State Farm Drones & AI.
This is interesting, but not just State Farm.
https://news.yahoo.com/finance/news/homeowner-hit-20k-bill-state-154526906.html
Below are all the posts — topics as well as replies — that mention the hashtag #automation.
Mention #automation in your post to continue the discussion!
State Farm Drones & AI.
This is interesting, but not just State Farm.
https://news.yahoo.com/finance/news/homeowner-hit-20k-bill-state-154526906.html
So its bad enough we’re losing staff to false performance ratings and India but now we’re going to lose them for imaginary employees. BNY is a joke and everyone needs to get out of banking. All these id--ts are copying each other with RV think BNY is going to lead automation . Yeah ok buddy. First you have to update the dinosaur systems you forced us to use
is whether AI agents implemented over the last 6 months will get laid off too? And in what order? Eg,
Most of what India does can be replaced with AI agents.
Tech layoffs reached over 45,000 globally in early 2026. Approximately 20% of these reductions, totaling over 9,200 jobs, are linked to AI implementation. Block accounted for the largest single cut with 4,000 layoffs, driven by AI tool capabilities. Other companies like WiseTech Global, Livspace, eBay, and Pinterest also reduced staff due to AI strategies. Firms are restructuring operations around AI-driven workflows to boost efficiency and automate tasks.
https://technode.global/2026/03/09/2026-tech-layoffs-reach-45000-in-march-more-than-9200-due-to-ai-and-automation-rationalfx/
Verizon layoffs to hit 15,000 roles in 2026 as automation takes over https://share.google/AJuhG51e9EFToXk0E
Verizon layoffs to hit 15,000 roles in 2026 as automation takes over https://share.google/AJuhG51e9EFToXk0E
| # | Job Title | Primary Function | Why Risk Is Higher with AI |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Technical Support Engineer | Customer issue troubleshooting | AI support agents and automated diagnostics reduce ticket handling |
| 2 | Customer Success Manager | Post-sales adoption and engagement | AI analytics tools automate monitoring and outreach |
| 3 | Inside Sales Representative | Lead generation and qualification | AI sales tools automate outreach and scoring |
| 4 | Sales Operations Analyst | CRM reporting and pipeline analysis | AI dashboards automate sales analytics |
| 5 | QA Engineer (Manual Testing) | Manual software testing | Automated AI testing frameworks replace manual testing |
| 6 | Program Manager (Non-Technical) | Coordination and project tracking | AI workflow tools reduce coordination overhead |
| 7 | Implementation Consultant | Deploy Oracle SaaS for customers | Standardized AI deployment templates reduce manual work |
| 8 | Systems Administrator | Internal infrastructure management | AI monitoring and auto-remediation replace routine tasks |
| 9 | NOC / Cloud Operations Engineer (L1/L2) | Infrastructure monitoring and alert handling | AI observability tools automate incident response |
| 10 | Marketing Operations Specialist | Campaign management and marketing automation | AI marketing platforms automate segmentation and campaigns |
| 11 | Recruiting Coordinator | Hiring logistics and scheduling | AI recruiting tools reduce manual coordination |
| 12 | Business Analyst (Internal Ops) | Internal reporting and analytics | AI copilots automate data analysis and reporting |
Story by bgriffiths@insider.com (Brent D. Griffiths)
Anthropic economists say they have developed a new way to track how AI will upend the workforce.
Their new measure shows that AI use hasn't come close to tapping the full power of large language models.
Not surprisingly, they say the most exposed field is computer programmers.
Anthropic economists say that AI use is far from reaching its full potential to disrupt the labor market.
Using their new measure, they found the five most exposed occupations to be: Computer programmers, customer service representatives, data entry keyers, medical record specialists, and market research analysts and marketing specialists.
AI has yet to significantly affect the unemployment rate for workers in these highly exposed professions, economists Maxim Massenkoff and Peter McCrory wrote. The pair said there is "suggestive evidence" that the hiring of young workers in those fields has slowed.
Massenkoff and McCrory also wrote that there are a number of tasks and, in some cases, whole jobs that AI can't do, such as making legal arguments in a courtroom.
"Many tasks, of course, remain beyond AI's reach—from physical agricultural work like pruning trees and operating farm machinery to legal tasks like representing clients in court," the pair wrote.
