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OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman told a Commonwealth Bank of Australia conference in Sydney on May 26, 2026, that rapid advances in artificial intelligence were unlikely to cause a global “jobs apocalypse.” Altman said OpenAI’s technical forecasts since launching ChatGPT in 2022 had been broadly accurate but that the social and economic consequences had unfolded differently than he expected.
He said he was “delighted to be wrong” about large-scale elimination of entry-level white-collar roles, noting a persistent “human part” of many jobs after experimenting with AI to handle messages.
Altman did not cite employment data.
His remarks come as a number of global firms — including HSBC, Amazon, Standard Chartered, Meta and some Australian companies — have announced AI-driven role reductions, and as Australia’s WiseTech has faced violent threats amid job cuts.
Reuters has also reported OpenAI is preparing a confidential U.S. IPO filing, adding market interest to the comments.
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Channel NewsAsiaOpenAI's Altman says AI unlikely to lead to 'jobs apocalypse'
The Sydney Morning HeraldOpenAI boss downplays jobs apocalypse as ‘threats of violence’ hit Aussie tech giant
Business StandardAI unlikely to lead to 'jobs apocalypse', says OpenAI CEO Sam Altman





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