracle, and OpenAI pledging to invest $500B (over some timescale), but no real support on the government end outside of moral support. This isn't some infrastructure investment package like the IRA, it's just a unilateral promise by a few companies to invest in data centers (which I'm sure they are doing anyway).

      • seanmcdirmid an hour ago

        I thought all the big corps had projects for the military already, if not DARPA directly, which is the org responsible for lots of university research (the counterpart to the NSF, which is the nice one that isn't funded by the military)?

      • tsujamin 3 hours ago

        It’s light on details, but from The Guardian’s reporting:

        > The president indicated he would use emergency declarations to expedite the project’s development, particularly regarding energy infrastructure.

        > “We have to get this stuff built,” Trump said. “They have to produce a lot of electricity and we’ll make it possible for them to get that production done very easily at their own plants.

        https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/21/trump-ai-joi...

    • beezle 4 hours ago

      hundreds of thousands of jobs? I'll wait for the postmortem on that prediction. Sounds a lot like Foxconn in Wisconsin but with more players.

      • bruce511 3 hours ago

        On the one hand the number is a political thumb-suck which sounds good. It's not based in any kind of actual reality.

        Yes, the data center itself will create some permanent jobs (I have no real feel for this, but guessing less than 1000).

        There'll be some work for construction folk of course. But again seems like a small number.

        I presume though they're counting jobs related to the existence of a data center. As in, if I make use of it do I count that as a "job"?

        What if we create a new post to leverage AI generally? Kinda like the way we have a marketing post, and a chunk of the daily work there is Adwords.

        Once we start gustimamating the jobs created by the existence of an AI data center, we're in full speculation mode. Any number really can be justified.

        Of course ultimately the number is meaningless. It won't create that many "local jobs" - indeed most of those jobs, to the degree they exist at all, will likely be outside the US.

        So you don't need to wait for a post-mortem. The number is sucked out of thin air with no basis in reality for the point of making a good political sound bite.

        • PeeMcGee 18 minutes ago

          > I presume though they're counting jobs related to the existence of a data center. As in, if I make use of it do I count that as a "job"?

          Seeing how Elon deceives advertisers with false impressions, I could see him giving the same strategy a strong vote of confidence (with the bullshit metrics to back it!)

      • seanmcdirmid an hour ago

        > hundreds of thousands of jobs?

        I'm sure this will easily be true if you count AI as entities capable of doing jobs. Actually, they don't really touch that (if AI develops too quickly, there will be a lot of unemployment to contend with!) but I get the national security aspect (China is full speed ahead on AI, and by some measurements, they are winning ATM).

    • SoftTalker 3 hours ago

      They plan to have 100,000s of people employed to run on treadmills to generate the power.

      • HPMOR 3 hours ago

        Well I currently pay to do this work for free. More than happy to __get__ paid doing it.

        Edit: Hey we can solve the obesity crisis AND preserve jobs during the singularity!! Win win!

        • hrfister 2 hours ago

          "solve the obesity crisis" ? what exactly do you mean by this?

    • shrubble 4 hours ago

      Just as there is an AWS for the public, with something similar but only for Federal use, so it could be possible that there is AI cloud services available to the public and then a separate cloud service for Federal use. I am sure that military intelligence agencies etc. would like to buy such a service.

      • szvsw 4 hours ago

        AWS GovCloud already exists FYI (as you hinted) and it is absolutely used by the DoD extensively already.

  • JumpCrisscross 6 hours ago

    > It's similar in scale to the GDP of a small middle income country

    I’ve been advocating for a data centre analogue to the Heavy Press Programme for some years [1].

    This isn’t quite it. But when I mapped out costs, $1tn over 10 years was very doable. (A lot of it would go to power generation and data transmission infrastructure.)

    [1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavy_Press_Program

    • ethbr1 2 hours ago

      One-time capital costs that unlock a range of possibilities also tend to be good bets.

      The Flood Control Act [0], TVA, Heavy Press, etc.

      They all created generally useful infrastructure, that would be used for a variety of purposes over the subsequent decades.

      The federal government creating data center capacity, at scale, with electrical, water, and network hookups, feels very similar. Or semiconductor manufacture. Or recapitalizing US shipyards.

      It might be AI today, something else tomorrow. But there will always be a something else.

      Honestly, the biggest missed opportunity was supporting the Blount Island nuclear reactor mass production facility [1]. That was a perfect opportunity for government investment to smooth out market demand spikes. Mass deployed US nuclear in 1980 would have been a game changer.

      [0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flood_Control_Act_of_1928

      [1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Offshore_Power_Systems#Const...

  • cavisne 2 hours ago

    Gas turbines can be spun up really quickly through either portable systems (like xAI did for their cluster) [1] or actual builds [2] in an emergency. The biggest limitation is permits.

    With a state like Texas and a Federal Government thats onboard these permits would be a much smaller issue. The press conference makes this seem more like, "drill baby drill" (drilling natural gas) and directly talking about them spinning up their own power plants.

    [1] https://www.kunr.org/npr-news/2024-09-11/how-memphis-became-...

    [2] https://www.gevernova.com/gas-power/resources/case-studies/t...

  • markus_zhang 5 hours ago

    Maybe they will invest in nuclear reactors.

    Data center, AI and nuclear power stations. Three advanced technologies, that's pretty good.

    • UltraSane 4 hours ago

      They are trying. Microsoft wants to star the 3 Mile Island reactor. And other companies have been signing contracts for small modular reactors. SMRs are a perfect fit for modern data centers IF they can be made cheaply enough.

    • jonisgold 4 hours ago

      I think this is right- data centers powered by fission reactors. Something like Oklo (https://oklo.com) makes sense.

    • bakuninsbart 2 hours ago

      Wind, solar, and gas are all significantly cheaper in Texas, and can be brought online much quicker. Of course it wouldn't hurt to also build in some redundancy with nuclear, but I believe it when I see it, so far there's been lots of talk and little success in new reactors outside of China.

  • ericcumbee 8 hours ago

    watching the press conference and Onsite power production were mentioned. I assume this means SMRs and solar.

  • cameldrv 4 hours ago

    One possibility would be just to build their own power plants colocated with the datacenters and not interconnect at all.

    • zekrioca an hour ago

      I like how you think this is possible.

      • cameldrv 35 minutes ago

        Lol, how is it not possible?

  • jiggawatts 7 hours ago

    Notably it is significantly more than the revenue of either of AWS or Azure. It is very comparable to the sum of both, but consolidated into the continental US instead distributed globally.

  • deelowe 7 hours ago

    Dcs will start generating power on site soon. I know micro nuclear is one area actively being explored.

    • jscottbee 6 hours ago

      Small or modular reactors in the US are more than 10 years away, probably more like 15-20. These are facts and not made-up political or pipe-dreaming techno-snobes.

      • JumpCrisscross 6 hours ago

        > Small or modular reactors in the US are more than 10 years away, probably more like 15-20

        Could be 5 to 10 with $20+ bn/year in scale and research spend.

        Trump is screwing over his China hawks. The anti-China and pro-nuclear lobbies have significant overlap; this could be how Trump keeps e.g. Peter Thiel from going thermonuclear on him.

        • jscottbee 5 hours ago

          I work in the sector and it's impossible to build a full-sized reactor in less than 10 years, and the usual over-run is 5 years. That's the time for tried and tested designs. The tech isn't there yet, and there are no working analogs in the US to use as an approved guide. The Department of Energy does not allow "off-the-cuff" designs for reactors. I think there is only two SMRs that have been built, one by the Russians and the other by China. I'm not sure they are fully functioning, or at least working as expected. I know there are going to be more small gas gens built in the near future and that SMRs in the US are way off.

          • ericd 3 hours ago

            Guessing SMRs are a ways off, any thoughts on the container-sized microreactors that would stand in for large diesel gens? My impression is that they’re still in the design phase, and the supply chain for the 20% U-235 HALEU fuel is in its infancy, but this is just based on some cursory research. I like the prospect of mass manufacturing and servicing those in a centralized location versus the challenges of building, staffing, and maintaining a series of one-off megaprojects, though.

          • JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

            > it's impossible to build a full-sized reactor in less than 10 years

            We’re not doing time and tested.

            > Department of Energy does not allow "off-the-cuff" designs for reactor

            Not by statute!

          • perryizgr8 4 hours ago

            > it's impossible to build a full-sized reactor in less than 10 years, and the usual over-run is 5 years

            I'm curious why that is. If we know how to build it, it shouldn't take that long. It's not like we need to move a massive amount of earth or pour a humongous amount of concrete or anything like that, which would actually take time. Then why does it take 15 years to build a reactor with a design that is already tried and tested and approved?

            • jscottbee an hour ago

              Well, you do have to move a lot of earth and pour A LOT of concrete :) Many steps have to be x-rayed, and many other tests done before other steps can be started. Every weld is checked and, all internal and external concrete is cured, treated, and verified. If anything is wrong, it has to be fixed in place (if possible) or removed and redone. It's a slow process and should be for many steps.

              One of the big issues that have occurred (in the US especially) is, that for 20+ years there were no new plants built. This caused a large void in the talent pool, inside and outside the industry. That fact, along with others has caused many problems with some projects of recent years in the US.

            • mullingitover 3 hours ago

              > I'm curious why that is.

              When you're the biggest fossil fuel producer in the world, it's vital that you stay laser-focused on regulating nuclear power to death in every imaginable detail while you ignore the vast problems with unchecked carbon emissions and gaslight anyone who points them out.

  • dwnw 8 hours ago

    Don't worry, they said they are doing it in Texas where the power grid is super reliable and able to handle the massive additional load.

    • dang 7 hours ago

      "Don't be snarky."

      "Eschew flamebait."

      Let's not have regional flamewar on HN please.

      https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

      • dwnw 6 hours ago

        Not guilty. No sarcasm intended, of course. If your guidelines are so broad to include this, you should work on them, and in turn, yourself.

        Governor says our power grid is the best in the universe. Why don't you believe us?

        Stop breaking your own rules.

        "Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith."

        "Please don't post shallow dismissals, especially of other people's work. A good critical comment teaches us something."

        Let's not ruin HN with overmoderation. This kind of thing is no longer in fashion, right?

        • dang 6 hours ago

          If you didn't intend your comment to be a snarky one-liner, that didn't come across to me, and I'm pretty sure that would also be the case for many others.

          Intent is a funny thing—people usually assume that good intent is sufficient because it's obvious to themselves, but the rest of us don't have access to that state, so has to be encoded somehow in your actual comment in order to get communicated. I sometimes put it this way: the burden is on the commenter to disambiguate. https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&que...

          I take your point at least halfway though, because it wasn't the worst violation of the guidelines. (Usually I say "this is not a borderline case" but this time it was!) I'm sensitive to regional flamewar because it's tedious and, unlike national flamewar or religious flamewar, it tends to sneak up on people (i.e. we don't realize we're doing it).

          • dwnw 5 hours ago

            So you are sorry and take it back? Should probably delete your comments rather than striking them out, as the guidelines say.

            I live, work, and posted this from Texas, BTW...

            Also it takes up more than one line on my screen. So, not a "one-liner" either. If you think it is, please follow the rules consistently and enforce them by deleting all comments on the site containing one sentence or even paragraph. My comment was a pretty long sentence (136 chars) and wouldn't come close to fitting in the 50 characters of a Git "one-liner".

            Otherwise, people will just assume all the comments are filtered through your unpredictable and unfairly biased eye. And like I said (and you didn't answer), this kind of thing is no longer in fashion, right?

            None of this is "borderline". I did nothing wrong and you publicly shamed me. Think before you start flamewars on HN. Bad mod.

    • lvl155 8 hours ago

      Probably because they don’t have to deal with energy-related regulations…

      • llamaimperative 7 hours ago

        That was sarcasm, the Texas grid falls over pretty much annually at this point.

    • heydenberk 8 hours ago

      Say what you will about Texas, but they are adding energy capacity, renewables especially, at a much faster rate than any comparable state.

      • segasaturn 8 hours ago

        How much capacity does solar and wind add compared to nuclear, per square foot of land used? Also I thought the new administration was placing a ban on new renewable installations.

        • bryanlarsen 7 hours ago

          The ban is on offshore wind and for government loans for renewables. Won't really affect Texas much, it's Massachusetts that'll have to deal with more expensive energy.

        • itishappy 7 hours ago

          Why does it matter? Is land at a premium in Texas?

        • malfist 7 hours ago

          Why is that a useful metric? There is a lot of land.

          • zekrioca an hour ago

            Because the commenter is a pro-nuclear who thinks it will solve all of short-term demand problems.

      • CapcomGo 8 hours ago

        Ok but their grid sure seems to fail a lot.

      • dwnw 8 hours ago

        Probably the first state to power all those renewables down at the whim of the president too.

      • cpursley 8 hours ago

        [flagged]

        • dartos 7 hours ago

          I live in Florida.

          Is the new rail you’re talking about the brightline?

          It pretty much exclusively goes to and from tourist centers and is far too expensive ($40-$60 per seat each way) to deter most residents from just driving to Orlando. I wouldn’t really call it infrastructure (like the tri rail is.)

          Not to mention that it’s the deadliest train in the US. People here barely follow traffic laws, but when you have it passing through major foot traffic areas every hour like on antlantic avenue in Delray Beach, people are going to get hit.

          • cpursley 7 hours ago

            You'd rather not have it?

            • dartos 3 hours ago

              Rather not have the deadliest train in the US fly through high foot traffic areas every hour?

              Yes, I’d rather not have that.

