The new report “State of AI 2025” by Messari captures a sector growing simultaneously in three dimensions: adoption, investment, and computational capacity, with an impact that now transcends industrial, national, and political boundaries. Artificial intelligence is no longer an emerging technology but a structural force reshaping the global economy, geopolitical power, and digital infrastructures.
The result is a clear picture: AI is entering a phase of accelerated maturity, where competition no longer concerns just the models, but especially energy, hardware, data centers, and geostrategic alliances.
According to the report, AI is now present “everywhere, simultaneously.” The collected statistics show an unprecedented cross-sector adoption:
It is a contemporary, rapid, and cross-sectional adoption: a pattern not even seen in the early years of the internet.
The report confirms a clear trend: major American labs are accelerating towards an increasingly scale-oriented model.
Simultaneously, paid adoption is skyrocketing: from 5% of business users in 2023 to 44% in 2025, with retention close to 80%.
It’s no longer just hype: the market is paying to use AI.
One of the strongest chapters of the report concerns the geopolitical aspect. By 2025, the competition between the United States and China for AI leadership has become openly strategic.
On July 23, the White House unveiled “Winning the Race: America’s AI Action Plan”, a plan with over 90 initiatives to:
Simultaneously, the USA maintains and extends export controls towards China, limiting access to NVIDIA’s most advanced chips.
Three days later, China responded with the Global AI Governance Action Plan, focused on:
The USA focuses on private frontier models and the market.
China focuses on national capacity, controlled hardware, and vertical alignment.
It’s a two-speed race but with the same destination: AI sovereignty.
According to Messari, the competition is not about the models, but about the infrastructure.
Citigroup estimates that global spending on AI infrastructure will exceed 2.8 trillion dollars by 2029, aligning with NVIDIA’s forecast of 3–4 trillion by 2030.
Concrete examples:
We are witnessing the largest infrastructure expenditure in the history of software.
In Q3 2025:
It’s an unprecedented market capitalization. And it shows no signs of slowing down.
The report highlights a crucial point for those working in Web3:
Crypto does not “compete” with AI: it enables it.
In this new intelligence economy, blockchain becomes essential for:
The core of the report is precisely this: the future of AI will not be completely centralized nor entirely decentralized. It will be hybrid.
“State of AI 2025” does not merely describe a growing sector: it outlines a new industrial era.
And above all: AI becomes a national infrastructure, on par with electricity, internet, and defense.The next major frontier — which we will analyze in the second article of the series — concerns the growing demand for decentralization, privacy, verifiability, and coordination: the birth of Decentralized AI.



