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Not at all, there is a famous saying (often attributed to Keynes but as far as I can tell he never said) “Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.”
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“But can the markets remain solvent longer than I can remain rational” is the real question.
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It’s not been that long really. The dot com bubble was called a bubble for a while before it finally imploded. And just like now folks were in massive denial that it was a bubble.

One of the challenges here is that a lot of folks simply weren’t around then and haven’t seen what happens when everything implodes overnight. Those that have experienced it know what that looks like and know it will happen again.

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What makes this time weird though is back then (and in most bubbles) the bubble was creating jobs - supposedly (I'm too young) anyone who could write a bit of HTML could get hired in the dot com boom.

Whereas this is a very weird bubble where it creates big pumps in some equity prices but apart from a tiny number of people who are directly involved in AI research etc. it's not created any jobs, in fact by creating uncertainty it's probably caused fewer jobs to be created.

What that means for labour market dynamics when it pops I really don't know

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It's no coincidence that daytrading ascended with the dotcom era.
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NFTs lasted a lot longer than they should have.
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yes they did, Salesforce even came out with an "NFT Cloud" product.
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Bubbles don't pop overnight. In the aftermath of any collapse, you can generally see a pretty clear pattern of red flags (and attempts to minimize them or cover them up). Some parties notice earlier than others, but the realization is generally a much more gradual process than the collapse.
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The bubble bursting has almost become eschatological for deniers. Keep praying that it will happen. It won't.
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Why the sudden pivot to agents and subagents? One shotting not good enough? Was a tech plateau reached? Or maybe one related to cost?
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LLMs can be a massively transformative and valuable technology, and this would still be a bubble, there's no reason those two things can't be true at once.

In fact "pure" bubbles where the focus item is of literally no value (tulips, NFTs) are quite rare. Much more common are the bubbles based on an actual real transformative innovation (canals, railways, radio, internet, LLMs).

Railways did absolutely transform how travel worked in the UK, while simultaneously almost everyone who invested in them lost their shirts

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That's also what NFT hypebros said.
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