The 70-year interruptive ad model is dead, replaced by invisible, AI-driven in-content advertising. This is not a feature—it's a new $685B+ infrastructure class. We deconstruct the tech, the psychology, and the strategic playbook for founders, investors, and leaders.
I myself is a financial modeling expert. In fact, I am global level trainer in big4 but truth be told, things are changing. This is a data driven analysis. I work in this very industry for over a decade. I suggest you give the story a read and then I will be happy to have an open discussion.
next I will make sure I dont have a headline ending with ?. thanks for the suggestion. This is a data driven analysis. I work in this very industry for over a decade. I suggest you give the story a read and then I will be happy to have an open discussion.
I wrote this story after a personal experience with Claude Code. While it was designing a frontend for me, I realized it had inserted a library I never asked for. That's when it hit me: we're underestimating the second-order effect of AI assistants becoming the new distribution channel for developer tools.
When an AI model suggests a code block that imports a specific library (like an auth provider or a client for a SaaS API), it's effectively making a default choice for the developer. This creates an incredibly powerful—and potentially very lucrative—flywheel for the owners of those suggested libraries. It's a new form of vendor lock-in that doesn't happen in a sales meeting, but in a developer's editor, one auto-completed line at a time.
I'm curious how others see this playing out. Are there technical solutions, like a "nutrition label" for AI-suggested code that flags commercial dependencies? Or is this an unavoidable evolution of software distribution, turning companies like OpenAI and Anthropic into the new gatekeepers of the dev stack?