By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
bolsterflipinfluencer.combolsterflipinfluencer.combolsterflipinfluencer.com
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Brand News
  • Social Media
  • Influencer News
  • Podcast
  • Advertise
  • Join As Creator
Reading: Sundar Pichai says AI anxiety is understandable, but students will find new opportunities
Share
bolsterflipinfluencer.combolsterflipinfluencer.com
Font ResizerAa
  • Brand News
  • Social Media
  • Influencer News
  • Podcast
  • Advertise
  • Join As Creator
Search
  • Brand News
  • Social Media
  • Influencer News
  • Podcast
  • Advertise
  • Join As Creator
Follow US
  • Advertise
© 2026 Bolsterflip Influencer Managed By Bolsterflip Media. All Rights Reserved.
bolsterflipinfluencer.com > Influencer News > Sundar Pichai says AI anxiety is understandable, but students will find new opportunities
Influencer News

Sundar Pichai says AI anxiety is understandable, but students will find new opportunities

Team Bolsterflip
Last updated: 26/05/2026 6:42 AM
By Team Bolsterflip 6 days ago
Share
5 Min Read
SHARE

Google and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai addressed students at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras on Tuesday, acknowledging that fears surrounding artificial intelligence are “completely understandable” but expressing confidence that the technology will ultimately expand — not erase — career opportunities.

Contents
From panic to proficiencyNo ‘job apocalypse’Advice for studentsIndia’s role in the AI revolutionNo direct comment on India’s AI regulationsThe bigger picture

“There is anxiety about what AI means for jobs, especially among young people. I understand that completely,” Pichai said during a fireside chat at the institute’s research park. “But every technological shift in history has initially created fear, and then created more opportunities than anyone imagined.”

From panic to proficiency

Pichai drew parallels with the early days of the internet and mobile computing. “When the smartphone first arrived, people were terrified of its impact on attention spans, privacy, social interaction. Today, we can’t imagine life without it — and entire economies have been built on it.”

He argued that generative AI will follow a similar arc: initial panic, followed by gradual integration, and eventually, a period of proficiency where the technology becomes invisible and indispensable.

“The students who learn to use AI as a tool — not as a crutch, not as a threat — will be the ones who build the next Google, the next Microsoft, the next breakthrough,” he said.

No ‘job apocalypse’

Pichai dismissed predictions of a job apocalypse as “overstated.” He noted that while certain tasks will be automated, entire new categories of roles will emerge — many of which do not exist today.

“When I graduated from IIT Kharagpur in 1993, there was no such thing as a social media manager, a cloud architect, a UX designer, or an AI prompt engineer. Those are all jobs that came out of technological shifts. There will be roles in 2030 that we can’t name yet.”

He added that AI will augment human capability, not replace it. “The most powerful outcomes will come from humans plus AI, not AI alone. The intuition, the ethics, the creativity — that remains uniquely human.”

Advice for students

When asked what skills students should focus on, Pichari emphasized problem-solving over coding proficiency.

“Learning to code is still valuable. But more valuable is learning how to break down a problem, how to ask the right questions, how to verify outputs. AI can generate code faster than any human. But AI cannot decide what to build, or why.”

He also urged students not to lose sight of the humanities. “The engineers who succeed in an AI-driven world will be those who understand psychology, ethics, history, and communication. The most successful teams at Google are not just technical. They are empathetic.”

India’s role in the AI revolution

Pichai expressed optimism about India’s position in the global AI landscape. “India has the world’s largest pool of young talent, a thriving startup ecosystem, and a digital infrastructure that is the envy of many developed countries. You can leapfrog.”

He cited Google’s continued investment in AI research centres in Bengaluru and Hyderabad, and the company’s focus on building AI models that work for Indian languages and contexts.

“We are seeing startups in agriculture, healthcare, education, and finance — all using AI to solve problems that are specific to India. That is incredibly exciting. That is the future.”

No direct comment on India’s AI regulations

Pichai, however, did not directly comment on the Indian government’s proposed Digital India AI Framework, which is expected to regulate high-risk AI applications. He noted that “thoughtful regulation” is important but declined to offer specifics.

The bigger picture

Pichai acknowledged that the pace of AI development can feel overwhelming. “It is moving faster than any technology I have seen in my career. That can be unsettling. But it can also be exhilarating.”

He ended with a message of reassurance: “Don’t be afraid. Be curious. The tools are here to help you think bigger, not smaller. And if you can solve real problems for real people, you will always have a place — no matter how smart the machines get.”

You Might Also Like

Who is Juhi Bhatt? Meet Ranveer Allahbadia’s girlfriend spotted at IPL match

MasterChef India’s Pankaj Bhadouria Shares Cancer Diagnosis: ‘Need Your Prayers…’

‘Off Campus’ series review: A chaotic, charming, and addictive Hockey romance

Influencer Exposes Cannes Red Carpet Reality: ‘Paid Rs 44,500 For 7 Videos, 7 Photos’

India’s Influencer Marketing Industry to Reach US$ 529.10 million by 2027 as Creator Economy Formalises

TAGGED: AI anxiety, future of work, generative AI, Google CEO, IIT Madras, Sundar Pichai, technology education
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
Previous Article Salman Khan is Bollywood’s PR nightmare and a wild card. That’s exactly why he works
Next Article ‘Yeh kis line mein aa gaye Raju’: Fans in splits at Akshay Kumar’s Bhojpuri avatar for Welcome To The Jungle’s Ghis Ghis
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

bolsterflipinfluencer.combolsterflipinfluencer.com
Follow US
© 2026 Bolsterflip Influencer Managed By Bolsterflip Media. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?