The Great AI Jobs Debate: Why Alex Karp Is Both Right and Completely Wrong

A Philosophy PhD Who Built an AI Empire Just Declared His Own Degree Worthless—But the Data Tells a More Complex Story


At the World Economic Forum in Davos this week, Alex Karp—billionaire CEO of Palantir Technologies—made a startling prediction that sent shockwaves through the education world. The irony? A man with a philosophy degree from Haverford College, a law degree from Stanford, and a PhD in neoclassical social theory from a top German university just declared that humanities education is doomed in the age of AI.

“It will destroy humanities jobs,” Karp told BlackRock CEO Larry Fink. “You went to an elite school, and you studied philosophy—hopefully you have some other skill, that one is going to be hard to market.”

His prescription? Vocational training. Battery factory workers. Technicians. People who can be “rapidly” retrained for whatever industry needs them next.

But here’s where it gets interesting: The employment data and corporate hiring trends suggest Karp might be spectacularly wrong about the very degree that made him successful.

The Case FOR Karp’s Prediction: Vocational Skills Are Rising

Let’s start by acknowledging where Karp has solid ground beneath his argument.

The Numbers Don’t Lie About Entry-Level White Collar Jobs

The statistics on entry-level professional positions are genuinely concerning for humanities graduates:

  • Entry-level hiring at the 15 biggest tech firms fell 25% from 2023 to 2024
  • Computer programmer employment in the United States dropped a dramatic 27.5% between 2023 and 2025
  • 30% of U.S. workers fear their job will be replaced by AI or similar technology by 2025
  • By 2030, roughly 30% of current U.S. jobs could be fully automated

The World Economic Forum projects that machines and algorithms could take on more work tasks than humans by 2025, with 85 million jobs potentially eliminated by AI and automation.

Even Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei confirmed during their joint Davos panel that entry-level hiring at their companies was already declining due to AI, with software and coding roles down at both junior and mid-levels.

Vocational Trades Show Real Resilience

Karp’s emphasis on vocational skills isn’t just corporate propaganda. The data backs up significant protection for hands-on trades:

  • Construction and skilled trades are among the least threatened by AI automation
  • Over 663,000 openings are projected yearly in construction and extraction fields through 2033
  • Healthcare vocational roles (medical assistants, dental hygienists, nursing aides) are projected to grow as AI augments rather than replaces these jobs
  • Nurse practitioners are projected to grow by 52% from 2023 to 2033
  • Personal services jobs (food service, medical assistants, cleaners) are expected to add over 500,000 positions by 2033

Skills requiring physical dexterity, on-site problem-solving, and human interaction in unpredictable environments remain stubbornly resistant to automation. You can’t automate fixing a burst pipe in a 100-year-old building or reading a patient’s non-verbal cues during a medical exam.

The National Student Clearinghouse Research Center found strong growth at community colleges and among trade programs, suggesting students are already voting with their feet toward vocational paths.

China’s Data Supports Karp’s Concerns

The situation for humanities graduates looks particularly grim in China’s competitive market:

  • Among the top 20 highest-earning majors for 2023 graduates in China, no liberal arts majors made the list
  • China’s National Natural Science Foundation enjoyed a budget of RMB 36.3 billion in 2024, while funding for the National Social Science Foundation was only around one-thirtieth of that amount
  • Universities are cutting humanities programs: Harvard cancelled more than 30 liberal arts courses in 2024, while Chinese institutions like Northwest University and Sichuan University withdrew several liberal arts majors

When money talks, it’s saying “go technical.”

The Case AGAINST Karp: Liberal Arts Are the New Premium

But here’s where Karp’s thesis falls apart—spectacularly. While he was busy declaring his own educational background obsolete, the world’s leading companies were quietly doing the exact opposite.

Tech Giants Are Hiring Humanities Grads for AI Oversight

The evidence that contradicts Karp is both recent and compelling:

McKinsey just reversed course entirely. The consulting firm’s CEO Bob Sternfels revealed they’re now “looking more at liberal arts majors, whom we had deprioritized” as potential sources of creativity. Why? Because AI models have become expert at problem-solving, but McKinsey needs people who can think beyond “logical next steps.”

BlackRock’s own COO contradicts Karp. Robert Goldstein told Fortune in 2024 that his company was actively recruiting graduates who studied “things that have nothing to do with finance or technology.”

