| ▲ | Sam Altman and Dario Amodei are both walking back AI jobs apocalypse predictions(fortune.com) |
| 111 points by ianrahman 3 hours ago | 89 comments |
| |
|
| ▲ | tunesmith 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] |
| Unfortunately it will take longer for our bosses to walk it back. I feel like I'm fighting the battle daily, telling execs what kind of work LLMs do not replace... it's very slippery, they keep on doing the rhetorical texas two-step - I don't think they even realize they're doing it. We communicate that LLM is amplifying, they hear it can replace. "No, we need humans to help with specs" "But AI can help with that." "But only help, they can't come up with the idea." "Sure they can, we can just ask them." It's also amazing how hidden some of these realities were before. Like, you assign a ticket to a developer - in the past they just wanted to know the developer was working on it and didn't care so much which work was what. They'd probably be so surprised to find out that a large percentage of implementation was deriving exactly what was meant by the jira ticket or the specification or the product person's intent. Which is all the stuff you have to work on before you can type in a prompt to an LLM. But now there's this pressure to believe that the developers only do the implementation part that the LLMs do, so they can pretend there will be major efficiency improvements. And it's really hard to explain to them what it is that developers even do. I know I'm not saying anything new here, but at least where I'm working all of these matters feel much more present than they did months ago. |
| |
| ▲ | chrsw an hour ago | parent | next [-] | | Companies only want to spend money on AI in order to save more money somewhere else. So if LLMs make some tasks easier but overall don't make a big dent on shipping dates because of all the friction points you mentioned, and more, then it will be difficult to justify buying all these tokens. Even if the shipping timelines are the same but the quality goes up that still could be hard to justify token spend too. | | |
| ▲ | fg3fg 41 minutes ago | parent [-] | | Earnings growth, cash flows and valuation. Thats all the management at firms care about. Sorry for all the dev's here who rant about productivity gains but forget what matters to who employs them in the first place! | | |
| ▲ | TheOtherHobbes 16 minutes ago | parent [-] | | But it's not going to happen. There may be some localised productivity gains, but in many of these businesses cracks will appear over the next 6-12 months as an all-AI pipeline becomes unfeasibly expensive and there's no corresponding earnings growth. These CEOs have no clue how their companies work. They're in the driving seat of a machine they don't understand, they've been sold corporate FSD, they've turned it on like kids playing with a shiny toy, and they're about to discover it's been oversold, underbudgeted, and doesn't work yet. |
|
| |
| ▲ | datakan an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | It tells you a lot about your execs and how little they care, either for their employees or their customers. The quarterly profits are their God and they will worship at the altar of the stock price. Instead of finding ways to make AI enhance their employees and make them more productive, they immediately jump to ways to eliminate employees. It's the opposite of a growth mentallity. I'd love for these executives to show me a time when investing in people was the wrong choice. I've never seen a company punished for doing the right thing, caring for humans and providing a good work environment. This suicidal tendency in the corporate world to constantly decimate your workforce every cycle is just mind boggling and the fact the stock market responds to it so positively is horrifying. | | |
| ▲ | tunesmith 2 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | | I think there's something else psychological going on. What you describe is a rational approach based off of bad values. But I think I'm also seeing something weirdly irrational. It's like an (emotional) depression or something. Scarcity thinking, the inability to think expansively. People are so sure that everything around them is shrinking that they feel an instinct to hunker down, shrink, and cut as well. Like it doesn't occur to them that they don't have to feel that way. The execs I work with, none of them strike me as spreadsheet-driven greedy people. They seem more freaked out than that. | |
| ▲ | ravenstine 36 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | They have no reason to care in globalized cultures that are morally bankrupt and have no sense of citizenry to feel any amount of allegiance to. Business leaders were never perfect, but things are at least different when you have a sense that when you treat your employees and customers unfairly that you are treating your extended friends and family unfairly. The atomization of everything means that sense that your business is a part of your own community is pretty much gone. In a society with a decreasingly coherent morality, nothing matters more than cash flow, and there are many ways to make cash flow besides making a good product at a fair price. In an immoral society, leadership benefits from attributed success but suffers not from its failures. Society has given up on accountability beyond a certain scale. The petite bourgeoisie might be punished for misleading the public or