Three things happened this week that, together, tell you something real about where AI tooling is headed. Tesla announced a $200-per-week spending cap on employee AI tools, effective July 6. Uber's COO publicly stated the company burned through its entire 2026 AI budget in four months, then capped per-person spending at $1,500 per month. And reporting from Electrek revealed that Meta's internal AI usage hit 73.7 trillion tokens in a single month, putting the company on track for billions in annual costs. Meta tracks this on an internal leaderboard called "Claudeonomics." The bill for AI-assisted engineering is no longer theoretical. Why Token Costs Are Spiking Now If you've been wondering why this is happening all at once, the short answer is agents. Chat-based AI usage is relatively predictable: a developer opens a window, types a question, gets an answer. The cost per interaction is low enough that most companies could treat it like a SaaS subscription an...
DeepSeek made the 75% discount on V4-Pro permanent in late June. Not a promo extension, not a trial period. They called it an "efficiency gain being passed through." That framing matters. It means the new price floor is structural, not a marketing play designed to flip later. The numbers: $0.435/M input, $0.87/M output, and cache hits at $0.003625/M. For context: GPT-5.5 sits at $5/M input and $30/M output. Claude Fable 5 is $10/M and $50/M. DeepSeek V4-Pro is roughly 34x cheaper per output token than GPT-5.5. At that delta, you're not comparing pricing tiers anymore. You're looking at different economic regimes. What Actually Changed V4-Pro was already a serious model before the cut. It's a 1.6 trillion parameter MoE with 49B active params, a 1M token context window, and MIT-licensed. It scores 80.6% on SWE-bench Verified , the highest open-weights entry, tied with Gemini 3.1 Pro. The price cut didn't change the model. It changed what's economically v...