Major tech companies are building humanities divisions:

  • Apple recruits graduates from arts and humanities because designing products people want requires empathy and cultural awareness
  • Microsoft has added ethicists and humanists to its AI teams to test for fairness, privacy, and cultural sensitivity
  • Google employs philosophers, linguists, and sociologists to confront algorithmic bias and inclusivity
  • OpenAI has professionals trained in liberal arts helping guide responsible AI development

The editorial director of Google’s NotebookLM—one of their largest AI products—explicitly stated that philosophical and psychological skills are particularly valuable for addressing AI-related questions and fine-tuning conversational tone.

The Employment Data Contradicts Karp’s Prediction

Here’s the stunning reversal in actual employment statistics:

  • Art history graduates show 3% unemployment versus 7.5% for computer engineers
  • Philosophy and history graduates outpace many tech specialists in the job market
  • Liberal arts majors demonstrate far greater career resilience, with agility to move between jobs, careers, and industries

Why? Because while AI eliminated 27.5% of programmer jobs, it only reduced software developer roles (the more design-oriented positions) by 0.3%. The creative, strategic thinkers survived while the code writers got automated.

Cognizant’s CEO Flips the Script on Entry-Level Hiring

Perhaps most damaging to Karp’s thesis is what Ravi Kumar S, CEO of IT consulting giant Cognizant (with 350,000 employees), told Fortune:

“We are now going to hire non-STEM graduates. I’m going to liberal arts schools and community colleges.”

Kumar’s reasoning directly contradicts Karp: “I think we’ll need more school graduates in the AI era… AI is an amplifier of human potential. It’s not a displacement strategy.”

His company is hiring more school graduates than ever before in 2025, giving them AI tools so they can “punch above their weight.”

The Skills Gap Employers Actually Report

When you dig into what employers say they need versus what they’re getting, the humanities suddenly look essential:

  • 64% of employers say oral communication is “essential,” but only 34% feel graduates are “very well prepared”
  • Nearly 90% of employers stressed the importance of exposure to diverse perspectives and ideas—a hallmark of liberal arts education
  • National Associate of College and Employers (NACE) 2023 ranked critical thinking second only to communication as the most important career competency
  • Deloitte’s 2025 Global Gen Z and Millennial Survey found younger generations place even greater value on soft skills like empathy, leadership, and adaptability in an AI-driven workplace
  • McKinsey projects that by 2030, demand for social and emotional skills in the United States will rise by 14%

The Problem With AI That Only Humanities Grads Can Solve

Here’s what Karp conveniently ignores: AI has fundamental limitations that require liberal arts training to overcome.

AI cannot generate original questions. It recombines patterns from training data. Someone needs to ask the right questions to get useful outputs—and that requires broad knowledge across disciplines, exactly what humanities education provides.

AI outputs are plagued by bias and errors. Who identifies algorithmic bias rooted in Western cultural assumptions? Who questions the exclusion of Indigenous knowledge? Who challenges phantom responses? People trained in sociology, history, philosophy, and ethics.

AI lacks judgment about what problems are worth solving. As one Reddit analysis put it: “AI pushes us toward creating more humanistic service roles that demand genuine empathy… machines don’t have hearts.”

Stanford research found the key dividing line: AI struggles with tasks requiring genuine human emotion, creativity, physical dexterity, and ethical judgment. Three of those four are exactly what humanities education cultivates.

So Who’s Right? Both. And Neither.

The truth is more nuanced than either extreme position suggests.

Karp Is Right About the Short-Term Pain

Entry-level humanities grads without technical skills are facing a brutal job market. The data on this is unambiguous:

  • Nearly 50 million U.S. jobs at entry-level are at risk in coming years
  • The unemployment rate for young workers ages 16 to 24 hit 10.4% in December 2025
  • 39% of current skillsets will be overhauled or outdated between 2025 and 2030
  • Many companies expect new hires to already come up to speed without extensive training

A philosophy grad who can’t code, can’t use AI tools, and has no practical skills is in serious trouble. Karp is correct that a pure humanities degree with zero technical augmentation is increasingly unmarketable for entry-level positions.

But Karp Is Spectacularly Wrong About the Long Game

What the employment data reveals is this: AI is creating a bifurcated job market.

