Tech leaders like Sundar, Satya, and Sam are hyping up AI as a job replacement tool, but in reality, AI struggles with basic tasks and requires human supervision.
The panic about AI taking jobs is manufactured by executives who prioritize ROI over innovation and fire human talent to invest in incomplete technology.
Sundar, Satya, and Sam may serve investors now more than innovation, chasing profits and pivoting features constantly to satisfy boards.
Many startups claim to be 'AI-powered,' but in reality, their products often fall short, relying on AI as a selling point even when it doesn't work effectively.
AI is viewed as a last-resort emergency exit for failing startups, yet true success still relies on human expertise in design, engineering, and problem-solving.
Despite the hype around AI, what remains are a few cool demos, a trillion-dollar hype cycle, and tech leaders who may have oversold a half-baked dream.
Real value creation, creativity, and understanding still come from human ingenuity, something AI cannot fully replicate.
The narrative that AI will replace jobs forces a reevaluation of work, value, and trust, challenging how we perceive the role of automation in society.
Ultimately, AI can assist but not fully replace humans, and even tech leaders like Sundar, Satya, and Sam understand the limitations of AI in terms of true human capabilities.