Survey Says is a weekly sequence rounding up an important polling traits or information factors that you must find out about, plus a vibe examine on a pattern that’s driving politics or tradition.
The billboards began showing final yr, first in San Francisco, then elsewhere. A younger lady’s face, regular however for her glowing eyes, stared out at us. The textual content beside her learn, “Stop Hiring Humans. The Era of AI Employees Is Here.”
The corporate that put them up, Artisan, stated the advertisements had been merely meant to generate consideration for its “AI-first” gross sales platform. In that method, the marketing campaign was profitable—right here I’m, writing about it—however in one other method, it unintentionally reveals how so many of those synthetic intelligence corporations see human beings: as a vestigial organ, as soon as helpful however not, the one factor misplaced within the in any other case excellent physique of an organization.
However on this supposedly shining way forward for a largely AI workforce, the place do the folks go?
This previous summer season, in a weblog put up about his billboards, Artisan’s cofounder painted a utopian imaginative and prescient. He imagined widespread AI adoption giving strategy to four-day workweeks, then to AI-supported common primary earnings, permitting people to by no means need to work once more.
The naivety right here is apparent. For one factor, he appears to assume each job exists on a laptop computer. For an additional, in what world would the Republican Social gathering, propped up by company money, comply with tax companies at excessive sufficient charges to ship nonworking People common funds that will cowl each expense in each month, plus sufficient for them to purchase automobiles and homes, take holidays, and so forth? In what world would even the Democratic Social gathering comply with that?
If solely the naivete stopped there. Artisan’s cofounder, who’s in his early 20s, additionally expressed shock that his advertisements generated “1000s” of loss of life threats, a few of which he deemed “actually pretty funny.”
The factor is, the overwhelming majority of individuals aren’t laughing.
Solely 10% of People are extra excited than involved concerning the rising use of AI in on a regular basis life, based on a latest Pew Analysis Middle research. And the extra People study AI, the much less they’re excited. That very same determine has been lower practically in half since 2021, when it was 18%.
In the meantime, 50% of People are extra involved than enthusiastic about AI—a quantity that’s grown 13 share factors since 2021.
A major purpose behind that prime nervousness is the very subject Artisan is glibly joking about.
Two-thirds of People assume AI will get rid of extra jobs than it should create, based on a Marist College ballot performed in July. And lest you assume most people are simply afraid of recent tech, information reveals that utilizing AI extra typically doesn’t mitigate these fears. Over half of millennials and Gen-Zers use AI instruments typically, and over half of every age group thinks AI will slash the variety of jobs on web. In actual fact, 70% of Gen Z holds that view.
Broadly talking, People don’t see many upsides to AI. Only a few assume it should assist folks remedy issues (29%), make onerous selections (19%), or assume creatively (16%), based on one other Pew research. Solely 5% assume AI will assist folks kind significant relationships. Half of People assume AI will make it more durable to take action.
And no less than two AI corporations appear very happy to usher on this new period of the incel. After years of promising AI would “fix” local weather change and “cure cancer,” OpenAI CEO Sam Altman introduced his ChatGPT service will, by yr’s finish, enable grownup customers to sext with chatbots. OpenAI joins Elon Musk’s xAI, which earlier this yr launched AI girlfriends for his legion of pick-me losers.
However as a lot as folks wish to have intercourse with a mannequin, they don’t need that mannequin to be massive language. A stunning 88% of People say they will’t think about ever having an erotic or sexualized relationship with a chatbot, based on a latest YouGov ballot.
There may be an plain air of unseriousness that hangs round AI corporations. They make grand claims about fixing (or ending) the world, then go all-in on porn.

Regardless of OpenAI’s potential $1 trillion valuation, 66% of American adults have by no means used its flagship product, ChatGPT.
Regardless of this, the sector is quickly turning into a pillar of our monetary system. One estimate says AI corporations are answerable for 80% of inventory beneficial properties this yr, irrespective of that just about none of them are making income proportionate to their worths.
Take a look at OpenAI. The corporate is getting ready for an preliminary public providing at as much as a $1 trillion valuation. That might put it at practically 5 instances the worth of the McDonald’s Company, regardless of the truth that OpenAI presently makes lower than half of the quick meals large’s annual income.
