惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

U
Unit 42
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
S
Securelist
I
Intezer
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
P
Privacy International News Feed
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
博客园 - 聂微东
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
爱范儿
爱范儿
B
Blog
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
S
Secure Thoughts
K
Kaspersky official blog
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
O
OpenAI News
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
C
Check Point Blog
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
T
Tor Project blog
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
Vercel News
Vercel News
D
Docker
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
博客园 - 司徒正美
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog

Fortune | FORTUNE

One man can kill Bill Ackman’s $64 billion bid for Universal Music Group—and no one knows what he’ll do | Fortune Poppi’s cofounder pitched her startup on Shark Tank while 9 months pregnant and landed a $400,000 deal—now it's worth $2 billion | Fortune Teen boys are choosing AI girlfriends over real ones for 'maximum control, zero rejection'—experts say it could make them unemployable | Fortune A United American merger is by no means impossible given the president 'loves big deals' | Fortune Reed Hastings’s planned exit from $455 billion Netflix ‘had nothing to do with’ the failed deal for Warner Bros., says Ted Sarandos | Fortune Meet Joe McCann: The high-flying crypto trader held in Tanzania after sudden death of his influencer fiancée Ashly Robinson | Fortune Gen Z is carving a different path in the housing market by doing it alone | Fortune U.S. Catholic leaders criticize Trump for ‘disparaging words’ about the pope as Vatican clash risks alienating Catholic voters | Fortune China has ‘nearly erased’ America’s lead in AI—and the flow of tech experts moving to the U.S. is slowing to a trickle, Stanford report says | Fortune Self-made millionaire behind $5 billion Skims Emma Grede says it all began with a cold call to Kris Jenner: Emma Grede—the self-made millionaire behind the $5 billion Skims empire—says it all began with an audacious cold call to Kris Jenner: ‘The difference between me and someone else is, I made it happen’ | Fortune Americans have never been this gloomy about the economy. Wall Street has never cashed in harder | Fortune ‘The college grading system [is] almost meaningless’: People see the Ivy League as an easy A and with flawed admissions standards | Fortune The CEO of $8.5 billion Japanese car giant Nissan plays the drums in a band and hits the tennis courts to destress from the top job | Fortune New York governor's take on a millionaires tax: fancy pied-à-terre second apartments worth over $5 million | Fortune Pope Leo XIV: A ‘handful of tyrants’ are ravaging earth with war and exploitation | Fortune Trump has no plan to cut the $39 trillion national debt, but he does want to cut childcare. His budget director is scrambling to clarify | Fortune China's economy grows 5% in first quarter, surprising economists to the upside | Fortune Everyone was wondering what Trump wanted more: Warsh smoothly seated at the Fed, or for Powell to pay. We have our answer | Fortune Palantir exec: the biggest mistake retailers are making with AI? Trying to do it all with one agent | Fortune American YouTuber who calls himself a 'troll' sentenced to 6 months in Korean prison for literally dancing on wartime graves | Fortune BBC plans to cut up to 2,000 jobs to save 10% of annual budget | Fortune Canva debuts a new suite of agentic tools, as the design app quietly becomes one of the world’s most used AI services | Fortune Moody's CEO: AI has a trust problem – better models won’t fix it | Fortune Top New York surgeon: Americans have better data for choosing restaurants than surgeons. That has to change | Fortune The Iran war’s fertilizer shock is hammering American farmers, and 70% can’t afford what they need for this year’s growing season | Fortune Education experts to Mamdani: Why are you foisting AI on our kids? | Fortune This CEO pirated video games as a teen and became a hacker for the Air Force. Now he’s built a $3 billion cyber firm | Fortune Teacher, blame thyself: Yale report savages Ivy League schools for destroying American trust in higher education | Fortune Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh is worth more than $100 million and has stakes in SpaceX and Polymarket | Fortune From wool sneakers to GPUs: Allbirds’ desperate AI pivot and 600% stock surge, explained | Fortune The Sam Altman attack is putting two anti-AI groups under scrutiny—but the story is more complicated | Fortune Elizabeth Warren on her proposal to bring back IRS Direct File: ‘For just one day of bombing Iran, we could pay for 20 years’ | Fortune ‘I am certain’: Harvard policy expert warns the true cost of the Iran war to U.S. taxpayers will exceed $1 trillion | Fortune The CEO of a $24 billion Dutch lender has sandwiches once a week with the staff to hear their views and get them on side with cost cuts | Fortune Why insurance giant Travelers' CTO is placing fewer, bigger bets on AI | Fortune Current price of oil as of April 15, 2026 | Fortune The dirty secret behind Big Tech’s AI arms race: Massive hardware investments that are obsolete in 3 years | Fortune Dow’s CEO handoff elevates an insider and seasoned operator | Fortune Anthropic faces user backlash over reported performance issues with its Claude AI chatbot | Fortune Stock futures sink while oil spikes as the U.S. Navy looks to squeeze Iran's economy and break its grip on the Strait of Hormuz | Fortune A major U.S. gasoline production hub is in such a severe drought that its refineries may be hobbled. 'We are actively praying for a hurricane' | Fortune U.K. won’t take part in Trump’s planned blockade of Hormuz strait | Fortune Hungarian voters oust Viktor Orbán, a close ally of Trump and Putin, despite late campaign push from JD Vance | Fortune Blazing hot IPOs, an AI agent craze, and a new word for ‘token’: Here’s what’s happening in the world of Chinese AI | Fortune Iran’s crumbling economy is the regime’s greatest weakness with prices up 40% since the war began while authorities worry about making payroll | Fortune Here’s how a U.S. naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz could work. ‘This is a big task, and it’s a big gamble’ | Fortune Intuit was an AI pioneer. Why its stock became a SaaSpocalypse casualty | Fortune Artemis III will practice docking Orion with lunar landers in Earth orbit next year while Musk’s Starship and Bezos’ Blue Moon compete for Artemis IV | Fortune Oil tankers U-turn in Hormuz as U.S.