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Latest News
- Andy Jassy says AI will eliminate some Amazon jobs — but create more in at least 2 areas
Andy Jassy says AI will eliminate some Amazon jobs — but create more in at least 2 areas

REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
- Amazon's CEO, Andy Jassy, says AI will transform jobs at the company.
- The tech will create new jobs in robotics and AI, despite automating some existing roles, he said.
- Amazon has 500 open robotics roles on LinkedIn.
AI isn't all doom and gloom for jobs, said Amazon's Andy Jassy.
In an interview with CNBC published on Monday, the Amazon CEO deemed AI "the most transformative technology in our lifetime." He said that it would change things not only for Amazon customers but also for its employees.
Jassy said that AI technologies would create jobs in at least two areas of the company.
"With every technical transformation, there will be fewer people doing some of the jobs that the technology actually starts to automate," he said. "Are there going to be other jobs? We're going to hire more people in AI and more people in robotics, and there are going to be other jobs that the technology wants you to go higher that we'll hire over time too."
Jassy said that AI agents, which do tasks like coding, research, analytics, and spreadsheet work, would also change the nature of every employee's job.
"They won't have to do as much rote work," he said. "Every single person gets to start every task at a more advanced starting spot."
On LinkedIn, Amazon has added at least 500 open roles worldwide with the keyword "robotics" in the job title in the past month. Roles span internships to senior applied scientist positions.
The Amazon robotics senior applied scientist job description includes tasks like "developing machine-learning capabilities and infrastructure for robotic perception and motion" and "building visualization tools for analyzing and debugging robot behavior."
Jassy's comments came in response to a question about his June 17 memo, which outlined how AI would change the company's workforce.
"It's hard to know exactly where this nets out over time, but in the next few years, we expect that this will reduce our total corporate workforce as we get efficiency gains from using AI extensively across the company," he wrote.
Some Amazon employees were not happy with Jassy's message. In internal Slack channels, some called for leadership to share in the fallout, while others saw it as a layoff warning, Business Insider reported.
"There is nothing more motivating on a Tuesday than reading that your job will be replaced by AI in a few years," one person wrote in Slack.
Amazon employs about 1.5 million workers, according to its website, and has cut almost 28,000 jobs since the start of 2022, per Layoffs.fyi.
From Jassy's memo and Monday's interview, it is unclear which or how many Amazon employees would be affected by AI-driven job changes.
Other tech CEOs have raised the alarm on AI-related job cuts, especially for white-collar and entry-level roles.
In April, Micha Kaufman, the CEO and founder of the freelance-job site Fiverr, wrote in an email to employees that: "It does not matter if you are a programmer, designer, project manager, data scientist, lawyer, customer support rep, salesperson, or a finance person β AI is coming for you."
In late May, Anthropic's CEO, Dario Amodei, suggested AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs.
"We, as the producers of this technology, have a duty and an obligation to be honest about what is coming," Amodei told Axios in an interview. "I don't think this is on people's radar."
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Microsoft says its new health AI beat doctors in accurate diagnoses by a mile

Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images
- Microsoft said its medical AI diagnosed cases four times as accurately as human doctors.
- The AI system also solved cases "more cost-effectively" than its human counterparts, Microsoft said.
- The study comes as AI's growing role in healthcare raises questions about its place in medicine.
Microsoft said its medical AI system diagnosed cases more accurately than human doctors by a wide margin.
In a blog post published on Monday, the tech giant said its AI system, the Microsoft AI Diagnostic Orchestrator, diagnosed cases four times as accurately as a group of experienced physicians in a test.
Microsoft's study comes as AI tools rapidly make their way into hospitals and clinics, raising questions about how much of medicine can or should be automated and what role doctors will play as diagnostic AI systems get more capable.
The experiment involved 304 case studies sourced from the New England Journal of Medicine. Both the AI and physicians had to solve these cases step by step, just like they would in a real clinic: ordering tests, asking questions, and narrowing down possibilities.
The AI system was paired with large language models from tech companies like OpenAI, Meta, Anthropic, and Google. When coupled with OpenAI's o3, the AI diagnostic system correctly solved 85.5% of the cases, Microsoft said.