The bottom tier gets automated. Entry-level programmers, data entry clerks, basic content writers, junior analysts—all getting displaced by AI. This is brutal for recent grads trying to get their foot in the door.

The middle tier needs technical skills. Battery factory workers, technicians, vocational specialists—these roles are secure and well-paying. Karp is absolutely right about this tier.

But the top tier increasingly demands humanities thinking. Senior developers who design systems, not just code them. Leaders who can ask the right questions. Ethicists who can prevent AI disasters. Creative directors who envision what doesn’t exist yet. Strategic thinkers who can pivot when industries transform.

And here’s the kicker: That top tier is where the philosophy PhD sits—precisely where Karp himself ended up.

The Real Answer: Hybrid Education

The most successful educational approach combines both:

  1. Liberal arts foundation: Critical thinking, ethics, communication, creativity, cultural awareness
  2. Technical augmentation: AI tool proficiency, data literacy, some coding ability
  3. Lifelong learning mindset: Adaptability across changing industries

As one educator put it: “Liberal arts students will need to gain competency on the technical side. But the emergence of AI will also require people who are really thoughtful about: How do we prompt? Should we prompt in certain instances? How do we filter bias?”

Cognizant’s CIO Neal Ramasamy noted that the best programmers he’s hired came from music, philosophy, and literature backgrounds—because with AI handling the mechanical coding, “what’s left is the harder stuff: understanding problems deeply, communicating with stakeholders, and designing solutions that make sense.”

The Uncomfortable Truth Karp Won’t Admit

Alex Karp stands on stage at Davos—invited because of his success, credibility, and influence—and declares that the educational path that got him there is worthless.

Think about that logic.

His philosophy degree taught him to think critically about complex systems. His law training gave him frameworks for arguing positions. His PhD in social theory equipped him to understand how societies respond to technological change. These skills enabled him to co-found a company now worth $177 billion.

And his advice to young people is: “Don’t do what I did. Learn to build batteries instead.”

The real message should be: “Do what I did, but also learn to code and use AI tools.”

The Bottom Line for Students and Parents

If you’re choosing an educational path in 2025:

Don’t choose pure humanities without technical skills. The data on entry-level employment is too stark to ignore. You’ll struggle to get your foot in the door.

Don’t choose pure vocational training if you want long-term career flexibility. You’ll be secure in your specific trade, but vulnerable when that industry transforms. And it will transform.

Do choose liberal arts WITH technical augmentation. Study philosophy, but take computer science courses. Major in history, but learn data analysis. Get an English degree, but master AI tools. This combination is what employers are increasingly desperate to find.

As the Globe and Mail put it: “What’s the value of a liberal arts degree? The AI-world answer: exceptionally high and rising.”

But only if you pair it with the ability to actually use the technology transforming the world.

Final Thought: The Irony of Karp’s Position

Perhaps the most revealing part of this entire debate is that Alex Karp is using his humanities education to make the argument that humanities education is worthless.

His philosophical training gave him the abstract thinking to envision Palantir. His social theory background helped him understand how governments and institutions work. His ability to articulate complex ideas—honed through years of humanities education—is exactly why people listen when he speaks at Davos.

And now he’s climbing up the ladder and trying to pull it up behind him.

The vocational workers Karp celebrates are essential and deserve respect and good pay. But when those battery factory jobs get automated in 2035 by the next wave of robotics, those workers will need to pivot. And pivoting requires exactly the kind of adaptable, creative, critical thinking that humanities education provides.

Karp is living proof that philosophy graduates can build AI empires. Perhaps instead of declaring humanities doomed, he should be honest about what actually made him successful: a combination of deep humanistic thinking and the technical knowledge to apply it.

That combination—not vocational training alone—is the real future of work in the AI age.

Industries Most Affected by AI Job Losses

AI Job Loss in 2025: Impact, Industries, and YouTube Resources

Overview of AI Job Loss in 2025

The U.S. job market in 2025 has experienced a slowdown, with nonfarm payrolls adding only 22,000 jobs in August—far below the expected 75,000—and the unemployment rate rising to 4.3%, the highest in nearly four years [Web ID: 11, 13]. While economic uncertainty is the primary driver, artificial intelligence (AI) is contributing to job displacement, particularly in roles involving repetitive or data-driven tasks. AI-related layoffs accounted for over 10,000 job cuts in the first seven months of 2025, with the technology sector seeing 89,000 total cuts, of which 27,000 since 2023 are directly tied to AI adoption [Web ID: 1, 13]. Experts describe AI’s current impact as “small but not zero,” with projections estimating it could disrupt 6-7% of U.S. jobs (approximately 45 million roles) if adoption scales, though much of this will occur gradually through task automation rather than mass layoffs [Web ID: 0, 11, 19]. The World Economic Forum’s 2020 report predicted 85 million global jobs displaced by 2025, potentially offset by 97 million new roles, suggesting a net gain but significant disruption [Web ID: 10].

