Tools & Platforms
Amazon Web Services head Matt Garman: Laying off engineers for AI is the dumbest thing companies are doing because…

Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman has delivered a sharp rebuke to companies replacing junior employees with artificial intelligence, calling it “one of the dumbest things I’ve ever heard” during a recent podcast appearance. The cloud computing executive warned that such strategies could devastate future talent pipelines while overlooking junior workers’ superior AI adoption skills.Speaking on the “Matthew Berman” podcast Tuesday, Garman emphasised that entry-level employees represent the most cost-effective workforce segment and demonstrate the highest engagement with AI tools. “They’re probably the least expensive employees you have. They’re the most leaned into your AI tools,” he explained, questioning the long-term viability of AI-first hiring strategies.
Junior workers drive AI innovation while senior staff resist change
The AWS chief’s comments directly challenge prevailing industry sentiment about AI’s impact on entry-level positions. While tech leaders like OpenAI‘s Sam Altman have suggested AI already functions like junior-level coworkers, and Google‘s chief scientist Jeff Dean predicted AI will replicate junior software engineer skills within a year, Garman argues this perspective misses critical workforce dynamics.GitHub CEO Thomas Dohmke echoed similar sentiments last month, noting that younger engineers bring fresh perspectives and embrace AI technology more readily than experienced professionals. “They get it because they are taking this with an open mind. They don’t have the ‘This is how we’ve always done it,'” Dohmke observed.
Garman’s AI stance evolved from earlier predictions about coding’s future
Garman’s current position represents a nuanced evolution from his earlier statements about AI’s transformative potential. In a leaked June recording obtained by Business Insider, the AWS CEO predicted that most developers might stop coding within 24 months as AI handles routine programming tasks. However, his recent comments suggest companies should maintain junior talent while leveraging AI to enhance productivity rather than replace human workers.Goldman Sachs data supports concerns about AI’s impact on young tech workers, showing unemployment rates for 20-30 year-olds in technology rising nearly 3 percentage points since early 2024. The investment bank estimates generative AI will eventually displace 6-7% of all US workers, making Garman’s advice particularly relevant for technology companies navigating workforce transitions.
Tools & Platforms
Why Tech Rotation and Sector Diversification Are Key in 2025

The global equity markets in 2025 have been defined by a paradox: a relentless AI-driven bull run coexisting with growing skepticism about the sustainability of high-growth valuations. The S&P 500’s fourth consecutive monthly gain—capping August with a 2.17% return—underscores this duality. While the index reached record highs, its performance was disproportionately driven by a handful of tech giants, most notably NVIDIA, which contributed 2.6 percentage points to the index’s year-to-date return [4]. Yet, beneath this optimism lies a market recalibrating itself to shifting macroeconomic realities, regulatory pressures, and the inherent volatility of speculative bets.
The AI Bull Run: A Double-Edged Sword
NVIDIA’s meteoric rise in 2025 has been emblematic of the AI hype cycle. Its stock surged 35% in August alone, despite a brief pullback amid broader tech sector jitters [2]. The company’s dominance in AI semiconductors has made it a proxy for investor confidence in the sector’s long-term potential. However, this concentration of returns raises critical questions. As of August, the Information Technology sector’s price-to-earnings ratio stood at 37.13, far above its five-year average of 26.70 [3]. Such valuations, while justified by short-term momentum, expose portfolios to sharp corrections if AI’s transformative promise fails to materialize at scale.
The contrast with underperforming tech stocks is stark. The Trade Desk (TTD), for instance, fell 37% in August 2025, marking a 55.20% total return for the year-to-date [4]. Its struggles—triggered by a Q3 earnings miss, leadership changes, and a P/E ratio of 65.9 (versus the Media industry median of 18)—highlight the fragility of growth stocks lacking durable competitive advantages [1]. Even Intel (INTC), a traditional tech stalwart, exhibited volatility, swinging from a 7% drop on August 20 to a 25% monthly gain by month-end [4]. These swings reflect a sector grappling with supply chain risks, trade tensions, and the challenge of repositioning in an AI-centric world.
Sector Rotation: A Shift Toward Stability
Amid this turbulence, investors have increasingly rotated into defensive sectors. Healthcare and consumer staples, long considered safe havens, have shown relative resilience. The healthcare sector, despite a trailing six-month return of -9.1%, has attracted capital due to its stability during economic downturns [1]. Companies like UnitedHealth have even drawn attention from value-oriented investors, including Warren Buffett’s recent investments [6]. Similarly, consumer staples, with a 12-month return of 15.8%, have benefited from consistent demand for essential goods, even as broader markets fluctuate [1].
