惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
博客园 - Franky
J
Java Code Geeks
腾讯CDC
博客园 - 聂微东
The Cloudflare Blog
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
博客园 - 司徒正美
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
量子位
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
S
Schneier on Security
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
Latest news
Latest news
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
S
Securelist
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
GbyAI
GbyAI
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
Y
Y Combinator Blog
W
WeLiveSecurity
T
Threatpost
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
P
Proofpoint News Feed
D
DataBreaches.Net
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
V
V2EX
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
D
Docker
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
A
About on SuperTechFans
Security Latest
Security Latest
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
博客园_首页
H
Hacker News: Front Page

Fortune | FORTUNE

One man can kill Bill Ackman’s $64 billion bid for Universal Music Group—and no one knows what he’ll do | Fortune Poppi’s cofounder pitched her startup on Shark Tank while 9 months pregnant and landed a $400,000 deal—now it's worth $2 billion | Fortune Teen boys are choosing AI girlfriends over real ones for 'maximum control, zero rejection'—experts say it could make them unemployable | Fortune A United American merger is by no means impossible given the president 'loves big deals' | Fortune Reed Hastings’s planned exit from $455 billion Netflix ‘had nothing to do with’ the failed deal for Warner Bros., says Ted Sarandos | Fortune Meet Joe McCann: The high-flying crypto trader held in Tanzania after sudden death of his influencer fiancée Ashly Robinson | Fortune Gen Z is carving a different path in the housing market by doing it alone | Fortune U.S. Catholic leaders criticize Trump for ‘disparaging words’ about the pope as Vatican clash risks alienating Catholic voters | Fortune China has ‘nearly erased’ America’s lead in AI—and the flow of tech experts moving to the U.S. is slowing to a trickle, Stanford report says | Fortune Self-made millionaire behind $5 billion Skims Emma Grede says it all began with a cold call to Kris Jenner: Emma Grede—the self-made millionaire behind the $5 billion Skims empire—says it all began with an audacious cold call to Kris Jenner: ‘The difference between me and someone else is, I made it happen’ | Fortune Americans have never been this gloomy about the economy. Wall Street has never cashed in harder | Fortune ‘The college grading system [is] almost meaningless’: People see the Ivy League as an easy A and with flawed admissions standards | Fortune The CEO of $8.5 billion Japanese car giant Nissan plays the drums in a band and hits the tennis courts to destress from the top job | Fortune New York governor's take on a millionaires tax: fancy pied-à-terre second apartments worth over $5 million | Fortune Pope Leo XIV: A ‘handful of tyrants’ are ravaging earth with war and exploitation | Fortune Trump has no plan to cut the $39 trillion national debt, but he does want to cut childcare. His budget director is scrambling to clarify | Fortune China's economy grows 5% in first quarter, surprising economists to the upside | Fortune Everyone was wondering what Trump wanted more: Warsh smoothly seated at the Fed, or for Powell to pay. We have our answer | Fortune Palantir exec: the biggest mistake retailers are making with AI? Trying to do it all with one agent | Fortune American YouTuber who calls himself a 'troll' sentenced to 6 months in Korean prison for literally dancing on wartime graves | Fortune BBC plans to cut up to 2,000 jobs to save 10% of annual budget | Fortune Canva debuts a new suite of agentic tools, as the design app quietly becomes one of the world’s most used AI services | Fortune Moody's CEO: AI has a trust problem – better models won’t fix it | Fortune Top New York surgeon: Americans have better data for choosing restaurants than surgeons. That has to change | Fortune The Iran war’s fertilizer shock is hammering American farmers, and 70% can’t afford what they need for this year’s growing season | Fortune Education experts