screwing its employees, but beyond that it seems we let leaders get away with quite a bit. And why wouldn't they want to eliminate employees? That's their wet dream! Many business leaders don't see employees as their asset. To them, employees are a necessary evil. If anything, the employer-employee relationship is inherently adversarial. The idea that C-level execs could one day simply talk to an AI and, boom, there's a business with cash flow and no employees, is too attractive for them to pass up, even if the chance is high it doesn't work out. At a personal level, these people have already made their money and are merely there to make more of it. What happens when AI doesn't work out for them and they still need employees? Either they get a pay raise anyway or they get let go and keep their mansions. If they erroneously let a bunch of employees go, then great, they can replace those roles with cheaper workers overseas working remotely. If AI itself can't take the blame for domestic workers losing their jobs, then they can point the finger at Anthropic and OpenAI. Modern workplace hierarchy depends highly on the diffusion of blame, and AI fits into that paradigm by introducing an entirely new dimension to that blame diffusion. | | |
| ▲ | ryandrake 24 minutes ago | parent [-] | | These businesses don't see themselves as corporeal parts of the world or as part of their physical, local community. They see themselves as intangible entities - bytes in the ether, spreadsheets, lacking physical substance or matter, immaterial ghosts owned by shareholders. Every other physical thing in the world, living or not, that is not a shareholder's wallet, is a resource to be used, exploited, mined, and discarded. The Holy Grail is a business that exists without costs, employees, property, equipment, products, or even a physical location--just a virtual blob that increases a share price forever. That's ultimately the (in reality unachievable) goal end-state everyone is trying to at least approach. |
| |
| ▲ | heathrow83829 an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | i think it's more about cutting costs. Usually, cutting costs when there is opportunity to do so is a lot easier than growing revenue. | |
| ▲ | andy99 an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | | I've never seen a company punished for doing the right thing, caring for humans and providing a good work environment.
We’ll see how this goes over but I disagree. You don’t have to look hard in tech, especially a few years ago, to find groups of coddled “workers”, doing very little or at least doing what they want instead of what a business and customers want. This paradoxically ended up creating toxic work environments, and making it impossible to actually get work out of people. We’re seeing a correction now. | | |
| ▲ | ravenstine 32 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | | > You don’t have to look hard in tech, especially a few years ago, to find groups of coddled “workers”, doing very little And whose fault is that? When employers create "fun" workplaces, value optics over excellence, disempower management, and maintain the status quo by the diffusion of blame, what sort of employees should they expect to have? I argue that it is not the fault of lazy workers but employers who encourage and tolerate lazy workers who are getting away blame-free. But the message is that it's always the fault of peons rather than the higher rungs of the hierarchy. | |
| ▲ | treis an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | This tracks and IMHO some of the disconnect between technology innovation and productivity is that engineers are soaking up the excess by working less. They're not banging out more code/functionality because by and large that isn't rewarded | |
| ▲ | skydhash an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | | Good work environment is not coddling workers. It’s hard to discuss with people who believe taking care of your employees is catering to their caprices (or more likely, what YOU think they would like) |
|
| |
| ▲ | FloorEgg an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | That's exactly right. I hav set up a system where customer success and sales can drop in artifacts of customers talking about what they value (emails, transcripts, etc) and skills analyS them and then use them to add context to issues in the backlog. The idea is that everything in the backlog is tied to an explanation of who it benefits and how it benefits them. We're using AI to merge multiple sources and automate the writing of it. The hope is it streamlines that communication. Our backlog issues now are 3-4 pages that explain very clearly why the issue matters, what it's higher level goal is, etc. At first engineering was like "woa that's a lot of text" but after reading it was then "that's the best written issue I've ever seen". Okay, so cool we are streamlining product management and setting ourselves up to automate customer feedback to development pipeline, dramatically cutting down on that issue discernment bottleneck you're pointing at... ..except today I found an issue with critical hallucinations in it. It mixed up what the customer said and what the cs rep said, to the extent that the issue was just straight up incorrect. This was with Opus 3.7 extended thinking. (Mind you it was a big transcript and pushing the limits of context window, loading multiple skills, etc) So there's some serious potential, but it's