More than a decade later, that assumption looks increasingly outdated.
The technologies that sparked global outrage during the early 2010s now appear relatively modest when compared with the capabilities emerging from today’s artificial intelligence industry. Modern AI systems can analyze text, images, audio, video, purchasing habits, behavioral patterns, and vast streams of real-time information at a scale that would have seemed almost unimaginable only a few years ago. More importantly, these systems are no longer experimental. They are becoming part of the infrastructure that powers modern society.
This is the uncomfortable backdrop against which the mini-documentary “The Horror Of AI That The Elites Are Hiding From You” attempts to tell its story. The title is undeniably dramatic, perhaps intentionally so, but beneath the sensational framing lies a question that has become increasingly difficult to dismiss in 2026: are we paying enough attention to the long-term consequences of the AI revolution currently unfolding around us?
Rather than focusing on science-fiction scenarios involving conscious machines or robot uprisings, the film concentrates on something far more plausible. Its creators argue that the greatest risks associated with artificial intelligence will not arrive through a single catastrophic event. There will be no obvious moment when society suddenly realizes that everything has changed. Instead, the transformation is likely to occur gradually, through thousands of small decisions that seem reasonable in isolation but become far more significant when viewed collectively.
History suggests that major technological revolutions often unfold in exactly this way. Few people recognized the long-term implications of social media during its earliest years. Most users simply enjoyed the ability to communicate more easily with friends and family. Only later did society begin confronting questions about misinformation, political polarization, algorithmic influence, and digital addiction. The internet itself followed a similar trajectory. What initially appeared to be a communication tool eventually reshaped commerce, journalism, entertainment, education, and politics.
Artificial intelligence may represent an even larger shift because it is not confined to a single industry. It is simultaneously influencing healthcare, finance, transportation, education, law enforcement, media, software development, scientific research, and national security. Unlike previous technologies, AI is not merely changing how people communicate or consume information. It is increasingly involved in analyzing information, making recommendations, generating content, and assisting with decisions that affect millions of lives.
What makes this transition particularly unusual is that much of it remains invisible.
Most people never see the algorithms that determine which content appears in their feeds. They do not observe the systems screening job applications before a recruiter reviews them. They rarely encounter the predictive models that influence advertising, credit assessments, fraud detection, or consumer recommendations. They experience the outcomes without seeing the machinery that produces them.
The documentary argues that this invisibility is one of the defining characteristics of the AI age. Previous centers of power were relatively easy to identify. Factories dominated industrial economies. Television networks shaped mass media. Banks influenced financial systems. Artificial intelligence, by contrast, operates quietly behind interfaces that appear simple on the surface while relying on infrastructure of extraordinary complexity beneath.
Over the past year, analysts have repeatedly revised upward their estimates for AI-related spending. Gartner now projects global IT spending to exceed $6.3 trillion in 2026, with data center systems representing one of the fastest-growing segments of the entire technology industry. Spending on data center infrastructure alone is expected to approach $788 billion this year as companies race to build the computational capacity required for increasingly advanced AI systems.
The numbers are difficult to comprehend because they extend beyond traditional software investment. What is taking place is a physical transformation of infrastructure. New facilities are being constructed around the world to house specialized processors, networking equipment, cooling systems, and energy infrastructure capable of supporting AI workloads that continue growing in size and complexity. Goldman Sachs recently estimated that spending by a handful of major technology companies could exceed $5 trillion by the end of the decade, highlighting the extraordinary scale of the race now underway.