to Mamdani: Why are you foisting AI on our kids? | Fortune This CEO pirated video games as a teen and became a hacker for the Air Force. Now he’s built a $3 billion cyber firm | Fortune Teacher, blame thyself: Yale report savages Ivy League schools for destroying American trust in higher education | Fortune Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh is worth more than $100 million and has stakes in SpaceX and Polymarket | Fortune From wool sneakers to GPUs: Allbirds’ desperate AI pivot and 600% stock surge, explained | Fortune The Sam Altman attack is putting two anti-AI groups under scrutiny—but the story is more complicated | Fortune Elizabeth Warren on her proposal to bring back IRS Direct File: ‘For just one day of bombing Iran, we could pay for 20 years’ | Fortune ‘I am certain’: Harvard policy expert warns the true cost of the Iran war to U.S. taxpayers will exceed $1 trillion | Fortune The CEO of a $24 billion Dutch lender has sandwiches once a week with the staff to hear their views and get them on side with cost cuts | Fortune Why insurance giant Travelers' CTO is placing fewer, bigger bets on AI | Fortune Current price of oil as of April 15, 2026 | Fortune The dirty secret behind Big Tech’s AI arms race: Massive hardware investments that are obsolete in 3 years | Fortune Dow’s CEO handoff elevates an insider and seasoned operator | Fortune Anthropic faces user backlash over reported performance issues with its Claude AI chatbot | Fortune Stock futures sink while oil spikes as the U.S. Navy looks to squeeze Iran's economy and break its grip on the Strait of Hormuz | Fortune A major U.S. gasoline production hub is in such a severe drought that its refineries may be hobbled. 'We are actively praying for a hurricane' | Fortune U.K. won’t take part in Trump’s planned blockade of Hormuz strait | Fortune Hungarian voters oust Viktor Orbán, a close ally of Trump and Putin, despite late campaign push from JD Vance | Fortune Blazing hot IPOs, an AI agent craze, and a new word for ‘token’: Here’s what’s happening in the world of Chinese AI | Fortune Iran’s crumbling economy is the regime’s greatest weakness with prices up 40% since the war began while authorities worry about making payroll | Fortune Here’s how a U.S. naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz could work. ‘This is a big task, and it’s a big gamble’ | Fortune Intuit was an AI pioneer. Why its stock became a SaaSpocalypse casualty | Fortune Artemis III will practice docking Orion with lunar landers in Earth orbit next year while Musk’s Starship and Bezos’ Blue Moon compete for Artemis IV | Fortune Oil tankers U-turn in Hormuz as U.S.-Iran talks break down Saudi Arabia says East-West pipeline restored to full capacity In 2011, Barack Obama said it was time to ‘pivot’ to Asia. But 15 years later, the U.S. is still at war in the Middle East Trump says U.S. Navy to impose Hormuz blockade after Iran ceasefire talks end with no deal. ‘No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage’ This TikTok sensation sold her startup for $2 billion. Now Pepsi is letting ‘Poppi be Poppi’ ‘Almost unmanageable’: Raising a child in the U.S. now costs more than $300,000 As Iran peace talks fail, Trump and Joe Rogan watch a hobbled fighter triumph in a brutal cage match Haiti stares down starvation as Iran War drives 200,000 into acute food emergency status ‘I just keep seeing a lot of different aspects of life getting more expensive’: New car prices are up 30% over 6 years America is not ready for its own longevity crisis — and 2026 is the wake-up call | Fortune JD Vance leaves Pakistan after marathon talks with Iran end without a deal as Tehran refuses U.S. demand not to develop nuclear weapons | Fortune Average price of new cars nears $50,000 as automakers focus on big pickups and SUVs while cheaper sedans get phased out | Fortune Navy tests Hormuz blockade as expert says U.S. military prepares for round 2 and could degrade Iran’s hold over the strait to a ‘manageable level’ | Fortune Pakistan sends military force to Saudi Arabia as part of pact | Fortune Three oil supertankers sail through the Strait of Hormuz | Fortune Trump downplays talks for ceasefire deal with Iran, claiming military victory. 