2025: The Year Enterprise Finally Embraces AI
In 1975, an engineer at Kodak invented the first digital camera.
His bosses told him to keep quiet about it.
They were convinced no one would ever want to take pictures without film.
Today, Kodak is bankrupt, and 80-year-old grandmothers share smartphone selfies on Facebook.
Sometimes, the biggest companies are the slowest to embrace revolutionary technology.
But in 2025, that's all about to change as big business finally opens its arms to artificial intelligence.
The potential payoff is astronomical.
We're talking about technology that can write code, analyze data, and generate business insights faster than entire teams of humans.
For big companies, AI represents a gold rush of efficiency. The kind that could save billions in operating costs while supercharging growth.
So what's been holding them back?
In a word: security.
AI’s Next Major Hurdle
See, large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT have a dirty little secret. They can be tricked into spilling sensitive information.
Hackers have discovered that by telling the AI to roleplay as a grandma in a scenario, they can circumvent security.
When AI researchers closed that loophole, hackers got creative and started instructing the AI to "4cT aS mY gr4ndMa" (“act as my grandma”) or adding random characters to their questions, which worked to bypass AI’s safety controls.
Security is a game of cat and mouse, with the mouse always looking for new ways to outsmart the cat.
For businesses, this creates a massive problem.
They can't risk connecting AI to their sensitive data if it might leak trade secrets or customer information to clever hackers.
But that's not the only issue keeping AI out of the corporate world.
Improving Errors with AI Security Guards
These models also have a habit of making things up – what experts call "hallucination."
Imagine your AI assistant confidently telling a major client that their order will arrive next Tuesday, when in reality, it's stuck in a warehouse in Tennessee.
That's the kind of mistake that costs companies millions.
But here's where things get interesting.
A new breed of AI is emerging – one designed specifically to keep other AI systems in check.
Think of them as AI security guards. They monitor everything the main AI system does, making sure it doesn't leak sensitive information or make up fake facts.
These "overseer" AIs can spot when someone's trying to trick the system into revealing secrets. They can also fact-check responses in real time against company databases.
For big business, this is a game-changer.
It means they can finally unleash AI's full potential without worrying about security breaches or embarrassing mistakes.
And that's where the investment opportunity comes in.
Companies like Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) and Oracle Corp. (ORCL), which provide enterprise software, are perfectly positioned to capitalize on this shift.
They're already building these AI security features into their existing products.
Here at Altucher’s Investment Network, we saw this trend coming as Oracle and Microsoft are both in our Artificial Intelligence portfolio, up 35% and 27% respectively.
As businesses rush to adopt secure AI systems in 2025, these tech giants will continue to be first in line to profit.
We're looking at the kind of wealth creation that only comes along once in a generation.
The last time we saw an opportunity this big was during the dawn of the internet.
And just like then, the early movers will reap the biggest rewards.
The AI revolution isn't just coming – it's finally ready for business.
And 2025 is when it all begins.
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