Microsoft AI Boss Issues Warning to Office Workers with Jobs Severely at Risk
11 Articles
11 Articles
The assumptions of the works that will be replaced by artificial intelligence continue.The great technological entrepreneurs, like Bill Gates, point out that the profiles that will be replaced by the AI are the engineers in blockchain, proofreaders, secretaries, journalists, accountants, analysts and writers.However, there are other gurus, like the CEO of Nvidia, who consider that people will not lose their jobs because of the AI, but by those w…
Microsoft AI CEO Warns Office Tasks Could Change Within 18 Months
Eighteen months. That is the number Mustafa Suleyman dropped into an interview with the Financial Times last Wednesday, and it has been rattling around office blocks and LinkedIn feeds ever since. Suleyman runs Microsoft's AI division. Not an advisory role, not a research post — he is the one building the products. And what he told the FT, in plain language with no caveats worth mentioning, is that most white-collar work will be fully automated …
Artificial intelligence is no longer just a technological innovation, but a key factor that is redefining the labour market. According to Mustafa Suleyman, head of Microsoft’s AI, many jobs that are currently being performed in front of a computer could be automated in a surprisingly short time, between 12 and 18 months. The warning does not come from an external analyst, but from one of the leaders who is building these tools. YOU CAN SEE: What…
Microsoft’s AI Chief Draws a Line in the Sand: All White-Collar Desk Work Automated Within 18 Months
Mustafa Suleyman, the chief executive of Microsoft AI, has made one of the boldest predictions yet to emerge from the corridors of Big Tech: within the next 18 months, virtually all traditional white-collar desk work will be capable of being performed by artificial intelligence. The claim, delivered with the confidence of a man who co-founded DeepMind and now sits atop one of the most powerful AI divisions in the world, has sent ripples through …
According to a Microsoft manager, the global economy is facing a moment of "things come away here": he is sure that AI systems will be able to make most of the work in offices redundant within the next 18 months. (Continue reading)
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