'It doesn’t matter. From the standpoint of America, we win' | Fortune Boeing’s moon rocket faces uncertain future under Trump’s NASA | Fortune Appeals court says national security implications of halting White House ballroom construction must be weighed | Fortune Some of cheapest fuel can be found on Native American reservations as tribes are exempt from state gas taxes | Fortune JD Vance begins talks with Iran in Pakistan while Trump claims U.S. has begun 'clearing out' the Strait of Hormuz | Fortune 'This is the last warning.' Iran threatens U.S. warships after they throw down the gauntlet for winner-take-all Strait of Hormuz | Fortune U.S. Navy ships transit Hormuz ahead of mine-clearing mission | Fortune Over a third of Ireland's fuel stations are empty and truck and tractor drivers are protesting nationwide | Fortune Some communities are enduring unprecedented long waits on federal disaster requests, and Democrat-led states say they're being denied | Fortune These niche AI startups are trying to protect the Pentagon’s secrets | Fortune Former Tesla president reveals the ‘single most important thing’ you can do for your career—it’s a habit Elon Musk and Warren Buffett share too | Fortune Ingersoll Rand CEO: here's how employee ownership helped drive more than 8x enterprise value growth | Fortune The petrodollar faces increased risk, but a petroyuan is ‘far-fetched’ as fears of U.S. losing superpower status are overhyped, strategist says | Fortune Palantir CEO says AI ‘will destroy’ humanities jobs, but there will be ‘more than enough jobs’ for people with vocational training | Fortune Warren Buffett says 'accumulating great amounts of money' doesn’t achieve greatness—He still lives in a $31,500 Nebraska home and clipped coupons | Fortune Starbucks' game plan to roll out AI chatbots at cafes could serve as a 'litmus test' for the industry, analyst says | Fortune Data centers and gas demand make boring pipelines great again | Fortune The 'Tuscan Mom' aesthetic is taking over TikTok as Gen Z glamorize McMansions and reject millennial gray | Fortune Man's best friend may soon live a little longer thanks to a new pill promising to extend your pup's lifespan | Fortune Danantara CIO: Indonesia can anchor the AI and energy economy—if governance keeps pace | Fortune OpenAI’s TBPN deal shows how talent, media, and influence are collapsing into one | Fortune AI promises to free workers from grunt work, but psychologists say those mindless tasks are exactly what our brains need to recover | Fortune The 'affordability economy' has created a housing market nobody predicted: Prices collapsing in the Sun Belt, soaring in the Rust Belt | Fortune 'It’s 13 minutes of things that have to go right': Artemis II splashes down despite faulty heat shield | Fortune Fed seeks details on U.S. banks' exposure to private credit firms | Fortune The Navy confirmed an ‘abundant amount’ of Uncrustables when the Artemis II crew lands. Smucker’s just offered them a lifetime supply | Fortune Meet ‘trendslop,’ the new, AI-fueled scourge of workplace consultants everywhere | Fortune Amazon is still paying Jeff Bezos an $80,000 yearly salary—but $1.6 million for travel and security | Fortune Trump-backed World Liberty Financial crypto tokens reach all-time low on reports of insider loans | Fortune Iran is demanding tankers in the Strait of Hormuz pay tolls in crypto: What we know so far | Fortune First they went after medtech, then Kash Patel. Iranian hackers’ next target is likely ‘low-hanging fruit’ in water, energy, and tourism, experts say | Fortune The AI that found 27-year-old vulnerabilities no human ever caught before just forced an emergency meeting with every major Wall Street CEO | Fortune Inflation goes up by a whopping monthly rate of nearly 1%—and it’s hitting you at the grocery store and gas station | Fortune H&R Block is betting it can be more than a tax company | Fortune The real engine of innovation is trust | Fortune Huntington is powering digital growth—by opening a branch almost every 2 weeks, says CFO | Fortune How the 173-year-old glass-maker behind Edison's light bulb and iPhone screens became a Silicon Valley darling | Fortune
A record number of 18-year-olds are set to graduate into an economy designed against them | Fortune
Nick Lichten · 2026-05-18 · via Fortune | FORTUNE

