Trying to hype up investors, yes! It's exactly why we keep seeing features that nobody wants in goods and services nowadays.
Capitalism is supposed to maximize efficiency and do everything it can to make the consumers happy. But we have reached a point where the "meta" isn't that anymore. It really never was, really. But with corporations becoming so big they dominate world markets, it has become complety shameless about it.
Eh, making customers happy is absolutely still a thing, but it only really applies to smaller companies. Small companies win through superior service, large companies win by being the default option. Once a company is the default option, it comes down to how much profit the company can extract.
The problem isn't capitalism, but all of the rules both explicit and implicit that benefit large companies over smaller companies. Very rarely does a small company lose due to not having economies of scale (does happen though), usually it's because of startup costs, and those go up substantially when there's a large player because of all the barriers in place. For example, ISPs will sue to prevent newcomers from getting established. If you don't have deep pockets, there are many industries you just can't get started in.
It used to be that large companies could fail if they royally mess up, but now get just get bailed out. Or they buy their competition so they don't need to innovate. Or they sue their competitors so they can't compete. The problem isn't capitalism itself, the problem is all the nonsense that protects those with more and allows them to bully those with less. The problem is ineffective government.
The problems you see in government are the problems caused by capitalism through regulatory capture.
Not to mention that there are plenty of inherent problems with capitalism since it just doesn't work for products bought e.g. only once or twice in your life or where the quality can otherwise not be judged by the buyer before buying.
Open AI‘s newest model is priced at 200 $ / month since they have been bleeding money and desperately need to earn some cash. This is probably the first sign of the bubble collapsing.
I use various models on a daily basis (as a software/infrastructure developer), and can say that the reason they are able to sell AI is that it's really useful.
Like any tool, you have to work with its strengths and weaknesses, and it's very much a matter of "shit in, shit out."
For example, it can easily get confused with complicated requests, so they must be narrowly focused. Breaking large problems down into smaller ones is a normal part of problem solving, so this doesn't detract from its utility.
Also, it sometimes just makes shit up, so it's absolutely necessary to thoroughly test everything it outputs. Test-driven development has been around for a long time, so that's not really a problem either.
It's more of a booksmart intern assistant than a professional software engineer, but used in this way it's a great productivity booster.