just not there yet. Even if all this works flawlessly, the context these models can hold at once is like 0.1% of what a human can (if not less). So we will still need the humans for quite a while to make the harder decisions. This is in a very leading edge startup pushing the limits of what LLMs can do... And even in this context optimized for LLM success it's still no where close to replacing people. We get a ton of value out of LLMs, but let me clarify that the hold up isn't just fact checking, it goes way beyond that. In some ways I keep thinking it comes down to context management. Humans can hold so many orders of magnitude more context. Context is the bottleneck. The tech is a long way off being capable enough, and even when it is, there will be lots of operational and cultural obstacles to getting the right context into the AI. And then there is the jevons paradox consideration... It feels like we are a long way off. It seems plausible a generation from now employment will look very different, and I can kind of grasp how we get there, but I'm extremely skeptical of any unemployment apocalypse on a 5 year time horizon being triggered by AI. Maybe an unrelated economic shock, but not AI. | |
| ▲ | crystal_revenge an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | | > "But only help, they can't come up with the idea." "Sure they can, we can just ask them." I've had multiple instances now where AI left to it's own devices has solved a tricky problem that I honestly didn't think it was capable of. I routinely have them design their own experiment loops, learn from each round and iterate on the process. Multiple times it has lead to a needle moving change with no need for human intervention. There are, of course, many cases where this is not true, but they're certainly more capable than I had previously thought and can solve an increasingly large range of problems on their own. Reading the comments here is like glimpsing in to either the past or an alternate timeline. There's tons of inertia in the system so don't expect change to happen over night, but reading "AI won't replace jobs" today feels a lot like when I used to hear "nobody will purchase things online!" back in the mid 1990s. | | |
| ▲ | tunesmith 14 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | | > I've had multiple instances now where AI left to it's own devices has solved a tricky problem that I honestly didn't think it was capable of. Who cares that you've had multiple instances? Everyone has had multiple instances. The question is whether that happens in EVERY instance. Because when someone's laid off, that's what the exec believes, that the person isn't needed at all. I'm not arguing that AI won't replace jobs - it's clear that jobs are already disappearing "because of AI". I'm not even arguing that it is immoral (even though it is). I'm arguing that it is short-sighted and unwise. | |
| ▲ | adamiscool8 an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Can you give a specific example, ideally that would not have been solved by people-hours amounting to less than the token costs? | |
| ▲ | smallnix an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | > I routinely have them design their own experiment loops, Exactly, so that's the person required in the dev loop. You directed it, a person. | |
| ▲ | r4dd an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | | These posts are so boring lmao. if you really believe this, quit the yapping and concentrate your portfolio for direct and indirect exposure to all frontier AI projects. |
|
|
|
| ▲ | aresant an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| This is an absolutely classic PR "submarine" effort to reframe the impact of AI Paul Graham has mandatory essay on this - https://www.paulgraham.com/submarine.html (1) More than 50% of Americans at this point are more concerned about AI than excited for it - https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2026/03/12/key-findi... (2) Popular media is feeding into this zeitgeist with headlines like - "Prepare for an AI jobs apocalypse" eg - https://www.economist.com/leaders/2026/05/14/prepare-for-an-... (3) There is a bright line between these articles and growing concern / pushback on the development of new data centers with both moratoriums and significant municipal cancellations. (4) Perhaps more materially the architects of AI are being challenged directly - in April Sam Altman's home was (a) bombed and then (b) shot at and weeks later the entire industry was just taken to task by The Pope! himself calling for acknowledgement of human limitation, grace, and dignity. (5) Meanwhile Sam and others are reframing including launching a new foundation to "increase quality of life and individual freedoms for people around the world" and pivoting messaging to AI "accelerating everyone in achieving their goals" https://x.com/sama/status/2059677202917331431 & https://x.com/sama/status/2057218997503086888 Is this because the architects don't believe AI will be as disruptive as planned or . . . ? |
| |
| ▲ | margalabargala 16 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | | It'll be disruptive, but not apocalyptic. Some classes of jobs common today will be eliminated, while more will grow. Overall productivity will increase, but it'll suck for the people made obsolete. Certainly it will not result in most people working fewer hours. Source: see the adoption of computers/databases across previously pen-and-paper industries 50 years ago. That was more disruptive than this will be. | |
