Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

The AI Hype Index: AI gets booed in graduation season

read original get AI Graduation Cap Decor → more articles
Why This Matters

The skepticism from recent graduates highlights a growing distrust and concern about AI's impact on jobs and society, reflecting a broader hesitation in mainstream acceptance. Despite this, AI continues to advance rapidly, securing investments and forming partnerships, underscoring its significance in shaping the future of technology and the economy.

Key Takeaways

It is one thing to say AI will change the world. It is another to expect the class of 2026 to applaud it. In fact, when former Google CEO Eric Schmidt told University of Arizona graduates that their task is to help shape AI, he was met with a resounding chorus of boos. “I can hear you,” he said, before conceding that fears about disappearing jobs and a broken future were “rational.”

This is not exactly the message one hopes to hear while sweating under a polyester gown and tallying student loan payments. Graduates have been jeering at AI pep talks at other commencements too, including ceremonies at the University of Central Florida and Middle Tennessee State University. Still, increasingly loud skepticism hasn’t stopped OpenAI from winning court cases, raising enormous sums of money, and launching new partnerships. And AI is even earning some unlikely cheerleaders: Reese Witherspoon has warned women to embrace it or be replaced by it.