Young workers (20-30 years old) in AI-exposed occupations, like software development, have seen unemployment rise by nearly 3% since early 2025 [Web ID: 19]. However, AI is also creating opportunities in areas like oversight, AI development, and cybersecurity, with roles like AI trainers and ethicists emerging [Web ID: 8]. Upskilling remains critical, as workers with AI skills command wage premiums [Web ID: 9].

Industries Most Affected by AI Job Losses

The following industries are experiencing or are projected to feel AI-driven job losses first, primarily due to automation of routine, data-heavy tasks:

IndustryKey Impacts and Examples
Administrative and Clerical SupportRoutine tasks like data entry and scheduling are being automated, leading to slower employment growth and direct job cuts [Web ID: 10, 18]. Example: AI tools like AimeReception handle office tasks.
Legal ServicesAI for document review and contract analysis is moderating job growth, with only 1.6% expansion projected through the decade vs. 4% economy-wide [Web ID: 10, 19]. Example: AI scans legal databases faster than human researchers.
Finance and AccountingAutomation of data processing and fraud detection is displacing roles, especially in data-rich environments [Web ID: 10, 13]. Example: AI analytics tools outperform human market analysis.
Customer Service and Call CentersAI chatbots and voice systems reduce the need for human agents, contributing to below-trend employment growth [Web ID: 12]. Example: IBM’s AskHR handles 11.5 million interactions annually with minimal human oversight [Web ID: 18].
Marketing and Graphic DesignGenerative AI for content creation and ad targeting is slowing hiring in creative roles [Web ID: 12]. Example: Tools like DALL-E replace manual design work.
Software Development and ProgrammingCode generation tools are reducing demand for entry-level coders, with a 6% employment drop for 22- to 25-year-olds since 2022 [Web ID: 9, 13]. Example: GitHub Copilot automates coding tasks.
ManufacturingAssembly and quality control tasks are increasingly automated, making workers vulnerable [Web ID: 18]. Example: AI-driven machinery replaces manual labor.

Healthcare is adopting AI more slowly but may soon see impacts in administrative and diagnostic roles due to efficiency needs [Web ID: 3].

Finding YouTube Videos Demonstrating AI Job Loss

YouTube is a valuable platform for exploring AI’s impact on jobs through news reports, expert analyses, and personal stories. However, finding specific, credible videos requires targeted searches, as YouTube’s algorithm and recent AI controversies (e.g., unauthorized AI enhancements to Shorts) can complicate discoverability [Web ID: 2, 7, 14]. Below are strategies to locate relevant videos, types of content to expect, and tips for verifying credibility.

Search Strategy

Use these search terms on YouTube (accessible at m.youtube.com) to find 2025-specific videos:

  • “AI job loss 2025”
  • “Artificial intelligence replacing jobs 2025”
  • “AI automation impact on jobs 2025”
  • “Generative AI layoffs 2025”
  • “AI job displacement in tech 2025”
  • “Jobs replaced by AI 2025 industry analysis”

Filter results by selecting “This year” or “2025” under YouTube’s filter options. Adding “human voiced” (to avoid AI-generated content) or “expert analysis” can improve relevance.

