Microsoft President Brad Smith criticizes tech moguls’ AI warnings as hypocritical and self-serving

1 hour ago 2



Microsoft’s Brad Smith has a message for the tech executives issuing dire warnings about artificial intelligence: look in the mirror first.

In an interview with Axios on June 16, Smith called out what he described as “hypocritical, grandiose warnings” from prominent tech figures about AI risks. His core argument is deceptively simple. These warnings are framed as things happening to Americans, not for them. In English: the people building the most powerful AI systems are also the ones screaming loudest about how dangerous those systems might be, and Smith thinks the framing is deliberately disempowering.

It’s a bold stance from someone who has spent 33 years at one of the world’s largest AI investors.

The 25-year timeline versus the fundraising pitch

Smith’s critique zeroes in on timeline manipulation. He argues that the AI transformation will unfold over the next 25 years, not the compressed, breathless timelines that dominate pitch decks and investor presentations.

He specifically took aim at companies advocating for a global pause on AI development, singling out Anthropic, suggesting that those calling for slowdowns should first address their own acceleration in AI innovations.

Gen Z’s commencement season anxiety

Smith’s commentary didn’t emerge in a vacuum. It followed a notable trend during the 2026 commencement season, where graduates used their speeches to voice genuine fear about AI’s impact on their career prospects. Students at institutions like Princeton expressed a preference for human-created designs, rejecting AI-generated options in a show of resistance to what they perceived as an elite-driven push towards automation.

In a June 10 blog post, Smith acknowledged these concerns directly, writing about AI’s potential impact on jobs while drawing parallels to historical fears about technology’s effects on employment.

Microsoft’s self-interest, acknowledged

Smith was refreshingly transparent about Microsoft’s positioning in all of this. He stated that Microsoft’s success hinges on people remaining employed, and that the company’s future is tied to maintaining employment levels.

Smith emphasized that AI should be centered on aiding humans rather than replacing them.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article