| ▲ | watwut 4 minutes ago | parent | prev [-] | | The most maddening thing is that in our current timeline, the more obviously you lie and bullshit, the more you get rewarded. And winners can lie and bullshit with even less pushback, creating deadly cycle. |
|
|
| ▲ | resfirestar 17 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Implicit in a lot of "AI jobs apocalypse" predictions is the assumption that most tasks are ridiculously easy compared to AI research, so naturally the smart AI researchers can understand any profession well enough to credibly predict that AI will be able to replace it. I'm personally not sure the apocalypse has been truly disproven as opposed to progress just being slower than some of the overexuberant predictions, but there does seem to be a pattern of famous AI researchers predicting a job would be automated and turning out to be wrong because they focused too hard on a single aspect of it that could be automated while handwaving or ignoring the hard parts. This has prominently happened with radiology, then with customer service, and now they are walking back on programming too. Maybe take these guys with a grain of salt going forward? I trust them to be able to tell us frontier AI models will keep getting better, not to predict the impact that will have on specific industries. Some people will insist we should give them half credit for predicting there would be impact at all (as opposed to the "it's a bubble" refrain) but I think it should be possible to ignore two categories of obviously dumb predictions at the same time. |
|
| ▲ | blitzar 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| They won't be trillionaires with that attitude. They could have kept saying the line "Ai will replace all the jobs by the end of the year" for another 20 years. |
| |
| ▲ | beepbopboopp 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | If you think there is even a 2% chance you're going to need a government bailout over the next decade, you simply cant be calling your product the grim reaper. | | |
| ▲ | pessimizer 10 minutes ago | parent [-] | | Especially when the chance they'll get that bailout is around 99.9999999%. That bag has already been got. Doesn't matter if AI ultimately turns out to be useless for anything but children's toys because the productivity it adds to IT work is exactly offset by the amount of bugs it both adds and has to find. The psychopaths that are pushing it will be arguing over who gets to be president of the world in 2044. This arguing will not be done in any public forum, but over a grouptext. |
| |
| ▲ | eloisius an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | “Companies that use AI well will replace the ones that don’t” I’d type that in alternating caps but I’m on mobile. | | | |
| ▲ | citrin_ru an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | A significant job loss will trigger a deep recession which will eventually hit most AI customers so they will have too few customers to be profitable. The best (for AI business) scenario is when productivity is increased without mass unemployment. | |
| ▲ | an0malous 42 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | They're trying to pivot to something that would inspire the retail investor they need to pass the bag to as they gear up for IPO, something out of Elon's playbook like "AI will take us to Alpha Centauri by 2030" or "AI will cure cancer by the end of the year" | |
| ▲ | iammjm 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | That’s the Elon Musk spirit! | | |
| ▲ | analogpixel 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | These Ai's will be full self driving next year. | | |
| ▲ | Goofy_Coyote an hour ago | parent | next [-] | | These Ais don't even need to arrive. They just are there. Always. Everywhere. | |
| ▲ | warumdarum 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | These Ai's will be fools self driving next year. I see what your dialect did there. Can i quote you verbatim? | |
| ▲ | bfkwlfkjf 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | These Ais can drive from a parking lot in new York to a parking lot in California now | | |
| |
| ▲ | postalrat an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | | Well that is the goal! |
|
|
|
| ▲ | papichulo2023 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| It is kinda funny the irony of going from "we are going to replace devs" to "we <3 devs, keep burning those tokens" |
| |
| ▲ | zuzululu 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | I don't think its as big of a deal as its made out to be. They are human after all and have overestimated the capabilities of LLMs. What's more important is that this signals product market fit. | | |
| ▲ | winfredJa 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | They are backpedaling because AI backlash is slowing down their data center builds. | | |
| ▲ | petre 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | Molotov bombing Altman's front gate did not help AI apocalypse hype either | |
| ▲ | iwontberude 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | Millions of Nvidia GPUs are stranded in warehouses right now with nowhere to be installed and some will be deprecated in less than a year. Good thing Micron and everyone in the supply chain is scaling up to make millions more... I am sure this will work out fine when they write down all of the inventory which is too old to install | | |
