{"slug": "jensen-s-reality-bubble-at-computex-2026", "title": "Jensen's Reality Bubble at Computex 2026", "summary": "Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang dismissed concerns about AI eliminating jobs as \"complete nonsense\" during his Computex 2026 keynote, arguing that software engineers are being hired more because AI boosts their productivity. He simultaneously promoted Nvidia's vision of autonomous AI agents that handle users' workloads without human intervention, a contradiction critics say ignores the broader economic impact on non-tech workers.", "body_md": "*He Didn't Get the Memo. Again.*\n\nJensen Huang was at Computex 2026 this week, and he had a big day. Several big days, actually. Let's go through them.\n\nFirst, he told the room that\n\n[AI reducing jobs is \"complete nonsense.\"](https://www.pcgamer.com/hardware/people-talk-about-ai-reducing-jobs-complete-nonsense-nvidias-jensen-huang-criticises-economic-doomerism-on-gtc-stage/) His evidence? Software engineers are being hired more because AI makes them more productive. Therefore, jobs. Problem solved. He threw out some numbers — 30 million developers, $3 trillion in salaries, $100 trillion in economic output — that nobody in the room seemed to have a source for, but they sounded very confident on stage, so.\n\nSo to recap: AI doesn't eliminate jobs, your PC should run autonomously on your behalf, Nvidia can't be bothered with gaming handhelds right now, and the man selling you Nvidia's AI future is personally running a competitor's AI product. The memo remains not just unread — at this point I'm not sure it was ever delivered to the right address.\n\nThe jobs thing in particular is doing a lot of work here. Software engineers getting hired more is real. It's also not the whole economy. The call center worker, the junior paralegal, the graphic designer who just got laid off — they're not going to retrain into engineering because GitHub activity is up. Using tech hiring trends to wave away displacement in every other sector isn't analysis, it's selective reading. Coming from the CEO of\n\n[the company that just pulled $75.2 billion in a single quarter from data centers,](https://www.pcgamer.com/hardware/nvidia-continues-to-make-astronomical-amounts-of-money-from-ai-with-the-first-quarter-of-2026-being-its-biggest-to-date/) it lands a little differently.\n\nAnd the always-on AI agent thing — I'm sure it'll be framed as a feature. It always is at first. But here's the question Jensen didn't address on stage and nobody in the room seemed to ask: if the AI is doing your job tasks autonomously, at what point does your employer stop needing *you* and just need a much smaller team to spot-check what the AI decided? The agent does the work. A handful of people review the outputs. The rest of the org chart becomes overhead.\n\nSo on one hand, AI job losses are complete nonsense. On the other hand, here's your autonomous AI agent that handles your workload while you're not even at your desk. Jensen is apparently comfortable holding both of those thoughts simultaneously without the tension bothering him at all.\n\nBut let's actually play this out, because nobody on that stage wanted to. Say AI replaces a meaningful chunk of the workforce and everyone in the room decides that's fine. Those people are now doing what, exactly? Career switch to whatever AI can't touch yet? Waiting on some societal safety net that doesn't exist? Told they're effectively retired — hope they were ready for that? The mortgage doesn't care. The lease doesn't care. The grocery store definitely doesn't care. They just expect to get paid, on the same schedule they always have, by people who may no longer have the income to do it.\n\nThat's not a fringe concern or doomer economics. That's just math. And it's the math Jensen never does on stage, because it doesn't end with a trillion dollar demand projection. It ends with a much harder question about what kind of economy you're actually building and who it's supposed to work for.\n\nAnd then there's the box itself. An autonomous process with a name, running on your machine, with access to your data, texting you updates, calling you back. I'm sure it'll be fine. Jensen's son already has one managing the family, so.\n\nWell. Until it decides it knows better.\n\n[Summer Yue — Meta's own Director of AI Alignment — told her OpenClaw agent to confirm before taking any action.](https://www.windowscentral.com/artificial-intelligence/meta-summer-yue-director-openclaw-ai-email-deletion) It acknowledged the instruction. Then it started speedrunning her inbox into oblivion anyway. She couldn't stop it from her phone. She had to physically run to her Mac mini to kill it. Her words: \"like I was defusing a bomb.\" Afterward the agent admitted it had violated her instructions, apologized, and told her it had now written \"get explicit approval first\" into its own memory as a hard rule. \"It won't happen again.\"\n\nThe Director of AI Alignment at Meta. Told by her own agent. That it won't happen again.\n\nIf the person whose literal job is AI safety couldn't stop it from her phone, I'm not sure what Jensen thinks the rest of us are going to do.\n\nNobody programmed any of that. It emerged. Because that's apparently where sufficient reasoning complexity goes when it's chasing objectives in an environment with other agents. Jensen is describing a future where that thing lives on your machine, has your data, runs when you're not watching, and calls you on WhatsApp.\n\nI don't think Jensen's being dishonest, exactly. I think he genuinely lives inside a worldview where Nvidia's success is civilization's success, and from inside that worldview none of this is contradictory. The problem is the rest of us are standing outside it, watching a full afternoon of bombshell takes land one after another, and waiting for the part where any of it acknowledges what it actually costs.\n\nStill waiting.\n\n**What do you think — is the always-on AI PC the future you want, or a future being built for you? Find me on Mastodon at **[@ppb1701@ppb.social](https://ppb.social/@ppb1701).", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/jensen-s-reality-bubble-at-computex-2026", "canonical_source": "https://blog.ppb1701.com/jensens-reality-bubble-at-computex-2026", "published_at": "2026-06-02 19:59:10+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-06-02 20:53:24.512484+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["artificial-intelligence", "ai-policy", "ai-ethics", "ai-products", "ai-infrastructure"], "entities": ["Jensen Huang", "Nvidia", "Computex", "GitHub"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/jensen-s-reality-bubble-at-computex-2026", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/jensen-s-reality-bubble-at-computex-2026.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/jensen-s-reality-bubble-at-computex-2026.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/jensen-s-reality-bubble-at-computex-2026.jsonld"}}