By contrast, 21 practicing physicians from the US and UK β each with five to 20 years of experience β averaged 20% accuracy across the completed cases, the company added. In the study, the doctors did not have access to resources they might typically tap for diagnostics, including coworkers, books, and AI.
The AI system also solved cases "more cost-effectively" than its human counterparts, Microsoft said.
"Our findings also suggest that AI reduce unnecessary healthcare costs. US health spending is nearing 20% of US GDP, with up to 25% of that estimated to be wasted," it added.
"We're taking a big step towards medical superintelligence," said Mustafa Suleyman, the CEO of Microsoft's AI division, in a post on X.
He added that the cases used in the study are "some of the toughest and most diagnostically complex" a physician can face.
Suleyman previously led AI efforts at Google.
Microsoft did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Will AI replace doctors?
Microsoft said in the blog post that AI "represents a complement to doctors and other health professionals."
"While this technology is advancing rapidly, their clinical roles are much broader than simply making a diagnosis. They need to navigate ambiguity and build trust with patients and their families in a way that AI isn't set up to do," Microsoft said.
"Clinical roles will, we believe, evolve with AI," it added.
Tech leaders like Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates have said that AI could help solve the long-standing shortage of doctors.
"AI will come in and provide medical IQ, and there won't be a shortage," he said on an episode of the "People by WTF" podcast published in April.
But doctors have told BI that AI can't and shouldn't replace clinicians just yet.
AI can't replicate physicians' presence, empathy, and nuanced judgment in uncertain or complex conditions, said Dr. Shravan Verma, the CEO of a Singapore-based health tech startup.
Chatbots and AI tools can handle the first mile of care, but they must escalate to qualified professionals when needed, he told BI last month.
Do you have a story to share about AI in healthcare? Contact this reporter at [email protected].
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Latest News
- Ray Dalio warns that politicians can't solve the 'debt bomb problem' without serious voter blowback
Ray Dalio warns that politicians can't solve the 'debt bomb problem' without serious voter blowback

Jemal Countess via Getty Images
- Ray Dalio said solving America's debt problem will require a bipartisan solution.
- But Dalio said Republicans and Democrats can't do it "because politics have become so absolutist."
- "To me, that's a tragedy," he added.
Ray Dalio, the founder and former CEO of hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, said on Monday that Republicans and Democrats don't have the political will to reduce the country's national debt.
"There is no way that the deficit/debt bomb problem can be sustainably dealt with unless there is a mix of tax revenue increases and spending decreases that are determined in a bipartisan way," Dalio wrote in an X post on June 30.
Dalio said in his post that both Republicans and Democrats know they have to cut the deficit by raising taxes and cutting spending. This "would lead to a supply/demand balance improvement for US debt which in turn would lower interest rates," he added.
Dalio said lower interest rates would "reduce the budget deficit" and "help the markets and the economy."
"But because politics have become so absolutist, they feel they can't go down this obviously best path because both their constituents and their parties will throw them out of office if they explored this more balanced approach," Dalio wrote on X.
"To me, that's a tragedy," he added.
A representative for Dalio did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
This isn't the first time Dalio has warned about the ramifications of leaving debt levels unattended. In February, Dalio told attendees at the World Governments Summit in Dubai that the US could suffer the financial equivalent of a "heart attack" if debt continued to soar.
Then, in March, Dalio said he had met House Budget Chair Jodey Arrington and other House Republicans to discuss the national debt. Dalio said after the meeting that there was a "pretty broad recognition" among attendees that the deficit needed to be reduced to around 3% of US GDP.
The federal government spent $6.75 trillion in the 2024 fiscal year but only collected $4.92 trillion in revenue. The resulting deficit of $1.83 trillion was $138 billion higher than the previous fiscal year's.
Dalio isn't the only business leader who has sounded the alarm on the US debt problem.
Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, has sharply criticized President Donald Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" for worsening the country's debt situation. Musk was a prominent financial backer of Trump and used to lead the administration's cost-cutting outfit, the White House DOGE Office.
