Time to re-think your investment choices?
https://thenextweb.com/news/the-ai-hype-cycle-will-slow-down-whats-next-decides-the-winners
The AI hype cycle will slow down. What’s next decides the winners
Artificial Intelligence is entering the late stage of its hype cycle.
Not a collapse. A correction.
For the past two years, AI has dominated venture capital flows, with capital pouring into the sector at unprecedented scale and startups multiplying rapidly as funding concentrates around AI-driven businesses.
What began as acceleration has now started to show the early signs of saturation. The expectations built into the market are beginning to exceed the returns being delivered.
The hype is beginning to fade.
This is the predictable arc of every major innovation cycle. From railroads to the internet, transformative technologies move through a familiar pattern: rapid enthusiasm, inflated expectations, and an eventual reset where economic reality reasserts itself. AI is following the same trajectory.
What is different this time is speed.
Entire market cycles are compressing into a fraction of their historical duration. Adoption, investment, and saturation are happening simultaneously.
As that happens, companies built primarily on narrative rather than durable value creation will come under pressure. Funding will tighten, valuations will reset, and some of today’s most visible players will not survive the transition.
This phase is the beginning of AI’s real test.
But this way Trump isn’t in charge…
https://www.politico.com/news/2026/06/03/openai-white-house-ai-safety-rules-00948478
OpenAI diverges from White House on AI safety rules
A new OpenAI proposal for regulating advanced artificial intelligence systems splits from President Donald Trump’s recent executive order on at least two key points, with the tech giant now working to nudge the White House and Congress toward its preferred approach to governing AI.
In a new policy paper, OpenAI calls on the federal government to require mandatory evaluations of advanced AI models for potential risks, but places the responsibility for overseeing that process on civilian agencies.
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