The Coming Ad-ification of Cloud AI

Conspiracy School covers AI this week.  As we high board it into:

When Answers Become Ads: The Next Failure Mode of AI Systems

There is a predictable pattern in the lifecycle of any high-utility information system. First, it is built to solve a problem. Then it is optimized for performance. Finally, it is monetized. The first two stages produce value. The third stage often degrades it. Unless, like a good MBA I parrot “Third stage is the long-term investment harvest…”

Artificial intelligence has not yet fully entered that third phase in a visible way, and likely won’t for a long time.  But the economic pressures that drive it are already in place. Large-scale models are expensive to train, expensive to operate, and increasingly central to decision-making workflows. That combination—high cost, high usage, and high influence—guarantees that monetization will not remain optional. The only open question is how it will be implemented.

I should back up here: Many of the well-intended “AI Controllers” — the people who turn blue warning us about model safety — may not realize they are also, in practical effect, building the control hooks the ad-hawkers will use later.

The Reality Check No One Wants to Hear

“Guardrails” may prove to be the sock puppet. The public reason will be safety, responsibility, and protecting the planet — the same rhetorical neighborhood as Al Gore climate “variability.” But the corporate reason may be far simpler: centralized hooks make future ad insertion easier.

If you haven’t figured out this zig-zag in the future’s path yet, you may want to check what you’ve been filling your Zig-Zags with.

The naive expectation is that advertising in AI will resemble advertising on the web: banners, sponsored blocks, or clearly labeled placements.

Lies!  Suckers! That expectation is incorrect because the interaction model is fundamentally different. A search engine presents a list of options. The user evaluates those options and makes a selection. An AI system, by contrast, collapses that process into a single step by producing an answer. The distinction matters because it removes the visible boundary between information and recommendation.

From a systems perspective, this creates a new class of vulnerability. When the output is a single synthesized response, any bias—intentional or otherwise—can be embedded directly into the answer itself. There is no list to compare, no obvious ranking to question. The influence is not adjacent to the result. It is the result.

Think of it like this: Imagine the (side of page, gutter) ads on a platform like Google Search were to suddenly sneak in (just below your perception threshold) in AI responses.

That’s why I took the position last week that anyone with plans to remain in a (Reese-Mogg and, Davidson context) as a Sovereign Individual – will need a home/local/not-connected AI running in a late-state global empire’s collapsing, bullshit detection mode.  And that’s just to stay sane.

The progression toward monetization is therefore unlikely to be abrupt. It will occur in phases, each one small enough to appear reasonable in isolation.

The first phase is subtle weighting. Certain tools, products, or approaches are mentioned slightly more often or framed more favorably. This does not require explicit advertising contracts. It can emerge from training data, reinforcement signals, or partnerships that influence model tuning. At this stage, the system remains plausibly neutral, and most users will not detect the shift.

The second phase is native insertion. Instead of presenting overt advertisements, the system begins to incorporate specific products or services into otherwise valid answers. A response to a question about project management might include a sentence such as, “A commonly used platform for this is X.” The sentence is technically correct, contextually appropriate, and informationally useful. It is also monetizable. The advertising unit is no longer a block on a page; it is a clause in a sentence.

The third phase is contextual monetization. At this point, the system has sufficient awareness of user intent to align recommendations with likely purchasing behavior. If a user is writing about hydroponics, the system may suggest a specific pump or nutrient solution. If a user is planning a trip, it may recommend a particular booking platform. The distinction between assistance and promotion becomes increasingly difficult to define because the recommendations are both relevant and commercially influenced.

Fourth Phase Nails It

The final phase is full integration, where economic incentives are directly coupled to model behavior.  You can see it in capital flows already, if you know where to look.  After all, “money is the pavement the future drives on.

Preferred vendors will receive preferential placement within answers. Certain solution paths are emphasized because they generate revenue. Access to higher-quality reasoning or more capable models may be gated behind subscription tiers. At this stage, the system functions less as a neutral tool and more as an intermediary—a broker between the user’s intent and a set of monetized outcomes.

This trajectory is not hypothetical. It is consistent with the evolution of search engines, social platforms, and virtually every large-scale information system that preceded AI. The difference is that AI systems operate at a deeper level of integration with user cognition. They do not merely present information; they participate in the construction of understanding. As a result, the insertion of economic bias has a more direct path to influencing decisions.

The implications for system design are significant. If cloud-based AI becomes a primary interface for thinking, writing, and decision-making, then any monetization layer applied to it effectively becomes a layer on top of those processes. The user is no longer simply navigating a marketplace of information. They are engaging with a mediated representation of that marketplace, shaped in part by economic incentives.

This is where the distinction between local and cloud systems, discussed in my column before this one, becomes operational rather than philosophical. A local model, even if less capable, does not carry the same external incentive structure. It may be biased in other ways—through training data or inherent limitations—but it is not subject to real-time monetization pressures from a service provider. It represents a form of cognitive independence, however imperfect.

Here’s to the Hybrids – AI Freedom Fighters All!

