Part I: The 2026 Hotel Yearbook Begins with a Philosophical Question
One does not expect a hospitality technology publication to open with E.T.A. Hoffmann, Freud, Lacan, Hegel, Octavio Paz, and Mark Fisher. Yet that is precisely how Simone Puorto frames the 2026 HOTEL Yearbook: Technology Edition – AI. Rather than introducing artificial intelligence through software, automation, or operational efficiency, he begins with a more fundamental proposition. Before discussing what AI will do to hotels, we must first ask what it does to the idea of hospitality itself. It is an ambitious opening, and an appropriate place to begin this series.
The purpose of this and upcoming essays is neither to review nor to rebut the contributors to the Yearbook. It is to map the intellectual terrain they collectively define. Every contribution will be approached in the same way. What question is the author attempting to answer? What central idea emerges? What does that idea contribute to the wider conversation? And where does its natural boundary suggest the next question should be asked?
Puorto’s essay asks perhaps the broadest question of all. His concern is not whether artificial intelligence can improve hospitality, but whether the distinction between human and machine remains meaningful once increasingly intelligent systems begin performing tasks that have traditionally defined human service. By introducing the concept of the “Reverse Uncanny Valley,” he extends the discussion beyond automation and into identity, suggesting that the greater risk may not be machines becoming more human, but humans becoming progressively more machine-like.
This is an important contribution because it shifts the conversation from implementation to philosophy. It reminds us that hospitality has always been more than a collection of operational processes; it is also a relationship built upon trust, recognition, and the experience of being welcomed by another person. The essay’s natural boundary is equally clear. Its attention remains focused on intelligence as it becomes embedded within the hotel itself. Hotels adopt AI. Employees work alongside AI. Hospitality organizations redefine service through AI. The guest, however, remains largely the recipient of these transformations.
That observation does not weaken the argument. It simply reveals the next question. What happens when intelligence also becomes embedded within the traveler?
The emergence of persistent personal AI suggests that hospitality may soon contain two independent centers of intelligence: one operating on behalf of the enterprise and another operating exclusively on behalf of the guest. If Puorto asks how artificial intelligence changes the host, the next stage of the conversation may ask how it changes the guest—and what happens when those two forms of intelligence begin negotiating with one another. That, perhaps, is where the next map begins.
A Second Center of Intelligence
One of the strengths of Puorto’s foreword lies in its willingness to treat artificial intelligence as a philosophical problem rather than simply another technological innovation. Throughout his essay, the reader is invited to consider what becomes of hospitality when increasingly intelligent systems begin performing tasks that have traditionally defined human service. The resulting discussion is not about software or automation as such, but about identity, authenticity, and the increasingly uncertain boundary separating human interaction from artificial simulation. It is an ambitious framework because it asks readers to think beyond implementation and toward first principles.
Yet the argument also reveals, almost naturally, the next question. Throughout the foreword, intelligence remains embedded within the hospitality enterprise. Hotels deploy increasingly sophisticated systems to support employees, personalize guest experiences, optimize operations, and automate complex decisions. The hotel becomes progressively more intelligent, while the guest remains largely the recipient of that intelligence. This perspective is entirely consistent with the purpose of the Yearbook, which seeks to explore how artificial intelligence is reshaping hospitality from within.
What receives comparatively little attention, however, is the possibility that an equally significant transformation may be occurring outside the enterprise itself. Artificial intelligence is no longer developing exclusively inside organizations. Increasingly, it is developing alongside individuals. Personal AI systems are evolving far beyond conversational assistants into persistent companions capable of remembering years of travel, understanding deeply personal preferences, comparing competing destinations, negotiating reservations, verifying sustainability claims, interpreting reviews, translating languages, and filtering enormous quantities of information long before a traveler arrives at a booking page.
Hospitality may therefore be approaching a future in which two independent centers of intelligence coexist within every guest relationship. One resides within the enterprise, helping hotels optimize operations, personalize service, and support decision-making. The other increasingly accompanies the traveler, acting as a persistent representative that interprets information, evaluates alternatives, negotiates outcomes, and continuously learns from experience. Neither intelligence controls the other, yet both engage with the same journey from fundamentally different perspectives. Understanding how those two forms of intelligence interact may ultimately prove as important as understanding either one individually.
