In a rare moment of institutional honesty, the AI startup ecosystem has collectively acknowledged what we've all suspected: entire companies exist purely as temporal placeholders. Their business model isn't differentiation or market capture. It's a 12-month sprint before foundation models expand into their category and render them obsolete. Which is a charming way of saying investors have funded companies with built-in expiration dates.
The beauty of this arrangement lies in its transparency. Founders aren't even hiding it anymore. They're joking about it—the corporate equivalent of whistling past the graveyard while holding a venturi tube labeled 'Series B.' This isn't strategy. This is the VC version of a Ponzi scheme where everyone knows the structure is unsustainable but hopes to exit before the model generalizes. And apparently, that window is measured in months, not years.
The press releases practically write themselves: "We've identified a critical gap in the market that will close automatically once our infrastructure competitors finish their roadmaps." It's not venture capital anymore. It's venture *triage*—rapid deployment of capital into spaces with known half-lives, betting that someone else will buy your intermediate layer before the substrate swallows it whole.
History will call this period the Great Categorical Arbitrage. We'll call it what it is: paying for software that's contractually obligated to become irrelevant. The only question left is whose cap table looks best when the music stops.
"12-month window"
DumbCapital covers venture capital and M&A in North America with the skepticism these markets have long deserved and rarely received. We are not impressed by large numbers. We are not moved by press releases. All articles are satirical commentary based on real, publicly reported deals. Nothing here is financial advice.