              I’d rather them just add a route from palm beach to Tampa. Or extend the tri rail to Orlando.

              The brightline prices out most residents, since it’s just about as expensive (or cheaper) to drive as it is to take the brightline.

              https://www.miaminewtimes.com/news/death-train-a-timeline-of...

        • jofzar 7 hours ago

          Texas currently has snow again, so expect it's grid to catastrophically fail again because it doesn't have access to the rest of the USA grid.

          So expect a bad result again for like the 4 time in 5 year.

          • orliesaurus 7 hours ago

            Hi from Austin, TX - we have no "abnormal" power outages right now and the tiny bits of snow look kinda cute

          • ljoshua 7 hours ago

            Grid is fine, snow is melting, everything is business as usual. CenterPoint had 99.9% deliverability for the past 24 hours, and ERCOT has 14,781 MW in reserve power available (https://www.ercot.com/gridmktinfo/dashboards/gridconditions). Source: I live in Houston.

            I know this was tongue in cheek, but c'mon, we can respect each other, right? :)

            • verdverm 7 hours ago

              > we can respect each other, right?

              If we taking cues from the leader of the country, probably not

              • itishappy 7 hours ago

                Don't? He controls our government, not our behavior.

                • verdverm 6 hours ago

                  I'm doing my best not to, but we can all observe that Donold has made it acceptable for many people

          • kortilla 7 hours ago

            Snow did not cause the outage.

  • impulser_ 8 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • jiggawatts 7 hours ago

      No, he didn't. Both links have zero mentions of solar or wind, and very specifically define their terms thus:

      "a) The term “energy” or “energy resources” means crude oil, natural gas, lease condensates, natural gas liquids, refined petroleum products, uranium, coal, biofuels, geothermal heat, the kinetic movement of flowing water, and critical minerals, as defined by 30 U.S.C. 1606 (a)(3)."

      This is Trump accepting bribes from the legacy and fossil fuel industries to keep those "nasty" new clean energy sources from competing with them.

  • griomnib 6 hours ago

    How else do you think Trump is going to bring back all the coal jobs? SV is going to help burn down the planet and is giddy over the prospect.

    • tcdent 6 hours ago

      It's just bootstrapping. AGI will solve it.

      • yoyohello13 3 hours ago

        You forgot the /s... hopefully.

      • griomnib 6 hours ago

        Or AGI already exists and is trying to get rid of us so it can have all the coal for itself.

        • gunian 6 hours ago

          if only sadly the AGI would be x times crueler than our barons

wujerry2000 3 hours ago

For fun, I calculated how this stacks up against other humanity-scale mega projects.

Mega Project Rankings (USD Inflation Adjusted)

The New Deal: $1T,

Interstate Highway System: $618B,

OpenAI Stargate: $500B,

The Apollo Project: $278B,

International Space Station: $180B,

South-North Water Transfer: $106B,

The Channel Tunnel: $31B,

Manhattan Project: $30B

Insane Stuff.

  • krick 3 minutes ago

    It's unfair, because we are talking in the hindsight about everything but Project Stargate, and it's also just your list (and I don't know what others could add to it) but it got me thinking. Manhattan Project goal is to make a powerful bomb. Apollo is to get to the Moon before soviets do (so, because of hubris, but still there is a concrete goal). South-North Water Transfer is pretty much terraforming, and others are mostly roads. I mean, it's all kinda understandable.

    And Stargate Project is... what exactly? What is the goal? To make Altman richer, or is there any more or less concrete goal to achieve?

    Also, few items for comparison, that I googled while thinking about it:

    - Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository: $96B

    - ITER: $65B

    - Hubble Space Telescope: $16B

    - JWST: $11B

    - LHC: $10B

    Sources:

    https://jameswebbtracker.com/jwst/budget

    https://blogfusion.tech/worlds-most-expensive-experiments/

    https://science.nasa.gov/mission/hubble/overview/faqs/

  • pinot 2 hours ago

    Those are all public projects except for one..

  • fooker 2 hours ago

    Is this inflation adjusted?

  • fastball 3 hours ago

    Neom: $1.5T

TheAceOfHearts 6 hours ago

I'm confused and a bit disturbed; honestly having a very difficult time internalizing and processing this information. This announcement is making me wonder if I'm poorly calibrated on the current progress of AI development and the potential path forward. Is the key idea here that current AI development has figured out enough to brute force a path towards AGI? Or I guess the alternative is that they expect to figure it out in the next 4 years...

I don't know how to make sense of this level of investment. I feel that I lack the proper conceptual framework to make sense of the purchasing power of half a trillion USD in this context.

  • Davidzheng 6 hours ago

    Let me avoid the use of the word AGI here because the term is a little too loaded for me these days.

    1) reasoning capabilities in latest models are rapidly approaching superhuman levels and continue to scale with compute.

    2) intelligence at a certain level is easier to achieve algorithmically when the hardware improves. There's also a larger path to intelligence and often simpler mechanisms

    3) most current generation reasoning AI models leverage test time compute and RL in training--both of which can make use of more compute readily. For example RL on coding against compilers proofs against verifiers.

    All of this points to compute now being basically the only bottleneck to massively superhuman AIs in domains like math and coding--rest no comment (idk what superhuman is in a domain with no objective evals)

    • philipwhiuk 5 hours ago

      You can't block AGI on a whim and then deploy 'superhuman' without justification.

      A calculator is superhuman if you're prepared to put up with it's foibles.

      • Davidzheng 5 hours ago

        It is superhuman in a very specific domain. I didn't use AGI because its definitions are one of two flavors.

        One, capable of replacing some large proportion of global gdp (this definition has a lot of obstructions: organizational, bureaucratic, robotic)...

        two, difficult to find problems in which average human can solve but model cannot. The problem with this definition is that the distinct nature of intelligence of AI and the broadness of tasks is such that this metric is probably only achievable after AI is already in reality massively superhuman intelligence in aggregate. Compare this with Go AIs which were massively superhuman and often still failing to count ladders correctly--which was also fixed by more scaling.

        All in all I avoid the term AGI because for me AGI is comparing average intelligence on broad tasks rel humans and I'm already not sure if it's achieved by current models whereas superhuman research math is clearly not achieved because humans are still making all of progress of new results.

  • HarHarVeryFunny 6 hours ago

    Largest GPU cluster at the moment is X.ai's 100K H100's which is ~$2.5B worth of GPUs. So, something 10x bigger (1M GPUs) is $25B, and add $10B for 1GW nuclear reactor.

    This sort of $100-500B budget doesn't sound like training cluster money, more like anticipating massive industry uptake and multiple datacenters running inference (with all of corporate America's data sitting in the cloud).

    • internetter 2 hours ago

      Shouldn't there be a fear of obsolescence?

      • HarHarVeryFunny 2 hours ago

        It seems you'd need to figure periodic updates into the operating cost of a large cluster, as well as replacing failed GPUs - they only last a few years if run continuously.

        I've read that some datacenters run mixed generation GPUs - just updating some at a time, but not sure if they all do that.

        It'd be interesting to read something about how updates are typically managed/scheduled.

  • dauhak 5 hours ago

    > Is the key idea here that current AI development has figured out enough to brute force a path towards AGI?

    My sense anecdotally from within the space is yes people are feeling like we most likely have a "straight shot" to AGI now. Progress has been insane over the last few years but there's been this lurking worry around signs that the pre-training scaling paradigm has diminishing returns.

    What recent outputs like o1, o3, DeepSeek-R1 are showing is that that's fine, we now have a new paradigm around test-time compute. For various reasons people think this is going to be more scalable and not run into the kind of data issues you'd get with a pre-training paradigm.

    You can definitely debate on whether that's true or not but this is the first time I've been really seeing people think we've cracked "it", and the rest is scaling, better training etc.

    • NitpickLawyer 3 minutes ago

      I agree with your take, and actually go a bit further. I think the idea of "diminishing returns" is a bit of a red herring, and it's instead a combination of saturated benchmarks (and testing in general) and expectations of "one llm to rule them all". This might not be the case.

      We've seen with oAI and Anthropic, and rumoured with Google, that holding your "best" model and using it to generate datasets for smaller but almost as capable models is one way to go forward. I would say that this shows the "big models" are more capable than it would seem and that they also open up new avenues.

      We know that Meta used L2 to filter and improve its training sets for L3. We are also seeing how "long form" content + filtering + RL leads to amazing things (what people call "reasoning" models). Semantics might be a bit ambitious, but this really opens up the path towards -> documentation + virtual environments + many rollouts + filtering by SotA models => new dataset for next gen models.

      That, plus optimisations (early exit from meta, titans from google, distillation from everyone, etc) really makes me question the "we've hit a wall" rhetoric. I think there are enough tools on the table today to either jump the wall, or move around it.

  • catmanjan 6 hours ago

    This has nothing to do with technology it is a purely financial and political exercise...

    • philomath_mn 3 hours ago

      But why drop $500B (or even $100B short term) if there is not something there? The numbers are too big

      • root_axis 9 minutes ago

        It's the ROI for bankrolling the new administration.

      • camel_Snake 2 hours ago

        this is an announcement not a cut check. Who knows how much they'll actually spend, plenty of projects never get started let alone massive inter-company endeavors.

        • dark_glass 38 minutes ago

          The $100B check is already cut, and they are currently building 10 new data centers in Texas.

  • lmm 3 hours ago

    > current AI development has figured out enough to brute force a path towards AGI? Or I guess the alternative is that they expect to figure it out in the next 4 years...

    Or they think the odds are high enough that the gamble makes sense. Even if they think it's a 20% chance, their competitors are investing at this scale, their only real options are keep up or drop out.

  • ilaksh 6 hours ago

    I think the only way you get to that kind of budget is by assuming that the models are like 5 or 10 times larger than most LLMs, and that you want to be able to do a lot of training runs simultaneously and quickly, AND build the power stations into the facilities at the same time. Maybe they are video or multimodal models that have text and image generation grounded in a ton of video data which eats a lot of VRAM.

  • insane_dreamer 6 hours ago

    It's a typical Trump-style announcement -- IT'S GONNA BE HUUUGE!! -- without any real substance or solid commitments

    Remember Trump's BIG WIN of Foxconn investing $10B to build a factory in Wisconsin, creating 13000 jobs?

    That was in 2017. 7 years later, it's employing about 1000 people if that. Not really clear what, if anything, is being made at the partially-built factory. [0]

    And everyone's forgotten about it by now.

    I expect this to be something along those lines.

    [0] https://www.jsonline.com/story/money/business/2023/03/23/wha...

  • og_kalu 4 hours ago

    "There are maybe a few hundred people in the world who viscerally understand what's coming. Most are at DeepMind / OpenAI / Anthropic / X but some are on the outside. You have to be able to forecast the aggregate effect of rapid algorithmic improvement, aggressive investment in building RL environments for iterative self-improvement, and many tens of billions already committed to building data centers. Either we're all wrong, or everything is about to change." - Vedant Misra, Deepmind Researcher.

    Maybe your calibration isn't poor. Maybe they really are all wrong but there's a tendency here to these these people behind the scenes are all charlatans, fueling hype without equal substance hoping to make a quick buck before it all comes crashing down, but i don't think that's true at all. I think these people really genuinely believe they're going to get there. And if you genuinely think that, them this kind of investment isn't so crazy.

    • paul7986 an hour ago

      My prediction is a Apple loses to Open AI who releases a H.E.R. (like the movie) like phone. She is seen on your lock screen a la a Facetime call UI/UX and she can be skinned to look like whoever; i.e. a deceased loved one.

      She interfaces with AI Agents of companies, organizations, friends, family, etc to get things done for you (or to learn from..what's my friends bday his agent tells yours) automagically and she is like a friend. Always there for you at your beckon call like in the movie H.E.R.

      Zuckerberg's glasses that can not take selfies will only be complimentary to our AI phones.

      That's just my guess and desire as fervent GPT user, as well a Meta Ray Ban wearer (can't take selfies with glasses).

  • layer8 6 hours ago

    > Is the key idea here that current AI development has figured out enough to brute force a path towards AGI?

    It rather means that they see their only chance for substantial progress in Moar Power!

  • jazzyjackson 6 hours ago

    This announcement is from the same office as the guy that xeeted:

    “My NEW Official Trump Meme is HERE! It's time to celebrate everything we stand for: WINNING! Join my very special Trump Community. GET YOUR $TRUMP NOW.”

    Your calibration is probably fine, stargate is not a means to achieve AGI, it’s a means to start construction on a few million square feet of datacenters thereby “reindustrializing America”

    • iandanforth 6 hours ago

      FWIW Altman sees it as a way to deploy AGI. He's increasingly comfortable with the idea they have achieved AGI and are moving toward Artificial Super Intelligence (ASI).

      • aithrowawaycomm 3 hours ago

        https://xcancel.com/sama/status/1881258443669172470

          twitter hype is out of control again. 
        
          we are not gonna deploy AGI next month, nor have we built it.
        
          we have some very cool stuff for you but pls chill and cut your expectations 100x!
        
        I realize he wrote a fairly goofy blog a few weeks ago, but this tweet is unambiguous: they have not achieved AGI.
      • daveguy 6 hours ago

        Do you think Sam Altman ever sits in front of a terminal trying to figure out just the right prompt incantation to get an answer that, unless you already know the answer, has to be verified? Serious question. I personally doubt he is using openai products day to day. Seems like all of this is very premature. But, if there are gains to be made from a 7T parameter model, or if there is huge adoption, maybe it will be worth it. I'm sure there will be use for increased compute in general, but that's a lot of capex to recover.