But Musk broke with Trump just days after he announced his departure from DOGE on May 28. Musk called Trump's bill a "MOUNTAIN of DISGUSTING PORK" on June 5 before walking back his attacks the following week.
Musk, however, resumed his attacks on the bill over the weekend. The bill is pending a vote in the Senate, and GOP lawmakers hope to send it to Trump's desk by July 4.
"It is obvious with the insane spending of this bill, which increases the debt ceiling by a record FIVE TRILLION DOLLARS that we live in a one-party country β the PORKY PIG PARTY!!" Musk wrote in an X post on Monday.
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Trump-Musk feud reignites after Tesla CEO calls for new political party
Elon Musk again blasted President Trump's signature spending bill Monday as the Senate worked through a marathon amendment session to send the measure to the Oval Office by July 4.
The latest: Hours after Musk threatened to form a new political party if the "big, beautiful bill" passed, Trump claimed early Tuesday the Tesla CEO "may get more subsidy than any human being in history" and suggested he may have DOGE, which the Tesla CEO once spearheaded, take a "good, hard, look" at the businesses the billionaire has government contracts with.

Why it matters: The relationship between Trump and Musk β once a ubiquitous figure in the White House and at DOGE β imploded over the president's "big, beautiful bill."
- "It is obvious with the insane spending of this bill, which increases the debt ceiling by a record FIVE TRILLION DOLLARS that we live in a one-party country β the PORKY PIG PARTY!!" Musk wrote on his social media site X.
- "Time for a new political party that actually cares about the people," the world's richest man added.
What they're saying: In a separate post, Musk doubled down on his rhetoric, saying every member of Congress who votes to pass the bill should "hang their head in shame."
- "[T]hey will lose their primary next year if it is the last thing I do on this Earth," Musk said.
- In a post later Monday, Musk said, "If this insane spending bill passes, the America Party will be formed the next day."
- He added that the country needs "an alternative to the Democrat-Republican uniparty so that the people actually have a VOICE."
Of note: The White House initially responded to Musk's comments by pointing to Trump's remarks to Fox News over the weekend saying that the world's richest person was upset the bill would end subsidies for EVs.
- "I think Elon is a wonderful guy, and I know he's going to do well, always. He's a smart guy," Trump said in the interview.
Friction point: Musk, who slashed and burned through federal agencies atop the Department of Government Efficiency, has repeatedly decried the size of Trump's spending package, now estimated to add more than $3 trillion to the national debt.
- The rupture spilled over into an open feud earlier this month, with Musk lashing out at Trump in a series of X posts, which he later walked back.
- Musk, who claimed credit for Trump's reelection, had floated the idea of founding a new political party in an X poll of his readers June 5.
More from Axios:
- Trump threatens to cancel Musk's government contracts
- Musk talked with Trump before tweeting regrets about feud
- Deficit hawks hate the latest version of the "big, beautiful bill"
Editor's note: This story has been updated with additional reporting, including details of President Trump's Tuesday morning post to Truth Social.
X's new head of product said he got the job by posting his way to the top

Steve Jennings/Getty Images
- X's new head of product, Nikita Bier, said he got the job by posting his way to the top.
- Bier said he spends "every waking hour" on X.
- In 2022, he tweeted at Elon Musk asking for the product head role.
Here's how X's new head of product said he got the job: "I've officially posted my way to the top."
Nikita Bier, a Los Angeles-based entrepreneur, posted a picture on X on Monday with the platform's owner, Elon Musk, writing about how he landed his new appointment.
"While I already spend every waking hour on this app, I'll now be spending that time helping others unlock that same value," he said in the post.
Ladies and gentlemen, I've officially posted my way to the top:
β Nikita Bier (@nikitabier) June 30, 2025
I'm joining @X as Head of Product.
π is the most important social network in the world. It's where internet culture originates and where the world's most influential people convene.
Finding my community and⦠pic.twitter.com/MLU16rvXIP
Musk reposted Bier's announcement with the caption, "Welcome to X!"
The appointment was a long time coming for Bier β he has had his eye on the role for more than three years. In April 2022, shortly after Musk took over X β which was then called Twitter β Bier tweeted at Musk asking for the role: "@elonmusk Hire me to run Twitter as VP of Product."
