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The AI backlash crowd has it backwards, and I think it's worth saying…

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The AI backlash crowd has it backwards, and I think it's worth saying directly. Eric Schmidt got booed at a commencement address for talking about AI. Students at a university, in 2024, booing someone for saying AI is important. And my first reaction wasn't sympathy for Schmidt. It was recognition. I've seen this pattern before, in different industries, different eras. The people doing the booing always feel like they're on the right side of history. They rarely are. There's a concept called the K-shaped economy. The K has two lines coming off it — one going up, one going down. The rule of thumb is simple: if you're not AI-native, you're on the downline. And the troubling part isn't the downline itself. It's that most people on it have no idea they're there. Calling AI output "slop" and dismissing it wholesale is not a sophisticated critique. It's a comfort mechanism. It lets people feel superior without doing the harder work of figuring out how to use AI well. I understand the impulse. I had a version of it myself about influencers. I used to think of them as lesser marketeers, people who got attention without the craft behind it. I was wrong. What I missed was that distribution had quietly become the real bottleneck. Influence wasn't about being an influencer. It was about reach. Reid Hoffman saw it before most people did. The same blind spot is happening with AI right now. The people pushing back hardest aren't protecting quality. They're protecting familiarity. And the market doesn't care about familiarity. It never has. What's actually interesting about this moment is that the backlash is loudest right when AI is becoming impossible to ignore. That's not a coincidence. It's the standard shape of how a significant shift moves through a culture. Resistance peaks just before adoption tips. The noise you hear right now is not evidence that AI has a ceiling. It's evidence that it doesn't. The thing I keep coming back to: the question of whether AI is here to stay is not actually open. It's coming, there's no question it's coming. The only real question is who's going to figure out how to use it with actual human voice and judgment behind it, versus who's going to keep feeding prompts into ChatGPT and wondering why the output sounds like every other piece of content on the internet. The AI slop problem is real. But it's not an AI problem. It's a human problem. Garbage in, garbage out. Always has been. The upline on the K goes to people who treat AI as a serious productivity tool and put the work in to make it better. Not the people dismissing it at commencement addresses. Not the people producing content that sounds like it was written by a committee of robots. The people who actually think about the craft. Something to remember: the laggards and resistors always have the most confident opinions in the room. And they're almost never where you want to be five years later.

Mark HadfieldJun 8, 2026Published to X - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

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