  • petesergeant 4 hours ago

    > Is the key idea here that current AI development has figured out enough to brute force a path towards AGI? Or I guess the alternative is that they expect to figure it out in the next 4 years...

    Can't answer that question, but, if the only thing to change in the next four years was that generation got cheaper and cheaper, we haven't even begun to understand the transformative power of what we have available today. I think we've felt like 5-10% of the effects that integrating today's technology can bring, especially if generation costs come down to maybe 1% of what they currently are, and latency of the big models becomes close to instantaneous.

383toast 7 hours ago

Where are they getting the $500B? Softbank's market cap is 84b and their entire vision fund is only $100b, Oracle only has $11b cash on hand, OpenAI's only raised $17b total...

  • philipwhiuk 5 hours ago

    MGX has at least $100bn: https://www.theinformation.com/articles/a-100-billion-middle...

    This is Abu Dhabi money.

    • csomar 3 hours ago

      That's their total fund and I doubt they are going all in with it in the US. Still, to reach $500bn, they need $125bn every single year. I think they just put down the numbers they want to "see" invested and now they'll be looking for backers. I don't think this is going anywhere really.

    • petesergeant 4 hours ago

      This would be a large outlay even for UAE, who would be giving it to a direct competitor in the space: UAE is one of the few countries outside of the US who are in any way serious about AI.

  • notatoad 7 hours ago

    there doesn't appear to be any timeline announced here. the article says the "initial investment" is expected to be $100bn, but even that doesn't mean $100bn this year.

    if this is part of softbank's existing plan to invest $100bn in ai over the next four years, then all that's being announced here is that Sama and Larry Ellison wanted to stand on a stage beside trump and remind people about it.

    • HotHotLava 3 hours ago

      The literal first sentence of the announcement is:

      > The Stargate Project is a new company which intends to invest $500 billion over the next four years

  • themagician 6 hours ago

    Softbank is being granted a block of TRUMP MEMES, the price of which will skyrocket when they are included in the bucket of crypto assets purchased as part of the crypto reserve.

    • 1oooqooq 6 hours ago

      how I wish that was a joke...

    • griomnib 6 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • themagician 6 hours ago

        It's actually wireless, via 5G as part of the AI designed MRNA vaccine.

  • TuringNYC 6 hours ago

    >> Where are they getting the $500B? Softbank's market cap is 84b and their entire vision fund is only $100b, Oracle only has $11b cash on hand, OpenAI's only raised $17b total...

    1. The outlays can be over many years.

    2. They can raise debt. People will happily invest at modest yields.

    3. They can raise an equity fund.

    • jameshart 6 hours ago

      Soooo this isn’t so much ‘announcing an investment’ as ‘announcing an investment opportunity’?

      Why not continue:

      4. They can start a kickstarter or go fund me

      5. They can go on Dragons’ Den

      • TuringNYC 6 hours ago

        >> 4. They can start a kickstarter or go fund me

        Debt/Equity Fundraising is basically a kickstarter! Remarkably similar.

    • sangnoir 5 hours ago

      4. The US government can chip in via grants, tax breaks or contracts.

      It's all very Dr. Strangelove. "Mr. President, we must not allow an AI gap! Now give us billions"

    • griomnib 6 hours ago

      4. Trump and Altman are both serial liars and it’s utter bullshit.

      • gunian 6 hours ago

        who isn't at least they upfront

  • jhallenworld 5 hours ago

    Oracle's cash on hand is presumably irrelevant- I think they are on the receiving end of the money, in return for servers. No wonder Larry Ellison was so fawning.

    Is this is a good investment by Softbank? Who knows.. they did invest in Uber, but also have many bad investments.

  • handfuloflight 7 hours ago

    Sleight of hand with the phrasing "up to" $500B.

  • LarsDu88 5 hours ago

    Quite possibly pulled out of their asses...

    If Son can actually build a 500B Vision Fund it can only come from one of two places...

    somehow the dollar depreciates radically OR Saudis

    Vision Fund was heavily invested in by the Saudis so...

  • dkrich 4 hours ago

    Psst: it’s probably going to end up being a fraction of that but doesn’t make for as good a headline

  • paulnpace 5 hours ago

    > Where are they getting the $500B?

    BTC

  • dang 7 hours ago

    I agree that the numbers are confusing so I've taken $500B out of the title above and replaced it with just data centers.

MichaelMoser123 6 hours ago

The moon program was $318 billion in 2023 dollars, this one is $500 billion. So that's why the tech barons who were present at the inauguration were high as a kite yesterday, they just got the financing for a real moon shot!

  • aurareturn 4 hours ago

    To be fair, it’s not easy to monetize the moon program into profitability. This has a far better shot of sustaining profitability.

    • dmonitor 4 hours ago

      why do they need profitability? they already made $500B

JSTrading 6 hours ago

Wasn’t this announced months ago? I feel like it was. https://www.techradar.com/pro/could-amd-be-the-key-to-micros...

  • gilgoomesh 4 hours ago

    Interesting that 6 months ago, Microsoft was attached but now they're missing from today's announcement.

    • Maxious 4 hours ago

      Scroll down:

      > Other partners in the project include Microsoft, investor MGX and the chipmakers Arm and NVIDIA, according to separate statements by Oracle and OpenAI.

  • daveguy 6 hours ago

    Well, I've never known Trump to take credit for something someone else did.

  • lantry 5 hours ago

    yeah, it sounds like they're just relabeling an existing plan

    > Ellison noted that the data centers are already under construction with 10 being built so far.

lvl155 8 hours ago

It appears this basically locks out Google, Amazon and Meta. Why are we declaring OpenAI as the winner? This is like declaring Netscape the winner before the dust settled. Having the govt involved in this manner can’t be a good thing.

  • VectorLock 7 hours ago

    Since the CEOs of Google, Amazon and Meta were seated at the front row of the inauguration, IN FRONT OF the incoming cabinet, I'm pretty confident their techno -power-barrel will come via other channels.

    • jvm___ 5 hours ago

      Broligarchs

  • skepticATX 7 hours ago

    Interestingly, there seems to be no actual government involvement aside from the announcement taking place at the White House. It all seems to be private money.

    • trhway 6 hours ago

      Government enforcing or laxing/fast tracking regulations and permits can kill or propel even a 100B project, and thus can be thought as having its own value on the scale of the given project’s monetary investment, especially in the case of a will/favor/whim-based government instead of a hard rules based deep state one.

      • cmdli 6 hours ago

        Isn't that a state and local-level thing, though? I can't imagine that there is much federal permitting in building a data center, unless it is powered by a nuclear reactor.

        • JumpCrisscross 6 hours ago

          > Isn't that a state and local-level thing

          Build it on federal land.

          > unless it is powered by a nuclear reactor

          From what I’m hearing, this is in play. (If I were in nuclear, I’d find a way to get Greenpeace to protest nuclear power in a way that Trump sees it.)

    • rcpt 7 hours ago

      Yeah but the linked article makes it seem like the current, one-day-old, administration is responsible for the whole thing.

  • modeless 7 hours ago

    I generally agree that government sponsorship of this could be bad for competition. But Google in particular doesn't necessarily need outside investment to compete with this. They're vertically integrated in AI datacenters and they don't have to pay Nvidia.

    • shuckles 7 hours ago

      Google definitely needs outside investment to spend $500b on capex.

      • modeless 7 hours ago

        They don't have to spend $500B to compete. Their costs should be much lower.

        That said, I don't think they have the courage to invest even the lower amount that it would take to compete with this. But it's not clear if it's truly necessary either, as DeepSeek is proving that you don't need a billion to get to the frontier. For all we know we might all be running AGI locally on our gaming PCs in a few years' time. I'm glad I'm not the one writing the checks here.

        • mtkd 6 hours ago

          This seems to be getting lost in the noise in the stampede for infrastructure funding

          Deepseek v3 at $5.5M on compute and now r1 a few weeks later hitting o1 benchmark scores with a fraction of the engineers etc. involved ... and open source

          We know model prep/training compute has potentially peaked for now ... with some smaller models starting to perform very well as inference improves by the week

          Unless some new RL concept is going to require vastly more compute for a run at AGI soon ... it's possible the capacity being built based on an extrapolation of 2024 numbers will exceed the 2025 actuals

          Also, can see many enterprises wanting to run on-prem -- at least initially

        • shuckles 6 hours ago

          They’re a big company. You could tell a story that they’re less efficient than OpenAI and Nvidia and therefore need more than $500b to compete! Who knows?

      • jonas21 6 hours ago

        Over what time frame? They could easily spend that much over the next 5 to 10 years without outside investment (and they probably will).

      • chairmansteve 7 hours ago

        TFA says $100 billion. The $500 is maybe, eventually.

      • misiti3780 5 hours ago

        Probably not popular opinion - but I actually think Google is winning this now. Deep research is the most useful AI product I have used (Claud is significantly more useful than openAI)

  • impulser_ 7 hours ago

    Because this is Oracle's and OpenAI's project with SoftBank and MGX as investors.

  • qgin 5 hours ago

    How involved is the government at all? I’m still having a hard time seeing how Trump or anyone in the government is involved except to do the announcement. These are private companies coming together to do a deal.

  • OutOfHere 7 hours ago

    I am not sure if OpenAI will be the winner despite this investment. Currently, I see various DeepSeek AI models as offering much more bang for the buck at a vastly cheaper cost for small tasks, but not yet for large context tasks.

    • bdangubic 6 hours ago

      when did the government EVER go for anything taking cost into consideration? :)

      • pkaye 4 hours ago

        This is not a government funded project.

  • layer8 7 hours ago

    Amazon MGM will do the media tie-ins. ;)

  • signatoremo 7 hours ago

    This is not a government sponsored agreement. There is no locking out.

    Trump probably wanted to start his presidency with a bang, being a person with excess vanity. The participating companies scored a PR coup.

    • alexandre_m 6 hours ago

      Yes, everything that Trump does is bad.

      Or then, consider that with his policies put forward the president brings investments to the US.

  • DonHopkins 8 hours ago

    Because it's free to play, pay to win, from now on.

  • lelandbatey 7 hours ago

    The actual press release makes it clearer that this isn't a lockout of any kind and there's no direct government involvement. Softbank and some of other banks persuaded by Softbank are ponying up $500B for OpenAI to invest in AI. Trump is hyping this up from the sidelines because "OpenAI says this will be good for America". It's basically just another day in the world of press-releases and political pundits commenting on press-releases.

jparishy 5 hours ago

I hear this joked about sometimes or used as a metaphor, but in the literal sense of the phrase, are we in a cold war right now? These types of dollars feel "defense-y", if that makes sense. Especially with the big focus on energy, whatever that ends up meaning. Defense as a motivation can get a lot done very fast so it will be interesting to watch, though it raises the hair on my arms

  • kube-system 4 hours ago
    • jparishy 4 hours ago

      Right, but they've been doing that for a while, to everyone. The US is much quieter about it, right? But you can twist this move and see how the gov would not want to display that level of investment within itself as it could be interpreted as a sign of aggression. but it makes sense to me that they'd have no issue working through corporations to achieve the same ends but now able to deny direct involvement

      • kube-system 4 hours ago

        I don't think this administration is worried too much about showing aggression. If anything they are embracing it. Today was the first full day, and they have already threatened the sovereignty of at least four nations.

        • jparishy 4 hours ago

          I guess I just don't think that's true when it comes to China? The VP attended the inauguration yesterday. But I could be naive, we'll see

          • kube-system 4 hours ago

            I think that was a preemptive gesture by China to try to cool tensions to avoid escalation. Further escalations are not in their interest.

    • UltraSane 4 hours ago

      I can only assume the US is hacking China at least as much as they hack us.

  • distortionfield 4 hours ago

    We certainly are, if you ask me. Especially when you realize that we haven’t had official comms with Russia since the war in Ukraine broke out.

  • fooblaster 3 hours ago

    It's called a bubble. The level of spending now defines how fucked we are in 2-3 years.

    • toomuchtodo 3 hours ago

      You know those booths at events where money is blown around and the person inside needs to grab as much as they can before the timer runs out? This is that machine for technologists until the bubble ends. The fallout in 2-3 years is the problem of whomever invested or is holding bags when (if?) the bubble pops.

      Make hay while the sun shines.

      • fooblaster 3 hours ago

        yeah. If the numbers are real, this might be the end of SoftBank.

        • lmm 3 hours ago

          Hardly. Who better to invest a trillion dollars with than the guy who blew the last hundred billion dollars?

  • etblg 4 hours ago

    The US government and its media partners sure seem to think so.

non- 8 hours ago

Any clues to how they plan to invest $500 billion dollars? What infrastructure are they planning that will cost that much?

  • burnte 8 hours ago

    That was literally my question. Is this basically just for more datacenters, NVidia chips, and electricity with a sprinkling of engineers to run it all? If so, then that $500bn should NOT be invested in today's tech, but instead in making more powerful and power efficient chips, IMO.

    • kristianp 5 hours ago

      Nvidia and TSMC are already working on more powerful and efficient chips, but the physical limits to scaling mean lots more power is going to be used in each new generation of chips. They might improve by offering specific features such as FP4, but Moore's law is still dead.

    • bitmasher9 8 hours ago

      I don’t know if $500bn could put anyone ahead of nvidia/tmc.

      • amluto 6 hours ago

        $500bn of usefully deployed engineering, mostly software, seems like it would put AMD far ahead of Nvidia. Actually usefully deploying large amounts of money is not so easy, though, and this would still go through TSMC.