-Iran talks break down Saudi Arabia says East-West pipeline restored to full capacity In 2011, Barack Obama said it was time to ‘pivot’ to Asia. But 15 years later, the U.S. is still at war in the Middle East Trump says U.S. Navy to impose Hormuz blockade after Iran ceasefire talks end with no deal. ‘No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage’ This TikTok sensation sold her startup for $2 billion. Now Pepsi is letting ‘Poppi be Poppi’ ‘Almost unmanageable’: Raising a child in the U.S. now costs more than $300,000 As Iran peace talks fail, Trump and Joe Rogan watch a hobbled fighter triumph in a brutal cage match Haiti stares down starvation as Iran War drives 200,000 into acute food emergency status ‘I just keep seeing a lot of different aspects of life getting more expensive’: New car prices are up 30% over 6 years America is not ready for its own longevity crisis — and 2026 is the wake-up call | Fortune JD Vance leaves Pakistan after marathon talks with Iran end without a deal as Tehran refuses U.S. demand not to develop nuclear weapons | Fortune Average price of new cars nears $50,000 as automakers focus on big pickups and SUVs while cheaper sedans get phased out | Fortune Navy tests Hormuz blockade as expert says U.S. military prepares for round 2 and could degrade Iran’s hold over the strait to a ‘manageable level’ | Fortune Pakistan sends military force to Saudi Arabia as part of pact | Fortune Three oil supertankers sail through the Strait of Hormuz | Fortune Trump downplays talks for ceasefire deal with Iran, claiming military victory. 'It doesn’t matter. From the standpoint of America, we win' | Fortune Boeing’s moon rocket faces uncertain future under Trump’s NASA | Fortune Appeals court says national security implications of halting White House ballroom construction must be weighed | Fortune Some of cheapest fuel can be found on Native American reservations as tribes are exempt from state gas taxes | Fortune JD Vance begins talks with Iran in Pakistan while Trump claims U.S. has begun 'clearing out' the Strait of Hormuz | Fortune 'This is the last warning.' Iran threatens U.S. warships after they throw down the gauntlet for winner-take-all Strait of Hormuz | Fortune U.S. Navy ships transit Hormuz ahead of mine-clearing mission | Fortune Over a third of Ireland's fuel stations are empty and truck and tractor drivers are protesting nationwide | Fortune Some communities are enduring unprecedented long waits on federal disaster requests, and Democrat-led states say they're being denied | Fortune These niche AI startups are trying to protect the Pentagon’s secrets | Fortune Former Tesla president reveals the ‘single most important thing’ you can do for your career—it’s a habit Elon Musk and Warren Buffett share too | Fortune Ingersoll Rand CEO: here's how employee ownership helped drive more than 8x enterprise value growth | Fortune The petrodollar faces increased risk, but a petroyuan is ‘far-fetched’ as fears of U.S. losing superpower status are overhyped, strategist says | Fortune Palantir CEO says AI ‘will destroy’ humanities jobs, but there will be ‘more than enough jobs’ for people with vocational training | Fortune Warren Buffett says 'accumulating great amounts of money' doesn’t achieve greatness—He still lives in a $31,500 Nebraska home and clipped coupons | Fortune Starbucks' game plan to roll out AI chatbots at cafes could serve as a 'litmus test' for the industry, analyst says | Fortune Data centers and gas demand make boring pipelines great again | Fortune The 'Tuscan Mom' aesthetic is taking over TikTok as Gen Z glamorize McMansions and reject millennial gray | Fortune Man's best friend may soon live a little longer thanks to a new pill promising to extend your pup's lifespan | Fortune Danantara CIO: Indonesia can anchor the AI and energy economy—if governance keeps pace | Fortune OpenAI’s TBPN deal shows how talent, media, and influence are collapsing into one | Fortune AI promises to free workers from grunt work, but psychologists say those mindless tasks are exactly what our brains need to recover | Fortune The 'affordability economy' has created a housing market nobody predicted: Prices collapsing in the Sun Belt, soaring in the Rust Belt | Fortune 'It’s 13 minutes of things that have to go right': Artemis II splashes down despite faulty heat shield | Fortune Fed seeks details on U.S. banks' exposure to private credit firms | Fortune The Navy confirmed an ‘abundant amount’ of Uncrustables when the Artemis II crew lands. Smucker’s just offered them a lifetime supply | Fortune Meet ‘trendslop,’ the new, AI-fueled scourge of workplace consultants everywhere | Fortune Amazon is still paying Jeff Bezos an $80,000 yearly salary—but $1.6 million for travel and security | Fortune Trump-backed World Liberty Financial crypto tokens reach all-time low on reports of insider loans | Fortune Iran is demanding tankers in the Strait of Hormuz pay tolls in crypto: What we know so far | Fortune First they went after medtech, then Kash Patel. Iranian hackers’ next target is likely ‘low-hanging fruit’ in water, energy, and tourism, experts say | Fortune The AI that found 27-year-old vulnerabilities no human ever caught before just forced an emergency meeting with every major Wall Street CEO | Fortune Inflation goes up by a whopping monthly rate of nearly 1%—and it’s hitting you at the grocery store and gas station | Fortune H&R Block is betting it can be more than a tax company | Fortune The real engine of innovation is trust | Fortune Huntington is powering digital growth—by opening a branch almost every 2 weeks, says CFO | Fortune How the 173-year-old glass-maker behind Edison's light bulb and iPhone screens became a Silicon Valley darling | Fortune
BofA says you'll be 10x more productive with AI. Ignore the 0.1% result so far | Fortune
Nick Lichtenberg · 2026-05-24 · via Fortune | FORTUNE

