- The losses of AI jobs are inevitable, but the new innovations will stop the effects, says the CEO of Nvidia, Jensen Huang
- Huang has been warned by senators before a next trip to China
- American technology should establish the global standard ‘Huang argues
For a long time, AI will have aimed at mass unemployment, with several CEO and technological leaders who warn that AI will eliminate millions of jobs, and companies like Microsoft that fire thousands of workers while bringing new AI productivity tools.
Now, Jensen Huang, CEO of the chips manufacturer and firm of the NVIDIA, offered his perspective (slightly obsolete). In an interview with CNNHuang essentially passes labor protection responsibilities to business leaders, claiming; “If the world runs out of ideas, then productivity gains translate into loss of employment.”
“The works of all will be affected. Some jobs will be lost. Many jobs will be created and what I hope is that the productivity profits we see in all industries will raise society,” said Huang.
Bipartisan warnings
The Huang authority in AI is also significant, thanks to the power of Nvidia in the market. The company’s GPUs remain one of the most influential technological products in the world, and are largely promoting the development of AI worldwide, even in China, which is giving some US politicians.
Huang recently received a warning written by Republican Senator Jim Banks and Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, reports PakGazette, who advised a meeting with Chinese companies, arguing that this could “legitimize companies that cooperate closely with the Chinese army or involve discussing the exploitable gaps in the export controls of the United States.”
A Nvidia spokesman, Saidus Technology, ‘will establish the global standard’ and that ‘United States wins’, China being one of the world’s largest software markets, and added that the AI software “should work better in the United States technology stack, encouraging nations worldwide to choose America.”
That said, Huang has recently argued that Chinese military branches will avoid using United States technology due to the associated risk; “It could be, of course, limited at any time,” he argued, “they just can’t trust it.”
He added how Chinese military services, which are already developing powerful tools, “do not need Nvidia chips, certainly, or US technological batteries to build their military.”
This comes in response to the growing concerns that Chinese companies and military agencies will use US technology to improve capacities.
The increasingly hard restrictions have China’s access to China to the main AI technologies, aimed at curbing the advance of China’s artificial technology and intelligence, but there are concerns about the threat to the national security of the United States if China uses US companies to develop their abilities.