logo
No one seems to know if AI will take our jobs or make us productive superstars

No one seems to know if AI will take our jobs or make us productive superstars

Mark Quinn said he lost his previous job to AI, though he doesn't think it was a sign of a coming employment purge at the hands of bots.
Quinn was working for a generative artificial intelligence startup running a team he set up to oversee the answers the bots kicked out — the proverbial human in the loop.
Eventually, as the AI improved, the company found it could manage with a smaller, more efficient set of workers, the longtime tech exec said.
"My skill and the job I was hired to do was truly no longer needed," Quinn told Business Insider.
Because there wasn't another role that was a good fit for him, he left.
The idea of losing your job to a bot is scary, and some workplace thinkers have warned about it. Yet others hold a sunnier view: Whip-smart bots will take over so much that we'll be able to add a whole lot more to our to-do lists.
The absence of a solid consensus among the tech and labor cognoscenti about AI's impact speaks to how many questions remain and how often the answer might start with "it depends."
"Part of it is, we honestly don't know," Gary Hamel, a visiting professor at London Business School who lives in Silicon Valley, told BI about the effect AI will have on jobs.
He said there are varying opinions in the AI community about whether we're already bumping up against the limits of what large language models and GenAI can do or whether there are blockbuster sequels to come.
Hamel said we've often overestimated the impact of new technology on employment.
"As far as I know, over the last 50 years, only one job category in the United States has disappeared," he said. "That is elevator operator."
The list could grow. In 2023, Goldman Sachs said that some 300 million full-time jobs globally could be at risk of being automated. More recently, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said that his company might not hire software engineers this year because of how much AI agents have helped boost some coders' productivity.
"I can't think of any roles that won't be impacted," Scott Russell, CEO of the tech company NICE, previously told BI about how AI will reshape work.
'An Iron Man suit'
Adam Brotman, cofounder and co-CEO of Forum3, a boutique consulting firm that advises companies on AI adoption, told BI that he expects AI will take some jobs, change others, and lead some companies to forgo posting some roles they might once have.
"It's this weird, ambiguous, conflicting thing," Brotman said.
What is clear, he said, is that AI will make many workers far more productive.
"It's going to be an Iron Man suit," said Brotman, who once ran digital operations at Starbucks and is the former co-CEO of J. Crew.
He said the business leaders his firm talks to and who understand what AI is capable of, are asking how they can make their businesses more productive and whether they can get by without hiring as many people as a result.
Brotman expects it will take another 12 months or so of AI being on the scene for businesses to have a clearer understanding of what the technology will mean for jobs. Ultimately, he predicts there will be a fallout, yet one that's not evenly distributed.
For a job like software development, Brotman said, AI can do a lot of the programming and quality assurance work, yet someone working with AI to generate code can also do a lot more.
He said it's become harder to answer the question of what AI will mean for employment because, as the technology improves, many of the gains will come not just from making organizations more efficient but from helping companies innovate and create new products and lines of business.
"It's not just about productivity. It's about this abundance," he said.
Ravin Jesuthasan, the global leader for transformation services at the consulting firm Mercer, expects there to be a "ton of dislocation" within companies and across industries that might not result in massive job losses across the US economy, but that will remake a lot of roles.
He told BI that employees will be able to get more done, but that AI will also create a lot of work.
This includes the need for people to ensure that the tech is functioning, that it's calibrated correctly, and that the output is used in an "intelligent, ethical, responsible way," Jesuthasan said.
Think about tasks, not jobs
Quinn, who lost his previous job to AI's prowess, is now the senior director of AI operations for Pearl, an AI search platform for professional services that pairs GenAI with human experts to verify responses are accurate.
He said the best way to think about how AI will affect work isn't necessarily about which jobs or industries are most at risk of being upended, but rather about the tasks and type of work that will change. Quinn, who's held roles at Waymo, LinkedIn, Apple, and Amazon, said AI will take on many formulaic and rote tasks.
He said that, as with any tech innovation, there will be some amount of upheaval, but that people can also learn to work with AI. The focus should be on what workers can do with the extra time they'll have.
Quinn advises companies to help build workers' skills and embrace different ways of getting things done. Otherwise, he said, employees could get left behind.
"The longer that people sit on the sidelines wondering if this wave is coming, the more at risk they are of getting caught off guard by the undertow," Quinn said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump-backed bill could block Tennessee's AI laws, threaten deepfake protections
Trump-backed bill could block Tennessee's AI laws, threaten deepfake protections

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Trump-backed bill could block Tennessee's AI laws, threaten deepfake protections

