Oracle cuts 21,000 jobs and points the finger at AI
The software giant laid off thousands and said it plainly: it was because of artificial intelligence. The AI-era jobs debate just got a lot more concrete.
Until now, the talk about artificial intelligence “stealing jobs” lived mostly in the realm of theory. Oracle just dragged it into the real world: the software company cut roughly 21,000 roles and, in its annual filing, wrote it in black and white — the layoffs are tied to the adoption and deployment of AI across its operations.
At the same time — and it’s no coincidence — the company ramped up spending on AI infrastructure. Capital expenditure jumped 162%, to $55.7 billion. In other words: fewer people doing certain tasks, far more machines and data centres doing them.
Why it matters
It’s one of the first cases where a major company openly admits it’s swapping human work for AI. That doesn’t mean it’ll play out everywhere, or at the same pace — but it sets the tone for a decade that will force a lot of people to relearn their trade. In Portugal, where services and tech weigh more and more, it’s worth watching this not with panic, but with attention.
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