I’ve measured the cost of a screw in a file cache. The silk screening on a CD. Cloud redundancy. Events-per-minute to disk compression. Every technology transition eventually reaches a moment where someone asks: Wait. What is this actually costing us? Generative AI is at that moment. Most organizations just don’t see it yet. Tokens are COGS . Not a rounding error. Not a subscription line item. At enterprise scale, every unnecessary word in every AI interaction becomes a real cost with a real invoice attached. We measured it. A typical generative AI response contains four parts: the prompt, the answer, and two layers of conversational overhead that mostly add tokens without adding value. Same movie as cloud provisioning sprawl. Different cast. The governance folks are arriving. The finance folks are opening the bills. Our first cost optimization memo? “Don’t say please and thank you.” This is why I’ve started thinking about AI maturity in three stages: Toy → Tool → Collaborative Partner Most AI today is still Toy : chatbots in your pocket that are fun and occasionally useful. Enterprise value starts when AI becomes a Tool : constrained use cases, gated systems, clear prompts, human review. The real power comes later, when AI becomes a Collaborative Partner — but that stage requires governance, auditing, and multiple humans in the loop for anything that actually matters. These systems look opaque, but they’re not magic. They just learn patterns quickly — including the ones we accidentally reinforce. So boundaries matter. We have a name for one of the things being left on the table right now: Token Pollution. Because unnecessary tokens don’t just affect your invoice. They affect the atmosphere. https://preview.redd.it/rpp1dh55yqng1.jpg?width=898&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=845ec2e06a7c2eb13e604107e09a65331e02e82d submitted by /u/MaizeNeither4829
Originally posted by u/MaizeNeither4829 on r/ArtificialInteligence
