Matt Asay
Contributor

Stopping the rot in AI spending

opinion
21 Oct 20245 mins
Artificial IntelligenceEmerging TechnologyGenerative AI

Emerging AI governance tools offer a step toward visibility and control of what’s happening in a company’s AI applications.

Successful Corporate Top CEO's Talking, Using Laptop Computer Standing in Big City Office at Night. Two Successful Managers Discuss Environmental, Social, Corporate Governance for e-Commerce Project
Credit: Gorodenkoff / Shutterstock

They say that half the money spent on advertising is wasted, but the problem is figuring out which half. If that’s true, the problem is arguably worse for AI. Talk to people deep in the AI weeds and they’ll tell you upwards of 90% of money spent on AI is waste, and mountains of cash are chasing that elusive 10% because the potential payoff is so good. Accenture, for example, has booked $2 billion just this year to help clients make sense of AI. Nvidia and the clouds keep raking in tens of billions more, too.

Clearly there’s a lot of money in AI. The question for most companies needs to be: Which investments are working, and which should be dumped?

Although there hasn’t been an obvious answer to that question, a new class of software is being designed to provide answers. Just as data science brought us data governance, companies like Holistic AI deliver AI governance. Fledgling efforts have tried to treat AI governance as an extension of data, IT, or cloud governance, when it actually requires its own unique, distinct approach, given the need to move well beyond standard risk assessment to also include factors such as bias, effectiveness, and explainability.

If this doesn’t seem to be the sexiest category of software, think of it this way: If it helps companies improve their AI win rate, that’s incredibly sexy.

The stakes are high for AI

Yes, our industry has its fair share of overblown hype for technology “trends” that turn out to be vaporous fads (e.g., Web3, whatever that was). But AI is different. Not because I want it to be, or because AI vendors hope it will be, but because however much we poke holes in it (hallucinations, etc.), it’s still there. Though generative AI is a relatively new spin on AI, the technology itself is a relatively mature, much larger market that includes things like machine learning. Companies may be more obvious in posturing around AI in the past year or two, but don’t let that confuse you. Just this week I talked with a company that has a large number of AI applications running, with each one costing close to a million dollars each year.

Clearly that Fortune 500 company sees value in AI. Unfortunately, it’s not always clear which of their costly applications is delivering on its promise, and which ones are introducing more risk than reward.

When a company elects to build an AI application, they’re placing a lot of faith in large language models (LLMs) or other tools without much (if any) visibility into how the models yield results. This can be catastrophic for a company if it turns out their algorithms are persistently prejudiced against a protected class (ethnic minorities, etc.), misprice products, or cause other mishaps. Regulators and boardrooms are therefore paying more attention to so-called “algorithm conduct” to ensure AI delivers boom, not bust.

From commodity to velocity

It has already become tedious to review the newest LLMs. On an almost daily basis, Meta one-ups OpenAI which one-ups Google which one-ups any company with the capacity to invest billions in infrastructure and R&D on model performance. And the next day they all rotate which company claims to be fastest that day. Who cares? In aggregate it matters because enterprises are getting better performance at lower cost, but none of it matters if those same enterprises can’t build on the models with confidence.

To gain true business velocity through AI, companies need full visibility and control across all AI projects. Holistic AI, for example, seamlessly integrates with all common data and AI systems. Even better, it automatically discovers AI projects across the organization, streamlines inventory management, and offers a unified dashboard so that executives get a broad view of their AI assets and can act accordingly. For example, the Holistic AI software surfaces potential regulatory and technical risks in a particular application, alerting the team so that the company can resolve the issue before it becomes embarrassing or expensive (or both).

This isn’t akin to cloud governance tools, if for no other reason than that the stakes are so much higher. You can think of cloud as an inherently better, more flexible way of managing hardware or software assets, but it doesn’t necessarily fundamentally change how we think about these concepts (though serverless, for example, does challenge the thinking around provisioning of infrastructure to support an application). There’s a reason we jokingly refer to cloud as “someone else’s computer.” Not so with AI, which fundamentally changes what’s possible with software and data, although often in ways that we can’t explain. This is why we need AI governance tools like Holistic AI that help increase the velocity of effective AI experimentation and adoption by minimizing the risk that we’re using AI in ways that will hurt more than help.

The faster we want to move on AI, the more we need guardrails through AI governance systems. Again, this isn’t about forcing teams to slow down; it’s a way to speed up by ensuring less time is wasted on risky, ineffective AI projects.

Matt Asay
Contributor

Matt Asay runs developer relations at MongoDB. Previously. Asay was a Principal at Amazon Web Services and Head of Developer Ecosystem for Adobe. Prior to Adobe, Asay held a range of roles at open source companies: VP of business development, marketing, and community at MongoDB; VP of business development at real-time analytics company Nodeable (acquired by Appcelerator); VP of business development and interim CEO at mobile HTML5 start-up Strobe (acquired by Facebook); COO at Canonical, the Ubuntu Linux company; and head of the Americas at Alfresco, a content management startup. Asay is an emeritus board member of the Open Source Initiative (OSI) and holds a J.D. from Stanford, where he focused on open source and other IP licensing issues.

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