Remember how many businesses who built their concepts around AI are struggling. All the chatbot tools that basically got killed by new updates, the web browser extensions that got killed by GPT updates, etc.
AI as a part of your business makes perfect sense. AI as your business is a dangerous game to play. Most AI apps are built on OpenAI API's right now, which isn't inherently bad, but please remember Apollo with Reddit. Took one price hike to kill a multi-million user app in a matter of months.
Tons of businesses are adding AI to their offerings, and doing great because of it. Hubspot, Hootsuite, Figma, Framer and plenty more, but they are real fully sustained businesses using it for extra functionality, not building their businesses around it.
My business makes use of AI, but if AI died tomorrow because of corporate intervention, the whole thing would still work wonderfully.
Think of all the businesses built on Blockchain and NFT tech that aren't around anymore because the hype died and the market decided they were worthless. Do I think that's going to happen to AI? No, but I don't think AI should be seen as this mystical thing we should run towards.
AI is the gold rush in the old west. Plenty of money to be made, but the most successful people are selling shovels.
If I was you I'd be hunting for a non-technical co-founder with either a marketing or finance background. A crap ton of people in software dev have this 'build it and they will come' mindset, I sorta did too back when I was a FSD, but since working in marketing at multiple SaaS startups, I've realised it really, really isn't true. There are so, so many good pieces of software out there with almost no users because they've got no idea how to communicate with their target audience. If you're a great developer, find someone who can get users for your platform and help with design and such along the way, you'll have a much better chance.