At commencement ceremonies across the country this May, a telling phenomenon is obvious. A speaker steps to the podium. They say the words “artificial intelligence.” And the audience erupts in boos.

It happened at the University of Central Florida, when real estate executive Gloria Caulfield told arts and humanities graduates that “the rise of artificial intelligence is the next industrial revolution.” It happened at the University of Arizona with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, even though he went out of his way to calm the obviously strong emotions. “There is a fear in your generation that the future has already been written,” according to remarks reported by NBC News, “that the machines are coming, that the jobs are evaporating, that the climate is breaking, that politics is fractured, and that you are inheriting a mess that you did not create, and I understand that fear.”

At New York University’s ceremony at Yankee Stadium, psychologist Jonathan Haidt was met with walkouts and jeers the moment he took the stage. The author of The Anxious Generation was invited, in part, because of his work diagnosing Gen Z’s fragility.

But as Fortune has been reporting for the past several years, if you want to understand why graduates are booing, the story doesn’t start at the podium. It doesn’t even start with AI.

The wound was already there

For more than a decade, economists have been tracking a quiet inversion in American well-being: young people are now the most despairing age group in the country. A 2025 working paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research by Dartmouth economist David Blanchflower and University College London’s Alex Bryson documented a dramatic rise in despair among young workers since the years just following the Great Recession — roughly 2012 to 2014 — reversing the classic pattern of the “midlife crisis.”

Blanchflower previously told Fortune that the midlife crisis was “one of the most important patterns in the world, in social science … until it isn’t.” He admitted that he had never heard the phrase “quarterlife crisis” but it was absolutely appropriate, and said he was “freaked” out by what his research showed: “Suddenly young workers look to be in big trouble.”

The decline tracks changes that hit young workers hardest: rising housing and healthcare costs, student debt, eroding entry-level job quality, the hollowing of the career ladder. As Bryson put it: “Moving on up the ladder, it feels as if, perhaps, for some of them, somebody’s removed some of the rungs.” Puzzlingly, Blanchflower and Bryson found that the decline isn’t about wages, as real wages for young workers have risen over the past several decades. It seems to be about the gap between what this generation was promised and what it has received.

Shortly afterward, in August 2025, an influential Stanford study led by AI researcher Erik Brynjolfsson found that since late 2022, fewer young people were being hired into occupations heavily exposed to automation — meaning AI was beginning to compress even the diminished pool of entry-level opportunity that remained. The cycle of innovation has only accelerated since then.

2020 broke something

The NBER research describes a decades-long deterioration. Retired University of Chicago economist Sam Peltzman found something sharper: a single rupture. Combing through 50 years of General Social Survey data — the longest-running poll asking Americans simply “are you happy?” — he identified a crash in 2020 that has not healed. The collapse was 22.2 percentage points in a single year, by far the largest single move in the survey’s history. The number of Americans saying “not very happy” exceeded those saying “very happy” for the first time ever. The measure has recovered only to around 6 points above baseline as of 2024, leaving Americans at their least happy sustained level since the GSS began in 1972.

Peltzman told me earlier this month that he considered this a “regime change” — not just a shift in numbers, but a shift in the underlying mechanism generating the numbers. “Unless the next wave of data shows a return to the norm,” he told me, “you have to proceed on the assumption that the world is different.” And who was hit hardest? Not the poor. Not the least educated. “The biggest decline over this period is among the most educated,” he told me. “The ones with the largest concentration of people who have reached the dream — biggest decline.” These are, disproportionately, the people walking across the stages this month.

A Gallup poll published in April surveyed 1,500 people ages 14 to 29 found that excitement about AI among Gen Z dropped 14 percentage points, hopefulness fell 9 points, and anger rose 9 points. Gen Z workers are more than three times as likely as older workers to say AI’s risks outweigh its benefits. But the numbers beneath these numbers are older and harder: young workers’ mental health has been declining since the early 2010s, the pandemic’s happiness crash has not healed, and a generation’s brains were neurologically rewired by social media before any of them could vote. These are not separate crises. They are the same crisis, arriving in successive waves.

The phones issue and Jonathan Haidt

Before the labor market turned against them, and before AI became a household word, something else was reshaping this generation at the neurological level. Haidt — whose work was cited approvingly by Blanchflower and Bryson in the very NBER research on young worker despair — argues that children born after 1995 are fundamentally different from earlier generations because they experienced puberty amid omnipresent smartphones and social media. Speaking at a Dartmouth-UN symposium last October, Haidt described the consequences with a vivid metaphor: “Their brains have been growing around their phones very much in the way that this tree grew around this tombstone.”

