When real estate executive Gloria Caulfield told graduates at the University of Central Florida that βthe rise of artificial intelligence is the next industrial revolution,β the crowd didnβt applaud β they booed.
It was one of the first in a series of similar scenes to play out across US campuses last month, including former Google CEO Eric Schmidt facing a heckling mid-speech.
The reason behind the discontent shouldnβt be surprising β AI is taking jobs.
The US tech sector has announced more than 123,000 job cuts in 2026 alone β up 66 percent on the same period last year β with AI now the most cited reason by employers.
Entry-level positions β the ones graduates walk into β have been among the hardest hit.
Yet some top tech executives still seem to have been taken aback by the chilly reception to AI, raising questions about a disconnect between the tech world and the real world.
The Convenient History Lesson
This week, Brad Smith, Microsoftβs Vice Chair and President published a detailed thought leadership piece that aimed to address the anxiety faced by graduates.
Smith opens with the story of Paul Delaroche, the French painter who reportedly declared βfrom today, painting is dead!β upon seeing an early photograph in 1838. The camera, Smith reminds us, did not kill painting β it sparked Impressionism, Post-Impressionism, Cubism, and entirely new artistic movements.
It is a fair point. But portrait painters did lose work when photography arrived. The transition wasnβt painless or instantaneous. And crucially, the timescale over which art reinvented itself β decades β is cold comfort to anyone whose income disappears in the next quarter.
The Numbers Worth Noting
In 2025 alone, Microsoft itself cut approximately 15,000 jobs across multiple rounds of redundancies.
In April 2026, the company offered voluntary redundancy to around seven percent of its workforce, even as it continued pouring billions into AI infrastructure.
A 2026 Motion Recruitment study found that AI adoption is already slowing hiring for entry-level and generalised IT roles β precisely the positions graduates would historically have walked into.
Unemployment among recent US college graduates hit 5.8 percent in 2025, partly attributed to companies replacing entry-level functions with AI tooling.
The transition pain Smith acknowledges is real, current, and disproportionately falling on exactly the audience he is addressing.
The βBundle of Tasksβ Framework
Smith endorses a framework from the book Open to Work: How to Get Ahead in the Age of AI, co-authored by LinkedIn CEO Ryan Roslansky and Aneesh Raman.
It asks workers to stop thinking of their job as a title and start thinking of it as a βbundle of tasksβ β sorted into three buckets: what AI can do alone, what you can do with AI, and what humans must do alone.
For many workers, this may be a genuinely useful way to look at AI.
But it puts the burden of adaptation squarely on the individual β and does not fully engage with the structural question of whether the new roles created by AI will materialise at the pace, scale, and wage level needed to absorb those displaced.
The Bottom Line
The graduates booing on campuses were sending a message to the industry ultimately responsible for the disruption they are entering.
Smith, to his credit, has engaged with that message more seriously than most of his peers.
But engagement is not the same as accountability. For all its sincerity, the piece ultimately places the burden of adaptation on the individual worker β learn AI fluency, rethink your task bundle, develop your soft skills.
What it stops short of is any suggestion that the companies deploying AI at scale, and cutting workforces to fund it, bear a corresponding responsibility for what comes next.
Smith calls it a shared challenge. The sharing, as yet, appears to be one-sided.