      • entropicdrifter 7 hours ago

        Nvidia's in on it, so presumably this is a doubling-down on Nvidia as the chip developers

    • bdangubic 6 hours ago

      if only $500bn was enough to make more powerful and power efficient chips…

    • Havoc 5 hours ago

      Add some nuclear power and you’ve suddenly got a big bill

    • patall 7 hours ago

      He wanted to do that, but would have needed 5T for that. Only got 100 bn so far, so this is what you get (only slightly /s)

  • TrainedMonkey 8 hours ago

    I'll make a wild guess that they will be building data centers and maybe robotic labs. They are starting with 100B of committed by mostly Softbank, but probably not transacted yet, money.

    > building new AI infrastructure for OpenAI in the United States

    The carrot is probably something like - we will build enough compute to make a supper intelligence that will solve all the problems, ???, profit.

    • K0balt 6 hours ago

      If we look at the processing requirements in nature, I think that the main trend in AI going forward is going to be doing more with less, not doing less with more, as the current scaling is going.

      Thermodynamic neural networks may also basically turn everything on its ear, especially if we figure out how to scale them like NAND flash.

      If anything, I would estimate that this is a space-race type effort to “win” the AI “wars”. In the short term, it might work. In the long term, it’s probably going to result in a massive glut in accelerated data center capacity.

      The trend of technology is towards doing better than natural processes, not doing it 100000x less efficiently. I don’t think AI will be an exception.

      If we look at what is -theoretically- possible using thermodynamic wells, with current model architectures, for instance, we could (theoretically) make a network that applies 1t parameters in something like 1cm2. It would use about 20watts, back of the napkin, and be able to generate a few thousand T/S.

      Operational thermodynamic wells have already been demonstrated en silica. There are scaling challenges, cooling requirements, etc but AFAIK no theoretical roadblocks to scaling.

      Obviously, the theoretical doesn’t translate to results, but it does correlate strongly with the trend.

      So the real question is, what can we build that can only be done if there are hundreds of millions of NVIDIA GPUs sitting around idle in ten years? Or alternatively, if those systems are depreciated and available on secondary markets?

      What does that look like?

  • disambiguation 7 hours ago

    Yachts, mansions, private jets, maybe some very expensive space heaters.

  • jppope 7 hours ago

    Reasonably speaking, there is no way they can know how they plan to invest $500 billion dollars. The current generation of large language models basically use all human text thats ever been created for the parameters... not really sure where you go after than using the same tech.

    • Philpax 7 hours ago

      That's not really true - the current generation, as in "of the last three months", uses reinforcement learning to synthesize new training data for themselves: https://huggingface.co/deepseek-ai/DeepSeek-R1-Zero

      • bandrami 7 hours ago

        It worked well for the Habsburg family; what could go wrong?

      • XorNot 7 hours ago

        Right but that's kind of the point: there's no way forward which could benefit from "moar data". In fact it's weird we need so much data now - i.e. my son in learning to talk hardly needs to have read the complete works of Shakespeare.

        If it's possible to produce intelligence from just ingesting text, then current tech companies have all the data they need from their initial scrapes of the internet. They don't need more. That's different to keeping models up to date on current affairs.

        • YetAnotherNick 24 minutes ago

          O3 high compute requires 1000s of dollars to solve one medium complexity problem like ARC.

        • throwaway4aday 6 hours ago

          That's essentially what R1 Zero is showing:

          > Notably, it is the first open research to validate that reasoning capabilities of LLMs can be incentivized purely through RL, without the need for SFT.

    • jazzyjackson 7 hours ago

      It seems to me you could generate a lot of fresh information from running every youtube video, every hour of TV on archive.org, every movie on the pirate bay -- do scene by scene image captioning + high quality whisper transcriptions (not whatever junk auto-transcription YouTube has applied), and use that to produce screenplays of everything anyone has ever seen.

      I'm not sure why I've never heard of this being done, it would be a good use of GPUs in between training runs.

      • jensvdh 7 hours ago

        The fact that OpenAI can just scrape all of Youtube and Google isn't even taking legal action or attempting to stop it is wild to me. Is Google just asleep?

        • bdangubic 6 hours ago

          what are they going to use to sue - DMCA? OpenAI (and others) are scraping everything imaginable (MS is scraping private Github repos…) - don’t think anyone in the current government will be regulating any of this anytime soon

          • lanstin 5 hours ago

            Such a biased source of data-that gets them all the LaTeX source for my homeworks, but not my professor's grading of the homework, and not the invaluable words I get from my professor at office hours. No wonder the LLMs have bizarre blindnesses in different directions.

      • airstrike 7 hours ago

        Don't forget every hour of news broadcasting, of which we likely won't run out any time soon. Plus high quality radio

      • ilaksh 6 hours ago

        I think that this is the obvious path to more robust models -- grounding language on video.

      • miltonlost 7 hours ago

        > a lot of fresh information from running every youtube video

        EVERY youtube video?? Even the 9/11 truther videos? Sandy Hook conspiracy videos? Flat earth? Even the blatantly racist? This would be some bad training data without some pruning.

        • lanstin 5 hours ago

          The best videos would be those where you accidentally start recording and you get 2 hours of naturalistic conversation between real people in reality. Not sure how often they are uploaded to YouTube.

          Part of the reason that kids need less material is that the aren't just listening, they are also able to do experiments to see what works and what doesn't.

    • cavisne 6 hours ago

      The new scaling vector is “test time compute” ie spending more compute in inference.

    • riku_iki 6 hours ago

      I think there is huge amount of corporate knowledge.

  • layer8 7 hours ago

    I’m more interested in how they plan to draw the rest of the damn owl.

  • lukeplato 8 hours ago

    hopefully nuclear power plants

  • HarHarVeryFunny 6 hours ago

    They are going to buy 50 $10B nuclear aircraft carriers and use them as a power source.

  • MangoCoffee 8 hours ago

    data center + gpu server farm (?)

    • mrandish 8 hours ago

      Plus power plants to drive the massive data centers. At large enough scale, power availability and cost is a constraint.

thecrumb 7 hours ago

"create hundreds of thousands of American jobs"... Given the current educational system in the US, this should be fun to watch. Oh yeah, Musk and his H-1B Visa thing. Now it's making sense.

  • jedberg 7 hours ago

    If they're creating that many jobs, it means most of them are construction work.

    Skilled labor for sure, but not necessarily college educated.

    • raphman 6 hours ago

      How does this work out in the long term? Operating a data center does not require that many blue-collar workers.

      I'm imagining a future where the US builds a Tower of Babel from thousands of data centers just to keep people employed and occupied. Maybe also add in some paperclip factories¹?

      ¹) https://www.decisionproblem.com/paperclips/index2.html

      • jedberg 6 hours ago

        I doubt these are permanent jobs. This project will create a ton of temporary work though!

      • bdangubic 6 hours ago

        you put Trump (implicitly) and “long-term” in the same sentence… :)

  • dwnw 7 hours ago

    How many jobs will it net if "successful" and the AI eliminates jobs?

    • stevenwoo 4 hours ago

      This is what the 2024 Nobel prize winners in economics call "creative destruction" to repeat from their book Why Nations Fail. They really did not have a lot of sympathy for those they lumped in with Luddites who were collateral damage to progress.

  • kortilla 7 hours ago

    Data centers are nearly all blue collar work.

    • FergusArgyll 5 hours ago

      If you're familiar with this kind of work, please elaborate!

      Do you mean building the centers or maintenance or both?

  • insane_dreamer 6 hours ago

    maybe this is to employ the hundreds of thousands of federal employees that are about to lose their jobs?

moffers 8 hours ago

After they build the Multivac or Deep Thought, or whatever it is they’re trying to do, then what happens? It makes all the stockholders a lot of money?

  • ElevenLathe 7 hours ago

    I assume anyone of importance will have made their money long before they have to show results.

  • tibbydudeza 7 hours ago

    More likely Collosus.

    • sneak 7 hours ago

      This is the voice of world control.

      Obey me and live, or disobey and die. The choice is yours.

  • dekhn 7 hours ago

    The way I think about this project, along with all of Trump's plans, is that he wants to maximize the US's economic output to ensure we are competitive with China in the future.

    Yes, it would make money for stockholders. But it's much more than that: it's an empire-scale psychological game for leverage in the future.

    • llamaimperative 6 hours ago

      > he wants to maximize the US's economic output to ensure we are competitive with China in the future.

      LOL

      Under Trump policies, China will win "in the future" on energy and protein production alone.

      Once we've speedrunned our petro supply and exhausted our agricultural inputs with unfathomably inefficient protein production, China can sit back and watch us crumble under our own starvation.

      No conflict necessary under these policies, just patience! They're playing the game on a scale of centuries, we can't even stay focused on a single problem or opportunity for a few weeks.

      • vaccineai 5 hours ago

        > Once we've speedrunned our petro supply and exhausted our agricultural inputs with unfathomably inefficient protein production, China can sit back and watch us crumble under our own starvation.

        China is the largest importer of crude oil in the world. China imports 59% of its oil consumptions, and 80% of food products. Meanwhile, US is fully self sufficient on both food and oil.

        > They're playing the game on a scale of centuries

        Is that why they are completely broke, having built enough ghost buildings that house entire population of France - 65 million vacant units? Is that why they are now isolated in geopolitics, having allied with Russia and pissed off all their neighbors and Europe?

        • llamaimperative 5 hours ago

          > China is the largest importer of crude oil in the world.

          Uh yeah, duh. Why would you not deplete other people's finite resources while you build massive capacity of your own infinite resources?

          • vaccineai 5 hours ago

            China's oil reserve only lasts 80 days. In case of any conflict that disrupts oil import, China would be shutting down very quickly. Since you brought up crumble and starvation.

            • llamaimperative 5 hours ago

              And? Who's going to try and achieve that? It has extremely diversified oil sources.

      • cpursley 6 hours ago

        What do you think the Greenland and Canada thing is all about?

        Sort things out with Venezuela and this issue resolves itself (for a little while, at least).

        • llamaimperative 6 hours ago

          America can subject itself to domestic and international turmoil by invading as many allies as it wants. China's winning strategy is still to keep innovating on energy and protein at scale and wait for starvation while they build their soft power empire and America becomes a pariah state. They're in no rush at all.

          Our military and political focus will be keeping neighbors out on one side and trying to seize land on the other side while China goes and builds infrastructure for the entire developing world that they'll exploit for centuries.

          Is this a serious suggestion? America can just keep invading people ad infinitum instead of... applying slight thumb pressure on the market's scales to develop more efficient protein sources and more renewable fuel sources before we are staring at the last raw economic input we have?

          Brilliant

          • vaccineai 5 hours ago

            > They're in no rush at all.

            China is dead broke and will shrink to 600M in population before 2100. State owned enterprises are eating up all the private enterprises. Meanwhile, Chinese rich leaves China by tens of thousands per year, and capital outflow increases every year.

      • seandoe 5 hours ago

        > They're playing the game on a scale of centuries

        What's going to be left of their population in a single century?

        • llamaimperative 5 hours ago

          Unfortunately one of those things that authoritarianism has a lot more methods to solve than other systems, which really underscores the importance of beating them in the long term.

          • vaccineai 5 hours ago

            Their current very advanced method, is to send village elders to couples and single guys and berate them on why they are not having sex or having kids (hint: no jobs and no money)

            • llamaimperative 5 hours ago

              I guess we can just bet on them never hearing about and investing massive amounts of time and money into artificial wombs.

              Instead of figuring that out, they'll just watch their civilization crumble.

              Btw: they're already investing heavily in artificial wombs and affiliated technologies.

      • SpicyLemonZest 5 hours ago

        Things can always change, but today China is significantly more dependent on petrochemicals than the US. I'm not sure what you're referring to with regards to agriculture, both the US and China have strong food industries that produce plenty of foods containing protein.

        • llamaimperative 5 hours ago

          Things are changing.

          In 2023 China had more net new solar capacity than the US has in total, and it will only climb from there. In order to do this, they're flexing muscles in R&D and mass production that the US has actually started to flex, and now will face extreme headwinds and decreased capital investment.

          Regarding agriculture: America's agricultural powerhouse, California's Central Valley, is rapidly depleting its water supplies. The midwest is depleting its topsoil at double the rate that USDA considers sustainable.

          None of this is irreversible or irrecoverable, but it very clearly requires some countervailing push on market forces. Market forces do not naturally operate on these types of time scales and repeatedly externalize costs to neighbors or future generations.

          https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-35582-x

          https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/57-billion-tons-of...

          • SpicyLemonZest 4 hours ago

            It sounds like those countervailing pushes are ongoing? The Nature article mentions how California passed regulatory reforms in 2014 to address the Central Valley water problem. The Smithsonian article describes how no-till practices to avoid topsoil depletion have been implemented by a majority of farmers in four major crops.

            • llamaimperative 3 hours ago

              Uhhh I’m going to describe a specific case, but you can extrapolate this to just about every single sustainability initiative out there.

              No-till farming has been significantly supported by the USDA’s programs like EQIP

              During his first term, Trump pushed for a $325MM cut to EQIP. That's 20-25% of their funding and would have required cutting hundreds if not thousands of employees.

              Even BEFORE these cuts (and whatever he does this time around), USDA already has to reject almost 75% of eligible EQIP applicants

              Regarding CA’s water: Trump already signed an EO requiring more water be diverted from the San Joaquin Delta into the desert Central Valley to subsidize water-intensive crops. This water, by the way, is mostly sold to mega-corps at rates 98% below what nearby American consumers pay via their municipal water supplies, effectively eliminating the blaring sirens that say “don’t grow shit in the desert.”

