Employees Are Using Their Jobs’ Super-Expensive AI Tokens for the Most Hilariously Pointless Tasks Imaginable
TL;DR
Futurism frames „tokenmaxxing“ as a new office habit: companies push employees to use AI tools heavily in the hope of raising productivity and cutting costs. At fintech company Slash, one employee reportedly burned 80,000 dollars in AI credits while vibe-coding a mediocre meme-themed shooter game. At Accenture, internal data reportedly shows non-engineers driving much of the token usage, including tasks like converting PDFs into PowerPoint decks.
Nauti's Take
This is not a cute story about silly employees. It is a stress test for AI rollouts with no cost logic.
If tokens become the productivity KPI, you get token theater. Builders need utility, budget guardrails, and ownership in the workflow, or demo hunger eats the margin.
Briefingshow
The story highlights a real tension in enterprise AI: usage is easy to measure, but value is much harder to prove. When companies demand „AI everywhere,“ employees can optimize for activity rather than outcomes. Expensive token bills make that gap visible very quickly.