Amazon Employees Say AI Is Just Increasing Workload

gizmodo.com · jamesgill · 2 hours ago · view on HN · security
0 net
Amazon Employees Say AI Is Just Increasing Workload. A New Study Confirms Their Suspicions Skip to content Artificial Intelligence Amazon Employees Say AI Is Just Increasing Workload. A New Study Confirms Their Suspicions Silicon Valley promised AI would make work less intense. Employees would beg to differ. By Ece Yildirim Published March 12, 2026 Reading time 2 minutes © Frederic Legrand - COMEO Read Later Read Later Comments (6) For years, Silicon Valley has sold a utopian future to the world, in which all-powerful AI tools automate entire workflows, both freeing up time for burnt-out workers while maximizing profit for shareholders. Many companies across the American workforce subscribed to this vision. Artificial intelligence crept into the workplace as business leaders promised four-day workweeks and a true work-life balance in a business world where working overtime has become somewhat of a norm. Now, workers are saying that’s not necessarily the reality they are facing. A group of Amazon corporate employees told The Guardian that the company’s internal push for all employees to use “half-baked” AI tools was actually unhelpful and just added to their workload. The AI tools often make mistakes, which the workers then have to dig through and correct or consult with colleagues to verify results, according to the report. It all just adds up to the time they spend on each task and has been hurting productivity, the employees said. “I and many of my colleagues don’t feel that it actually makes us that much faster,” one software developer told the Guardian. “But from management, we are certainly getting messaging that we have to go faster, this will make us go faster, and that speed is the number one priority.” The experience isn’t limited to Amazon employees. A recent survey showed that the vision to save time for workers via AI has proven to be a bit bogus across the economy. Workforce analytics company ActivTrak analyzed work activity across 163,638 employees in 1,111 organizations over three years, only to find that AI is actually increasing the average workload of employees. “The data is unambiguous: AI does not reduce workloads,” the researchers wrote in a report. The AI users reported spending more time on every measured work category after AI adoption, with not a single work category showing any decrease. The number of emails a worker had to send was up 104%, chat and messaging was up 145%, and time spent with business management tools was up 94%. “AI is being used as an additional productivity layer, not a substitute for existing work,” the report says. The ActivTrak survey paints a slightly different picture from the Amazon report. While Amazon employees reported that the AI tools did not decrease the time they spent doing a task, the survey did find that AI helped speed up some tasks and free up time. But the outcome was still the same: that “free time” was just filled up with even more work. The AI tools ultimately helped the company in its quest for more output, but didn’t help the employee who is looking to ease her work burden. In a podcast last year, former Google executive Mo Gawdat spoke about this exact disconnect between the promised consequences and the reality of artificial intelligence and technological advancements overall. “How often did social media connect us, and how often did it make us more lonely? How often did mobile phones make us work less? That was the promise, the early ads of Nokia, where people had parties, is that your experience of mobile phones?” Gawdat said. The reason why, according to Gawdat, is that technology magnifies existing human abilities and values, and in this case, it’s capitalism’s relentless pursuit of profit. Explore more on these topics AI Amazon work Share this story Copied! Sign up for our newsletters Subscribe and interact with our community, get up to date with our customised Newsletters and much more. Gizmodo io9 Earther Subscribe now Leave this field empty if you're human: Spectrum’s Invincible WiFi Ensures You’re Always Connected—No Matter What Latest news Mar 12 3:30 pm ‘Starfleet Academy’ Puts Itself on Trial, and Finds Its Old Generations Wanting Mar 12 3:25 pm Researchers Say AI Is Homogenizing Human Expression and Thought Mar 12 2:50 pm Amazon Employees Say AI Is Just Increasing Workload. A New Study Confirms Their Suspicions Mar 12 2:30 pm Netflix Makes the ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Sequel You Knew Was Coming Official Mar 12 2:20 pm Gemini Is Now Your Permanent Passenger in Google Maps Mar 12 2:01 pm A Green Lantern Is Joining ‘Man of Tomorrow,’ but Not the One You’d Expect Mar 12 1:30 pm Rocket Companies Win as Feds Retreat on Orbital Debris Crackdown Mar 12 1:30 pm Disney Will Tide Over the ‘Bluey’ Drought With a Streaming Stage Show and Minisodes Show All Latest news Latest Reviews Mar 10 9:03 am MacBook Neo Review: No Other Budget Laptop Can Compete Mar 9 4:30 pm M5 Max MacBook Pro Review: Preeminent Power In the Same Old Shell Mar 9 10:20 am iPhone 17e Review: So Much More Bang for Your Buck Mar 9 9:00 am M4 iPad Air Review: The ‘Better’ iPad Is Now Really That Good Mar 5 3:20 pm Asus ProArt PX13 GoPro Edition Review: Not Just for the GoPro-Pilled Mar 5 6:30 am Nothing Headphone A Review: A Little More Colorful and a Little Less Good Mar 6 10:45 am Google Pixel 10a Review: A Recycled Pixel 9a and Not Much More Mar 3 4:00 pm ‘Pokémon Pokopia’ Shows Why Switch 2 Games Need to Stop Fearing Mouse Controls Show All Latest Reviews Related Articles Spectrum’s Invincible WiFi Ensures You’re Always Connected—No Matter What Even when your power goes down, your Wi-Fi won't. Partners Partner content with Spectrum Feds to Amazon: Quit Whining About SpaceX and Launch Some Damn Satellites Amazon petitioned the FCC to deny SpaceX’s application to launch one million satellites, but the agency chairman isn't having it. Space & Spaceflight Ellyn Lapointe ‘Your AI Slop Bores Me’ Gives You a Chance to See How the Sausage Is Made These days, you don't even need to be good at chess to be a Mechanical Turk. Artificial Intelligence Tom Hawking AI Chatbots Recommend Calorie-Starved Diets for Teens, Study Warns Five of the major AI chatbots were tested. All of them regularly proposed dietary plans akin to skipping an entire meal each day. Health Matthew Phelan Outdated Targeting Data Blamed for Strike on Iranian School as Pentagon Fights for Autonomous Weapons At least 175 people were killed in the U.S. strike. Artificial Intelligence Matt Novak Microsoft Backs Anthropic in Pentagon Fallout Despite Heated Rivalry Microsoft is asking for a pause on the "supply-chain risk" designation. Artificial Intelligence Ece Yildirim Search Sign up for our newsletters Latest Tech News Artificial Intelligence Commerce Crime Cryptocurrencies Culture Gadgets Internet Politics Privacy & Security Robots Social Media Sploid Tech Policy Transportation Reviews Smartphones Laptops Headphones Gaming Home Entertainment & Smart Home Other Gadgets Tablets Accessories & Wearables Desktops Deals Science Biology Health Human History Physics & Chemistry Space & Spaceflight Earther Climate Change Conservation Earth Science Energy Environmental Justice io9 io9 Reviews Movies Trailers Television Books & Comics Toys & Collectibles Games Corporate Culture Theme Parks & Destinations Software Best VPN Free VPN Cheap VPN NordVPN Review ExpressVPN Review Best eSIM Cloud Storage Free Cloud Storage pCloud Review Web Hosting Hostinger Review Best Antivirus Compare Antivirus Download Hub About Us Other editions Deutsch Español Français Português Product Review Newsletters Your Privacy Choices Privacy Policy Terms of Use Accessibility Advertising & Licensing 𝕏 Bookmarks Cookies settings