| ▲ | jijijijij 20 minutes ago | parent [-] | | Are you telling me I only have to wait just a little longer and the GPU are going to be really, really cheap? |
|
| |
| ▲ | sumeno 24 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | I seriously doubt their actual beliefs* have changed in the slightest. They just see which way the wind is blowing with public sentiment and are trying to do damage control. *I doubt they HAVE actual beliefs. Their entire job is managing PR and convincing investors. | |
| ▲ | philipov 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice. | |
| ▲ | windexh8er 16 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | No. This is a ridiculous take on the recklessness Altman and Amodei have stated. Both men flat out lied, kept lying and continue to lie about their numbers and capabilities. They have literally destroyed markets that aren't coming back anytime soon (consumer hardware). They should be held accountable, not let off the hook like "Oh well, they fucked our economy long term. Guess they're just human." Literally fuck them and an oversimplification like this. | |
| ▲ | freejazz 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | > They are human after all and have overestimated the capabilities of LLMs They self-servingly overinflated the capabilities and now its coming to roost. | |
| ▲ | SirFatty 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | "They are human after all.." Hahaha! Good one! | |
| ▲ | sublinear 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | There are many humans without any skin in the game that accurately estimated the capabilities of LLMs. It has nothing to do with "being human". This wasn't about finding "product market fit" either. It was about griftin' while the gettin' was good. That certainly is "human". |
|
|
|
| ▲ | mustaphah 28 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Sam Altman and other big figures tend to shape their narratives around their personal and organizational interests. When people were skeptical, they pushed hard into the "God-like AI" narrative. Now that safety concerns are growing and their growth plans are in danger, they're pushing back against what they used to advocate. Even if they genuinely believe what they’re saying, their perspective is still fundamentally biased and should always be taken with a healthy grain of salt. |
|
| ▲ | atleastoptimal 13 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Are they walking back their PR or their actual beliefs? I think they realize that even if AI takes all jobs, the process to getting there will be more turbulent if they obfuscate and minimize it, until the working class no longer has leverage, rather than sounding the alarm earlier, leading to a more concerted populist uprising, and then AI is regulated far more than they want |
|
| ▲ | 0xbadcafebee 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| To recap: 1) they developed and heavily pushed a technology they thought would result in mass unemployment, 2) they now believe they are wrong, so the market/government should definitely support their company going public. Which means that they were both intending to tank the economy and take your job away, and they were also wrong in their predictions, and now want to be rewarded for both with more money. |
| |
| ▲ | datakan an hour ago | parent [-] | | It's almost like their business model was written by ChatGPT back when it was telling people to put rocks on pizza |
|
|
| ▲ | CodeCompost 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I have to admit LLMs are actually quite useful at generating code for me, but I am experienced enough to know what I want. I use it as a next-generation autocomplete. |
| |
| ▲ | elliotec an hour ago | parent [-] | | This is the "whole thing" in a nutshell for me too. It's useful, speeds some things up, but I've been doing this a long time. The state-of-the-art or medium-term future of the tooling doesn't feel apocalyptic in itself, but the macro forces, implications of scaling, and general reactions to it on all sides are a different story. |
|
|
| ▲ | dbvn 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| the damage is done. Why did they ever think it was a good idea to brag that they were going to destroy all middle/upper class jobs? |
| |
| ▲ | anthomtb 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | To market their product to c-suite people. | |
| ▲ | energy123 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Because it helps to raise capital at low costs if your investors and creditors think you're going to replace all labor. | | | |
| ▲ | sbayg 19 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Because the people who funded them from the outset did so because that was their goal? The destroy all jobs talk started at least 10 years ago, it many ways that hype is the actual product itself. | |
| ▲ | dyauspitr 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | Because that was the truth. Now they have learned they are going to have to lie to the people so the masses can be sleepwalked to the same eventuality. | | | |
| ▲ | reducesuffering 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | They were being earnest. People can't handle the truth, so now they're doing PR comms. | |
| ▲ | vrganj 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | Class blindness. Their buddies all love the idea of showing pesky workers their place. |