The core of Massenkoff and McCrory's paper proposes a new way to measure AI displacement risk that combines real-world data on Claude usage with other factors, including tasks that are theoretically possible for AI.
Anthropic has been publishing real-world data on Claude usage for every state and Washington, DC, through their "Anthropic Economic Index."
By doing so, the pair said that they hope to pinpoint economic disruption more reliably in real time, making it easier to "help identify the most vulnerable jobs before displacement is visible."
"This approach won't capture every channel through which AI could reshape the labor market, but by laying this groundwork now, before meaningful effects have emerged, we hope future findings will more reliably identify economic disruption than post-hoc analyses," they wrote.
The measure, which they call Observed Exposure, shows just how far LLMs have to go to disrupt specific job tasks that AI could theoretically replace or augment.
"For instance, Claude currently covers just 33% of all tasks in the Computer & Math category," they wrote.
Dario Amodei has warned about the future of white-collar work
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has repeatedly sounded the alarm about AI job displacement. He has said that AI could replace up to half of all entry-level white-collar jobs in the next one to five years. Amodei has stuck by his views even as others in the industry, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, have questioned his outlook.
Massenkoff and McCrory's findings dovetail with a growing consensus that AI could eliminate most entry-level software engineering jobs. One of the biggest uses for Anthropic's Claude is coding.
Boris Cherny, creator of Claude Code, recently said he expects the title of software engineer to start to "go away" in 2026.
xAI CEO Elon Musk said last year that "anything that is physically moving atoms" will outlast AI disruption longer. The Anthropic economists found that the least exposed professions include cooks, motorcycle mechanics, lifeguards, bartenders, and dishwashers
It is worth noting that sweeping predictions of AI job disruption haven't always aged well.
Geoffrey Hinton, the so-called "Godfather of AI," said in 2016 that "people should stop training radiologists now" and that within five years AI would surpass humans in the field. A decade later, radiologists remain in demand. Hinton told The New York Times in 2025 that his prediction was too broad and that the timing was off, even as he was correct about the direction of AI progress.
AI disruption also won't affect everyone the same way, the Anthropic economists wrote.
Based on US Census Bureau data from the three months before ChatGPT's release, the economists found that "Workers in the most exposed professions are more likely to be older, female, more educated, and higher-paid."
https://x.com/PeterMcCrory/status/2029716715916198006/photo/1
@PeterMcCrory
Head of Economics at Anthropic.
What’s the deal with this new buzz around AI DLC? Anyone have some insight into what it actually is? Also curious how many more jobs or roles might be at risk because of it.
This wave of AI-driven transformation only makes a small group of capitalists richer, while the majority of others may end up being harmed.
so you can spend more time strategically homeless.
If you want to trim away the useless, then start with HR. Just keep the bare bones skeleton crew, let the HR chatbot and AI do the rest of that work. If Citi AI can’t handle the mundane low hanging fruit HR work, then it has no place trying to be wedged into anything more complex or technical.
If it can’t be developed enough, tested enough and rock solid enough to handle the HR work load, then you have business trying to make it do anything more complex. It’s like trying to use a calculator that can’t add or subtract to perform advanced algebra. Use the HR role as your live test bed. Once you get that part down, you can then showcase what a success it is in all you little ppt slides and THEN move on to something more complex.
Focus Services is closing its Greenville call center. This action will result in 94 layoffs. The closure is attributed to the impact of AI. Call centers are facing automation of routine tasks. This trend affects many call center operations.
https://www.bizjournals.com/triangle/news/2026/03/02/focus-services-greenville-call-center-layoffs.html
We're all going to be laid off as soon as the company possibly can do so, if not sooner, because we're all being replaced via automation, off-shoring and outsourcing. I'm just grateful to have the nice termination package per labor contract for when the inevitable day comes when my position is surplussed.
I’m hoping our team is next. Seriously our team serves no purpose to be fair. It could be done by other departments or really just an automation in the system. It’s not survival it’s just the truth. Not sure why they even made this team as it doesn’t even make sense. Literally here collecting until the end because it pays something while looking elsewhere.
Consequences of AI -
AI has (some) innovations, but.
AI will replace (most, not all) computer dependent jobs (that can be) in the future, (easily) in the Millions over time; through automation efficiencies.
