News

CHICAGO—IBM CEO Arvind Krishna said dire AI job warnings stem from a "reality distortion field" among industry leaders, ...
During an interview with Bloomberg, Krishna revealed he anticipates AI replacing 30% of IBM's non-customer-facing jobs over the next five years. "I did say we have about 26,000 of those roles ...
As artificial intelligence is making its way into the workforce and potentially automating jobs, IBM Corp. is already talking about how that will affect the future of its workers as the company ...
The 61-year-old, who's spent his entire career at IBM, doesn't think AI will have as much impact as some fear. He predicts that only 6% of the workforce is at risk of having their job replaced by AI.
Amid growing fears of AI-induced job cuts, IBM's CEO Arvind Krishna says he doesn't intend to lose any programmers because of the technology. Krishna predicted that programmers would become 30% ...
IBM's CEO predicted that programmers would get 30% more productive because of AI. "I don't intend to get rid of a single one. I'll get more," he said.
IBM CEO Arvind Krishna explained during a recent interview that the company has been adopting AI and automation very aggressively to bring in efficiency. He also noted that IBM's overall employee ...
IBM is moving to turn over as many as 7,800 jobs to artificial intelligence, Chair and CEO Arvind Krishna said in an interview Monday. The warnings about AI being used to replace human job holders ...
AI threatens 7,800 jobs as IBM pauses hiring Meanwhile, Samsung bans employees from using generative AI. Written by Maria Diaz, Staff Writer May 3, 2023, 9:11 a.m. PT ...
News Business IBM could replace 7,800 jobs with artificial intelligence, CEO says May 2, 2023 Updated Tue., May 2, 2023 at 12:05 p.m.
Anthropic vs. IBM: The debate over AI’s role in coding The Anthropic CEO points to Claude Code and GitHub Copilot as evidence that developers will soon only supervise AI-generated code.
IBM's CEO Arvind Krishna says he won't "get rid of a single one" of the company's programmers, but will instead "get more" as AI continues to infiltrate the workplace and automate many tasks.