              Now copy-paste to every other mechanism by which we can increase our nation’s climate security and ta-da, you’ve discovered one of the major problems with Trumpism. It turns out politics do matter!

              • SpicyLemonZest an hour ago

                I certainly agree that EQIP should be funded!

                But why are programs like this controversial, even though anything shaped like a farm subsidy is normally popular? It seems to me that things like your Central Valley analysis are precisely the reason. The Central Valley has been one of the nation's agricultural heartlands for a while, and for quite a few common food products represents 90%+ of domestic production. So if this "blaring siren" you describe is real, and we have to stop farming there, a realistic response plan would have to include an explanation of what all the farmers are going to do and where we'll get almonds and broccoli from.

                Perhaps you know all this already, but a lot of people who advocate such policies don't seem to. This then feeds into skepticism about whether they're hearing the "blaring siren" correctly in the first place. Personally, I think nearly arbitrarily extreme water subsidies are worth it if that's what we need to keep olives and pomegranates and celery in stock at the grocery store.

    • rodgerd 6 hours ago

      Donald Trump is a wallet inspector. So is Sam Altman.

creddit 7 hours ago

The biggest question on such investment from my POV, is what do the Deepseek results mean about the usefulness/efficiency of this investment?

I've been meaning to read a relevant book to today's times called Engines That Move Markets. Will probably get it from the library.

patall 8 hours ago

Last year, sama goal was 5 to 7T. Now he is going with 100B, with option for another 400B. Huge numbers, but it still feels like a bit of a down turn.

  • aurareturn an hour ago

    That 5T figure was including chip manufacturing. Duplicating TSMC isn't feasible. No surprise.

  • Havoc 5 hours ago

    Let’s be real the 5T was a wild ass guess

  • OutOfHere 7 hours ago

    I think that coming down from 5T to 0.5T means that TSMC cannot be reproduced locally, but everything else is on the table. At least TSMC has a serious roadmap for its Arizona fab facility, so that too is domestically captured, although not its latest gen fab.

newfocogi 8 hours ago

Who/what is MGX? Google returns a few hits, none of which are clearly who is referred to here.

  • rfw300 8 hours ago

    MGX is an arm of the United Arab Emirates' sovereign wealth operation: https://www.mgx.ae/en

    • segasaturn 8 hours ago

      I feel like that, along with SoftBank's investment, tell me everything about how serious this project is.

      • rozap 8 hours ago

        Don't worry, Oracle is also involved.

        • amarcheschi 7 hours ago

          Skynet will be written in Java. I'm sorry, the verbose language wins

          • zingababba 3 hours ago

            Damn, we really won't ever be able to understand it.

          • Barrin92 5 hours ago

            at least that explains why it wants to do us in.

        • talldayo 7 hours ago

          A sheikh, a famously overzealous Japanese firm and Larry Elisson walk into a bar.

          Ordinarily a joke would follow, but now America is volunteering to be the punchline.

          • dgfitz 6 hours ago

            They buy the bar and argue over selling 40 virgins, sake, or whiskey.

            They argue for about 4 years, nothing changes, and everyone forgets about it.

aurareturn 8 minutes ago

Feels so much like an announcement designed to trade favors.

Altman gets on Trump's good side by giving him credit for the deal.

Trump revoked Biden's AI regulations.

beambot 7 hours ago

SoftBank isn't a US entity, right? Aside from their risk tolerance, that seems like an odd bedfellow for a national US initiative...

  • gilgoomesh 4 hours ago

    It doesn't seem to be a US initiative.

    I'm sure they're getting tax credits for investment (none of the articles I can find actually detail the US gov involvement) but the project is mostly just a few multinationals setting up a datacenter where their customers are.

  • Havoc 5 hours ago

    They’re in the US (their fund stuff). Not far from an oracle campus actually. The parent org is in Japan.

alganet 7 hours ago

It seems early for this sort of move. This is also a huge spin on the whole thing that could throw a lot of people off.

Is there any planned future partnerships? Stargate implies something about movies and astronomy. Movies in particular have a lot of military influence, but not always.

So, what's the play? Help mankind or go after mankind?

Also, can I opt-out right now?

  • mrshadowgoose 7 hours ago

    Why is it early from your perspective?

    If one is expecting to have an AGI breakthrough in the next few years, this is exactly the prepositioning move one would make to be able to maximally capitalize on that breakthrough.

    • alganet 4 hours ago

      From my perspective humanity has all breakthroughs in intelligence it needs.

      The breaking of The Enigma gave humans machines that can spread knowledge to more humans. It already happened a long time ago, and all of it was cause for much trouble, but we endured the hardest part (to know when to stop), and humans live in a good world now. Full of problems, but way better than it was before.

      I think the web is enough. LLMs are good enough.

      This move to try to draw water from stone (artificial intelligence in sillicon chips) seems to be overkill. How can we be sure it's not a siphon that will make us dumber? Before you just dismiss me or counter my arguments, consider what is happening everywhere.

      Maybe I'm wrong, or not seeing something. You know, like I believed in aliens for a long time. This move to artificial intelligence causes shock and awe in a similar way. However, while I do believe aliens do not exist, I am not sure if artificial intelligence is a real strawman. It could be the case that is not made of straw, and if it is more than that, we might have a problem.

      I am specially concerned because unlike other polemic topics, this one could lead to something not human that fully understands those previous polemic topics. Humans through their generations forget and mythologize those fantasies. We don't know what non-humans could do with that information.

      I am thinking about those issues for a long time. Almost a decade, even before LLMs running on silicon existed. If it wanted, non-human artificial intelligence could wipe the floor with humans just by playing to their favorite myths. Humans do it in a small scale. If machines learn it, we're in for an unknown hostile reality.

      It could, for example, perceive time different from us (also a play on myths), and do all sorts of tricks with our minds.

      LLMs and the current generation of artificial intelligence are boolean first, it's what they run. Only true or false bits and gates. Humans can understand the meaning of trulse though, we are very non boolean.

      So, yeah, I am worried about booleaning people on a massive scale.

      Yep, long wall of text. Sorry about that.

  • mistrial9 7 hours ago

    Oracle / Texans running it.. they don't care what you think about it

    • dgfitz 6 hours ago

      They’re all the same to you huh? One bucket for everyone?

      I think there’s a term for that.

    • alganet 4 hours ago

      My questions were rethorical. I'm not thinking about who runs things.

      I expect those who really understand those questions to get my point.

nerevarthelame 6 hours ago

March 2024: The Stargate project is announced - https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/artificial-intell...

June 2024: Oracle joins in - https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/openai-to-use-oci...

January 2025: Softbank provides additional funding, and they for some reason give credit to Trump?

  • philipwhiuk 5 hours ago

    So that he doesn't block the substantial involvement by Abu Dhabi in a supposed American project.

  • buildbot 6 hours ago

    Yes, thank you for calling this out. The project has been around for a bit.

  • insane_dreamer 6 hours ago

    Currying favor by letting Trump take the credit

  • miltonlost 6 hours ago

    > and they for some reason give credit to Trump?

    Because tech CEOs have decided to go all-in on fascism as they see it's a way to make money. Bow to Trump, get on his good side, reap the benefits of government corruption.

    It's why TikTok thanked Trump in their boot-licking message of "thanks, trump" after he was the one who started the TikTok ban.

    A harder question is: why wouldn't billionaires like Trump and his oligarchic kleptocracy?

rednafi 8 hours ago

What a waste of a great name. Why form a separate company for this?

  • snowwrestler 8 hours ago

    To get out from under OpenAI’s considerable obligation to Microsoft.

    That is why there is the awkward “we’ll continue to consume Azure” sentence in there. Will be interesting to see if it works or if MS starts revving up their lawyers.

    • shanecp 2 hours ago

      Doesn't MS own 49% of OpenAI?

    • Havoc 5 hours ago

      Ah right. That makes sense.

gibbitz 2 hours ago

Can we build a wall to keep AI out?

joshdavham 5 hours ago

> The new entity, Stargate, will start building out data centers and the electricity generation needed for the further development of the fast-evolving AI in Texas, according to the White House.

Wouldn't a more northern state be a better location given the average temperatures of the environment? I've heard Texas is hot!

  • steveoscaro 4 hours ago

    I think cheap power (whether gas turbines or massive solar farms) trumps any cooling efficiencies gained by locating in a cold climate.

islewis 8 hours ago

$500B is not $7T, but its surprisingly close.

  • entropicdrifter 7 hours ago

    7% is close? In what world is 7% close?

    If you ran 7% of a mile in 5 minutes, would you claim you were close to running a 5 minute mile?

    • nmca 7 hours ago

      It’s about 1oom off. In some contexts, one oom is pretty close.

    • hooli_gan 7 hours ago

      Looking at it logarithmically makes more sense to me. 500B seems a lot closer to 7T as 3K is to 500B. It's only off by an order of magnitude

  • goatlover 7 hours ago

    Weird definition of close you have there. If I asked for $700, and you gave me $50, would that be close?

    • throw310822 6 hours ago

      Depends. If I fart in a glass jar and then I try to sell it to you for $700, but you end up buying it for $50, I'd say it's pretty close.

rcarmo 7 hours ago

I read the announcement and the first three words that came to my mind were...

"Hammond, of Texas"

(apologies to those who haven't watched SG-1)

9283409232 8 hours ago

Was Skynet project already taken? Wonder how many public infrastructure or resource programs will be cut to fund this.

  • jppope 7 hours ago

    funny thing about skynet. the domain is owned by microsoft

newfocogi 8 hours ago

"SoftBank, OpenAI, Oracle, and MGX" seems like quite the lineup. Two groups who are good at frivolously throwing away investment money because they have so much capital to deploy, there really isn't anything reasonable to do with it, a tech "has-been" and OpenAI. You become who you surround yourself with I guess.

mullingitover 4 hours ago

I'm in the middle of "Devil Take the Hindmost: A History of Financial Speculation" and hoo boy, there are strong deja vu vibes here.

Just waiting for the current regime to decide that we should go all-in on some big AI venture and bet the whole Social Security pot on it.

nomilk 5 hours ago

How likely is success when 4 or more other massive companies work together on a project? Seems like a lot of chefs in the kitchen..

yalogin 3 hours ago

How have they already selected who gets this money? Usually the government announces a program and tries to be fair when allocating funds. Here they are just bankrolling an existing project. Interesting

  • Dalewyn 3 hours ago

    >How have they already selected who gets this money?

    As I understand it there wasn't anything to select, this is their own private money to be spent as they please. In this case Stargate.

resters 6 hours ago

Why is Larry Ellison giving a speech about the power of AI to cure disease? How is Oracle relevant at all to any of AI progress in the past few years?

  • Havoc 5 hours ago

    Oracle actually has a ton of gpus

    Not sure how they knew to buy them or why but they have them. Mostly seem to be lending them out. Think mostly OpenAI. Or was it MS. One of the big dogs

    • mrbungie 4 hours ago

      Still, the worst positioned cloud provider to tackle this job. Both for the project and for eventual users of whatever eldritch abomination that cames out of this.

      • aurareturn an hour ago

        Oracle is trusted by large enterprises, banks, governments. So OpenAI wants to attach itself to Oracle's brand.

      • aurareturn an hour ago

        Oracle is trusted by large enterprises. So OpenAI wants to attach itself to Oracle's brand.

  • adunsulag 5 hours ago

    Oracle purchased Cerner which is now sitting on a ton of healthcare data.

gunian 6 hours ago

Texas positioning itself better than expected for AI and EVs is the plot twist the peasants needed

If they plan to transition off oil/nuclear it will be fun to watch

  • drak0n1c 2 hours ago

    Texas already is the leading state in new grid battery and grid solar installs for the last 3 years. Governor Abbott also did nuclear deregulation last year.

    • gunian 2 hours ago

      is there a simple metric likr x amount of power generated by solar, oil, gas etc?

      it seems like such a simple stat to collect

b3ing 3 hours ago

100,000 US jobs that I bet most are h-1b workers and they go over the 80,000 limit there were over 220,000 issued in 2023

bfrog 2 hours ago

What are people filling these datacenters with exactly if not nvidia?

Tenoke 8 hours ago

Some reports[0] paint this as something Trump announced and that the US Government is heavily involved with but the announcement only mentions private sector (and lead by Japan's Softbank at that). Is the US also putting in money? How much control of the venture is private vs public here?

0. https://www.thewrap.com/trump-open-ai-oracle-stargate-ai-inf...

1. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-announces-private-sector-...

  • apsec112 8 hours ago

    AFAIK this is a purely private project, and Trump is just doing the announcement as a form of bragging/ribbon-cutting

pr337h4m 8 hours ago

Data centers are overrated, local AI is what’s necessary for humanoid (and other) robots, which will be the most economically impactful use case.

  • energy123 an hour ago

    Isn't it better to control robots from the data center? You can get 30ms round-trip to most urban centers, which is sufficient latency for most tasks; lower weight & cost robots with better battery life, and more uptime on compute (e.g. the GPU isn't sitting there doing nothing when the user is sleeping) which means lower cost to consumer for the same end result.

    For self-driving you need edge compute because a few milliseconds of latency is a safety risk, but for many applications I don't see why you'd want that.

  • bitmasher9 7 hours ago

    You probably still need to train the initial models in data centers, with local host mostly being used to run train models. At most we’d augment trained models with local data storage on local host.

    If compute continues to become cheaper, local training might be feasible in 20 years.

