Close Menu
  • Home
  • AI
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Food Health
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Well Being

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

What's Hot

Jensen Huang Says Comparing China Chip Sales to Nukes Is ‘Lunacy’

April 16, 2026

Google is now targeting bad ads over bad actors

April 16, 2026

Runway CEO says AI could help Hollywood make 50 films instead of one $100M blockbuster

April 16, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
IQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter YouIQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter You
  • Home
  • AI
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Food Health
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Well Being
IQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter YouIQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter You
Home » Box CEO Uses Slack Channel to Monitor AI Use, Not Leaderboard
Tech

Box CEO Uses Slack Channel to Monitor AI Use, Not Leaderboard

IQ TIMES MEDIABy IQ TIMES MEDIAApril 16, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Box CEO Aaron Levie wouldn’t be surprised if his engineers set up a tokenmaxxing leaderboard.

Loading audio narration…

“Honestly, they might exist,” he told Business Insider. “I just don’t know that it’s gone super viral across the entire company yet.”

Levie wouldn’t be against it, per se. He said the trend — in which engineers race against each other to spend as many AI tokens as possible — is a “fun, novel thing” that leads in the right direction. It will push AI agents to their limits, he said, and find the biggest productivity gains.

Token rankings are the new hot-button topic in Big Tech. One Meta employee made a “Claudeonomics” leaderboard with titles like “Token Legend” before it was shut down, The Information reported. OpenAI also has a token leaderboard, according to The New York Times. A token is a measurement of computing that determines how AI use is priced; large language models break words into numerical inputs, treating each token as roughly ¾ of a word.

At the cloud storage company Box, Levie does track token spending, including at the employee level, but “we don’t celebrate tokenmaxxing in the same way,” he said. “But we are focused entirely on increasing the rate of product velocity and increasing the scope of our product roadmap as our major goal.”

He has other ways to discern which of his engineers are AI power users. Box has a Slack channel where people share their best practices for AI coding, Levie said, which already generally correlates with who uses agents the most.

The CEO wants them to use agents, and use them a lot. (Box sells enterprise AI agents.) It won’t only be engineers employing agents soon, Levie said; the tech will hit fields like marketing, finance, and law.

“You need to really start to figure out where can you get leverage from this new form of abundance of intelligence,” he said. “Tokenmaxxing is the extreme way.”

Allocating those agents (and their associated tokens) is another question. 90% of of the economy cannot tokenmaxx like Meta or a VC-fueled startup, Levie said.

“That’s the new frontier of things that enterprises have to think about,” he said.

Levie had heard several different strategies for token allocation. He described one unnamed company that had “Shark Tank”-style pitches for computing budget. (Levie declined to disclose the name of this company, as it was a Box customer.) Employees must ask for funding, test whether it works, and then scale it up, he said.

Other examples Levie said he had heard gave their most productive fields more powerful models, like Opus 4.6 and GPT 5.4. “You get more efficient and cheaper models down the stack through the organization,” he said.

Companies are “heat-seeking missiles” for productivity, he added. They’ll find the areas that need the tokens most.

But, no, Levie doesn’t plan to create his own corporate leaderboard and give out prizes.

“There’ll be a lot of hilarious outcomes that will exist around that idea,” he said. “You’ll have people spending budgets on completely ridiculous things.”



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
IQ TIMES MEDIA
  • Website

Related Posts

Jensen Huang Says Comparing China Chip Sales to Nukes Is ‘Lunacy’

April 16, 2026

Companies Announcing Layoffs Are Citing AI in Most Unoriginal Ways

April 16, 2026

The Booming Data Center Industry Is on Defense As It Faces Growing Pushback

April 16, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Video shows Oklahoma high school principal tackling gunman

April 15, 2026

Brain cancer stops new University of Michigan president from job

April 15, 2026

Student opens fire in Turkey school classrooms, killing 4

April 15, 2026

Greeks and Turks square off over ownership of ancient, healing soup

April 15, 2026
Education

Video shows Oklahoma high school principal tackling gunman

By IQ TIMES MEDIAApril 15, 20260

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Newly released video shows a high school principal in Oklahoma tackling…

Brain cancer stops new University of Michigan president from job

April 15, 2026

Student opens fire in Turkey school classrooms, killing 4

April 15, 2026

Greeks and Turks square off over ownership of ancient, healing soup

April 15, 2026
IQ Times Media – Smart News for a Smarter You
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2026 iqtimes. Designed by iqtimes.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.