What you need to know
- Students booed ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt during a graduation speech focused heavily on AI.
- Schmidt defended AI as the future, but many students clearly view it as a job threat.
- The viral moment highlights growing distrust toward AI among younger people entering the workforce.
AI might be on everyone’s mind at Google (and I/O 2026 made that clearer than ever), but Silicon Valley still seems to be missing how a lot of regular people actually feel about it. That includes students, who now seem genuinely terrified of AI and even booed ex-Google CEO Eric Schmidt over it during a recent graduation speech.
During a graduation ceremony at the University of Arizona, where Schmidt was invited to speak, he started talking about artificial intelligence and its impact on the future. But the moment he brought up AI, he was met with loud boos from students in the crowd.
Schmidt began by mentioning how Time magazine’s Person of the Year for 2025 recognized the architects behind AI. As soon as he made that point, the crowd reacted loudly. He then continued by saying that society is “standing on the edge of another technological transformation that will be larger, faster, and more consequential than before.”
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That statement also drew boos from the audience. Schmidt acknowledged that students are entering a much more difficult job market heavily impacted by AI and said that the fear surrounding the technology is rational. But even then, the crowd clearly wasn’t buying into the optimistic Silicon Valley pitch.
The former Google CEO continued defending AI throughout the speech, arguing that the technology will eventually become one of the defining tools of the next generation. “The question is not whether AI will shape the world. It will,” Schmidt added. “The question is whether you will have shaped artificial intelligence.”
The moment quickly went viral online because it highlighted something the tech industry increasingly seems disconnected from: younger people don’t necessarily view AI the same way tech executives do anymore.
For companies like Google, AI is still being framed as the next major productivity revolution. But for students graduating into today’s job market, AI feels a lot less exciting.
We’re already seeing thousands of layoffs every month across industries, and for many younger people, AI now feels more like a threat to stability than anything.
Android Central’s Take
Wow. Just wow. As someone whose own job feels increasingly at risk because of AI, I completely understand where these students are coming from. I don’t think Schmidt’s comments were technically wrong — in fact, I believe we all are probably still in the denial phase about how much AI will change things — but there’s definitely a better way to frame that conversation to students about to enter an already brutal job market.

