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Windows Central
Windows Central
Technology
Kevin Okemwa

Bill Gates recently warned of an AI bubble — likening it to the dot-com era's hype-driven overvaluations: "There are a ton of these investments that will be dead ends."

Bill Gates, chair of the Gates Foundation, during the Bloomberg Philanthropies 2025 Global Business Forum in New York, US, on Wednesday, Sept. 24, 2025.

Generative AI has undoubtedly revolutionized the world across a wide range of sectors since its emergence, including medicine, education, computing, and more. However, investors and users have raised critical concerns and skepticism, citing that the technology might be a passing fad despite the billions of dollars invested in the ever-evolving landscape.

As NVIDIA briefly became the world's first $5 trillion company, CEO Jensen Huang dismissed claims of an AI bubble, further suggesting that the technology will drive revolutionary scientific breakthroughs and global innovation. Contrary to popular opinion, the executive says AI is driven by real demand.

However, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates takes a different view, claiming the world is in the midst of an AI bubble during a recent interview on CNBC's Squawk Box show (via Business Insider). However, the philanthropic billionaire indicated that the AI bubble is quite different from the Netherlands' "tulip mania" in the 1630s, when tulip prices reached an all-time high before suddenly dropping. "That's not where we are," the executive added.

Gates suggests it was more like the dot-com bubble, where several internet-based companies became overvalued, leading to a significant crash.

In the end, something very profound happened. The world was very different. Some companies succeeded, but a lot of the companies were kind of me-too, fell behind, burning capital companies.

Microsoft co-founder, Bill Gates

The executive predicts that some of the companies plunging billions into the AI sector might not reap any profits as their investments hit dead ends. "There are a ton of these investments that will be dead ends."

According to Bill Gates:

"The value is extremely high, just like creating the internet ended up being, in net, very valuable. But you have a frenzy. And some of these companies will be glad they spent all this money. Some of them, you know, they'll commit to data centers whose electricity is too expensive."

However, key figures heavily invested in the AI landscape, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, have dismissed the AI bubble speculation, suggesting coveted benchmarks like artificial general intelligence (AGI) will whoosh by with surprisingly little societal impact. He even predicts that superintelligence will trigger a 10x surge in scientific AI breakthroughs, making each year as revolutionary as a decade.

FAQ

What is an AI bubble?

It refers to a financial phenomenon in which investor enthusiasm for generative AI is at an all-time high, leading to rapid valuation increases for AI companies, often driven by speculation rather than tangible profits.

How is the AI bubble similar to the dot-com era?

The AI bubble and the dot-com era share key similarities, including investor hype, inflated company valuations, and speculation about the business model and profits.

Why does Bill Gates think the world is in an AI bubble?

The Microsoft co-founder claims there is an increase in the number of AI-based companies being overvalued, which could ultimately lead to a significant crash with their investments hitting a dead end. However, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang recently disputed the claim, suggesting that AI is driven by real demand.

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