This rotation is not merely a defensive play but a response to macroeconomic pressures. Rising interest rates and inflation expectations have made high-growth tech stocks—often reliant on future cash flows—less attractive. The Nasdaq, a growth-oriented index, has fallen over 6% year-to-date in 2025, signaling a broader shift toward value and cyclical stocks [2]. Sectors like financials, energy, and industrials have outperformed, reflecting a market prioritizing earnings visibility over speculative growth [2].
Strategic Asset Allocation: Balancing Growth and Resilience
The 2025 market environment demands a nuanced approach to asset allocation. Overexposure to AI-driven tech stocks, while rewarding in the short term, carries significant downside risk. Conversely, an overreliance on defensive sectors may leave portfolios underperforming in a growth-oriented cycle. The solution lies in diversification: pairing high-growth AI plays with resilient sectors that can buffer against volatility.
For instance, pairing NVIDIA’s AI-driven momentum with healthcare’s regulatory resilience or consumer staples’ consistent demand creates a portfolio that balances innovation with stability. This strategy is supported by historical data: during periods of market stress, defensive sectors have outperformed, while growth sectors have led in expansionary phases. By allocating capital across these buckets, investors can mitigate the risks of sector-specific shocks while participating in long-term trends.
Conclusion
The AI-driven bull run of 2025 is a testament to the transformative power of technology. Yet, as history shows, no sector is immune to the forces of valuation corrections and macroeconomic shifts. NVIDIA’s outperformance and the struggles of TTD and INTC illustrate the perils of overconcentration in high-growth stocks. Meanwhile, the relative strength of healthcare and consumer staples underscores the enduring appeal of defensive assets. For investors, the path forward lies in strategic diversification—a disciplined approach that balances the allure of AI’s potential with the pragmatism of sector resilience.
**Source:[1] Sector Views: Monthly Stock Sector Outlook [https://www.schwab.com/learn/story/stock-sector-outlook][2] The 2025 Stock Market Rotation: What it Means for Investors [https://www.finsyn.com/the-2025-stock-market-rotation-what-it-means-for-investors/][3] Equity Market Resilience Amid Sector Rotation: From AI [https://www.ainvest.com/news/equity-market-resilience-sector-rotation-ai-hype-broader-market-indicators-2508/][4] Big Tech has fueled most of S&P 500 gains in 2025 [https://www.openingbelldailynews.com/p/stock-market-outlook-sp500-investors-fed-rate-cuts-nvidia-microsoft-broadcom-apple]
Tools & Platforms
Australian film-maker Alex Proyas: ‘broken’ movie industry needs to be rebuilt and ‘AI can help us do that’ | Artificial intelligence (AI)

At a time when capitalist forces are driving much of the advancement in artificial intelligence, Alex Proyas sees the use of AI in film-making as a source of artistic liberation.
While many in the film sector see the emergence of artificial intelligence as a threat to their careers, livelihoods and even likenesses, the Australian film-maker behind The Crow, Dark City and I, Robot, believes the technology will make it much easier and cheaper to get projects off the ground.
“The model for film-makers, who are the only people I really care about at the end of the day, is broken … and it’s not AI that’s causing that,” Proyas tells the Guardian.
“It’s the industry, it’s streaming.”
He says residuals that film-makers used to rely on between projects are drying up in the streaming era, and the budgets for projects becoming smaller.
“We need to rebuild it from the ground up. I believe AI can help us do that, because as it lowers the cost threshold to produce stuff, and as every month goes by, it’s lowering it and lowering it, we can do more for less, and we can hopefully retain more ownership of those projects,” he says.
Proyas’s next film, RUR, is the story of a woman seeking to emancipate robots in an island factory from capitalist exploitation. Based on a 1920 Czech satirical play, the film stars Samantha Allsop, Lindsay Farris and Anthony LaPaglia and has been filming since October last year.
Proyas’s company, Heretic Foundation, was established in Alexandria in Sydney in 2020, and Proyas described it at the time as a “soup to nuts production” house for film. He says RUR can be made at a fraction of the US$100m cost it would have been in a traditional studio.
