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Mark Cuban Says Companies Ignoring AI Will Disappear, Just Like Those Who Dismissed Streaming

MarketDash Editorial Team
12 hours ago
Mark Cuban is warning businesses that artificial intelligence will separate winners from losers, drawing on his own experiences watching industry leaders mock streaming and HDTV before those technologies reshaped entire markets.

Billionaire investor Mark Cuban has a stark message for companies brushing off artificial intelligence: adapt or die. He's doubling down on the belief that AI will draw a clear line between businesses that thrive and those that vanish, and he's got the receipts to back it up.

The Streaming Skeptics Were Dead Wrong

Over the weekend, Cuban made his case bluntly: the future belongs to "two types of companies — those that are great at AI, and those that used to be in business." It's a direct challenge to critics claiming generative AI is already overhyped.

When someone questioned whether tech leaders might be exaggerating AI's potential, Cuban fired back with history. He remembers when early audio streaming sounded terrible, video streams were tiny "postage stamp" sized, and bandwidth limitations had media executives convinced the whole concept would never work at scale.

Sound familiar? That's because we've seen this movie before.

The $20,000 TV Nobody Thought Would Matter

Cuban's favorite example is HDNet and HDNet Movies, which he launched back in 2001. At the time, broadcasters and cable companies thought high-definition television was a joke.

He recalls executives literally pulling out analog TVs during meetings to demonstrate that consumers couldn't tell the difference. Never mind that HDTV sets cost nearly $20,000 at the time, making them inaccessible to most households.

"People laughed," Cuban said. Now those same TVs cost a fraction of that price and HDTV is everywhere. The skeptics didn't just miss the boat—they denied the boat existed.

AI Isn't Smart, But It Makes You Smarter

Cuban's argument is that today's AI criticism makes the same mistake: focusing on current limitations instead of future trajectory. He doesn't see AI as some magical replacement for human intelligence. Instead, it's an amplifier.

"AI isn't smart," Cuban explained, but it "makes smart people smarter."

This isn't Cuban's first rodeo with disruptive technology. Through Microsolutions, he helped introduce local area networks. He built Audionet as an early streaming pioneer, then HDNet as one of the first high-definition television networks. More recently, he launched Cost Plus Drugs, which has upended prescription drug pricing.

The pattern is clear: Cuban spots technology that looks clunky today but will reshape markets tomorrow, then watches the establishment dismiss it until it's too late.

Even Shark Tank Agrees

Cuban isn't alone in this view. Kevin O'Leary, his fellow panelist on "Shark Tank," has called AI one of the most strategic investments for small business owners. O'Leary sees AI-driven customer service bots as a powerful competitive weapon for growth.

O'Leary has also warned that the biggest threat to the AI boom isn't hype or inflated valuations—it's a potential electricity shortage to power all this technology.

Cuban's message to businesses is simple: ignore AI at your own peril. History suggests the companies laughing now won't be around to laugh later.

Mark Cuban Says Companies Ignoring AI Will Disappear, Just Like Those Who Dismissed Streaming

MarketDash Editorial Team
12 hours ago
Mark Cuban is warning businesses that artificial intelligence will separate winners from losers, drawing on his own experiences watching industry leaders mock streaming and HDTV before those technologies reshaped entire markets.

Billionaire investor Mark Cuban has a stark message for companies brushing off artificial intelligence: adapt or die. He's doubling down on the belief that AI will draw a clear line between businesses that thrive and those that vanish, and he's got the receipts to back it up.

The Streaming Skeptics Were Dead Wrong

Over the weekend, Cuban made his case bluntly: the future belongs to "two types of companies — those that are great at AI, and those that used to be in business." It's a direct challenge to critics claiming generative AI is already overhyped.

When someone questioned whether tech leaders might be exaggerating AI's potential, Cuban fired back with history. He remembers when early audio streaming sounded terrible, video streams were tiny "postage stamp" sized, and bandwidth limitations had media executives convinced the whole concept would never work at scale.

Sound familiar? That's because we've seen this movie before.

The $20,000 TV Nobody Thought Would Matter

Cuban's favorite example is HDNet and HDNet Movies, which he launched back in 2001. At the time, broadcasters and cable companies thought high-definition television was a joke.

He recalls executives literally pulling out analog TVs during meetings to demonstrate that consumers couldn't tell the difference. Never mind that HDTV sets cost nearly $20,000 at the time, making them inaccessible to most households.

"People laughed," Cuban said. Now those same TVs cost a fraction of that price and HDTV is everywhere. The skeptics didn't just miss the boat—they denied the boat existed.

AI Isn't Smart, But It Makes You Smarter

Cuban's argument is that today's AI criticism makes the same mistake: focusing on current limitations instead of future trajectory. He doesn't see AI as some magical replacement for human intelligence. Instead, it's an amplifier.

"AI isn't smart," Cuban explained, but it "makes smart people smarter."

This isn't Cuban's first rodeo with disruptive technology. Through Microsolutions, he helped introduce local area networks. He built Audionet as an early streaming pioneer, then HDNet as one of the first high-definition television networks. More recently, he launched Cost Plus Drugs, which has upended prescription drug pricing.

The pattern is clear: Cuban spots technology that looks clunky today but will reshape markets tomorrow, then watches the establishment dismiss it until it's too late.

Even Shark Tank Agrees

Cuban isn't alone in this view. Kevin O'Leary, his fellow panelist on "Shark Tank," has called AI one of the most strategic investments for small business owners. O'Leary sees AI-driven customer service bots as a powerful competitive weapon for growth.

O'Leary has also warned that the biggest threat to the AI boom isn't hype or inflated valuations—it's a potential electricity shortage to power all this technology.

Cuban's message to businesses is simple: ignore AI at your own peril. History suggests the companies laughing now won't be around to laugh later.