As Silicon Valley’s latest trillion-dollar boom gains momentum, a co-founder of Anthropic has delivered a stark warning: the artificial intelligence industry is inflating a speculative bubble that could burst, leaving society scrambling to contain the fallout. Dario Amodei, speaking at a closed-door summit in San Francisco, argued that without robust human oversight, AI development risks spiralling into a “runaway train” scenario, where models evolve faster than our ability to govern them.
Amodei’s comments come as investors pile into AI startups at valuations that rival the dot-com era. OpenAI recently closed a $6.6 billion funding round, while Anthropic itself has raised over $7 billion. The frenzy is reminiscent of the late 1990s, when irrational exuberance drove tech stocks to unsustainable heights. But Amodei suggests the stakes are higher this time: “We are not just talking about a market correction; we are talking about a technology that could reshape the fabric of society. If we lose control, we may not get a second chance.”
The Anthropic co-founder emphasised that the current trajectory is driven by a “release fast, fix later” mentality, where companies prioritise market share over safety. He pointed to recent incidents where large language models generated harmful or biased outputs, requiring emergency patches. “These are not bugs. They are symptoms of a deeper problem: we are deploying systems we do not fully understand into critical infrastructure,” he said. “Without human oversight at every stage, we are building a plane while flying it.”
Amodei’s warning echoes concerns from other AI researchers. Geoffrey Hinton, the so-called “Godfather of AI,” recently resigned from Google to speak freely about the existential risks. And a open letter signed by over 1,000 tech leaders called for a six-month moratorium on training models more powerful than GPT-4. But Amodei argues that a pause alone is insufficient. “We need institutional mechanisms for oversight: regulatory bodies with teeth, independent auditing, and a commitment to transparency. The industry cannot self-regulate because the incentives are misaligned.”
The financial markets seem unperturbed. Nvidia, whose GPUs power most AI workloads, has seen its market cap soar past $2 trillion. Venture capital flows into AI have doubled year-on-year. Yet there are signs of frothiness: AI startups with no revenue are commanding billion-dollar valuations, and the number of “AI-powered” products has ballooned, many offering little more than a thin wrapper over existing APIs.
Amodei’s prescription is radical but pragmatic. He advocates for a cap on compute resources allocated to training frontier models, akin to a nuclear non-proliferation treaty. “Compute is the currency of AI. If we limit the amount of computing power any single entity can access, we can slow down the race and buy time for safety research.” He also calls for mandatory “kill switches” in all advanced AI systems and real-time monitoring by human operators. “This isn’t about stifling innovation. It is about ensuring innovation doesn’t become our undoing.”
Critics argue that such measures would cede leadership to authoritarian regimes like China, which has no such qualms. But Amodei counters that the race to the bottom is a dangerous myth. “If we compete on safety and ethics, we set a global standard. The alternative is a world where the most reckless AI defines the baseline.”
As the bubble inflates, Amodei’s voice is a cautionary one. Whether the industry listens or repeats the mistakes of the past remains to be seen. For now, the trains are leaving the station, and the brakes are still being tested.