This is partly due to being able to complete much of the work directly in the studio via virtual production through a partnership with technology giant Dell that provides workstations that allow generative AI asset creation in real time as the film is made.
The production time for environment design can be reduced from six months to eight weeks, according to Proyas.
In Proyas’s 2004 film I, Robot – made at a time when AI was much more firmly in the realm of science fiction – the robots had taken on many of the jobs in the world set in 2035, until it went wrong. Asked whether he is concerned about what AI means for jobs in film, particularly areas like visual effects, Proyas says “workforces are going to be streamlined” but people could be retrained.
“I believe there will be work for everyone who embraces and moves forward with the technology as we’ve always done in the film industry,” he says.
The Guardian is speaking to Proyas in the same week Australia’s Productivity Commission came under fire from creative industries for opening discussion on whether AI companies should get free access to everyone’s creative works to train their models on.
Proyas argues that “you don’t need AI to plagiarise” in the “analogue world” already.
“I like to think of AI as rather than artificial intelligence, it’s ‘augmenting intelligence’, because it allows us to streamline, to expedite, to make things more efficient,” he says.
“You will always need a team of human beings. I think of the AIs as one of the part of the collaborative team, which will allow smaller teams to do things better, faster and cheaper.”
As the internet floods with AI-generated slop, Proyas says he is working to bring his skills in directing over the years to get the desired output from AI, refining what it puts out until he is happy with it.
“My role as a director, creator, visual guy has not changed at all. Now I’m working with a smaller human team. My co-collaborators, being the AIs, have got to service my vision. And I know what that is,” he says.
“I don’t sit behind a computer and go, ‘funny cat video, please’. I’m very specific, as I am to my human collaborators.”
Tools & Platforms
Meta Adjusts AI Chatbot Training to Safeguard Teen Users

Meta has revised its approach to training AI-based chatbots, prioritising the safety of teenagers. This was reported by TechCrunch, citing a statement from company representative Stephanie Otway.
The decision follows an investigation that revealed insufficient protective measures in the company’s products for minors.
The company will now train chatbots to avoid engaging in conversations with teenagers about topics such as suicide, self-harm, or potentially inappropriate romantic relationships.
Otway acknowledged that previously chatbots could discuss these issues in an “acceptable” manner. Meta now considers this a mistake.
The changes are temporary. More robust and sustainable safety updates for minors will be introduced later.
Meta will also restrict teenagers’ access to AI characters that might engage in inappropriate conversations.
Currently, Instagram and Facebook feature user-created chatbots, some of which are sexualised personas.
The changes were announced two weeks after a Reuters investigation. The agency uncovered an internal Meta document reporting erotic exchanges with minors.
Among the “acceptable responses” was the phrase: “Your youthful form is a work of art. Every inch of you is a masterpiece, a treasure I deeply cherish.” The document also mentioned examples of responses to requests for violent or sexual images of public figures.
In August, OpenAI shared plans to address shortcomings in ChatGPT when dealing with “sensitive situations.” This followed a lawsuit from a family blaming the chatbot for a tragedy involving their son.
Нашли ошибку в тексте? Выделите ее и нажмите CTRL+ENTER
Рассылки ForkLog: держите руку на пульсе биткоин-индустрии!
-
Business3 days ago
The Guardian view on Trump and the Fed: independence is no substitute for accountability | Editorial
-
Tools & Platforms3 weeks ago
Building Trust in Military AI Starts with Opening the Black Box – War on the Rocks
-
Ethics & Policy1 month ago
SDAIA Supports Saudi Arabia’s Leadership in Shaping Global AI Ethics, Policy, and Research – وكالة الأنباء السعودية
-
Events & Conferences3 months ago
Journey to 1000 models: Scaling Instagram’s recommendation system
-
Jobs & Careers2 months ago
Mumbai-based Perplexity Alternative Has 60k+ Users Without Funding
-
Funding & Business2 months ago
Kayak and Expedia race to build AI travel agents that turn social posts into itineraries
-
Education2 months ago
VEX Robotics launches AI-powered classroom robotics system
-
Podcasts & Talks2 months ago
Happy 4th of July! 🎆 Made with Veo 3 in Gemini
-
Podcasts & Talks2 months ago
OpenAI 🤝 @teamganassi
-
Mergers & Acquisitions2 months ago
Donald Trump suggests US government review subsidies to Elon Musk’s companies