Actually take into consideration that: McDonald’s has over 44,000 areas throughout greater than 100 international locations. It has among the many most recognizable logos on the planet, and it sells tens of millions of things every single day. In the meantime, 66% of American adults have by no means used ChatGPT.
An AI hype-man would possibly say that comparability is inapt since an organization needn’t have many unusual customers to justify its massive market cap. In that case, the numbers are about the identical as in contrast with RTX Corp., the most important protection contractor on the planet by market cap.
Sadly, it will get solely extra absurd. AI chip-maker Nvidia just lately grew to become the world’s first $5 trillion firm, and whereas its market cap has slipped some since then (as a result of fears over AI corporations having bloated valuations), it’s nonetheless price greater than 21 instances as a lot as McDonald’s. And but its income is simply 5 instances that of the burger chain—or about 1.6 instances that of RTX.
Or, if you need one thing really ludicrous, Nvidia is price over 5 instances as a lot as Walmart however pulls in lower than one-fifth of Walmart’s income.
All of this hazard is hiding in plain sight, too.
Go to the web site for Artisan—the corporate working these pro-layoffs billboards, for those who already forgot its generic identify—and also you’ll discover a banner on the high. It isn’t about their product; the web page it hyperlinks to doesn’t as soon as embody the phrases “revenue” or “earnings” or “profit.” As a substitute, it’s about how the corporate raised $25 million in Collection A funding.
It’s a banner to hype the corporate to future traders. It isn’t for you.
Any updates?
This previous Tuesday, Zohran Mamdani grew to become the mayor-elect of New York Metropolis, a growth that was principally unimaginable earlier this yr. Earlier than he gained June’s Democratic major, the polls had him trailing disgraced former Gov. Andrew Cuomo—however the polls had been unsuitable. So how’d they do within the basic election? Fairly a bit higher. A Each day Kos common of polls for the reason that begin of August confirmed Mamdani with 46% assist, and as of Friday, he has 50% of the vote within the election, that means the polls had been simply 4 factors off. The miss was greater for Cuomo, although: Polls confirmed him with a mean of 29% assist, however he scored about 42% within the election—a distinction of 13 factors. Cuomo beating his polls probably has rather a lot to do with Trump’s last-minute endorsement of his former foe, which appears to have harm Republican Curtis Sliwa’s efficiency. Polls had him with 16% assist on common, however that fell to 7% within the election.
Trump needs to begin blowing up nukes once more, testing the weapons for—effectively, it’s not clear. Both method, People are broadly skeptical of it. Solely 33% assist resuming nuclear weapons testing, based on the most recent YouGov/Economist ballot. Forty-eight % oppose resuming testing, whereas one other 18% usually are not positive. For what it’s price, a robust majority of People (64%) assume the invention of nukes was a foul factor, per one other YouGov ballot.
Vibe examine
Gerrymandering is dangerous, but it surely’s worse for Democrats to disarm whereas Republicans maintain at it. And voters in no less than one blue state agree.
This previous Tuesday, California voted to permit the Democrat-led state to redraw its U.S Home districts. The transfer pushes again towards Republicans in different states who’re additional gerrymandering their maps at Trump’s behest.
The difficulty is, it’ll take rather more than simply California preventing again.
As a consequence of latest redistricting, Republicans are presently on monitor to choose up 4 Home seats on web, based on a Each day Kos evaluation of recent Home maps which can be in place or have handed a serious authorized or electoral hurdle, reminiscent of in California.
California’s impending redraw is anticipated to flip 5 Republican-held Home seats, however that merely offsets GOP beneficial properties in Texas, which redrew its map in August. Since then, Republicans in Missouri, North Carolina, and Ohio have redrawn their maps to additional benefit their social gathering. And much more GOP-led states, reminiscent of Florida and Indiana, are transferring to do the identical.
Utah is extra sophisticated. It’s additionally redrawn its map as a result of a courtroom order, and whereas its new map provides Democrats a greater shot in two districts, Republicans are nonetheless favored in every. That stated, if subsequent yr’s midterm elections are a blue wave, the map might backfire on them, probably giving Democrats two seats within the state, the place they presently have none.
If these maps pan out as anticipated, and no extra are handed, Democrats would wish to flip seven seats on web to retake the Home.
Virginia, your time is now. Maryland too. And Illinois. And New York.