The latest episode of TechCrunch's Equity podcast dissects a controversial concept: "AI psychosis". Coined by Box CEO Aaron Levie, the term refers to tech leaders being overly excited about AI's potential while lacking real-world experience regarding the hurdles of final implementation.
Key developments
The discussion comes as users are showing signs of fatigue from having AI shoved into every product. Google is a prime example, where its efforts to integrate AI into search have led to silly errors (such as misspelling its own name) and ruined the core experience of information retrieval. Conversely, search engine DuckDuckGo recorded a 30% spike in downloads by positioning itself as an "AI-free" alternative.
Aaron Levie argues that CEOs often look at slideshows of miraculous performance, forgetting that AI still requires immense fine-tuning to actually deliver value. Being disconnected from the "last mile" of implementation makes it easy for them to make mass layoff decisions based on unproven beliefs about AI productivity.
Why it matters
For the Vietnamese tech community, this serves as a warning against chasing trends while neglecting the core user experience. DuckDuckGo's success proves there is still a massive market segment for "pure" products that focus on utility rather than forced AI integration. Business leaders must actually use these tools to understand their limitations before restructuring teams or pivoting product strategies.