AI will take away Tax revenues (from those employees that were replaced) who contribute to consumer spending which will (not if) have a very Negative impact on the U.S. economy.
AI will create (some) high paying jobs, but unless Taxes are Increased on Corporations; and the wealthy; there will (not if) be a Major shortfall in Tax revenue.
The U.S. National debt is (currently) $38.7 Trillion (and rising) per usdebtclock, with $990.0 Billion a year in Interest paid by U.S. taxpayers to outside Investors (U.S. based, Japan; China; etc.) that finance it over time.
Wars are (Always) costly over time (but sometimes necessary to defend U.S. National security), and the U.S. National debt will spike because of it.
These are the facts.
Angi confirmed it is eliminating around 350 positions as part of a plan to cut operating expenses and optimize its structure. Officials said advancements in AI have helped enable the workforce reduction.
https://www.businessinsider.com/angi-layoffs-angies-list-cuts-350-jobs-ai-efficiency-gains-2026-1
AI WILL REPLACE FCC SWITCH REPORTABLES. Regulated AI.
Does anyone know what we can expect from Agentic AI in PayPal in the next 12 to 24 months in terms of it's capabilities? I understand Lores is fully focused on Agentic AI and will likely use it to reduce the workforce like he has done at HP.
I'm not interested in what you've read from AI regarding Agentic AI as I've done that myself. If possible, I would like to hear from someone within the company who has been working with Agentic AI at PayPal or who knows what the general plans are? For example, will it handle 40% of disputes/limitations/fraud claims in 12 months.
Really curious as Lloyds bank announced this month they will be using Agentic AI for complex fraud and complaints reviews. With the advancement of Agentic AI, PayPal's desire for lightning fast changes and Lores's enthusiasm for Agentic AI and cuts, big changes could be on the way very soon. gulp
The company is already training AI agents to work directly with techs in the field to configure routers and diagnose troubles without an engineer. Tech chats with a bot directly to configure, test and turn up a router. Whole teams will probably be gone in next two years.
WIP: Machine learning + Code + AI - in flight - optimizing refinery scheduling, crude blending... logistics + maintenance sequencing. Now calculate # of jobs lost and $$$ in someone else's pockets
Not sure how many have heard of Project Converge, but it starts tomorrow. It is secretly tied to multiple initiatives in WAVE 2025 where we are marching towards significant staff reduction costs since Worldpay has merged into our organization. Drive of AI and Robotic Automation is extreme at this point. Will be a tough tough year. Good luck tomorrow.
There’s a growing misconception that AI "does the entire work. employees are sitting and watching". In reality, AI is helper not full-performer. Still lots of development requires human efforts. Management is pushing towards AI. The problem is once work is done, you will be first one to be thrown out.
Team I'm on is mandating AT LEAST 50 PERCENT OF ALL NEW CODE be generated using copilot. No longer "use copilot to work faster" but now "replace your development skills with copilot". I do not doubt, FIS will be rolling this out to ALL of development over time
If there were any doubts that FIS was taking the path of using AI to reduce workforce, well. That seems to be EXACTLY where were headed
Can't wait for the brain and skill rot from forced use of copilot to bite them in the a-s
I'm in PI and feel like it's only a matter of time. They already introduced an ai system that tracks and grades all of our calls last year... wouldn't be surprised if they're training an llm off of thousands of the top rated calls catalogued across the company.
First, there was collaboration.....(we are all in this together)
Then there was automation....(python, ansible rah rah rah!)
Then came agile......(hire scrum masters so we have have two bosses!)
Then came silos (due to agile...we don't care about anything outside our 2 week sprint!)
Now comes AI......(humans BAD, AI is good!)
Meanwhile, BE gets 22M per year, chainsaw gets 40M per year...and
...I get laid off!
So I and many other got laid off recently due to the company strategy to automate and replace with AI and failing that, outsource to India.
Considering so many large companies who regret their decision to lay off and replace with AI, you'd think this was thought out.
Nope. Got told outright that the company is willing to accept financial penalties for failure to meet contractual requirements, reputation damage and other losses. All because this is the strategy that Omar is steering the ship towards.
Fine ok. But zero communication or consultation with those affected. I'm not even talking about those who were let go, but those who remain and are expected to pick up the pieces.