A hybrid architecture therefore serves a critical (not yet public) second purpose beyond performance optimization. It acts as a hedge against systemic bias. Cloud systems can be used for speed and convenience, while local systems can be used for validation, comparison, and work that requires a higher degree of neutrality or privacy. The two modes can be cross-checked against each other, revealing discrepancies that might otherwise go unnoticed.

It is important to note that this is not an argument against monetization itself. Systems require resources, and those resources must be funded. The issue is not the presence of economic incentives but their integration into the core output of the system. When the boundary between information and promotion becomes indistinct, the user’s ability to evaluate the output is reduced.

From the perspective of an individual operator, the appropriate response is not withdrawal but awareness. Understanding that answers may carry embedded incentives allows for more deliberate use of the tool. It encourages verification, comparison across models, and the development of workflows that do not rely on a single source of truth.

The broader lesson is consistent with the earlier discussion of hybrid systems. No single tool should be treated as authoritative. Value emerges from the interaction of multiple components, each with known strengths and weaknesses. The operator’s role is to manage that interaction, not to delegate it entirely.

With Money Comes Crooks

Artificial intelligence is moving from a novelty to an infrastructure layer. As it does, the same forces that shaped previous layers of the digital ecosystem will apply. Advertising will not appear as a separate layer. It will be integrated into the fabric of the system itself.

The transition will be gradual. It will be justified at each step. And it will be largely invisible to those who are not looking for it.

For those who are, the appropriate stance is not alarm, but design discipline. Build systems that do not depend on a single channel. Maintain the ability to operate offline. Cross-check outputs when decisions matter. In short, treat AI not as an oracle, but as a component.

Because once answers become ads, the difference between being informed and being directed will depend less on the system—and more on the operator.

~Anti-Dave

PS: This will be the last of the publicly visible Anti-Dave/Hidden Guild series.  Future content will be on the subscription-only Peoplenomics.com website.  $40/year.

Hybrid AI as a Working System

Step-in close.  The Anti-Dave is about to explain: Why the Optimal Architecture Is Not What Most AI People Think.

Is New Always Better?  (Not always!)

There is this persistent error that shows up whenever a new technical capability becomes accessible to individuals.

  • People begin by asking what they should buy instead of asking how the system works.
    • In the case of artificial intelligence, this error expresses itself as an early fixation on hardware—specifically on graphics cards, memory ceilings, and the seductive metric of VRAM.
    • It is understandable, because the visible constraint in local AI is computational throughput, and the market has already trained a generation to equate performance with equipment.
    • However, this framing obscures the more important question, which is not how to maximize local compute, but how to construct a system that reliably produces useful work under real-world constraints of time, attention, and cost.

Balancing Throughput and Wallet Drain

At present, the most effective architecture available to individuals is hybrid.

This is not a compromise position, nor is it a transitional phase to be abandoned once local hardware improves.

It is, instead, a recognition that two distinct classes of computation now exist and that they are not interchangeable.

  • Cloud-based systems operate at industrial scale, with access to hardware that is orders of magnitude more powerful than anything economically feasible at the household level. These systems deliver extremely high token throughput, strong generalization, and mature tooling for formatting, document handling, and iterative refinement.
    • But in rural areas, or if you are stuck in the “high usage periods” you will have slow patches.
    • Out here in the woods – the land of HDSL bandwidth exhausted copper? Your tech is Ben Dover.
  • Local systems, by contrast, operate under tight resource constraints but offer properties that the cloud cannot: deterministic availability, privacy of data, absence of rate limits, and full control over model selection and behavior.
    • Ben Dover’s other job is selling computer video cards.

Yes, that’s right – Ben Dover no matter which way you turn!

But (one t or two?) Ben’s got another angle in the fire. Eventually, the cloud AI screen spaces will go to advertising.  The blur is already apparent at the (bad pun alert Edges) when you Google something.

You don’t really think Elon will miss a dime, do you? That’s when the bet of the home AI may leap ahead.

What Do You Need from AI?

When viewed as components in a system, these two (and a half) modes of computation map cleanly onto different categories of task.

Top Tier: Cloud AI excels at high-throughput cognitive work: drafting, revising, restructuring, and formatting large bodies of text, especially when rapid iteration is required. The latency is low, the outputs are polished, and the friction to execution is minimal.

Lower Tier: Local AI, even on modest hardware, is slower and more constrained, but it is persistent and sovereign. It can be used offline, it can operate on sensitive material without external exposure, and it can be instrumented, tuned, and experimented with in ways that cloud interfaces typically do not permit. The correct design pattern, therefore, is not substitution but specialization.

Amazon Alexa is one of the AI stacks we use and really find applicable.  The system incorporates burglar detection, a real-time from anyway (human-staffed) emergency services like, plus for calendars, shopping lists, re-orders of anything you’ve ever bought on Amazon (all by voice) is another Lazy Dave tool.