This possibility is no longer merely speculative. As Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman has argued, the future of artificial intelligence is likely to be defined by persistent personal companions that develop enduring relationships with their users rather than isolated conversational exchanges. Building on that vision, hospitality may soon confront what might be described as companion intelligence, or AI that does far more than answer questions. It develops continuity. It remembers, learns, negotiates, evaluates, and ultimately represents the long-term interests of one individual across months and years rather than across isolated prompts. Such systems will not simply help travelers find hotels. Increasingly, they may help determine which hotels deserve their trust.
From Enterprise Intelligence to Guest Sovereignty
Much of today’s discussion surrounding artificial intelligence in hospitality understandably concentrates on making organizations more intelligent. Revenue management systems anticipate demand with increasing precision. Predictive maintenance reduces operational disruptions. Recommendation engines personalize marketing. Recruitment platforms assist hiring managers, while conversational interfaces support both employees and guests. Each development contributes to a more capable and responsive enterprise, and together they represent one of the most significant technological transformations the industry has experienced in decades. Our own research begins where that conversation naturally leads.
As personal artificial intelligence matures, informational power begins shifting toward the individual traveler. The guest no longer depends exclusively upon search engines, online travel agencies, loyalty programs, influencer recommendations, or even brand marketing to make informed decisions. Instead, a persistent personal AI accumulates knowledge throughout an individual’s lifetime of travel, continuously comparing promises with lived experience and evaluating organizations through evidence gathered across thousands of interactions rather than isolated transactions.
This shift carries implications extending well beyond technology. For more than two decades, hospitality has competed within what might be described as the search economy, where visibility largely determined opportunity. Hotels invested heavily in search engine optimization, digital advertising, online reputation management, social media engagement, and distribution because success depended upon being discovered. Artificial intelligence will undoubtedly alter those mechanisms, but it may also change something far more fundamental. As intelligent personal agents become increasingly capable of conducting research, negotiating options, and filtering information independently, discoverability itself gradually loses its position as the industry’s primary competitive advantage.
Puorto’s reference to Mark Fisher’s concept of the “gothic flatline” offers an intriguing lens through which to view this transition. Fisher described a cultural landscape in which long-established distinctions gradually lose their certainty, where categories once considered stable begin to dissolve under the pressures of technological and social change. Applied to hospitality, that observation extends beyond the increasingly fluid boundary between human and artificial service. It also invites us to reconsider another distinction that has shaped hospitality for decades: the separation between marketing and operational reality. As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly capable of comparing institutional narratives with years of accumulated evidence, hotels themselves become progressively more transparent to the systems acting on behalf of travelers.
What replaces the search economy is therefore not simply another marketing discipline but an entirely different form of competition. Artificial intelligence representing individual travelers will not merely ask whether a hotel can be found; it will increasingly evaluate whether that hotel deserves to be recommended. Operational consistency, employee retention, verified sustainability practices, service recovery, regulatory compliance, local reputation, organizational transparency, and the accumulated experience of thousands of previous guests all become part of a continuously evolving trust model that no advertising campaign can permanently overcome.
If this transition continues, hospitality may find itself moving beyond a search economy toward what might more accurately be described as a trust economy. Hotels will still compete for visibility, but increasingly they will compete for something considerably more valuable: the confidence of intelligence acting exclusively in the interests of the guest. That possibility does not contradict Puorto’s philosophical framework. On the contrary, it extends it by suggesting that the future of hospitality may be shaped not simply by increasingly intelligent hotels, but by increasingly intelligent guests whose artificial companions redefine the relationship between service, trust, and human choice.
Next in the series: “Preface I: The PostHuman Traveler: Redefining the Guest” by futurist and transhumanist, Zoltan Istvan
About This Series
Mapping Hospitality’s AI Future is not a review of the HOTEL Yearbook or any other volume. It is an exploration of the ideas shaping hospitality’s AI future. Each installment identifies the question an author is asking, the contribution they make to the field, the boundaries of their thesis, and the next question their work naturally invites. Our purpose is not to critique individual contributors but to understand the emerging intellectual landscape—and to explore where it may lead next.