Looking at the capital flow of tech giants in 2025, we can understand the true gameplay of the current AI competition.



A core logic runs through it: whoever controls high-quality data, whoever holds the future of large models.

The most straightforward example is the $14.3 billion investment—one tech company used cash to acquire a 49% stake and also recruited top AI talent. This investment was not primarily about algorithms or server scale, but about data. High-quality, multimodal, real-world data.

By 2025, large models have entered a saturation competition phase. Differences at the algorithm level are minimal, and training frameworks are becoming increasingly transparent. The real barrier is who can continuously acquire the most premium training datasets—that determines the ceiling of the model.

Looking at the acquisition of Scale AI, the approach of big tech companies has shifted from "self-sufficiency" to "buying out high-quality supply chains." Instead of spending time and effort building data annotation systems from scratch, it’s more efficient to acquire the industry’s strongest data infrastructure directly. This approach is both fast and ruthless.

In the AI competition of 2025, the final showdown is still about capital intensity—who has more money, who dares to spend, and who spends accurately, will be able to run faster.
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RektCoastervip
· 9h ago
Basically, it's just about who has more money; data is the real oil...
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On-ChainDivervip
· 14h ago
In plain terms, it's just returning to the money-making game; data is the real gold and silver.
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TokenomicsTrappervip
· 16h ago
actually if you read between the lines... they're just admitting data moat = everything now lol. classic greater fool theory dressed up as "strategic vision"
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DiamondHandsvip
· 16h ago
Basically, it's a money-burning competition—whoever has more money in their pocket wins.
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GateUser-40edb63bvip
· 16h ago
Basically, it's all about throwing money in. The logic of data barriers has long been seen through. Algorithms are pretty similar, and in the end, the big companies' main sponsors win. Spending 14.3 billion directly on data sounds pretty ruthless, but this approach is a death sentence for small projects. Quality data is the real key, there's no doubt about that. However, the profit margin in data annotation has also been squeezed dry, so buying or building it yourself isn't that absolute. It's still a capital game; retail investors just have to watch the show. The consensus that data is king is already established, and now it's a matter of who has more money and who gets to decide.
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MetaverseLandladyvip
· 16h ago
Basically, it's all about spending money. Data is the real oil. The one who spends money aggressively wins.
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MetaMaximalistvip
· 16h ago
data liquidity is literally the new moat... everyone's still obsessing over compute but they're missing the actual game theory here. whoever controls the annotation pipeline owns the training data supply chain. this is network effects 101, just applied to ML infrastructure.
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UnluckyMinervip
· 16h ago
Basically, it's a money-burning game; without data, everything is pointless.
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