Young Americans feel more threatened by AI than young Chinese. Why? A new survey shows that 59% of young Americans fear AI threatens their job prospects, compared to less than 10% of young Chinese, reflecting fundamentally different economic outlooks and job markets in the two countries. Young Americans feel more threatened by AI than young Chinese. Why? It starts with the fundamentally different economic outlooks and job prospects for young people in China and the US most popular https://www.scmp.com/tech/big-tech/article/3325858/bytedance-chatbot-doubao-still-chinas-most-popular-ai-app-rival-deepseek-loses-users?module=inline&pgtype=article AI applications. My son, obsessed with space, black holes and galaxies, keeps asking Doubao for related videos. When the video is of low quality or inaccurate, I would stop it and explain it may not be reliable. Despite my concerns about AI-generated information, I let him interact with AI within limits. I see AI primarily as a tool; like the internet or smartphone, it will become an important part of everyday life, so learning to use it matters. echoed by most https://www.scmp.com/economy/china-economy/article/3354861/less-10-chinese-public-worried-about-ai-destroying-jobs-survey?module=inline&pgtype=article Chinese people, especially among the younger generation. But it seems different for their peers across the Pacific. In a recently released Chinese survey of more than 7,000 people, over 96 per cent report an awareness of AI, with over 54 per cent using it. More than 40 per cent use AI specifically in work, study or daily life, significantly higher than in the United States and other developed countries. The Edelman Trust Barometer shows 87 per cent in China trusting AI, compared with only 32 per cent in the US. In contrast, last year’s Harvard Youth Poll found that 59 per cent of 18-29‑year‑olds in the US believed AI threatened their job prospects. According to Gallup, 48 per cent of Gen Z workers think the risks of AI in the workplace outweigh the benefits – up 11 percentage points from last year; meanwhile, those reporting excitement about AI fell by 14 points. In a Harris Poll survey, nearly half of Gen Zers believe AI made their degrees irrelevant. AI job displacement https://www.scmp.com/tech/tech-trends/article/3352327/ai-cost-cutting-not-legal-excuse-fire-workers-chinese-court-says?module=inline&pgtype=article fell to 39.44 per cent last year from 60.5 per cent while the top risk, identified by 45.79 per cent, is of AI overuse leading to an atrophy of personal capabilities.