|
|
| ▲ | Sol- 11 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Kind of a let down if that were to mean that they are bearish on super intelligence. |
|
| ▲ | halamadrid 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| They both hired some good publicists who is advising that change your tone and messaging to get the public to like and trust the companies. Initially the goal was to convince investors which is pretty much done and now its the retail/public that will value these companies once they IPO. Either way the job market is definitely impacted and is changing rapidly. Will one of these companies be the first to hit 10 trillion valuation? |
|
| ▲ | guestbest an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| In every AI prediction there is an obvious underestimating of the actual difficulties faced by workers and planners so the tool to automate those intelligent tasks always way underperform what a person is capable of with the notable exception of merging the automation with human tasks as an augment. And that is a totally ‘nother topic. But thanks for the investment money. |
|
| ▲ | simonw 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| OK, this is weird. The article says: > OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, in an interview with Commonwealth Bank of Australia CEO Matt Comyn on Tuesday, said he was “pretty wrong” about AI’s economic impact—a reversal from his June 2025 warnings that entry-level roles were at serious risk. But the link to the interview goes to this 2m11s YouTube video, and he doesn't use say anything of the sort: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CAhbsKZ-_bg Here's a full MacWhisper transcript (easier to search than the YouTube one): https://gist.github.com/simonw/ba0fe174cb7306b74ddf08589a027... UPDATE: It turns out the article was linking to a short highlights video, but the interview itself was 45 minutes long. I don't think the full video is available anywhere, so it's hard to confirm that "pretty wrong" quote. This Reuters story carries the same quotes and, unlike the linked Fortune article, doesn't sit behind a paywall: https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/openais-altman-sa... |
| |
| ▲ | windexh8er 2 minutes ago | parent | next [-] | | For those that write and shill for these orgs, almost full time, I could see how this type of admission is damning. | |
| ▲ | foolswisdom an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] | | There's a partial corresponding quote at https://www.commbank.com.au/articles/newsroom/2026/05/sam-al.... | | |
| ▲ | simonw an hour ago | parent [-] | | That's a better link, thanks. Not much substance there about this though! > One of the areas where he personally had been wide of the mark was on AI’s short-term impact on entry-level white-collar jobs, which had not been nearly as bad as he had once predicted, he said. “I’m delighted to be wrong about that.” I'm not sure that justifies a whole "Sam Altman ... walking back AI jobs apocalypse predictions" headline, personally. It's pretty thin. But... we still haven't seen the full interview, so there might be more to it. The Fortune article also includes: > Altman added that he’s taken a lot of flack for his hype, but better safe than sorry.”People are like, ‘Oh you could have saved the world a lot of fear mongering and a lot of doom and gloom’ but at the time I was like, ‘I see this is a real risk we should probably talk about it.’ and it still may.” |
| |
| ▲ | cactusplant7374 an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | | Altman has said he thought AI would have a bigger impact. |
|
|
| ▲ | simonw an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Fortune articles are behind a paywall, which makes them a bad fit for Hacker News. This Reuters story carries a similar idea: https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/openais-altman-sa... I'd warn that this all looks pretty thin - there are a couple of partially supporting quotes from a 45 minute virtual conversation Sam had with the Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) conference on Tuesday, but they don't look strong enough to me support the "walking back AI jobs apocalypse" framing. See also this thread: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48315157 |
| |
| ▲ | spprashant 28 minutes ago | parent [-] | | I agree. With Altman at least it seems he is making the pivot because he thinks its better messaging. Amodei is just re-framing what he actually sees as the endgame here. He says 10x productivity, he means 10x less jobs. |
|
|
| ▲ | gxs 14 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| One of the things missed with AI is that it’s enabled people to do more - either by augmenting skill sets or augmenting bandwidth In my own circles this has led to more work not less Expectations are higher, SLAs are tighter. Which makes sense - if a company can mine more gold with less works, they aren’t going to retire workers they will ask for even more gold Managers are coding again, analysts are expected to write better requirements and do more of their own analytics, lots of worn all around Eventually we will saturate that and need new people again I don’t disagree with the general principle that people will lose jobs, I just a) don’t think it will be as accelerated as people claim and b) more obviously the disruption will be felt in roles that are more rote and mechanical in nature - e.g. peoples whose job is in the family of summarizing data or compiling metrics, generating simple content (slide decks), etc and slowly creep up from there AI is one of those garbage in garbage out things and so far the quality out when the input quality has been great from what I’ve seen. Just a note preemptively to the nay sayers |