No-one we work with knew, had any communication, etc.
Any pushback was met with silence and passing the buck to someone who is new (senior management Accenture replacement) and has no clue on the business. Which were met with corporate fluff, deception and being ignored.
Those of us let go were an average of 20 years each.
Some less. Some more.
When we tried over the last year to use AI as a tool, we would spend more time arguing with the hallucination it produced, than getting anything productive out of it.
But since we're now gone, there's nothing in place to replace us. Just that replacing with AI is the plan...
Absolute insanity!
Life will be so much better without all the belittling!!!
The AI used by companies is called an enterprise AI system. It capture everything typed on your company computer, and what programs are used by the employees to train itself. These systems record your interactions like the programs you write, the documents you create, and the queries you run.
The company tracks and then claim ownership of every keystroke you make within the digital realm, every idea you document and every tool you build. It identifies what approaches worked best, what email you sent and received and the language that got responses. All that knowledge can become part of the company’s AI, it eventually know, down to increasingly fine details, how you do your job.
The AI can pass that information along to anybody else who wants to do your job, or just do the job itself. Over time, you are easily replaceable
Yes, layoff happening replaced by AI.
"Some leaders and pioneers in AI say that artificial intelligence will advance far enough to replace entire workforces."
https://www.businessinsider.com/microsoft-ai-ceo-mustafa-suleyman-white-collar-tasks-automation-prediction-2026-2
She said she was implemented AI into her workflows… oh really? Give me 1 example of how you’re doing this
Also, I like how Mike avoided the question about AI taking jobs. He refused to specifically say if AI would or would not take jobs
Baker McKenzie announced plans to cut approximately 700 business services staff. The firm cited artificial intelligence as a reason for these reductions. The article questions if AI is truly the cause or an excuse. AI is not directly replacing Biglaw lawyers internally. Client use of AI and smaller firms leveraging it may reduce Biglaw's need for lawyers.
https://abovethelaw.com/2026/02/baker-mckenzie-blamed-ai-for-massive-layoff-but-the-problem-is-much-more-complicated/
E.W. Scripps Co. is expecting to make layoffs in the near future as the company, which operates more than 60 local TV stations in the U.S., has embarked on a plan aimed at boosting adjusted earnings by up to $150 million over the next three years.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/scripps-layoffs-loom-company-sets-161754967.html
Scripps is preparing for potential layoffs as part of a significant cost-cutting and revenue growth plan. The company intends to implement new strategies, including the use of artificial intelligence and automation. These measures are designed to enhance operational efficiency and reduce expenditures. While layoffs are anticipated, the specific number of affected roles has not been disclosed. The headline indicates a strategic shift for Scripps to adapt to the evolving media landscape.
https://www.imdb.com/de/news/ni65702916/?ref_=nwc_art_perm
analyst take on ROK:
One of the first companies to address industrial automation, Rockwell Automation (NYSE:ROK) sells products that help customers extract more efficiency from their machinery.
Why Does ROK Worry Us?
Organic sales performance over the past two years indicates the company may need to make strategic adjustments or rely on M&A to catalyze faster growth
Earnings per share have contracted by 1.5% annually over the last two years, a headwind for returns as stock prices often echo long-term EPS performance
Diminishing returns on capital suggest its earlier profit pools are drying up
My take. Layoffs will continue in low amounts. Leadership and the board are cautious leaders who value their options over growth. If you are good. Leave now. If you are less than good. Hang on. Most will hang on.
I have seen the futute of AI and ML and it doesn't include you. If you work in the desktop/server space, probably the lower levels of networking, then its time to retrain for a new career outside of IT.
Sorry to be blunt but your roles are already being automated by better companies than DXC, companies that have invested in AI and ML from early on.
AI tools like those from Anthropic are increasing automation and reducing the need for manpower in many roles. While operational work may require fewer people, human oversight and management decisions are still essential. The focus should be on adapting skills, not just replacing jobs.
“The technology sector faces perhaps the most dramatic transformation. Indian IT services firms, which built empires on providing entry-level coding and testing services, now face existential threats to their business models. When AI can write, debug, and test code autonomously, offshore staffing advantages evaporate.”
Expect less investment and a never-ending headcount decline.