Billionaire investor Mark Cuban argued that companies are unlikely to replace swaths of workers with AI in the near term, citing high deployment costs and inconsistent performance. Reacting to comments from the All-In podcast that some AI agents run over $300 a day—topping $100,000 annually—Cuban said the economics don’t yet beat human judgment. He likened current agents to “hungover” interns that make errors without understanding consequences, adding that models still lack the real‑world context needed for reliable decision-making. The remarks counter growing forecasts—from leaders such as Anthropic’s Dario Amodei—that rapid advances could soon upend large portions of entry‑level work.
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