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The haves and have-nots of the AI gold rush

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Why This Matters

The AI boom is creating a stark economic divide, with a small elite amassing significant wealth while many workers face layoffs and uncertainty about their future relevance. This disparity highlights the growing societal impact of rapid AI advancements, emphasizing the need for industry and policymakers to address economic inequality and workforce adaptation. For consumers, it underscores the importance of staying adaptable in a rapidly changing tech landscape.

Key Takeaways

In Brief

The vibes around the current AI boom aren’t great, even in the tech industry, according to a lengthy social media post from Menlo Ventures partner Deedy Das.

Das described San Francisco as “pretty frenetic right now,” as “the divide in outcomes is the worst I’ve ever seen.”

Using a “back of the envelope AI calculation,” he projected that there are around 10,000 people — founders and employees at companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Nvidia — that have “hit retirement wealth of well above $20M,” while everyone else worries “they can work their well-paying (but <$500k) job for their whole life and never get there.”

Plus, “layoffs are in full swing,” and “many software engineers feel that their life’s skill is no longer useful,” leading to confusion about the best career paths and “a deep malaise about work (and its future),” Das said.

This prompted some eye-rolling on X, with entrepreneur Deva Hazarika arguing that “most of the people in this post” are “incredibly fortunate and can simply make a choice to be happy.”

Another user suggested it’s “pretty damn novel & also kinda nasty” that in the current cycle, “the same technology is both the lottery ticket & the thing eating your fallback.”