Bank of America has a message for anyone who has grown skeptical of the AI boom: you are thinking too small.

In a report published Thursday, the bank’s research team made a typically sweeping claim for a Wall Street bank assessing the supposed artificial intelligence boom. It’s not like electricity or even the internet, the global economics team wrote. It is more powerful than both — and the productivity boom it will eventually deliver could be 10x larger than anything the economy is currently showing.

The problem is that the economy is currently showing 0.1%, “a small aggregate effect relative to all the excitement around AI,” the bank admitted. It’s a number so small that it barely registers against global growth of 3.5%.

Whether that argument holds is the most consequential open question in economics right now — and not everyone on Wall Street is buying it.

What 0.1% actually means

The gap between AI’s micro-level fireworks and its macro-level footprint is real, documented, and striking.

AI is already delivering task-level productivity gains that would have seemed implausible five years ago: software developers completing 55% more work with AI coding tools, customer support agents resolving 14% more tickets, professional writers finishing projects 37% to 40% faster.

But these aren’t showing up as a boost to GDP, BofA said, explaining that while AI can currently transform about 20% of all workplace tasks, only 23% of those are actually cost-effective to automate at today’s prices. Automated tasks save roughly 27% in labor costs, and labor is about half of all costs. Multiply it out and the theoretical ceiling is a 0.66% gain in labor productivity — before organizational friction, skills mismatches, slow diffusion, and regulatory drag compress it further toward the figure BofA has landed on: 0.1% per year.

The bank acknowledges the academic literature on AI’s aggregate impact is “inconclusive,” with multiple studies finding that even firm-level gains shrink or disappear when economists look at national accounts. While GDP statistics are poor at capturing quality improvements, this fits with the anecdotal sense that there’s a yawning divide between AI on paper and in reality. EY-Parthenon’s vice chair Mitch Berlin told Fortune earlier this month that he’s seeing a real “gap” in conversations with clients, even while saying that everyone he talks to is excited about what lies ahead.

BofA said AI is different when compared to previous innovations such as electricity or information and communication technology. The key difference, the bank argued, is that it can have an impact across a broader part of the economy than those previous advances, and “small improvements on this front can easily magnify the impact on aggregate productivity 10 times over the next decade.” BofA’s case rests heavily on the view that AI will follow the same J-curve — delayed impact followed by rapid acceleration.

But, still, a 10x increase? Really?

The 10x claim, unpacked

BofA’s bull case is not a forecast so much as an arithmetic exercise in what happens when conditions change — and the bank is explicit that the conditions driving that change are reasonable to expect.

The 10x figure comes from work by economist Philippe Aghion and co-authors published in 2024, which plugged more current AI capability estimates into a standard productivity model and found cumulative gains over the next decade that are 10 times larger than what today’s numbers suggest. The mechanism is straightforward: as AI models improve and inference costs fall — currently halving roughly every three months — the share of tasks that are both transformable and economically viable to automate expands rapidly. Each incremental expansion compounds non-linearly.

