Sunday, 8 March 2026

VINOD KHOSLA ON AI: It’s Not a Bubble, It’s Electricity


Why one of Silicon Valley’s boldest investors believes we’re drastically underestimating the scale of the AI transformation—and what that means for every industry, startup, and worker.


Based on Vinod Khosla’s conversation on the OpenAI podcast

Vinod Khosla doesn’t think like a typical venture capitalist. When he decided to invest in OpenAI, there was no product roadmap to scrutinize, no revenue model to stress-test. There was one question: What happens if we actually succeed at building human-level intelligence? For Khosla, the answer was simple—everything changes. And that was enough.

In a wide-ranging conversation on the OpenAI podcast, the Sun Microsystems co-founder and Khosla Ventures founder laid out a vision of the AI future that is sweeping in scope but remarkably specific in its predictions. From the death of the “bubble” narrative to the rise of robotic companions, here are the key ideas worth paying attention to.


Forget the Bubble Talk—Follow the API Calls

Wall Street loves a bubble narrative, but Khosla isn’t buying it. His argument is elegant: during the dot-com crash, stock prices collapsed, but internet traffic never slowed down. The underlying utility kept growing even as speculative money fled. He sees the same pattern in AI today.

The metric that matters, in his view, isn’t market capitalization—it’s API calls. As long as the volume of API calls continues its exponential climb, the technology’s real-world value is expanding regardless of what stock tickers say. Companies like OpenAI aren’t building ahead of demand; they’re scrambling to keep up with it.

A true bubble means investing ahead of demand that doesn’t exist. In AI, the demand for intelligence is effectively infinite.

AI is Infrastructure, Not Entertainment

One of Khosla’s most powerful reframes is his distinction between AI and attention-based services. Netflix is constrained by the number of hours in a day a person can watch. AI faces no such ceiling.

Instead, Khosla compares AI to electricity. We don’t track how many hours we “use” electricity each day. It powers our lights, our appliances, our tools—invisibly, constantly. AI is heading in the same direction: not a product you open, but a capability baked into everything you already do. The only current bottleneck is compute availability, and that’s a problem the industry is racing to solve.

2026: The Year Agents Take Over

If 2025 was the year of “vibe coding” and single-purpose assistants, Khosla believes 2026 will be defined by multi-agentic systems—AI that doesn’t just answer questions, but runs complex, multi-step workflows autonomously.

  • In the enterprise: Agents managing entire ERP systems, handling daily reconciliations, and tracking contracts without human oversight.

  • For consumers: An AI that plans your vacation by cross-referencing dietary restrictions, preferred airlines, calendar availability, and budget—then books it.

The shift from chatbot to agent is not incremental. It’s a fundamentally different relationship between humans and software.

The Great Information Reduction

The internet gave us access to more information than any civilization has ever had. The problem is that it gave us far too much. Khosla frames AI’s role as the great information reducer—a force that filters the overwhelming flood of data down to what is personally relevant to you, right now.

This is more than a productivity tool. It’s a shift in how humans relate to knowledge. Instead of searching, browsing, and evaluating, you simply ask—and get an answer calibrated to your context.

The Deflationary Future: Free Doctors, Free Teachers

Khosla’s most provocative prediction concerns the economy of 2050. He envisions a world where the two most expensive inputs in any economy—labor and expertise—approach zero cost.

What does that look like in practice?

  • Nearly free primary healthcare delivered by AI doctors.

  • World-class tutoring available to every child on earth.

The implications are staggering. Khosla argues we need to stop asking “How will people earn a living?” and start asking “What will people do with their lives?” In his vision, the minimum standard of living rises so dramatically that the traditional link between labor and survival breaks down entirely.

Robotics: Bigger Than the Auto Industry

Khosla predicts that within 15 years, the robotics industry—including bipedal robots—will surpass the current global auto industry in size. This isn’t just about factory floors. Robots will enter healthcare, hospitality, construction, and even companionship to address the loneliness epidemic.

Startups: Agency Over Experience

For founders, Khosla’s advice is counterintuitive: stop optimizing for industry experience. In a world where AI can compress decades of domain knowledge into a prompt, what matters most is agency—the raw ability to make things happen.

The moat isn’t the model; it’s the proprietary datasets and specialized workflows where generic models struggle.

Healthcare’s Bottleneck Isn’t Technology—It’s Regulation

Khosla has been vocal about AI’s potential to transform healthcare for years. But he’s equally blunt about what’s holding it back: regulatory and institutional resistance. The FDA and the AMA, in his view, are the primary bottlenecks—not the underlying technology.


The Takeaway

Khosla’s worldview can be boiled down to a single bet: intelligence is the most valuable resource in the world, and we’re about to make it nearly free. Whether you find that thrilling or terrifying, the underlying logic is hard to dismiss.

The question isn’t whether AI will be transformative. It’s whether we’re preparing for a transformation of this magnitude.

Source: Vinod Khosla on the OpenAI Podcas

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