Key control
- Jensen Huang de Nvidia said this week that he believes that “everyone’s works will be changed” for artificial intelligence.
- Also this week, Sam Altman de Openai said there could be “whole classes of work that disappear”, due to AI, but expect people to find new solutions to address change.
- The comments arise in the midst of concerns about the extent to which AI could interrupt the labor market.
The CEO of Nvidia (NVDA), Jensen Huang, said in an event earlier this week that he believes that “everyone’s works will be changed” by artificial intelligence.
“Some works will be obsolete, but many jobs will be created … Every time companies are more productive, they hire more people,” Huang said at the Vivatech conference in Paris on Wednesday, Fortune reported.
The comments were partly in response to the comments of the CEO Anthrope Dario Amodei, who last month said he hopes that AI can eliminate half of all the works of the entry level office, according to the report. Huang said that “practically you don’t agree[d] With almost everything, ”said Amodei.
It was not the only technology CEO that had something to say about AI and jobs this week, amid the concerns that rapid development technology could lead to a significant loss of jobs.
Sam Altman, the CEO of the Chatgpt Openai manufacturer and one of the faces of the AI boom, wrote in a blog post on Wednesday that hopes that there may be “complete classes of works that disappear” as the AI develops.
Chatgpt “is already more powerful than any human who has lived,” said Altman, who sees a future in which robots could be able to build other robots designed for tasks in the physical world.
However, Altman added that “people are able to adapt to almost anything,” and said he hopes that humanity will find new solutions to address change.
