General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCEOs Are Quietly Telling Us the Truth: AI Is Replacing You
In public, CEOs like to sound reassuring. They say generative AI will enhance productivity or streamline operations. But when you actually read what theyre telling their own employees, or what slips out in investor memos, the message is chilling: virtual workers are here, and theyre not just assistants. Theyre replacements.
Lets take a closer look at what some of the worlds most powerful tech CEOs are saying. Not in hype videos, but in official internal messages, blog posts, and investor updates.
1. Amazons Andy Jassy: We will need fewer people
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy recently published a company-wide message that sounds reasonable, until you actually read it.
As we roll out more generative AI and agents, it should change the way our work is done. We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today We expect this will reduce our total corporate workforce as we get efficiency gains from using AI extensively across the company.
The key phrase? Next few years. Thats corporate speak for 2026 to 2028. Not ten years away. This is soon.
https://gizmodo.com/ceos-are-quietly-telling-us-the-truth-ai-is-replacing-you-2000621907

FalloutShelter
(13,564 posts)Plenty of jobs opening up in slaughter houses or maybe, if you like being outdoors, behind lawn mowers.
Metaphorical
(2,459 posts)I work with AI daily. Most AIs are useless without someone babysitting them very closely, and their tendency to hallucinate is only getting worse, not better, with each iteration. Most companies that have gone the route of trying to replace workers with AIs are (quietly) restaffing because they AIs are causing more work than they are solving. This holds even more for agentic workflows, which basically ends up making it all but impossible to figure out what's wrong until well after the damage is done, because LLMs (GenAI) are very inconsistent.
We're going to reach a point where the whole house of cards collapses, because investors don't bother to really educate themselves about the downsides to these technologies. From an engineering perspective, AIs are seen as useful if you are wanting to generate content, but they are not production ready and introduce an obscene amount of technical debt in the process.
patphil
(8,081 posts)newdeal2
(3,339 posts)Because their stock price depends on it. Sort of a fake it till you make it but on steroids.
OLDMDDEM
(2,605 posts)me that AI would be the wave of the future. People would lose their jobs as they would be replaced by AI. My question was what would those people do once they lost their job? His answer was that low paying jobs would be open to those who needed work. Maybe that is what is going on now.
patphil
(8,081 posts)AI will eventually collapse the US and world economies, with the emergence of a small ruling class, a small overseer class and a huge semi-literate, extremely poor lower class that is essentially expendable.
This lower class will do the remaining jobs that AI can't do well.
rubbersole
(10,091 posts)...oh, wait.
tanyev
(47,099 posts)
haele
(14,392 posts)Most HR and "MBA" types can be replaced by AI.
The few who can't be replaced are the skilled workforce, scientists, researchers, and engineers.
But "leadership in a company? Hire a personable looking actor or PR script reader for the, have AI run the company, and shareholder should be able to get better returns than they do now with ego-driven, drug or alcohol or petulance addictions.
gypsy11
(396 posts)Large corporations will orchestrate their own demise.
AI is in NO WAY ready to replace humans. Sure, major corporation, use AI to replace humans. Watch how fast things get screwed up because nuance, or one-off things pop up and arent handled correctly by what is basically a supped-up data scraper that hallucinates. Once customers get screwed a few too many times, theyll go elsewhere.
My own experience with AI replacing humans in customer service jobs has been pretty bad. AI doesnt work (bugs galore), customer (me) gets screwed, and now Im looking at alternatives to dealing with any company that is pulling this crap.
Ping Tung
(3,005 posts)