"Twitter has the potential to be the leading messenger, groups app & content creation tool," he said in the post.
Shortly after his appointment on Monday, Bier added the comment "Never give up" to his old post.
Bier worked as a Meta product manager from 2017 to 2021. He cofounded tbh, an anonymous polling app for teenagers, which was acquired by Facebook in 2017. Less than a year later, FacebookΒ shut down the app, citing "low usage."
Bier also cofounded Gas, a social media app similar in function to tbh. Discord acquired it in January 2023 and shut it down in November.
Along with being a serial entrepreneur, Bier is also a serial poster. He posts on X several times daily and has garnered a following of over half a million on the app.
Over the years, he has provided Musk with product advice on X. In January 2023, Bier wrote that he would pay Musk $100 to "revert all product changes back" to what they were before he acquired Twitter.
Representatives for X did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Iran-linked hackers threaten to release emails stolen from Trump associates
An Iran-linked cyberattack group that hacked President Trump's 2024 campaign is threatening to release another trove of emails it has stolen from his associates, including White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and Roger Stone.
The big picture: Reuters first reported the threat on Monday that the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency on X called a "calculated smear campaign" β which came the same day as the Trump administration released a report warning that "Iranian Cyber Actors" may target U.S. firms and "operators of critical infrastructure."
We published a joint fact sheet with FBI β Federal Bureau of Investigation, DC3, and NSA - National Security Agency...
Posted by Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency onΒ Monday, June 30, 2025
- And it came three days after Trump announced he was halting plans to potentially ease sanctions on Iran after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei claimed U.S. and Israeli airstrikes on Iran's nuclear facilities didn't cause major damage.
Driving the news: Hackers who gave themselves the pseudonym "Robert" told Reuters in online conversations on Sunday and Monday they had around 100 gigabytes of emails involving Wiles, Stone, Trump lawyer Lindsey Halligan and adult film actress Stormy Daniels, and others.
- They spoke of potentially selling the emails, but did not disclose details of the material.
- The Justice Department alleged in an indictment last September against three Iranians in the 2024 Trump cyberattack case that Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps oversaw the "Robert" hacking drive.
What they're saying: CISA spokesperson Marci McCarthy said in a statement posted to X in response to Reuters' report that a "hostile foreign adversary" was "threatening to illegally exploit purportedly stolen and unverified material in an effort to distract, discredit and divide."
- McCarthy said the "so-called cyber 'attack' is nothing more than digital propaganda and the targets are no coincidence" and that it's designed to "damage President Trump and discredit honorable public servants" who serve the U.S. with distinction.
- "These criminals will be found and will be brought to justice," McCarthy added.
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Latest News
- Olivia Munn says she learned to let go of her 'extra baggage' after her breast cancer diagnosis
Olivia Munn says she learned to let go of her 'extra baggage' after her breast cancer diagnosis

Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images
- Olivia Munn says her breast cancer diagnosis taught her to let go of the "extra baggage" in her life.
- "When I got the diagnosis, immediately, the negative thoughts in my head, I dropped all of that," she said.
- Despite being more common in middle-aged and older women, breast cancer is rising among women under 50.
Olivia Munn, 44, says her breast cancer diagnosis forced her to confront her priorities in life.
On Monday's episode of "Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard," Munn spoke about how her cancer journey prompted her to let go of distractions and focus on the things she truly cared about.
The "X-Men: Apocalypse" actor was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent a double mastectomy in 2023.
"When I got the diagnosis, immediately, the negative thoughts in my head, I dropped all of that. Because when you are diagnosed with cancer you have one job," Munn told podcast host Dax Shepard.
Munn said her sole focus at that point in time became recovery, and with all her energy dedicated to surviving cancer, she had no room to think about anything else.
"That's all your mind is thinking about, and you're like 'How do I get through this? How do I get through this? How do I live? How do I survive?' Because there's no way to climb Everest with extra baggage on your shoulders," Munn said.
When she recovered, she realized the experience had completely changed her mindset.
"I'm like, oh, now that I got to the other side, I'm not going to β I can't imagine picking it back up," Munn said.