|
| ▲ | b0sk an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| This feels orchestrated (someone made a phone call to them). Look at this a16z tweet : https://x.com/a16z/status/2059687657840713925?s=20 |
| |
|
| ▲ | metalliqaz an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Public sentiment has turned strongly against them. They can try to take it back, but I don't think they will be successful. Nobody is buying the fiction anymore. Everyone knows that any proceeds from the technology will not be shared. The ownership class will take everything and leave the ecological impact to be dealt with by the same people they laid off. |
|
| ▲ | MagicMoonlight 7 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| AI lets me be far more productive, creating far more demand. Before I wouldn’t have made half the stuff I’ve made, because it was too time consuming. The lowered opportunity cost has led to me having more to do. It doesn’t have this effect for morons. If you don’t know what you’re doing, you can easily slop out some garbage, but you won’t be able to iterate on it or maintain it. These models will produce some really stupid outputs unless you actively fight them. Then if you try and add something new, you’re slapping new layers of slop onto the stinking pile. I’m not concerned about losing my job with these current slop models. Most employees can barely read and write, they aren’t suddenly going to produce entire systems just because they can slop stuff out. |
|
| ▲ | AlexandrB an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| So in the span of 2 years we've gone from "AI will be our new God and solve all of our problems" to "AI will replace all your jobs and make SaaS companies obsolete", to now "AI will have some impact on the job market - might be positive, might be negative - who can say?" I'm filing this right next to "blockchain for everything" and "we will all live in the metaverse" as evidence that most of these people are full of shit and don't understand much outside of their area of expertise (if they even understand that). I can't believe the level of credulous hype around this stuff. At least AI is a useful technology compared to what we saw with "The Metaverse". |
| |
| ▲ | 2dfds an hour ago | parent [-] | | " as evidence that most of these people are full of shit and don't understand much outside of their area of expertise " Its interesting isnt it? That many humans dont seem to understand that unless you know a thing well, perhaps you should shut up and not comment. How can Dario and Sam credibly say we are going to automate X, Y, Z job when they've never done it in their lives? Its like the idiots on here talking down on accountants - unless you've done the job and prove you understand the mechanics: shush. Dont talk about stuff you have zero clue about. I see this time and time again in posts related to finance - just shut up and stop creating noise. |
|
|
| ▲ | hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Saying people are going to lose jobs at least sounded like we were at the cusp of something special. Now it just seems like we are going to get Opus 4.8.1 that supposedly helps somehow according to benchmarks. Guess they have found their market and this is it. |
|
| ▲ | Analemma_ 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Of course, the fact that the statements they made confidently for years are now hastily getting undone in the face of public backlash only further cements their reputation as snakes who can't be trusted farther than one can throw a bowling ball. For a while there I actually respected Amodei for sticking to his guns on the job loss thing, it seemed like it was his genuinely-held belief and he was going to keep saying the truth even if it was unpopular, but never mind. |
| |
| ▲ | NateEag 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | Is it possible Amodei has revised his opinion after his predictions were empirically proved false? I haven't looked at how long he's been predicting job destruction, so I don't know if that explanation fits the facts. | | |
| ▲ | bcrosby95 an hour ago | parent [-] | | As a general rule the least charitable interpretation of a CEO's words are probably the most accurate. Considering the increasing backlash against AI this sounds more like a PR move than a change in actual belief. | | |
| ▲ | 2fer an hour ago | parent [-] | | Their identity in regards to history is centered on destroying jobs. So they will never let that go. Its gonna be funny seeing the eventual ego melt down when the labour market continues going on. |
|
|
|
|
| ▲ | okasaki 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| The scam was that the US needed private industry to bootstrap technology that's mostly going to be used for surveillance analysis and building kill matrices. |
| |
|
| ▲ | booleandilemma 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] |
| CEOs aren't a big enough target market. They need their slop machines to appeal to the masses as well. I wouldn't be surprised if we started seeing more advertising with that in mind, something like the ads Apple has but marketing their AI. |