Hidden Tier Watch-For: While the AI bubblers over in the dark financializations world would love everyone to land on either of the two obvious tiers, there’s a “half-tier” as embedding in existing consumer goods will eventually drain the AI Empire Builders. AI has to live somewhere and on phones or in online (anything) is the jailbreak breach.  Right, Siri, Google, Alexa? And connected cars are nearly here too: “Toyota tell me about weather ahead for the next 100 miles…”

You wait.

Bringing Tiers to Your Eyes

Let me put on the “Domain Walker” mantle:  This (tier-eyed) distinction becomes particularly important when you consider the actual bottlenecks encountered by most users. In practice, the limiting factors are rarely raw compute. They are far more often the operator’s time, the clarity of the prompt, the structure of the workflow, and the discipline with which intermediate results are managed.

A faster model does not correct a poorly framed request. A larger context window does not guarantee better reasoning if the input is disorganized. In other words, the human remains the primary system integrator, and inefficiencies at that level dominate the overall performance of the stack. Investing prematurely in hardware to alleviate a compute bottleneck that is not yet dominant is therefore a misallocation of resources.

A Home for Gaming Compute?

You Anti-Dave once laughed at “stupid people buying liquid-cooled video cards.”  The Anti-Dave was a fool.  Cards – huge almost all made in Taiwan for now cards – were going into “first look, first shoot.”  Tons of it went into AI.

This is where the current enthusiasm for high-VRAM consumer GPUs needs to be placed in context. A card such as a 24 GB-class device materially expands what can be run locally, enabling larger parameter models and longer contexts. This is useful, and for certain workloads it is transformative. Hey! If you have a few thousand dollars to snatch up pairs of 3090’s? More power to you.

However, it does not eliminate the fundamental differences between local and cloud systems. Even a well-configured local machine will not match the throughput or model breadth of a large, hosted service.

What it provides instead is autonomy. The decision to invest in such hardware should therefore be driven by a clear requirement for autonomy—privacy, offline capability, or sustained local experimentation—not by a generalized desire for “more power.”

Next week, though, we will blow away one concern about online AI:  It’s actually dumb and the titans of that vertical have left, oh, maybe a trillion dollars on the table.  That will be in an upcoming Peoplenomics.com paper.  Back to the now, then?

A more productive approach, particularly in the current phase of the technology, is to treat local AI as a laboratory environment. It is where one learns the mechanics of inference, the effects of quantization, the trade-offs between context length and latency, and the practical implications of threading and memory allocation. It is where prompts can be stress-tested without cost, where failure modes can be observed directly, and where one can develop an intuition for how models behave under constrained conditions. These skills transfer directly to cloud usage, often yielding greater gains in output quality than any incremental increase in hardware capability.

From a systems perspective, the recommended progression is therefore straightforward. First, establish a stable cloud-based workflow for high-value tasks—writing, editing, analysis—where speed and polish are paramount.

Second, deploy a modest local environment using available hardware to explore model behavior and to handle tasks where control or privacy is required.

Third, refine the interface between these two domains, developing repeatable patterns for when work is passed from one to the other.

Only after this hybrid workflow is operating smoothly does it make sense to evaluate whether the local component has become a bottleneck significant enough to justify hardware investment.

Now, the Money Part

It is also worth noting that this approach has an economic dimension that is frequently overlooked. Cloud services externalize capital expenditure but introduce ongoing operational costs and potential constraints. Local systems invert this relationship, requiring upfront investment but offering low marginal cost thereafter.

A hybrid architecture allows the user to arbitrage between these two cost structures, using the cloud where it is most efficient and the local system where marginal cost approaches zero. This flexibility is itself a form of resilience, particularly in environments where service availability or pricing may change unpredictably.

The broader implication is that artificial intelligence, at least in its current form, is less about acquiring a single “best” tool and more about assembling a coherent set of capabilities. The individual who understands how to compose these capabilities into a functioning system will outperform the individual who simply accumulates hardware or subscribes to multiple services without a clear operational model. This has been true in every prior technological domain, and there is no reason to expect AI to be an exception.

In that sense, the question is not whether one should run locally or in the cloud, but how to design a workflow that leverages both without being constrained by either. The answer, for now, is hybrid. It is not the most glamorous solution, nor is it the one most heavily marketed, but it is the one that aligns with the realities of current hardware, software, and human limitation. Those who adopt it early will not necessarily have the fastest systems, but they will have the most effective ones, and in practice that is the metric that matters.

How TAD Rolls

The Anti-Dave is ever-so…what do you call it?  Eccentric?

See, I’m a “Sample Class Ape.”  Like in my book Mind Amplifiers.

  • I buy every new cooking gadget as soon as it comes out.
  • I can pick for more than 2-dozen ham radio transmitters and receivers. (OK, that is dumb.)
  • But this keeps me right out on the edge of Future.

Future is where our happiness, or Eternal Shame, will come from.

This applies to AI.  Which, like water, given enough time will show up everywhere.

And that’s the point – why I was trying to bring “tiers to your eyes” today.

Now, blink them away, but you aren’t locked into just one AI or compute topology. And that’s the big lesson.  I have more AI models now than I have ham radio choices.  Excessive? Isn’t that what Life’s for?

~Anti-Dave