Types of YouTube Videos

Here are the types of videos likely to demonstrate AI job losses, with examples of content and potential channels:

  1. Economic and Industry Analysis
    • Content: News channels or tech analysts discuss data-driven insights, citing reports like Goldman Sachs (2.5-7% of U.S. jobs at risk) or Challenger, Gray & Christmas (10,000+ AI-related cuts in 2025) [Web ID: 1, 19]. Videos may include charts showing job losses in tech or administrative roles.
    • Channels: Bloomberg Technology (www.youtube.com/@BloombergTechnology), CNBC (www.youtube.com/@CNBC).
    • Example Titles: “How AI Is Disrupting Jobs in 2025” or “AI Layoffs: Tech Industry in 2025.”
    • Search Tip: Use “AI job loss statistics 2025 Bloomberg” or “CNBC AI layoffs 2025.”
  2. Tech Industry Case Studies
    • Content: Tech influencers highlight cases like AI replacing coders or designers, referencing Stanford’s finding of a 6% employment drop for young programmers [Web ID: 13]. Videos may show AI tools like GitHub Copilot in action.
    • Channels: TechLead (www.youtube.com/@TechLead), The AI Advantage (www.youtube.com/@aiadvantage).
    • Example Titles: “Why Coders Are Losing Jobs to AI in 2025” or “AI Automation in Tech Jobs.”
    • Search Tip: Use “AI replacing coders 2025” or “AI automation in tech jobs YouTube.”
  3. Creator and Worker Testimonials
    • Content: Creators share personal stories of AI impacting their jobs, such as graphic designers replaced by tools like DALL-E [Web ID: 9]. Videos may include screen recordings of AI-generated content vs. human work.
    • Channels: Individual creators like Rhett Shull (www.youtube.com/@RhettShull), who discussed YouTube’s AI enhancements [Web ID: 2].
    • Example Titles: “How AI Took My Job in 2025” or “AI vs. Graphic Designers 2025.”
    • Search Tip: Use “AI replaced my job 2025” or “graphic designer AI job loss YouTube.”
  4. Educational and Career Advice
    • Content: Career-focused channels discuss at-risk jobs (e.g., data entry, customer service) and upskilling strategies, showing AI tools like AimeReception automating tasks [Web ID: 18].
    • Channels: CareerVidz (www.youtube.com/@CareerVidz), Indeed (www.youtube.com/@Indeed).
    • Example Titles: “Jobs AI Will Replace in 2025 and How to Upskill” or “Surviving AI Layoffs in 2025.”
    • Search Tip: Use “AI job replacement 2025 career advice” or “how to survive AI layoffs 2025.”
  5. Debates and Thought Leader Discussions
    • Content: Videos from events like VivaTech 2025 or interviews with experts (e.g., Nvidia’s Jensen Huang vs. Anthropic’s Dario Amodei) debate AI’s job impact, contrasting predictions of 50% entry-level job losses with optimistic views on productivity [Web ID: 10].
    • Channels: Wired (www.youtube.com/@WIRED), Vox (www.youtube.com/@Vox).
    • Example Titles: “Will AI Destroy Jobs by 2030?” or “AI Job Loss Debate 2025.”
    • Search Tip: Use “AI job loss debate 2025” or “VivaTech 2025 AI employment.”

Verifying Video Credibility

  • Check Reputation: Prioritize established channels (e.g., Bloomberg, CNBC) or verified creators with industry expertise.
  • Look for Data: Ensure videos cite credible sources like Goldman Sachs, PwC, or the World Economic Forum [Web ID: 10, 19].
  • Avoid Sensationalism: Be cautious of exaggerated claims (e.g., “AI will replace 99% of jobs by 2030”) unless backed by evidence [Web ID: 16].
  • Cross-Reference: Check comments or related Reddit threads (e.g., http://www.reddit.com/r/jobs) for video recommendations [Web ID: 17].

Challenges in Finding Videos

  • YouTube’s AI Controversy: YouTube’s use of AI to enhance Shorts without creator consent may affect content discoverability [Web ID: 2, 7, 14]. Creators like Rick Beato have noted unauthorized changes, which could impact trust in platform content [Web ID: 21].
  • Content Volume: AI job loss is a niche topic amidst millions of videos, requiring precise keywords.
  • Misinformation: Some videos may overstate AI’s impact without evidence, so focus on data-driven content.

Recommendations

  1. Start Searching: Visit m.youtube.com and use the suggested search terms with 2025 filters.
  2. Explore Channels: Check Bloomberg Technology, CNBC, TechLead, The AI Advantage, or CareerVidz for relevant videos.
  3. Verify Sources: Cross-check video claims with reports from Goldman Sachs (www.goldmansachs.com) or PwC.
  4. Engage with Communities: Browse http://www.reddit.com/r/ArtificialInteligence or http://www.reddit.com/r/jobs for video recommendations or discussions [Web ID: 12, 17].

