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- CEOs are trying to warn you: Use AI or else - Business Insider
The latest corporate mantra: AI or bye-bye Amazon CEO Andy Jassy's warning this week that expanding use of artificial intelligence will mean the company needs fewer people in some roles — and
- AI warnings are the hip new way for CEOs to keep their . . . - CNN
Every few weeks, the Earth cries out for an artificial intelligence scare on a frequency heard only by tech CEOs And lo, like a rain cloud over a parched valley, here comes Amazon boss Andy Jassy
- Bosses want you to know AI is coming for your job
SAN FRANCISCO - Top executives at some of the largest American companies have a warning for their workers: Artificial intelligence is a threat to your job CEOs from Amazon to IBM, Salesforce and JPMorgan Chase are telling their employees to prepare for disruption as AI either transforms or eliminates their jobs in the future Subscribe to The Post Most newsletter for the most important and
- Why CEOs are using AI to scare workers - Axios
Chief executives are giving employees an AI fright — warning them the new technology could make many workers obsolete, while at the same time urging them to start using it right away Why it matters: That's a scary and mixed message, and fear is generally considered to have a bad track record as a management technique At the extremes
- CEOs Have Started Warning: AI is Coming For Your Job
It's not just Amazon's CEO predicting AI will lower their headcount "Top executives at some of the largest American companies have a warning for their workers: Artificial intelligence is a threat to your job," reports the Washington Post mdash; including IBM, Salesforce, and JPMorgan Chase
- Heres what CEOs are telling their employees about how to use . . .
Micha Kaufman, CEO of Fiverr, one of the world's largest freelance marketplaces, warned in an email to his team that: "AI is coming for your jobs Heck, it's coming for my job too Heck, it's
- Tech CEO warns AI will eliminate jobs. What can you do to . . .
Anthropic's CEO is now pushing lawmakers to get up to speed on AI and urgently look at ways to regulate the technology
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