The rewiring Haidt places between 2010 and 2015 coincided with a synchronized global collapse in teen mental health — nonfatal self-harm among early teen girls more than quintupled between 2010 and 2015. Fifty years of progress in educational achievement metrics ended in 2012, according to NAEP data, suggesting a broader erosion in the human capacity for focus. “We’re getting dumber,” Haidt said at the symposium, “exactly as our machines are getting smarter and taking over more areas of life.” He reported that some of his students described an inability to read a full page: “I open a book, I read a sentence, I get bored, I go to TikTok.”

This makes what happened at NYU’s commencement — where Haidt himself was booed — one of the more layered scenes of the 2026 graduation season. The student government called his selection “deeply unsettling,” citing his arguments against DEI programs and other positions. About three dozen students walked out. The irony was noted widely: the man who spent years diagnosing this generation’s anxiety as excessive was rejected by the very generation he diagnosed.

The Haidt controversy was not as straightforward as the other examples of commencement AI backlash. A self-described heterodox teacher, Haidt has provoked student ire because of his political positioning on DEI, Palestine, and campus free speech culture.

The student letter objecting to his speaking appointment referenced cultural issues, calling him “an individual who has been accused of making homophobic remarks in a class and public misconceptions about transgender identity, and has promoted disturbing rhetoric around antiracism, social justice, and diversity, equity and inclusion.”

The NYU students seemed to express a desire for a celebrity presence that would not challenge their beliefs, however, bemoaning the “gold standard” from years past of “figures of universal inspiration,” mentioning the entertainers Molly Shannon and Taylor Swift next to superlawyer David Boies and Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. The need for this generation to find universal truths where they don’t exist, of course, is a core argument that Haidt has long been making.

The students at NYU may have been rejecting not just Haidt’s politics but his premise: that their distress is primarily a product of their own digital habits, rather than the economy they were handed.

AI didn’t create the problem—It made it impossible to ignore

Economic historian Dror Poleg offered a different frame when I spoke with him recently. Poleg, whose forthcoming book addresses how to thrive in an era of intensifying uncertainty and inequality, pointed to remote work as a template: the technology didn’t create a new reality so much as force people to confront one that had been quietly arriving for years. “AI is like a catalyst, or a forcing function,” he told me, “a bit like COVID forced us to realize things about remote work and the internet that maybe were true five or 15 years before COVID.”

His deeper argument: for 50 years, the economy’s center of gravity has been moving toward producing intangible rather than tangible things — “more inequality, more uncertainty, more professions, fewer places to hide, like fewer normal jobs where you can just learn something, and that knowledge will remain useful for the next 20, 30, 40 years.” AI, he said, “is just the thing that made this more visible.” When a speaker steps to a podium and praises the next industrial revolution, they may think they’re talking to graduates about an exciting new technology, but the students seem to be putting a face to a threat that has been accumulating beneath the surface of their entire working lives.

Peak generation, peak anxiety

This collision lands on the largest class of young Americans in history. The country is currently at “peak 18,” according to Apollo Global Management chief economist Torsten Slok — the highest number of 18-year-olds ever recorded. The cohort will shrink roughly 14% over the coming decade, Slok calculated in his Daily Spark blog.

They are on track to surpass millennials as the most credentialed generation in history, entering a labor market that has been quietly restructuring away from the entry-level positions that once absorbed them. Gad Levanon, chief economist at the Burning Glass Institute, sees the AI-driven hollowing of entry-level white-collar work as potentially analogous to the manufacturing collapse of the Midwest in the 1990s — devastating for the affected communities, largely invisible to everyone else. “If the manufacturing thing happened to the entire population rather than just the manufacturing communities,” he told me, “it would have been a very, very big shock.”

The infrastructure buildout makes the stakes concrete. Slok has separately pointed out that roughly 4,000 data centers are currently operating in the United States, and nearly 3,000 more are under construction — the country’s AI capacity is about to nearly double, imminently. The machines are scaling. The question graduates are asking, with justified urgency, is: scaling toward what kind of economy, and for whom?