Dario Amodei, the chief executive officer of Anthropic, warned that artificial intelligence (AI) power and wealth are concentrating rapidly among a small group of companies, raising concerns about economic and political influence.

On Tuesday, speaking on a podcast, Amodei said he feels “somewhat uncomfortable” with how quickly influence has accumulated in the AI industry, describing the shift as occurring “almost overnight” and “almost by accident.”

He compared today’s AI expansion to periods of extreme corporate concentration, noting that a small number of U.S. and Chinese labs now dominate advanced development.

“There’s a certain randomness to how a few people end up leading these companies that grow so fast,” Amodei said, adding that their power could soon shape large parts of the global economy.

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He also warned that AI advancement resembles an approaching “tsunami,” arguing that many people underestimate its impact.

Amodei has previously published an essay cautioning that unchecked growth could generate “personal fortunes well into the trillions” and outsized political leverage.

He and Anthropic’s cofounders have pledged to donate much of their wealth amid concerns about concentration.

Recent product releases and enterprise AI tools from major labs have triggered sharp market reactions, reflecting investor fears that traditional software businesses could face disruption as AI capabilities expand.

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Earlier, Meta Platforms Inc. (NASDAQ:META)  invested $65 million to support state politicians backing AI development, launching two super PACs to counter regulatory threats and influence policy amid rising scrutiny.

The spending marked its largest election-related push, reflecting efforts to shape rules affecting the industry.

Alphabet Inc.’s (NASDAQ:GOOG(NASDAQ:GOOGL) Google announced a $15 billion investment to expand AI infrastructure in India, building new subsea cables and a gateway to strengthen connectivity while partnering with the Indian government to train millions of public servants through its digital platform.

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Investor Kevin O’Leary argued that Europe’s strict regulations pushed innovators to the U.S., while pro-business policies in the United Arab Emirates accelerated its rise in AI.