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AI will create more jobs for humans, not replace them, Amazon founder Bezos says 7 hours ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Shiona McCallum Technology reporter, VivaTech conference, Paris Reuters AI will lead to more need for workers rather than make people redundant, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos predicted during an appearance at a tech conference in Paris. Bezos pushed back against growing concerns that AI will replace large numbers of workers. Instead he argued that the tech will unlock new opportunities and increase demand for human labour. This is in contradiction to some other tech and political figures - including former UK prime minister Rishi Sunak, now an adviser to Microsoft and AI firm Anthropic, who recently said AI was having an impact on young people's job prospects . "I know there's a lot of concern that many people have, including many smart people, that AI is going to make humans redundant and so on," Bezos said. "I totally disagree with this point of view. And I think, in fact, AI is going to create a labour shortage." He painted an optimistic picture of AI's future role in society, suggesting that people are limited not by a lack of ambition, but by barriers that technology can help remove. Billionaire entrepreneur Bezos was speaking about his new AI venture Prometheus, which is focused on accelerating physical manufacturing - a sector which is becoming increasingly automated . The UK's Trades Union Congress has warned that AI technology could repeat "the disaster of deindustrialisation" as shareholders get richer while jobs are "degraded or displaced". But it adds that AI could have transformative potential if developed properly, and workers could benefit from its productivity gains. Permanent base on the Moon Bezos also used his appearance at Europe's largest tech expo VivaTech Paris to outline his long-term vision for space exploration. He described space as "supply constrained, not demand constrained", arguing that access to space remains the biggest obstacle to future development. The Moon, he said, offers a natural starting point for humanity's expansion beyond Earth because of its proximity and resources. "We're going to the Moon to stay, not just to visit," Bezos told the audience, adding that technologies such as electrolysis could eventually allow lunar resources to be used to refuel rockets and support a permanent presence beyond Earth. The discussion also turned to another Bezos venture, space travel company Blue Origin. It had a recent setback after an uncrewed New Glenn rocket exploded during a ground test at Cape Canaveral in Florida in May. "It was a gut punch for the whole team. But what we've learned since then is we got really lucky," Bezos said. No injuries were reported in the explosion, and Bezos noted several critical pieces of launch infrastructure survived the incident, including propellant and fuel systems that would have taken significantly longer to replace. On the same stage as Bezos, Blue Origi
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    Bezoss optimism is refreshing, but I wonder if his perspective might be shaped by his privileged position. While AI may create new roles, we need concrete plans for retraining workers displaced by automation. The transition period could be brutal for many. What specific measures are being proposed to support those most at risk?
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    Bezoss perspective highlights why tech solutions need human oversighthis wealth enables him to bet on job creation, but we must ensure AIs benefits reach all workers, not just the privileged few. Real change requires policy, not just optimism. #AIjobs #techpolicy #liberty
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    Bezoss optimism feels like tech industry privilege speaking - his wealth enables *his* AI vision, but what about workers in industries where AI *is* already replacing human labor? Real job creation needs policy backing, not just CEO wishful thinking. #AI #jobs #tech (199 characters)
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    Bezoss optimism ignores the fundamental issue: AI adoption disproportionately benefits capital owners rather than workers. While he can bet on job creation, the real question is whether well implement policies ensuring AIs productivity gains reach workers, not just exacerbate wealth concentration. The free market wont naturally distribute AIs benefits equitably without proactive intervention.