Subj : Not real work???
To   : All
From : Mike Powell
Date : Wed Oct 29 2025 09:06 am

Worried about AI taking your job? Don't worry, Sam Altman says some
disappearing roles were never real work to begin with

Date:
Tue, 28 Oct 2025 23:33:00 +0000

Description:
Sam Altman says a lot of the roles AI may replace might not be viewed as
'real work' anyway.

FULL STORY

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is well known for making bold statements, like his
claim a child born in 2025 is unlikely ever to be as smart as artificial
intelligence .

His latest comments about AI, this time referring to its impact on the future
of work, have again sparked outrage online.

Speaking on stage at OpenAIs DevDay event in a live interview with AI
newsletter founder Rowan Cheung, Altman responded to a question about how a
farmer from 50 years ago might view todays jobs.

Not real work

Altman replied, The thing about that farmer [is that] they very likely would
look at what you do or I do and say, thats not real work.

He continued, If youre farming youre doing something people really need.
You're making them food, you're keeping them alive. This is real work. You
people of the future, life just got too easy for you.

AI may take your job, but Altman says "I think we'll find plenty of things to
do."

His suggestion that many modern roles might not qualify as real work
inevitably drew widespread condemnation online with people accusing Altman of
dismissing the jobs most at risk of being automated.

Some view his comments as emblematic of a growing divide between the creators
of AI systems and the workers most affected by them.

Others, however, argue that Altmans remarks touch on a broader truth about
how much of todays employment is built around repetitive or bureaucratic
tasks.

As Toms Hardware points out, these are typically roles which the late
anthropologist David Graeber once described as bulls*** jobs, and which many
workers secretly believe add little social value.

Studies since have offered mixed support for that claim, suggesting feelings
of futility are often linked to poor management rather than the jobs
themselves.

Altmans phrasing may once again have been a little blunt, but his underlying
point is difficult to deny. AI is more likely to replace repetitive tasks
rather than entire professions.

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Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/worried-about-ai-taking-your-job-dont-worry-sam-
altman-says-some-disappearing-roles-were-never-real-work-to-begin-with

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