Most Replayed Moment: AI Safety Expert Predicts The Next 20 Years! Will It Really Take All Jobs?

Most Replayed Moment: AI Safety Expert Predicts The Next 20 Years! Will It Really Take All Jobs?

AI safety expert Roman Yampolskiy warns superintelligence is the last invention humanity will ever make — after that, it takes over everything, including the process of invention itself.

May 22, 2026 36:29 Difficulty: Intermediate Played
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3 / 14 cited (21%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Roman Yampolskiy coined the term 'AI safety' in 2010 and has published over 100 papers on the dangers of AI.

Steven Bartlett no source cited

Self-driving cars are already replacing human drivers, with Waymo operating driverless taxis in Los Angeles.

Steven Bartlett no source cited

Driving is one of the most common occupations in the world.

Steven Bartlett no source cited

AI became capable enough at coding that prompt engineering — once touted as a safe new career — is now itself being automated by AI within approximately two years.

Roman Yampolskiy no source cited

No government currently has programs prepared to deal with unemployment rates approaching 99%.

Roman Yampolskiy no source cited

Ray Kurzweil predicts 2045 as the year of the technological singularity.

Roman Yampolskiy Ray Kurzweil

As a percentage of total global knowledge, every individual human researcher gets relatively less knowledgeable every single day as AI generates knowledge faster than humans can absorb it.

Roman Yampolskiy no source cited

Silicon substrate is faster, more resilient, and more energy efficient than biological neural substrate for the purpose of intelligence.

Roman Yampolskiy no source cited

By 2030, humanoid robots will have sufficient flexibility and dexterity to compete with humans in all physical domains, including skilled trades like plumbing.

Roman Yampolskiy no source cited

The cost to train sufficiently large AI models decreases every year, and what might cost a trillion dollars today could eventually be achievable on a single laptop.

Roman Yampolskiy no source cited

Someone with a bachelor's degree in biology can probably already create a novel virus using advances in synthetic biology.

Roman Yampolskiy no source cited

Even the engineers who build large AI models must run experiments on their own products to discover what capabilities those models possess, because the systems are not fully understood by their creators.

Roman Yampolskiy no source cited

Booking.com has helped over 1.8 billion vacation rental guests find places to stay since 2010.

Steven Bartlett Booking.com

Nearly half of new hosts on Booking.com receive their first booking within a week of listing.

Steven Bartlett Booking.com

TL;DR

AI safety pioneer Dr. Roman Yampolskiy joins Steven Bartlett to discuss why all jobs — not just manual ones — will eventually be automated, why retraining is a dead end, and why the "just unplug it" argument is dangerously naive. Yampolskiy predicts humanoid robots competitive with humans by 2030 and a technological singularity by 2045, while arguing that superintelligence is the single most important existential challenge humanity faces. The key takeaway: unlike every prior technology, AI is not a tool but an agent — the last invention humanity will ever need to make.

#AI safety #AGI risk #job displacement #technological singularity #humanoid robots #AI interpretability #AI control problem #existential risk #future of work #superintelligence #cognitive bias #autonomous agents #job automation #singularity #AGI #black box AI #cognitive dissonance #Roman Yampolskiy #technological unemployment #AI ethics #self-driving cars #Moore's Law

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Dr. Roman Yampolskiy, AI safety expert and Professor of Computer Science, discusses why all jobs will eventually be automated, why the singularity is by definition unpredictable, and why humanity-level extinction from AI is a real and proximate risk.

Chapter list
Singularity
The theoretical point at which AI progress becomes so rapid that it is incomprehensible to humans; borrowed from physics where a singularity is a point beyond which normal laws break down and nothing can be observed.
AGI (Artificial General Intelligence)
An AI system with the ability to understand, learn, and apply intelligence across any intellectual task at or above human level — distinct from narrow AI, which excels only at specific tasks.
Superintelligence
A hypothetical AI system that significantly surpasses the cognitive abilities of the best human minds in virtually every domain, including scientific reasoning, social skills, and creative work.
Black box AI
An AI system whose internal decision-making processes are opaque even to its creators; inputs and outputs are observable but the reasoning pathway between them is not fully understood.
Event horizon
In physics, the boundary around a black hole beyond which nothing can escape; used metaphorically here to describe the point in time beyond which humans cannot predict or understand post-singularity AI behaviour.
Neuralink
A brain-computer interface company founded by Elon Musk that develops implantable chips aimed at connecting human brains directly to computers; cited here as a potential path to enhancing human intelligence.
Prompt engineering
The practice of crafting specific input instructions to elicit better outputs from AI language models; once considered an emerging career path, now itself being automated by AI.
Waymo
Alphabet's (Google's parent company) fully autonomous ride-hailing service operating driverless vehicles in cities including San Francisco and Los Angeles.
Synthetic biology
A field that applies engineering principles to biology to design and construct new biological parts, devices, or organisms — including the potential creation of novel pathogens.
Moore's Law
The observation by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore that the number of transistors on a microchip doubles roughly every two years, effectively halving costs and doubling computing power over time.
MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction)
A Cold War doctrine where two opposing powers with nuclear weapons are deterred from attacking each other because both would be destroyed; Yampolskiy applies this logic to uncontrolled superintelligence development.
Manhattan Project
The top-secret US-led research project during World War II that developed the first nuclear weapons; used here as a comparison for the scale of investment required to build superintelligence.
Humanoid robot
A robot with a body structure resembling a human, capable of operating in human environments; companies including Tesla are actively developing these for commercial deployment.
Malevolent
Having or showing a wish to do evil to others. Used by Yampolskiy to describe actors (human or AI) motivated by harmful intent.
Paradigm shift
A fundamental change in the underlying assumptions or framework of a discipline or society; used here to describe how AI-driven full employment automation is qualitatively different from all prior technological disruption.
Cognitive dissonance
The mental discomfort experienced when holding two contradictory beliefs simultaneously; used here to describe workers who acknowledge AI progress in general but deny it applies to their own occupation.
Dexterity
Skill and ease in using one's hands or body; used in the context of humanoid robots needing sufficient fine motor control to perform physical jobs.