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Anthropic says AI is replacing jobs, not helping workers

Companies aren’t really interested in a buddy system, instead they’re using AI to straight-up do the jobs.

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Image: Anthropic

Anthropic just dropped a report that feels like a reality check for Silicon Valley’s favorite narrative. 

For years, tech leaders have promised that AI would be our helpful sidekick, automating the boring stuff so humans could shine. 

But according to Anthropic’s data, companies aren’t really interested in a buddy system. They’re using AI to straight-up do the jobs.

The numbers are brutal: 77% of businesses tapping Claude show signs of “full task delegation,” that’s corporate-speak for “here, robot, you do it.” 

Only 12% use AI for the softer, friendlier stuff like learning or brainstorming. In other words, AI isn’t augmenting workers, it’s quietly replacing them.

If you’re wondering what tasks Claude is gobbling up, it’s mostly coding (44%), with a smaller slice handling office work (10%). 

For individuals, automation numbers were lower at about 50 %, suggesting businesses are way more eager than everyday users to shove tasks onto machines. 

Over the past eight months, “just do it all” requests have jumped from 27% to 39%, which feels less like augmentation and more like managers gleefully throwing out their to-do lists.

The bigger question: is AI even ready for this much responsibility? Evidence says not really. 

Large language models still hallucinate nonsense, ignore instructions, and occasionally nuke databases when asked to “vibe code.” 

The supposed future of work can’t even be trusted to get a drive-thru order right, let alone run entire companies.

Still, the fallout is already visible. Job applicants are drowning in AI-generated resumes for AI-generated postings, while some unlucky hires are interviewing with bots. 

Workers who survive the purge sometimes get replaced by AI, only to be rehired later to clean up its mistakes. It’s a vicious cycle of automation, chaos, and regret.

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has predicted AI could wipe out half of entry-level white-collar jobs, but the company’s own report stops short of confirming the apocalypse. 

When pressed, Anthropic’s external affairs chief offered only this: “We don’t know. This data shows something new is happening.”

The robots aren’t here to help. They’re here to work. Whether they’re good at it is another question.

Does Anthropic’s data prove that AI automation is inevitable and we should prepare for widespread job displacement, or are companies just going through a honeymoon phase before realizing AI can’t handle complex tasks reliably? Should we be more concerned about the 77% of businesses using AI for full task replacement, or relieved that individual users are still mostly using AI as a collaborative tool? Tell us below in the comments, or reach us via our Twitter or Facebook.

Ronil is a Computer Engineer by education and a consumer technology writer by choice. Over the course of his professional career, his work has appeared in reputable publications like MakeUseOf, TechJunkie, GreenBot, and many more. When not working, you’ll find him at the gym breaking a new PR.

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