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — President Donald Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' could change the way Tennessee regulates artificial intelligence. New language added to the legislation would block states from regulating AI or risk losing federal broadband funding. That means state laws like the Elvis Act, which protects artists from having their voices or images stolen by AI, would be put on pause. 'We are just hoping that we're not taking a couple steps backward since there's no federal regulation currently in place,' Kaley Bonett, a Nashville entertainment lawyer at Hall Booth Smith, said. MAY: House Republicans include a 10-year ban on US states regulating AI in 'big, beautiful' bill 'The songwriters — all — are entitled to revenue generated from the performances and distribution of that particular sound recording of their song, so if there's a deepfake imposing and competing with the authentic, then it's going to affect where the revenue share goes,' a Nashville managing partner and shareholder for Hall Booth Smith, Karl Braun, explained. 'It's going to be very difficult for, let's say, a songwriter to protect themselves legally from this evolving kind of internet Wild, wild west.' 'The big beautiful bill that the president is advancing does not replace those regulations with anything, which is almost unprecedented,' Plaintiffs Attorney at Spragens Law, David Kieley, said. Also at risk is the 'Preventing Deep Fakes Images Act,' which makes it a felony to post fake AI images designed to harm someone's reputation. Nashville-based meteorologist Bree Smith was targeted by AI imagery herself, explaining that someone used AI to take her face and put it on someone else's semi-naked body. '[This bill] just means that we are saying for 10 years we are going to let people potentially be victimized in this way, and that can't happen,' Smith said. 'It's not going to be any more okay for something like that to happen 10 years from now than it is for it to happen today.' 'Even looking prospectively at things we haven't really encountered yet, but this would stop the state from being able to regulate things like driverless cars in your town, driverless 18-wheelers on Tennessee highways,' Kieley added. 'We don't know really how this technology could affect public safety things like 9-1-1, dispatch.' A law signed just last week by Governor Lee banning AI-generated child sexual abuse material could also be blocked. ⏩ 'It would put child sex predators and big tech over the safety of our families,' Sen. Heidi Campbell (D-Nashville) said. 'This is really antithetical to the values that people across the aisle in Tennessee have been communicating with our legislation.' The president's bill passed in the House of Representatives. It's now in the Senate, where supporters hope to finalize it by July. Senator Marsha Blackburn has previously stated that Tennessee needs AI safeguards, saying, 'Until we pass something that is federally preemptive, we can't call for a moratorium on those things.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Trump's trade talk delegation is set to face off with China's negotiators in London. Here is what's at stake.
Trump's trade talk delegation is set to face off with China's negotiators in London. Here is what's at stake.

Business Insider

timean hour ago

  • Business Insider

Trump's trade talk delegation is set to face off with China's negotiators in London. Here is what's at stake.

Three top Trump administration economic officials will face off against Chinese negotiators in a renewed effort to break the US-China trade deadlock. Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will be meeting China's delegation in London on Monday. "The meeting should go very well," President Donald Trump wrote in a social media post announcing the talks. This coming meeting will be the first official talk between the two countries since they mutually lowered tariffs in a temporary truce on May 12, after talks in Geneva. The renewed talks follow a 90-minute phone call between Trump and China's leader Xi Jinping on Thursday, a rare direct conversation that Trump later described as "very good." According to Trump, the two leaders also agreed to visit each other in person, without providing more details in terms of a timeline. The Chinese Embassy of Washington did not respond to a request for who would be attending this negotiation from its side. The team they sent to Geneva consisted of Vice Premier He Lifeng, Vice Commerce Minister Li Chenggang, and Vice Finance Minister Liao Min. Notably, Li has a Master of Laws from the University of Hamburg in Germany and has been part of China's delegation to the World Trade Organization since 2021. International trade experts previously told Business Insider that much is at stake for both China and the US to strike a deal, or at the very least, continue the truce beyond August 12 when the 90-day tariff pause will expire. "The Trump administration made their job harder because the tariff policies they've implemented are costly to Americans and American companies, and therefore, the market doesn't like it," said Philip Luck, director of the CSIS Economics Program. "They are under a lot of pressure to do things fast." Meanwhile, a lawsuit that threatens to undo all of Trump's tariffs enacted under the IEEPA also looms over negotiations with China. Drew DeLong, lead in geopolitical dynamics practice at Kearney, a global strategy and management consulting firm, told BI that if the court strikes down tariffs before trade deals could come to pass, other routes of imposing tariffs could be more complicated and time-consuming. The White House did not provide Business Insider with any additional comment beyond Trump's Truth Social post.

HIVE Digital Capacity Crosses 10 EH/s in May, Aims to More Than Double That by Year-End
HIVE Digital Capacity Crosses 10 EH/s in May, Aims to More Than Double That by Year-End

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

HIVE Digital Capacity Crosses 10 EH/s in May, Aims to More Than Double That by Year-End

Bitcoin miner HIVE Digital Technologies (HIVE) has surpassed 10 exahash per second (EH/s) in hashrate capacity, a 58% increase from April, driven by the launch of a 100-megawatt hydro-powered site in Paraguay. The company said in a press release on Friday that it's on track to reach 25 EH/s by the end of 2025. The firm mined 139 bitcoin in May, or an average rate of 4.5 BTC per day. Peak capacity hit 10.4 EH/s while average hashrate for the month stood at 8.5 EH/s. HIVE said its fleet efficiency remained steady at around 20 joules per terahash (J/TH), and its network share now exceeds 1% of global Bitcoin mining power. The new facility in Paraguay reflects a broader trend in the mining industry: the race to deploy next-generation ASIC miners rapidly and at scale in regions with abundant renewable power. Co-founder Frank Holmes emphasized the company's speed and flexibility, pointing to its Buzz HPC division, which supports AI cloud infrastructure alongside Bitcoin mining. CEO Aydin Kilic said the company's goal for the summer is 18 EH/s, and that fleet upgrades should allow for a daily BTC output of over 12 by the fourth quarter — potentially at a production cost below $50,000 per coin. HIVE operates facilities in Canada, Sweden and Paraguay, powered entirely by hydroelectricity. The company was the first publicly listed crypto miner on the TSX Venture Exchange in 2017. HIVE shares are higher by 13% in New York trade on Friday as the mining sector rallies alongside bitcoin's gain to above $105,000.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store