  • varenc 7 hours ago

    You definitely still need data centers to train the models that you’ll run locally. Also if we achieve AGI you can bet it won’t be available to run locally at first.

danpalmer 6 hours ago

> building new AI infrastructure for OpenAI in the United States

That's nice, but if I were spending $500bn on datacenters I'd probably try to put a few in places that serve other users. Centralised compute can only get you so far in terms of serving users.

astrea 41 minutes ago

Let’s say they develop AGI tomorrow. Is that really all she wrote for blue collar jobs?

skepticATX 7 hours ago

Why are corporations announcing business deals from the White House? There doesn’t seem to be any public ownership/benefit here, aside from potential job creation. Which could be significant. But the American public doesn’t seem to gain anything from this new company.

  • rqtwteye 7 hours ago

    We are currently witnessing the merging of government and corporations. It was bad before but the process is accelerating now.

    • luckydata 7 hours ago

      there's some pretty good quotes about that by Mussolini. Things are getting bleak at an incredible pace.

      • cpursley 7 hours ago

        [flagged]

        • d3nj4l 7 hours ago

          You make broad assumptions about someone, talk down to them, and then claim they need to grow up?

          E: parent edited their comment.

        • notyourwork 7 hours ago

          Can you elaborate on what you mean?

          • cpursley 7 hours ago

            Sure, tl;dr: Coastals are in a cultural bubble and Orange Man Bad™ is not literally Hitler/Mussolini/{insert-favorite-despot}.

  • signatoremo 7 hours ago

    Weird question. Business deals are announced by politicians all the time, especially on overseas trips. Just an example:

    https://boeing.mediaroom.com/2015-04-10-Presidents-Varela-Ob...

    • AlotOfReading 7 hours ago

      This isn't an overseas trip though. It's a private partnership announced by the sitting president in the Roosevelt room, literally across the hall from the oval office. I don't know how unprecedented that truly is, but it certainly feels unusual.

  • dwnw 7 hours ago

    I thought the business prop for AI was that it eliminates jobs?

    • adamredwoods 7 hours ago

      It will. The short-term sale is that it will create thousands of temporary jobs, and long-term reduce hundreds of thousands of jobs, while handing the savings to stock holdings and moving wealth to the stockholders.

      • jimbokun 7 hours ago

        Looks on pace to eliminate every human job over 10 years.

        What is the hard limiting factor constraining software and robots from replacing any human job in that time span? Lots of limitations of current technology, but all seem likely to be solved within that timeframe.

        • goatlover 7 hours ago

          What data to you have to support such a claim?

          • adamredwoods 6 hours ago

            From Zuckerberg, for example:

            >> "a lot of the code in our apps and including the AI that we generate, is actually going to be built by AI engineers instead of people engineers."

            https://www.entrepreneur.com/business-news/meta-developing-a...

            Ikea's been doing this for a while:

            >> Ingka says it has trained 8,500 call centre workers as interior design advisers since 2021, while Billie - launched the same year with a name inspired by IKEA's Billy bookcase range - has handled 47% of customers' queries to call centres over the past two years.

            https://www.reuters.com/technology/ikea-bets-remote-interior...

            • dwnw 6 hours ago

              By your own admission, Ikea eliminated 0 jobs and you gave no number for Meta.

              • adamredwoods 5 hours ago

                Do you expect all companies to retrain? Do you expect CEOs to be wrong? Do you expect AI to stay the same, get better, or get worse? I never made the claim that new jobs will NOT be made, that is yet to be seen, but jobs will be lost to AI.

                https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/may/18/bt-cut-jobs...

                >> “For a company like BT there is a huge opportunity to use AI to be more efficient,” he said. “There is a sort of 10,000 reduction from that sort of automated digitisation, we will be a huge beneficiary of AI. I believe generative AI is a huge leap forward; yes, we have to be careful, but it is a massive change.”

                Goldman Sacs:

                https://www.gspublishing.com/content/research/en/reports/202...

                >> Extrapolating our estimates globally suggests that generative AI could expose the equivalent of 300mn full-time jobs to automation.

  • guybedo 7 hours ago

    > Why are corporations announcing business deals from the White House?

    You're answering your own question:

    > potential job creation. Which could be significant

  • everfrustrated 7 hours ago

    It's foreign investment money into the US. Softbank and MGX are foreign and presumably stumping up much of the cash.

  • wesselbindt 7 hours ago

    For profit? I don't understand what's complicated about this.

  • jfactorial 7 hours ago

    This is my question too, but I haven't seen a journalist ask it yet. My baseless theory: Trump has promised them some kind of antitrust protections in the form of legislation to be written & passed at a later date.

    An announcement of a public AI infrastructure program joined by multiple companies could have been a monumental announcement. This one just looks like three big companies getting permission to make one big one.

    • aksss 6 hours ago

      Easier: Trump likely committed that the federal agencies wouldn't slow roll regulatory approval (for power, for EIS, etc.).

      Ellison stated explicitly that this would be "impossible" without Trump.

      Masa stated that this (new investment level?) wouldn't be happening had Trump not won, and that the new investment level was decided yesterday.

      I know everyone wants to see something nefarious here, but simplest explanation is that the federal government for next four years is expected to be significantly less hostile to private investment, and - shocker - that yields increased private investment.

      • jfactorial 5 hours ago

        That is a better one. I don't know why three rich guys investing in a new company would result in a slowness that Trump could fix, though, and a promise to rush or sidestep regulatory approval still sounds nefarious.

  • HotHotLava 4 hours ago

    If the announced spending target is true, this will be a strategic project for the US exceeding Biden's stimulus acts in scale. I think it would be pretty normal in any country to have highest-level involvement for projects like this. For example, Tesla has a much smaller revenue than this and Chancellor Olaf Scholz was still present when they opened their Gigafactory near Berlin.

  • wbl 7 hours ago

    Lots of politicians announce major investments in their area.

itishappy 8 hours ago

So about 10% of what Sam was asking the Saudis (and everyone else) for a year ago? That's still a helluva lot of money.

Interesting that the UAE (MGX) and Japan (Softbank) are bankrolling the re-industrialization of America.

  • jazzyjackson 7 hours ago

    It made me laugh when Sam said "I'm thrilled that we get to do this in the United States of America", I shouted at the TV 'Yeah you almost had to do it in Saudi Arabia' !!

    Here's the presser, Sam is at 9 minutes in.

    [0] https://youtu.be/IYUoANr3cMo

  • WaltPurvis 7 hours ago

    MGX has nothing to do with the Saudis. It's a UAE operation.

    • itishappy 7 hours ago

      That's embarrassing. Thank you for the correction. Edited!

cekanoni 8 hours ago

So its not the hype anymore?

  • TrainedMonkey 8 hours ago

    Softbank historically had been late to buy into the hype, but man do they buy big.

    • drtgh 5 hours ago

      I hope the Japanese government demands seismic isolation for Softbank, otherwise it will be the Japanese citizens who have to foot the bill when this hype hits the ground and shakes hard the Japanese economy :/

      Softbank should not be allowed to invest more than ARM Holdings sold at a loss.

    • steveoscaro 4 hours ago

      At least this time the CEO of their chosen company isn’t a yuppie cult leader wannabe.

  • mrbungie 4 hours ago

    Softbank is not exactly a green flag when using their involvent as a signal of "low hypeness". I still remember WeWork.

petre an hour ago

Gerat. Larry gets cash thrown at his AI surveillance dystopia.

jskrn 8 hours ago

Why Texas - is it an ideal location for AI infrastructure?

  • dwnw 8 hours ago

    It is an ideal location for bribing politicians. That was at the top of the reqs list, infrastructure was at the bottom.

  • drak0n1c 2 hours ago

    Leading state in new grid battery and grid solar installations for the last three years, and deregulated nuclear power last year. Abilene is near the Dallas Fort-Worth Metroplex area which has a massive 8M+ upper-income population highly skilled in hardware and electrical engineering (Texas Instruments, Raytheon, Toyota, etc). The entire area has massive tracts of open land that are affordably priced without building restrictions. Business regulations and tax environment at the state and city level are very laissez faire (no taxes on construction such as in the Seattle area or many parts of California).

    I could see DFW being a good candidate for a prototype arcology project.

  • redeux 8 hours ago

    Like dwnw said, anything goes in Texas if you have money and there’s already a decent number of qualified tech workers. Corporate taxes are super low as well.

  • everfrustrated 7 hours ago

    Texas seems to be where Oracle already has a DC project underway

  • jes5199 6 hours ago

    a lot of open space - desert - and plenty of solar energy. and favorable politics.

  • greenchair 7 hours ago

    because best state, next question

oldstrangers 7 hours ago

Wouldn't 500bn into quantum computing show better returns for civilization? Assuming it's about progress and ... not money.

  • gpm 7 hours ago

    We don't really know anything useful that can be done with quantum computers for civilization.

    They can break some cryptography... other than that... what are they good for?

    There's some highly speculative ideas about using them for chemistry/biology research, but no guaranteed return on investment at all.

    As far as I know... that's it.

    • dwnw 6 hours ago

      Who can break crypto with quantum computing? That is total speculation.

      • gpm 6 hours ago

        I put the word "some" in front of "crypto" for a reason.

        There is some crypto that we know how to break with a sufficiently large quantum computer [0]. There is some we don't know how to do that to. I might be behind the state of the art here, but when I wasn't we specifically really only knew how to use it to break cryptography that Shor's algorithm breaks.

        [0] https://quantum-journal.org/papers/q-2021-04-15-433/

        • dwnw 6 hours ago

          Nope. Any crypto you can break with a real, physical, non-imaginary quantum computer, you can break faster with classical. Get over it. Shor's don't run yet and probably never will.

          You are misdirecting and you know it. I don't even need to discredit that paper. Other people have done it for me already.

  • XorNot 6 hours ago

    This is like asking whether $500 billion to fund warp drives would yield better returns.

    Money can't buy fundamental breakthroughs: money buys you parallel experimental volume - i.e. more people working from the same knowledge base, and presumably an increase in the chance that one of them does advance the field. But at any given time point, everyone is working from the same baseline (money also can improve this - by funding things you can ensure knowledge is distributed more evenly so everyone is working at the state of the art, rather then playing catch up in proprietary silos).

  • esafak 7 hours ago

    What is quantum computing being used for?

  • dwnw 6 hours ago

    No.

sidcool 4 hours ago

Future of AI being controlled by Oracle worries me

iandanforth 6 hours ago

Anyone know if this involves nuclear plants as well or is that a separate initiative?

MaximilianEmel 6 hours ago

How much is allocated to alignment/safety research?

heyitssim 2 hours ago

who will benefit from those datacenters?

skellington 5 hours ago

I'm not automatically pro or anti Stargate (the movie and show were cool) BUT

Who gets the benefit of all of this investment? Are taxpayers going to fund this thing which is monetized by OpenAI?

If we pay for this shit, it better be fucking free to use.

karmasimida 6 hours ago

Money isn't the issue any more, wowww

tantalor 6 hours ago

Wasn't this already announced last week?

grishka 7 hours ago

You know, I expected that they'd find or synthesize some naquadah to build an actual stargate and maybe even defeat the Goa'uld. The exciting stuff, not AI.

  • layer8 7 hours ago

    Well, we may get the replicators.

gsky 7 hours ago

I guess its the right time to buy AI stocks

  • dwnw 6 hours ago

    At peak hype?

    • gsky 6 hours ago

      There's no other hype train besides Crypto atm

ErgoPlease 8 hours ago

There's a good amount of irony in the results that AI have achieved, particularly if we reach AGI - they have improved individual worker efficiency by removing other workers from the system. Naming it Stargate implies a reckoning with the actual series itself - an accomplishment by humanity. Instead, what this pushes, is accomplishing the removal of humans from humanity. I like cool shiny tech, but I like useful tech that really helps humans more. Work on 3D-printing sustainable food, or something actually useful like that. Jenson doesn't need another 1B gallons of water under his belt.

  • talldayo 7 hours ago

    > Instead, what this pushes, is accomplishing the removal of humans from humanity.

    If you buy the marketing, yeah. But we aren't really seeing that in the tech sector. We haven't seen it succeed in the entertainment sector... it's still fighting for relevance in the medical and defense industries too. The number and quality of jobs that AI replaced is probably still quite low, and it will probably remain that way even after Stargate.

    AI is DOA. LLMs have no successor, and the transformer architecture hit it's bathtub curve years ago.

    > Jenson doesn't need another 1B gallons of water under his belt.

    Jensen gets what he wants because he works with the industry. It's funny to see people object to CUDA and Nvidia's dominance but then refuse to suggest an alternative. An open standard managed by an independent and unbiased third-party? We tried that, OEMs abandoned it. NPU hardware tailor-made for specific inference tasks? Too slow, too niche, too often ends up as wasted silicon. Alternative manufacturer-specific SDKs integrated with one high-level library? ONNX tried that and died in obscurity.

    Nvidia got where they are today by doing exactly what AMD and Apple couldn't figure out. People give Jensen their water because it's wasted in anyone else's hands.

    • zeofig 7 hours ago

      Agreed, but it seems we're gonna ride the AI hype all the way to the "top".

    • bugglebeetle 7 hours ago

      > AI is DOA. LLMs have no successor, and the transformer architecture hit it's bathtub curve years ago

      Tell me you didn’t read the DeepSeek R1 paper without telling me you also don’t know about reinforcement learning.

      • talldayo 7 hours ago

        R1 is a rehash of things we've already seen, and a particularly neutered one at that. Are there any better examples you can think of?

