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Anxiety over artificial intelligence is hardening among young workers as executives promote faster adoption and companies point to automation in fresh job cuts.
Former Google chief executive Eric Schmidt faced boos from graduating University of Arizona students this week as he described artificial intelligence as a force that would be "larger, faster and more consequential" than previous technological shifts.
Schmidt told students the technology would touch "every profession, classroom, hospital, laboratory, person and relationship you have". He acknowledged their concerns over job security and an uncertain future as rational, while presenting the disruption as something workers would have to adapt to.
The reaction captured a wider unease among young digital natives entering the workforce as ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini become household names and employers accelerate plans to embed AI across daily operations.
The anxieties have been reinforced by corporate announcements linking AI adoption to workforce reductions. Standard Chartered said on Tuesday (20 May) that it would cut more than 7,000 jobs and replace what it described as "lower-value human capital" with AI, offering a concrete example of the shift that many young workers fear.
Several large technology firms have also been cutting staff while citing AI and efficiency. Meta, which is installing tracking software on U.S.-based employees' computers to train its AI model, is planning to lay off 10 per cent of its workforce globally starting this month, according to Reuters.
Amazon has axed some 30,000 corporate jobs in recent months as it pushes artificial intelligence and efficiency, while fintech firm Block cut nearly half its staff in February. The announcements have turned broad warnings about automation into visible labour-market decisions affecting office workers, technology employees and new graduates seeking stable careers.
Schmidt told graduates that the scale of change was inevitable, echoing the view of many current executives who frame AI as a productivity tool that businesses cannot ignore. The boos suggested that message is landing differently among younger people who expect to compete with the same systems they are being told to master.
An April Gallup report showed that a rising number of Generation Z respondents, those born between 1997 and 2012 felt anxious or angry about AI. The share who said they were hopeful or excited had fallen sharply compared with a year earlier.
Nearly half of respondents said the risks of artificial intelligence outweighed the benefits, while 15 per cent saw it as a net positive. Most recognised the need to be AI-savvy but said the technology hindered deeper learning and creativity.
"Negative emotions have intensified over the past year," the report's authors wrote, noting that usage was starting to plateau. "Young adults in the workforce are significantly more likely to view AI as a risk than a benefit."
Schmidt's reception followed another recent sign of anger at AI. At the University of Central Florida on 8 May, real estate executive Gloria Caulfield was heckled and booed during a commencement speech on the technology. "The rise of artificial intelligence is the next industrial revolution," she said as boos rang out, before asking what had happened and saying she appeared to have struck a chord.
The World Urban Forum (WUF13) continues in Baku, Azerbaijan on 18 May, addressing the global housing crisis. The day’s agenda includes the official opening press conference, the WUF13 Urban Expo opening and a ministerial dialogue on the Nairobi Declaration to advance Africa's urban agenda.
United Nations World Urban Forum 13 continues in Baku, Azerbaijan on 19 May with sessions and roundtable discussions focused on strengthening dialogue and advancing cooperation in urban development. Organisers say there are nearly 3 billion people globally who face some form of housing inadequacy.
Azerbaijan and Georgia have agreed to resume daily passenger train services on the Baku-Tbilisi-Baku route from 26 May, 2026, marking a major step in restoring regional rail connectivity after services were suspended in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Pakistan has deployed around 8,000 troops, fighter jets and air defence systems to Saudi Arabia under a mutual defence agreement, according to security officials and government sources familiar with the arrangement.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday that he had paused a planned attack on Iran after Tehran sent a peace proposal to Washington. He said there was now a “very good chance” of reaching a deal to limit Iran’s nuclear programme.
Hackers are increasingly using artificial intelligence to detect software vulnerabilities, reducing the time organisations have to respond to cyber threats, Verizon said in its annual data breach report.
China has launched the world’s first experiment to study how artificial human embryos develop in space, marking a major step in understanding whether humans could one day reproduce beyond Earth.
Japanese filmmaker Koji Fukada has said that the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to “jump straight to the result” risks undermining the purpose of art, which he believes should be rooted in self-expression and a deeper understanding of the world.
The Spanish government has issued a defiant message to Silicon Valley, confirming it will push ahead with stringent new legislation designed to make social networks and Artificial Intelligence (AI) demonstrably safer.
A robotics startup says it has built an AI “brain” that can teach humanoid robots new physical skills in days rather than months, as the race to deploy human-shaped machines in factories and warehouses accelerates.
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