Conclusion

AI is reshaping the 2025 job market, with measurable impacts in tech, administrative, legal, finance, customer service, marketing, and manufacturing sectors. While the overall effect remains limited, specific roles face growing risks, balanced by emerging opportunities in AI-related fields. YouTube offers a wealth of resources to explore these trends, from data-driven analyses to personal stories. By using targeted searches and verifying content, you can find videos that vividly demonstrate AI’s impact on jobs.The US job market has indeed softened in 2025, with nonfarm payroll growth slowing significantly—adding just 22,000 jobs in August, well below expectations—and the unemployment rate rising to 4.3%, its highest level in nearly four years. However, this downturn appears driven primarily by broader economic uncertainty rather than AI alone, though AI adoption has contributed to some job displacements. For instance, occupations with higher AI exposure have seen larger unemployment increases between 2022 and 2025, and AI-related layoffs accounted for over 10,000 job cuts in the first seven months of the year. Overall, experts describe AI’s current workforce impact as “small” but not zero, with projections estimating it could eventually displace 6-7% of US jobs or disrupt up to 45 million roles, though much of this is expected to unfold gradually through productivity gains and task automation rather than mass layoffs.The US job market has indeed softened in 2025, with nonfarm payroll growth slowing significantly—adding just 22,000 jobs in August, well below expectations—and the unemployment rate rising to 4.3%, its highest level in nearly four years. However, this downturn appears driven primarily by broader economic uncertainty rather than AI alone, though AI adoption has contributed to some job displacements. For instance, occupations with higher AI exposure have seen larger unemployment increases between 2022 and 2025, and AI-related layoffs accounted for over 10,000 job cuts in the first seven months of the year. Overall, experts describe AI’s current workforce impact as “small” but not zero, with projections estimating it could eventually displace 6-7% of US jobs or disrupt up to 45 million roles, though much of this is expected to unfold gradually through productivity gains and task automation rather than mass layoffs.

Reskill or Die: Adapting to the AI Era

The Automation Avalanche: Is AI Coming for Your Job? (And What to Do About It)

The rise of artificial intelligence and automation is no longer science fiction—it’s happening right now, and it’s reshaping the workforce at an unprecedented pace. From self-checkout kiosks to AI-powered customer service bots, companies are rapidly replacing human labor with machines. The question isn’t if automation will disrupt your career—it’s when.

The AI Repocalypse: Job Displacement on a Massive Scale

Experts warn that we’re on the brink of an #AutomationAvalanche, where AI and robotics could displace millions of workers across industries. White-collar jobs once considered “safe”—like data analysis, legal research, and even creative writing—are now at risk. The #FutureOfWork is looking increasingly automated, leaving many to wonder: Will there be any jobs left for humans?

Silent Layoffs and Economic Collapse

Unlike mass layoffs that make headlines, AI-driven job losses are happening quietly. Companies are opting for #SilentLayoffs, replacing employees with algorithms without fanfare. The result? A growing #AIInequality gap, where tech elites thrive while the middle class crumbles. If this trend continues, we could face an #EconomicCollapse fueled by mass unemployment and dwindling consumer spending.

Reskill or Die: Adapting to the AI Era

The harsh reality is that #ReskillOrDie is the new mantra. Workers must pivot into roles that AI can’t easily replicate—jobs requiring emotional intelligence, creativity, and complex problem-solving. Meanwhile, calls for #UBI (Universal Basic Income) grow louder as a potential safety net for those left behind.

The Ethical Dilemma: People Over Profit

As corporations chase efficiency at all costs, the #TechEthics debate intensifies. Should we prioritize #HumanCentricAI, or are we heading toward a #RobotTakeover? The #AICrisis isn’t just about lost jobs—it’s about mental health crises, societal instability, and the very fabric of human dignity.

Fighting Back: A Human-Centric Future

The solution isn’t to reject AI but to demand policies that protect workers. We need:

  • Stronger retraining programs (#FutureProofCareers)
  • Regulations ensuring #EthicalTech deployment
  • A renewed focus on #PeopleOverProfit

The #GreatDisplacement is already underway. The choice we face now is simple: Will we let automation crush us, or will we rise to the challenge and build a future where technology serves humanity—not the other way around?

What’s your take? Are you worried about AI taking your job? Drop a comment below or join the conversation using the hashtags above!

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