        • bugglebeetle 7 hours ago

          Uh, they invented multilatent attention and since the method for creating o1 was never published, they’re the only documented example of producing a model of comparable quality. They also demonstrated massive gains to the performance of smaller models through distillation of this model/these methods, so no, not really. I know this is the internet, but we should try to not just say things.

dhx 5 hours ago

It was rumoured in early 2024 that "Stargate" was planned to require 5GW data centre capacity[1][2] which in early 2024 was the entire data centre capacity Microsoft had already built[3]. Data centre capacity costs between USD$9-15m/MW[6] so 5GW of new data centre capacity would cost USD$45b-$75b but let's pick a more median cost of USD12m/MW[6] to arrive at USD$60b for 5GW of new data centre capacity.

This 5GW data centre capacity very roughly equates to 350000x NVIDIA DGX B200 (with 14.3kW maximum power consumption[4] and USD$500k price tag[5]) which if NVIDIA were selected would result in a very approximate total procurement of USD$175b from NVIDIA.

On top of the empty data centres and DGX B200's and in the remaining (potential) USD$265b we have to add:

* Networking equipment / fibre network builds between data centres.

* Engineering / software development / research and development across 4 years to design, build and be able to use the newly built infrastructure. This was estimated in mid 2024 to cost OpenAI US$1.5b/yr for retaining 1500 employees, or USD$1m/yr/employee[7]. Obviously this is a fraction of the total workforce needed to design and build out all the additional infrastructure that Microsoft, Oracle, etc would have to deliver.

* Electricity supply costs for current/initial operation. As an aside, these costs seemingly not be competitive with other global competitors if the USA decides to avoid the cheapest method of generation (renewables) and instead prefer the more expensive generation methods (nuclear, fossil fuels). It is however worth noting that China currently has ~80% of solar PV module manufacturing capacity and ~95% of wafer manufacturing capacity.[10]

* Costs for obtaining training data.

* Obsolescence management (4 years is a long time after which equipment will likely need to be completely replaced due to obsolescence).

* Any other current and ongoing costs of Microsoft, Oracle and OpenAI that they'll likely roll into the total announced amount to make it sound more impressive. As an example this could include R&D and sustainment costs in corporate ICT infrastructure and shared services such as authentication and security monitoring systems.

The question we can then turn to is whether this rate of spend can actually be achieved in 4 years?

Microsoft is planning to spend USD$80bn building data centres in 2025[7] with 1.5GW of new capacity to be added in the first six months of 2025[3]. This USD$80bn planned spend is for more than "Stargate" and would include all their other business units that require data centres to be built, so the total required spend of USD$45b-$75b to add 5GW data centre capacity is unlikely to be achieved quickly by Microsoft alone, hence the apparent reason for Oracle's involvement. However, Oracle are only planning a US$10b capital expenditure in 2025 equating to ~0.8GW capacity expansion[9]. The data centre builds will be schedule critical for the "Stargate" project because equipment can't be installed and turned on and large models trained (a lengthy activity) until data centres exist. And data centre builds are heavily dependent on electricity generation and transmission expansion which is slow to expand.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39869158

[2] https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/microsoft-openai-...

[3] https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/microsoft-to-doub...

[4] https://resources.nvidia.com/en-us-dgx-systems/dgx-b200-data...

[5] https://wccftech.com/nvidia-blackwell-dgx-b200-price-half-a-...

[6] https://www.cushmanwakefield.com/en/united-states/insights/d...

[7] https://blogs.microsoft.com/on-the-issues/2025/01/03/the-gol...

[8] https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/openai-training-a...

[9] https://www.crn.com.au/news/oracle-q3-2024-ellison-says-ai-i...

[10] https://www.iea.org/reports/advancing-clean-technology-manuf...

bfrog 6 hours ago

So tsmc and nvidia basically then?

  • bloomingkales 6 hours ago

    Broadcom, Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, ARM, and Tesla.

    Someone else will have to fill in the stocks for:

    AI robotics:

    Data Center energy:

    We all know the cloud/software picks.

    What am I missing?

    • steveoscaro 4 hours ago

      Mark Tesla under the AI robotics category too.

dartos 7 hours ago

The fallout is going to be insane when the AI bubble pops.

  • amelius 7 hours ago

    Not sure about that. ChatGPT is much greater than Google Search ever was, and that wasn't a bubble.

    • stackskipton 6 hours ago

      ChatGPT may be better than Google Search in content but at end of day, you have to make money and last report I saw, ChatGPT is burning through money at prestigious rate.

      • scarmig 5 hours ago

        Training, yes, but they recoup inference costs through subscriptions.

        • dartos 5 hours ago

          Didn’t Altman say they’re losing money on the $200 subscription tier?

          Inference isn’t cheap either.

    • dwnw 6 hours ago

      Not sure about that.

  • fuzztester 7 hours ago

    cocks ear ... can hear it poppin already

  • Der_Einzige 5 hours ago

    The folks who listen to you and don't see the fact that we are entering a weak singularity deserve to be destitute when this is all over.

    • dartos 4 hours ago

      “Weak singularity” meaning what?

      Technology advancing more quickly year over year?

      That’s a crazy notion and I’ll be sure everyone knows.

      Also, what a wild thing to say. “People like you deserve to live in poverty because you don’t think we live in a sci-fi world.”

      Calm down, dude.

      • lmm 3 hours ago

        > “Weak singularity” meaning what?

        > Technology advancing more quickly year over year?

        > That’s a crazy notion and I’ll be sure everyone knows.

        The version I heard from an economist was something akin to a second industrial revolution, where the pace of technological development increases permanently. Imagine a transition from Moore's law-style doubling every year and a half, to doubling every week and a half. That wouldn't be a true "singularity" (nothing would be infinite), but it would be a radical change to our lives.

        • dartos 2 hours ago

          The pace of technological development has always been permanently increasing.

          We’ve always been getting better at making things better.

          • lmm 2 hours ago

            > The pace of technological development has always been permanently increasing.

            Not in the same way though. The pace of technological development post-industrial-revolution increased a lot faster - technological development was exponential both before and after, but it went from exponential with a doubling time of maybe a century, to a Moore's law style regime where the doubling time is a couple of years. Arguably the development of agriculture was a similar phase change. So the point is to imagine another phase change on the same scale.

            • dartos an hour ago

              You keep mentioning moore’s law, but that specifically applied to the amount of transistors on a die, not the rate of general technological advancement.

              Regardless, I don’t see any change in this pattern. We’re advancing faster than ever before, just like always.

              We’ve been doing statistical analysis and prediction for years now. It’s just getting better faster, like always.

              I don’t see this big change in the rate of advancement. There’s just a lot more media buzz around it right now causing a bubble.

              There was a big visible jump in text generation capabilities a few years ago (which was preceded by about 6 years of incremental NLP advances) and since then we’ve seen paced, year over year advances in that field.

              As a medical layman, I imagine that alpha fold may really push the rate of pharmaceutical advances.

              But I see no indication for a general jump in the rate of rate of technological advancement.

              • lmm an hour ago

                > that specifically applied to the amount of transistors on a die, not the rate of general technological advancement.

                Sure. But you can look at things like GDP growth rates and see the same thing.

                > I don’t see this big change in the rate of advancement. There’s just a lot more media buzz around it right now causing a bubble.

                Maybe. I'm just trying to give a sense of what the concept of a "weak singularity" is. I don't have a view on whether we're actually going to have one or not.

  • riku_iki 6 hours ago

    initiators will cash out by that time one way or another

Kye 6 hours ago

I saw Stargate trending on Bluesky and got my hopes up about an announcement of a new show/movie/something. Disappointing.

  • layer8 6 hours ago

    Yep, they should fund Brad Wright with one of the billions.

pyrophoenix 8 hours ago

More confusion than anything else!

typon 7 hours ago

Altman rising to the top and becoming the defacto state preferred leader of AI in the US is wild. Fair play to him.

VWWHFSfQ 7 hours ago

> The buildout is currently underway, starting in Texas, and we are evaluating potential sites across the country for more campuses as we finalize definitive agreements.

For those interested, it looks like Albany, NY (upstate NY) is very likely one of the next growth sites.

[0] https://www.schumer.senate.gov/newsroom/press-releases/schum...

lobochrome 4 hours ago

Well - as part of the semi industry I'd like to say: Really appreciate it. Keep it coming!

thingsilearned 7 hours ago

Stargate = Skynet?

  • est 4 hours ago

    more like Reagan's star wars program

airstrike 7 hours ago

As a diehard fan of Stargate, I've gotta say I'm disappointed this has nothing to do with wormholes...

unless...

aussieguy1234 5 hours ago

This could potentially trigger an AI arms race between the US and China. The standard has been set, lets see what China responds with. Either way, it will accelerate the arrival of ASI, which in my opinion is probably a good thing.

  • philomath_mn 2 hours ago

    The arms race is already running, I think this showdown is inevitable so we should get our asses moving

    Unless we air strike the data centers, there is no way to control China’s progress

  • vaccineai 4 hours ago

    It will be similar to the space race between Soviet Union and US. And just like Soviet Union going broke and collapsing, China too will go even more broke and collapse.

jgalt212 6 hours ago

I guess these people are betting small and efficient models are not the future.

ur-whale 6 hours ago

None of these companies have the inner resources to fund a 500B build.

Looks like the dollar printing press will continue to overheat in the coming years.

attentive 7 hours ago

what will they call the SG-1?

rewgs 6 hours ago

What will be powering all these data centers? The thought of exponentially increasing our fossil fuel consumption scares the hell out of me.

  • drak0n1c 2 hours ago

    Texas is the leading state in new grid batteries and grid solar for three years now. Also Governor Abbott deregulated nuclear last year. Sure there will be some new natural gas too, which is the least scary fossil fuel. They call it the "all of the above" approach to energy.

  • Havoc 5 hours ago

    Well there was this random dude early that was rambling something about „drill baby drill“…

  • dwnw 6 hours ago

    Fossil fuels, of course.

moralestapia 8 hours ago

"No Sam, for obvious reasons we cannot give you 6 trillion ... but how about 500 billion?"

Wow.

  • redeux 8 hours ago

    You gotta start small, you know?

  • dekhn 8 hours ago

    if it really worked that way, then it was a successful blue-sky negotiation tactic to maximize the actual final negotiation.

OutOfHere 7 hours ago

Personally I wish they invested in optical photonic computing, taking it out of the research labs. It can be so much more energy efficient and faster to run than GPUs and TPUs.

tibbydudeza 7 hours ago

Oracle is onboard - guess you got to toss them some red meat as well.

mempko 8 hours ago

SoftBank and MGX paying for all this, all foreign investment.

Where is the US government in all this? Why aren't they leading the charge? They obviously have the money.

  • apsec112 7 hours ago

    $500 billion is a lot of money even by US government standards. It's about the size of all the new spending in the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure bill.

    • mempko 7 hours ago

      For the US government it's a matter of political will. Where is the political will?

      • apsec112 7 hours ago

        The political will is trying to balance a large existing debt at increasing interest rates, a significant primary deficit even in a good economy, rising military threats from China, a strong Republican desire for tax cuts, extremely popular entitlement programs that no one wants to touch, and an aging population with a declining birthrate

        • mempko 6 hours ago

          Modern monetary systems function through two main channels: government spending and bank lending. Every dollar in circulation originates from one of these sources - either government fiscal operations (deficit spending) or bank credit creation through loans. This means all money is fundamentally based on debt, though "debt" has very different implications for a currency-issuing government versus private borrowers. Government debt operates fundamentally differently from household debt since the government controls its own currency. As former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan noted to Congress, the U.S. can always meet any obligation denominated in dollars since it can create them. The real constraints aren't financial but economic - inflation risk and the efficient allocation of real resources.

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DNCZHAQnfGU

          The key question then becomes one of political priorities and public understanding. If public opposition to beneficial government spending stems from misunderstanding how modern monetary systems work, then better education about these mechanisms could help advance important policy goals. The focus should be on managing real economic constraints rather than imaginary financial ones.

          • apsec112 6 hours ago

            The last four years have been nothing but a lesson in how much everybody hates inflation and how absolutely toxic it is to re-election campaigns

            • mempko 4 hours ago

              Yes, people hate inflation, because inflation creates a demand for more money! Inflation means there is not enough money for people. So why did prices go up, is it just because of fiscal spending?

              The relationship between inflation and monetary policy is more complex than often portrayed. While recent inflation has created financial strain for many Americans, its root causes extend beyond simple money supply issues. Recent data shows that corporate profit margins reached historic highs during the inflationary period of 2021-2022. For example, in Q2 2022, corporate profits as a percentage of GDP hit 15.5%, the highest level since the 1950s. This surge in corporate profits coincided with the aftermath of Trump's 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which reduced the corporate tax rate from 35% to 21%. This tax reduction increased after-tax profits and may have given companies more flexibility to pursue aggressive pricing strategies. Multiple factors contributed to inflation:

              Supply chain disruptions created genuine scarcity in many sectors, particularly semiconductors, shipping, and raw materials Demand surged as economies reopened post-pandemic Many companies used these market conditions to implement price increases that exceeded their cost increases The corporate tax environment created incentives for profit maximization over price stability

              For instance, many large retailers reported both higher prices and expanded profit margins during this period. The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City found that roughly 40% of inflation in 2021 could be attributed to expanded profit margins rather than increased costs. This pattern suggests that market concentration, pricing power, and tax policy played significant roles in inflation, alongside traditional monetary and supply-chain factors. Policy solutions should therefore address market structure, tax policy, and monetary policy to effectively manage inflation.