Doubling AI’s task reach from 20% to 40%, everything else equal, more than doubles aggregate productivity gains. If AI becomes cheap enough that all currently transformable tasks make economic sense to automate, gains multiply by more than seven. Add capital deepening — companies investing more as the return on capital rises — and the numbers get larger still.

But BofA makes a distinctive argument about innovation itself. Whereas electricity was powerful in automating physical processes, and the internet moved information faster, neither technology made inventing new things faster. AI can — by assisting research, accelerating hypothesis generation and augmenting the cognitive work that produces breakthroughs.

The bear case BofA doesn’t mention

Eight days before BofA’s report landed, Panmure Liberum strategist Joachim Klement published a detailed argument that the AI investment cycle is not a productivity story waiting to unfold, but rather a bubble that is still waiting to pop.

From a macro perspective, the AI boom is already 60% larger than the dot-com bubble at its peak, with tech investment accounting for 93% of all U.S. GDP growth, far beyond the 56% peak of the technology, media and telecom era. Hyperscalers — Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta, Oracle — are projected to spend $658 billion on capital expenditures in 2026 alone, growing at a 20% annual clip through 2030.

For those investments to generate even a 10% return, Klement calculated that hyperscalers need to find $2 trillion to $5 trillion in additional annual revenue — a quadrupling of their current base, with no meaningful increase in costs. Meta’s implied return on invested capital on its planned spending: negative 28.8%. Oracle’s: negative 35.6%. “There clearly are signs of irrational exuberance in stock markets today when it comes to the AI investment theme,” Klement wrote.

Klement also made a structural argument about the software layer that the productivity bulls tend to skip. Hallucinations in large language models, research from Tsinghua University shows, are not a fixable bug — they are neurologically inherent, traceable to neurons that emerge during pre-training and cannot be removed without breaking the model. This structurally disqualifies LLMs from the high-stakes deterministic use cases — accounting, legal filings, compliance — that currently justify much of the enterprise that premium investors are paying.

And threatening the entire data center rationale quietly from below: specialized small language models running locally on desktop hardware, at costs up to 1,000 times cheaper than cloud-based LLMs for routine commercial tasks. If the workloads that justify the hyperscaler capex boom can be handled locally and cheaply, the house of cards Klement described starts to look structurally unstable from the foundation.

Klement is not predicting imminent collapse — he estimates the bubble can sustain another one to two years on rate cuts. But in his mildest scenario, a modest correction in U.S. tech investment would send European and UK markets into bear territory. In a repeat of the dot-com crash, technology stocks would drop more than 70%.

The number in the middle

Tyler Cowen, one of the most widely read economists in the United States, addressed the gap between BofA’s bull case and Panmure’s bear case at the Sana AI Summit at the New York Public Library on Thursday — without quite framing it that way.

His forecast for AI’s contribution to U.S. growth: from 2% to 2.5%. Meaningful, he argued, but far short of what Silicon Valley is promising — and far short of BofA’s 1 percentage point addition to global growth. The constraint, in his telling, is institutional: roughly 40% to 50% of U.S. GDP sits in sectors — government, higher education, healthcare, nonprofits — that will be “very slow to adjust.” That drag doesn’t make AI less real. It makes the timeline longer and the path more uneven than the most bullish projections suggest.

Cowen’s 2.5% is still, in his view, transformative. Against the backdrop of $39 trillion in national debt, that delta is the difference between a debt spiral and a manageable fiscal path. “You feel we’re screwed,” he told the audience. “My kids are screwed, grandkids are screwed … But if our economy can grow at 2.5%, instead of 2%, that debt, rather than exploding and making us the next Greece, that debt actually converges to a manageable level.”

Cowen also asked the audience hypothetically, what else is there? “The way to get out of this hole, like if you work in AI, you are our savior.” Productivity growth means to no big tax increase and no big cut to Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, he added, and there isn’t another good idea about how to plug the gap. “You are our plan A. There is no plan B.”

What the bulls and bears agree on

Strip away the valuation disagreement and BofA and Panmure Liberum share more common ground than their conclusions suggest. Both believe AI will materially change the economy. Both acknowledge the gap between task-level gains and aggregate productivity is real. Both identify organizational friction — not model capability — as the primary constraint on near-term macro impact.

The disagreement is not about whether the technology works. It is about whether the investment cycle has outrun the technology’s current economic contribution so dramatically that a correction is now the most likely near-term path — even if the long-term productivity boom eventually arrives on the other side of it.

That is a question BofA’s 10x argument, however coherent its mechanics, cannot answer. The gap between 0.1% and 1.0% has a plausible path. What it does not have yet is a timeline.