Surely those first to incorporate black powder into their military were unstoppable as they approached the first defenders who thought they'd be holding out through just another seige.
Surely those first to incorporate the computer into their business processes were unstoppable as they reaped the bounties of efficiency.
Surely those first to incorporate AI into their processes will stumble upon "ah-ha!" moments and ideas that blossom into the fruit of serendipity, hard work, and/or simply being in the right place at the right time.
Throughout the next months and a few years, AI will increasingly be integrated into all things online to the point that it will no longer be note-worthy in and of itself.
Software development is quickly losing its place as a barrier to entry to "just build the thing". Anyone will be able to prompt and build the thing they've always had an idea for. This used to be a moat.
I believe we're going to see the rise and fall of hot-right-now software products at lightning speeds as teams are simply out-prompted by the next to come up. Obviously, some will inevitably stick and succeed.
What are product/service moats after everyone can prompt and replicate what you're selling? There have always been moats; there will always be moats. The specifics of what's hard to replicate changes, as it always has, so what is next?
This answer is only going to be obvious in hindsight. Prompt and build and release and figure out the new moats as you go. They are there. The answer is waiting to be discovered still, I believe, as everyone at this point is racing to simply keep up (those who wish to stay on the cutting edge, that is).
There will still be moats. Who will find them?