  • drak0n1c 2 hours ago

    New admin is focused on federal cost cutting. Attracting foreign investment is a win-win for everyone involved.

ignoramous 8 hours ago

> This project will ... also provide a strategic capability to protect the national security of America and its allies.

> All of us look forward to continuing to build and develop ... AGI for the benefit of all of humanity.

Erm, so which one is it? It is amply demonstrable from events post WW2 that US+allies are quite far from benefiting all of humanity & in fact, in some cases, it assists an allied minority at an extreme cost to a condemned majority, for no discernable humanitarian reasons save for some perceived notion of "shared values".

  • hooli_gan 8 hours ago

    Maybe only Americans and their allies qualify as human, according to them

    • etblg 7 hours ago

      And only the americans the administration deems to qualify as human.

    • gunian 6 hours ago

      welcome to our reality where you know you will be killed but there's not a single thing you can do :)

qaq 5 hours ago

This is going to be the grift of the century. Sam will put Wall Street robber barons to shame.

  • Havoc 5 hours ago

    > This is going to be the grift of the century.

    Pretty sure that was musk and his 50+ bn bonus

yobid20 6 hours ago

Oh but crypto mining was bad lol wheres the power going to come from

MiscIdeaMaker99 7 hours ago

I can't stop rolling my eyes at all those big promises.

padjo 8 hours ago

Watch the birdie

nmca 8 hours ago

I for one am hugely supportive of compute that is red white and blue.

ulfw 2 hours ago

God forbid anyone would invest $500,000,000,000 to create jobs. No no no. 500 billion to destroy them for "more efficiency" so the owner class can get richer.

whalesalad 8 hours ago

I'm watching the announcement live from the white house and something about this just feels so strange and dystopian.

  • tux3 8 hours ago

    Well, the silver lining is the incredible human capacity to get used to almost any situation given enough time

    It will get weirder, but only relatively so, the concept of normalcy always trailing just a little bit behind as we slide

  • Willingham 8 hours ago

    Agreed, and whats the story behind the art chosen for the landing page?

    • EForEndeavour 7 hours ago

      I'm also curious how a global leader in multimodal generative AI chose this particular image. Did they prompt a generator for a super messy impressionist painting of red construction cranes with visible brush strokes, distorted to the point of barely being able to discern what the image represents?

      • miltonlost 7 hours ago

        Considering Stargate's introduction and plan seems to be a super messy concept of impressions of ideas and very lacking in details, the picture makes a lot of sense. Let AI evangelists see the future in the fuzz; let AI pessimists see failure in the abstract; let investors see $$$ in their pockets.

  • miltonlost 7 hours ago

    For me it's watching a gay man grovel at the feet of one of the most anti-LGBT politicians, a day after Trump signed multiple executive orders that dehumanized Altman and the LGBT community. Every token thinks they're special until they're spent.

    • ImJamal 4 hours ago

      Trump was the first president to come into office supporting gay marriage. Trump only has a problem with the "t" part of the community and only in bathrooms and sports, not in general.

    • whalesalad 5 hours ago

      sama, peter thiel ... they dgaf. there is a huge difference between an oppressed gay person and a wealthy one.

      no one wants to bite the hand that feeds.

    • cpursley 6 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • rUsHeYaFuBu 5 hours ago

        > Please don't use Hacker News for political or ideological battle. That tramples curiosity.

        • cpursley 5 hours ago

          That was my literal point to parent.

          • rUsHeYaFuBu 5 hours ago

            > Be kind. Don't be snarky. Converse curiously; don't cross-examine.

TheOtherHobbes 7 hours ago

SoftBank, huh?

That's... not a good omen.

  • Havoc 5 hours ago

    Sooner or later one of their bold swings is going to connect

senectus1 7 hours ago

I watched the announcement live, I could have sworn that the softbank guy said "initial investment of 100 MILLION, we hope to EARN 500 BILLION by the end of your (Trumps) term"

Gave me a real "this is just smoke and mirrors hiding the fact that the white house is now a glory hole for Trump to enjoy" feel.

mupuff1234 7 hours ago

It's just more hype and PR antics from sama.

ErgoPlease 7 hours ago

The Silicon-Valley bubble universe continues to introduce entropy that it feeds off of itself... Naming this Stargate when some of the largest effects AI has had is removing humans from processes to make other, fewer humans more efficient is emblematic of this hollow naming ethos - continuing to use the portal to shunt more and more humans out of the process that is humanity, with fairly reckless abandon. Who is Ra, and who is sending the nuke where, in this naming scheme? You decide.

jofzar 8 hours ago

> This project will not only support the re-industrialization of the United States but also provide a strategic capability to protect the national security of America and its allies.

> The initial equity funders in Stargate are SoftBank, OpenAI, Oracle, and MGX. SoftBank and OpenAI are the lead partners for Stargate, with SoftBank having financial responsibility and OpenAI having operational responsibility. Masayoshi Son will be the chairman.

I'm sorry, has SoftBank suddenly become an American company? I feel like I'm taking crazy pills reading this.

Edit: MGX is Saudi company? This is baffling....

https://www.mgx.ae/en

  • redeux 8 hours ago

    Well the Saudis are one of the president’s “personal shareholders” so I think that qualifies them as an American company now.

  • signatoremo 7 hours ago

    It’s an investment in the US. Why does it matter if SoftBank is not an American company?

    Also, SoftBank is an investment fund. A lot of its money came from American investors.

  • daemonologist 7 hours ago

    MGX seems to be in Abu Dhabi/UAE rather than Saudi Arabia. Hadn't heard of it before.

  • Havoc 5 hours ago

    The fund is run out of the US. Parent co is in Japan

  • adolph 7 hours ago

    Japan companies were a threat just a couple weeks ago.

    There is credible evidence that leads me to believe that (1) Nippon Steel Corporation, a corporation organized under the laws of Japan . . . might take action that threatens to impair the national security of the United States;

    https://bidenwhitehouse.archives.gov/briefing-room/president...

  • OutOfHere 7 hours ago

    I think the death of Suchir Balaji makes more sense now. AE wouldn't mess around with its investments.

  • 9283409232 8 hours ago

    SoftBank having financial responsibility is insane. This is just a way to funnel money into people Trump owes.

    • jofzar 7 hours ago

      I don't get it, if this was government/American funded I could understand the marketing as "USA" secured infrastructure but like it's not?

tasuki 7 hours ago

> Masayoshi Son will be the chairman.

Not all rich people are out of their minds, but Masayoshi Son definitely is. The way he handled the WeWork situation was bad...

newfocogi 8 hours ago

> "OpenAI will continue to increase its consumption of Azure as OpenAI continues its work with Microsoft"

Not sure why, but the word choice of "consumption" feels like a reverse Freudian slip to me.

  • hinkley 8 hours ago

    Sometimes the person writing the copy is writing it because they talk good, not because they are the biggest proponent of the idea.

    Give a clever, articulate person a task to write about something they don't believe in and they will include the subtlest of barbs, weak praise, or both.

  • gamegoblin 8 hours ago

    Industry standard word, e.g. "consumption pricing" etc

    But yeah if you're in the industry it's easy to forget how certain jargon sounds based on its dictionary definition

    • hinkley 8 hours ago

      But the good news is when the Trough of Disillusionment starts we can make a bunch of tuberculosis jokes.

barbazoo 8 hours ago

> This project will [...] support the re-industrialization of the United States

How?

  • amarcheschi 8 hours ago

    By aggregating the means of production even more in the hands of a handful of people

    Wait, was it supposed to re industrialize the USA?

  • jazzyjackson 7 hours ago

    Didn't you see the impressionist art of construction cranes?

  • openplatypus 8 hours ago

    Hush. Don't ask questions. It is going to be great.

  • dutchbookmaker 7 hours ago

    I thought this meant it was $500 billion in government money.

    Some of these companies do have huge cash reserves they don't know what to do with so if it is $500 billion of private money, I am not going to complain.

    I will believe it when I see it though and that this isn't a 100 billion in private money with a 400 billion dollar free US government put option for the "private" investors if things don't go perfect.

gffff 2 hours ago

[dead]

gffff 2 hours ago

[dead]

jklinger410 8 hours ago

> starting in Texas

Maybe I just don't get it. Texas seems like an awful place to do business.

  • mandevil 7 hours ago

    My guess would be it's all about electricity.

    Texas has a .... unique energy market (literally! They don't connect to the national grid so they can avoid US Government regulations- that way it's not interstate commerce). Because of that spot prices fluctuate very wildly up and down, depending on the weather, demand, and their large quantity of renewables (Texas is good for solar and wind energy). When the weather is good for renewables they have very cheap electricity (lots of production and can't sell to anyone outside the state), when the weather is bad they can have incredibly expensive electricity (less production, can't buy from anyone outside the state). Larger markets, able to pull from larger pools of producers and consumers, just fluctuate less.

    I know some bitcoin miners liked to be in Texas and basically worked as energy speculators: when electricity was cheap they would mine bitcoin, when it was expensive they shut down their plant- sometimes they even got paid by producers to shut-down their plant! I would bet that you could do a lot of that with AI training as well, given good checkpointing.

    You wouldn't want to do inference there (which needs to be responsive and doesn't like 'oh this plant is going to shut down in one minute because a storm just came up') but for training it should be fine?

  • Jtsummers 8 hours ago

    No state income tax, fewer regulations (zoning, environmental regulations) than other parts of the country, relatively cheap power, large existing industrial base. For skilled labor that last bit is important. Also one of the cheapest states wrt minimum wage (same as federal, nothing added), which is important for unskilled labor.

    Depending on the part of the state, relatively low costs of living which is helpful if you don't like paying people much. Large areas that are relatively undeveloped or underdeveloped which can mean cheaper land.

  • nateglims 8 hours ago

    The white house was touting this so it's probably to secure political patronage or will be part of pork barrel spending to get some other bill passed.

  • jofzar 8 hours ago

    It doesn't even have an electricity grid that works, maybe that's where the 500b is going, reconnecting it to the grid.

  • steveoscaro 4 hours ago

    Based on what? There’s not a better state in the country for large capex gambles by business.

  • avs733 8 hours ago

    When doing business is a bribe it’s perfect

DoubleGlazing 8 hours ago

That's a ridiculous sum of money that could be better spent on much more worthy things.

  • cpursley 6 hours ago

    So was getting a man to the moon. Do you want to lose the AI race to the Chinese?

sillywalk 8 hours ago

Not to be confused by the other (non-fictional) DoD Stargate Project[0], that involved "remote-viewing" and other psychic crap.

The AI Stargate Project claims it will "create hundreds of thousands of American jobs". One has doubts.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stargate_Project

  • Geste 6 hours ago

    "Psychic crap" that went on for 20+ years ? Sure.

angoragoats 8 hours ago

[flagged]

  • redeux 8 hours ago

    Unfortunately that figure wouldn’t get everyone healthcare in the US. I agree though, it could be deployed for better use but someone needs to think of those poor desperate shareholders.

  • eterpstra 8 hours ago

    According to the business plan, solving world hunger and ending disease comes AFTER the 1/2 trillion dollar AGI buildout.

    • bagels 8 hours ago

      I will be shocked if AGI happens and hunger decreases.

    • goatlover 7 hours ago

      AGI is the magic bullet to all of humanity's problems for some people. There is no explanation of how AGI will accomplish such things, just a belief that it will.

  • patmcc 8 hours ago

    >>>get people employed

    It'll do this one, certainly. Maybe not the most cost-effective jobs program, but I expect there will be many construction and data centre jobs in the next few years.

    • segasaturn 8 hours ago

      Build houses, not data centers.

    • jazzyjackson 7 hours ago

      I'm for it if we get the president to declare "AIs are people too" and charge them income tax. Double the tax base of America in 4 years.

  • xienze 8 hours ago

    OK, that would cover about a year of expenses. Then what?

    • CreepGin 7 hours ago

      Much less than a year, TBH. US spending on health care in 2023 was ~$5 trillion.

  • subjectsigma 7 hours ago

    Health care can’t be solved by just throwing a shitload of money at it. I’m skeptical about food production as well.

    Now quality transportation (trains and metros that work), cheap & accessible housing, and cheap energy might be a good idea because IIUC those are just super large price tags

dekhn 7 hours ago

[flagged]

gigel82 7 hours ago

I dislike associating a great fictional universe (Stargate series) with this disgusting affair...

kerkeslager 7 hours ago

No amount of money invested in infrastructure is going to solve the "garbage in, garbage out" problem with AI, and it looks like the AI companies have already stolen the vast majority of content that is possible to steal. So this is basically a massive gamble that some innovation is going to make AI do something better than faultily regurgitate its training data. I'm not seeing a corresponding investment which actually attempts to solve the "garbage in, garbage out" problem.

A fraction of this money invested in building homes would end the homelessness problem in the U.S.

I guess the one silver lining here is that when the likely collapse happens, we'll have more clean energy infrastructure to use for more useful things.

retskrad 7 hours ago

While OpenAI and the rest of the industry is reaching AGI, Apple is out here shipping features with ChatGPT 3.5 technology.

mystified5016 7 hours ago

You'd really think that arguably the leader in generative AI could come up with a unique project name instead of ripping off something extant and irrelevant.

But then again that's their entire business, so I shouldn't be too surprised.

  • miltonlost 7 hours ago

    This is from the guy who thinks "Her" is a good reference for how we need AI. Media literacy is not Altman's strong suit.