CALIFORNIA: Someone forgot to set a spending limit. A company reportedly received a $500 million bill, equivalent to roughly Rs 4,770 crore, for a single month’s use of Anthropic’s Claude AI platform after failing to impose adequate controls on how employees were using it. The figure, cited by an AI consultant in a report by Axios, has sent a jolt through the enterprise technology world.
The mechanics were straightforward, if painfully expensive. The company had given employees access to Claude but put no effective usage caps in place. AI platforms charge based on token consumption, a measure of how much processing power each prompt and response requires. Enterprise plans include allocated usage, but when employees burn through that and keep going, the meter keeps running. In this case, it ran to a reported $500 million in 30 days.
The incident has landed at an awkward moment for the AI industry. Companies are already beginning to ask harder questions about whether the productivity gains from AI tools justify ballooning costs. Microsoft is reportedly winding down most of its Claude Code licences, planning to migrate users to an internal platform by June 30. Uber has said it exhausted its entire annual AI budget within the first five months of the year.
The story has also reignited a debate sparked by Nvidia’s chief executive Jensen Huang, who has publicly argued that engineers should be consuming AI tokens heavily and that he would worry if highly paid engineers were not doing so. The $500 million bill is, in a sense, that philosophy taken to its logical and ruinous extreme.
The case has become a reference point online, with some drawing comparisons to the reckless financial excess depicted in the film The Big Short. The analogy is imperfect but the underlying concern is not: if companies cannot govern how their employees spend on AI, the costs could compound in ways that are difficult to unwind.
In the AI gold rush, it turns out, the real risk is not moving too slowly. It is leaving the tap running.

