3rd June 2026 - Link Blog
** Uber Caps Usage of AI Tools Like Claude Code to Manage Costs**. I wrote
the other dayabout Uber blowing its 2026 AI budget in four months, and how that wasn't particularly surprising given they would have set that budget in 2025, before anyone could have predicted how popular token-burning coding agents were about to become.
Natalie Lung for Bloomberg:
The rideshare giant is limiting all employees to $1,500 in monthly token spending per AI coding tool, an Uber spokesperson said in response to a Bloomberg News inquiry. That means spending on one tool doesn’t have a bearing on the budget for another. The limits, which have been instituted in recent months, only apply to agentic coding software such as Cursor or Anthropic PBC’s Claude Code.
A $1,500 monthly limit per tool strikes me as much more sensible than those tokenmaxxing leaderboards encouraging employees to compete for as much AI usage as possible, and as a rational policy response to over-spending.
It's also interesting in that it hints at a real dollar value for what Uber is getting out of these tools. If we assume two actively used tools per engineer that's $3,000 * 12 = $36,000 cap per engineer per year. Levels.fyi lists the median yearly compensation package for Uber software engineers in the USA at $330,000.
That means each employee's AI spending cap is ~11% of that median compensation package.
I noted that my own token usage comes to about $1,000/month against each of Anthropic and OpenAI - which currently costs me just $100 per provider thanks to their generous subsidized plans for individual subscribers - plans that are no longer available to larger companies like Uber.
That means if I were working at Uber I'd still have ~$500/month of tokens to spare for each of those tools, given my current usage patterns.
Recent articles #
Claude Opus 4.8: "a modest but tangible improvement"- 28th May 2026I think Anthropic and OpenAI have found product-market fit- 27th May 2026Notes on Pope Leo XIV's encyclical on AI- 25th May 2026