"That's what cancer did for me," she added. "It was literally one step at a time, right, so when I have the thoughts that creep in, I think very quickly and let it go."
Munn isn't the only public figure who has publicly spoken about their cancer journey.
In April 2024, Shannen Doherty had said on her podcast that she was getting rid of some of her belongings after her breast cancer returned as stage 4. Doherty died in July 2024 at 53.
In November, Kathy Bates said that she decided against having reconstruction surgery after getting a double mastectomy in 2012 due to breast cancer.
In the US, breast cancer accounts for about 30% of all new cancer diagnoses in women each year, per data from the American Cancer Society. Although breast cancer mainly occurs in middle-aged and older women, the disease is on the rise among those who are 50 and below.
A representative for Munn did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent by Business Insider outside regular hours.
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Latest News
- Elon Musk is ripping the GOP and Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' again. Here's how it all went down.
Elon Musk is ripping the GOP and Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' again. Here's how it all went down.

Kevin Dietsch via Getty Images
- Elon Musk reignited his criticism of Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" over the weekend.
- Musk had sharply criticized the bill on June 5 but backed away from his attacks just days later.
- Musk has since resumed his attacks and said he will form his own political party if the bill passes.
Elon Musk is not done slamming President Donald Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" just yet.
Musk started criticizing Trump's spending bill on June 5 but walked back the attacks just days later. Musk said in an X post on June 11 that some of his remarks on Trump had gone "too far."
But the detente did not last long. The Tesla and SpaceX CEO reignited his attacks on the bill over the weekend and hasn't stopped since.
On Saturday, Musk wrote on X that the president's signature tax bill "will destroy millions of jobs in America and cause immense strategic harm to our country."
"Utterly insane and destructive. It gives handouts to industries of the past while severely damaging industries of the future," he continued.
GOP lawmakers hope to send the bill, which is pending a vote in the Senate, to Trump's desk by July 4. Musk, however, said he would defeat politicians who voted for the bill if it passed and form his own political party.
"It is obvious with the insane spending of this bill, which increases the debt ceiling by a record FIVE TRILLION DOLLARS that we live in a one-party country β the PORKY PIG PARTY!!" Musk wrote in an X post on Monday.
"Time for a new political party that actually cares about the people," he said.
Musk said in a follow-up post, published just an hour later, that any politician who voted for the bill despite campaigning on cutting government spending should "hang their head in shame."
"And they will lose their primary next year if it is the last thing I do on this Earth," he added.
Musk said later that a new party, the "America Party," will be formed the day after the "insane spending bill passes."
"Our country needs an alternative to the Democrat-Republican uniparty so that the people actually have a VOICE," Musk added.
Musk had long opposed Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill." In an interview with CBS that aired last month, Musk said he was "disappointed to see the massive spending bill."
Musk said the bill "undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing," the government cost-cutting outfit he led when he was a part of the Trump administration. Musk announced his departure from the White House DOGE office on May 28.
"I think a bill can be big, or it could be beautiful. I don't know if it could be both," Musk told CBS.
Musk's disagreement with Trump over the bill marks a rare break between the two men. Musk had been a prominent backer of Trump's presidential campaign last year, where he spent at least $277 million backing Trump and other GOP candidates in the 2024 elections.
When Musk criticized Trump's bill earlier in June, he took credit for Trump and the GOP's electoral victories in 2024. That was also when he first floated the possibility of forming his own political party.
"Without me, Trump would have lost the election, Dems would control the House and the Republicans would be 51-49 in the Senate," Musk wrote on X on June 5.
"Such ingratitude," he continued.
Musk said in an interview with Bloomberg on May 20 that he had "done enough" political spending and planned to "do a lot less in the future."
"Well, if I see a reason to do political spending in the future, I will do it," he added.
Trump initially expressed disappointment at Musk's behavior but has since taken a more conciliatory tone with Musk. Trump said last week that he still views Musk positively but has not spoken to him much.
"He's a smart guy. And he actually went and campaigned with me and this and that," Trump said in an interview with Fox News' Maria Bartiromo that aired Sunday.
"But he got a little bit upset, and that wasn't appropriate," he added.
Musk and the White House did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.