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How Sam Altman fooled Sundar Pichai — and pushed Google into cannibalizing itself
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How Sam Altman fooled Sundar Pichai — and pushed Google into cannibalizing itself

Fortune · May 27, 2026, 12:30 PM · Also reported by 2 other sources

What we are witnessing right now is a massive, multibillion-dollar strategic miscalculation led by Sam Altman of Open AI. For the past three years, Altman has built a market consensus around AI as an intelligent mind capable of running global commerce. In reality, AI is not a thinking intellect; it is an expensive, automated pattern-matching system prone to significant errors and inconsistencies. Yet, through a masterful reframing, Altman reshaped the market — and Sundar Pichai of Google responded in ways that may prove catastrophically self-defeating. Having spent years inside the energy and technology industry — including directing GE Energy’s Smart Grid Initiative — what I am documenting is a case study in executive panic and corporate self-sabotage at one of the world’s largest companies: Google. When OpenAI launched its conversational software, Pichai responded reactively, allowing Altman to dictate Google’s entire corporate roadmap. Terrified of losing speculative momentum, Google threw its immense cash reserves into an arms race that actively cannibalizes its own business model. The result is a self-destructive integration that threatens to bring down the Internet’s greatest monopoly. By forcing automated, conversational summaries into search results, Pichai is spending billions of dollars of corporate capital to actively train the global public to stop clicking links. He is effectively funding Google’s own advertising obsolescence to appease Wall Street speculation. This executive blindness extends across the entire tech industry, creating an economic doom loop that is hurtling toward a massive financial bust. Tech giants are burning over $100 billion a year on massive server farms and immense electricity grids — a figure borne out by the combined capital expenditure commitments announced by Microsoft, Google, Meta, and Amazon for 2025 and 2026. Yet, the revenue they scrape back relies on low-stakes corporate paperwork or cheap m

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