Eric Schmidt, the former Google CEO recently faced boos during the University of Arizona’s commencement ceremony after warning graduates about the ‘mess’ created by modern technology and artificial intelligence, according to a report by Business Insider. While the other speakers received applause for their address to the students, Schmidt’s reflections on the unintended consequences of tech and AI struck a nerve. “We thought we were adding stones to a cathedral of knowledge… but the world we built turned out to be more complicated,” he said, noting that platforms meant to connect people had also “degraded the public square.”
The tension between the audience and Schmidt escalated further when he directly addressed AI. “There is a fear in your generation that the future has already been written, that the machines are coming, that the jobs are evaporating, that the climate is breaking, that politics are fractured, and that you are inheriting a mess you did not create,” he told students. He acknowledged those fears as “rational,” but urged them to adapt and help shape how AI is used.
In the past also Schmidt has raised concerns about AI. The tech veteran underlined the rapid development of AI from being a useful assistant to a possible replacement for qualified programmers.
Schmidt revealed that at leading AI research facilities, like OpenAI and Anthropic, the AI system is already performing about 10 to 20 percent of the work in programming, adding that the said percentage will further increase at a very rapid rate. Eric Schmidt said that AI is under-hyped rather than overhyped. He emphasised that this is where AI’s real economic potential-exists: in automatically performing corporate operations, not just in coding.
Why students at the University of Arizona reacted strongly to comments made by Eric Schmidt
* Many graduates worry AI will cut entry-level jobs, with companies like Klarna and IBM already conducting AI-related layoffs.
* A Pew Research study found half of Americans feel more concerned than excited about AI’s growing role.
* Some students had also planned to protest Schmidt over past sexual assault allegations, which his attorney has called “fabricated.”
Schmidt’s sobering remarks contrasted sharply with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, who told Carnegie Mellon graduates last week that AI would create opportunities rather than erase them: “AI is not likely to replace you. But someone using AI better than you might.”
Speaking at Carnegie Mellon University’s commencement ceremony for the class of 2026, the Nvidia chief said the AI boom is creating massive demand for electricians, plumbers, welders, technicians, and builders needed to construct the physical infrastructure powering the technology. Huang described the moment as a “new industrial era”, arguing that skilled trades could soon become some of the most valuable and highly paid careers in the modern economy.
Do you believe that AI will create more job opportunities than it eliminates?