Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says AI tokenmaxxing is costly: "I'm a tokenmaxxer too, it's addictive."
The executive wants staffers to rethink how they use frontier AI models to solve problems.
It's no secret that Microsoft has heavily integrated generative AI across its tech stack following its multi-billion-dollar partnership with OpenAI. Even Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella revealed that the company writes up to 30% of its code using the technology.
In a recent interview at The New York Times' "Hard Fork" podcast, co-host Casey Newton asked Satya Nadella how much tokenmaxxing is happening at Microsoft (via Business Insider).
For context, tokenmaxxing refers to a workplace phenomenon where productivity is measured by the number of tokens processed, particularly in tasks involving artificial intelligence.
In response to the question, the executive indicated that the company indulges in "a lot" of tokenmaxxing.
This development follows Microsoft’s announcement that all employee Claude Code licenses will be terminated effective June 30, as the company accelerates its transition to GitHub Copilot CLI.
Several reports suggest the push may have a financial motive, given that Microsoft’s fiscal year ends on June 30. The company could be encouraging employees to adopt its in-house offering to reduce operational costs.
I'm a tokenmaxxer too, it's addictive. But you have to step back when the novelty wears off to say, 'What is it that I'm trying to create?'
Microsoft CEO, Satya Nadella
While the company has been outright championing the incorporation of AI into the employees' workforce, the bills are piling up quickly. In case you missed it, a mysterious corporation blew $500 million in a single month on Claude AI after forgetting to set usage limits for Claude licenses for employees.
Interestingly, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella didn't categorically indicate that the company was capping employees' AI usage. Instead, he revealed that the staffers are encouraged to use the right model for the job.
Nadella did not say Microsoft is limiting employees' AI use, but he said workers should use the right model for the job. "Don't use frontier models for non-frontier problems," the executive added.
He pointed to Microsoft Copilot’s Auto Mode as the ideal tool for this scenario, since it automatically selects the model best suited for the specific task at hand. "Let's kind of match these things such that you get the outputs, you get the economics; it can't be a race to doing things that just don't add value."
As it happens, Microsoft is reportedly limiting the use of Claude Fable 5 because of Anthropic's new data retention requirements, citing data protection concerns.
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Kevin Okemwa is a seasoned tech journalist based in Nairobi, Kenya with lots of experience covering the latest trends and developments in the industry at Windows Central. With a passion for innovation and a keen eye for detail, he has written for leading publications such as OnMSFT, MakeUseOf, and Windows Report, providing insightful analysis and breaking news on everything revolving around the Microsoft ecosystem. While AFK and not busy following the ever-emerging trends in tech, you can find him exploring the world or listening to music.
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