SUBSCRIBE
Tech Journal Now
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Reading: Is AI killing technology? – Computerworld
Share
Tech Journal NowTech Journal Now
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • AI
  • Best Buy
  • Games
  • Software
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Journal Now > AI > Is AI killing technology? – Computerworld
AI

Is AI killing technology? – Computerworld

News Room
Last updated: February 20, 2026 8:02 am
News Room
Share
5 Min Read
SHARE

How AI is harming technology

AI is killing, harming, delaying, or forcing higher prices on a wide range of technologies and tech products and services. The AI industry is: 

  1. Creating catastrophic chip shortages. Major RAM makers Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron have shifted their production to focus on High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM) needed for AI. This has led to shortages of standard DRAM and NAND chips used in smartphones, laptops, and medical devices.
  2. Driving hardware prices up. Due to the memory shortage, building non-AI electronics is becoming expensive. By early 2026, prices for standard computer memory and storage drives (SSDs) had surged because the industry’s been prioritizing  high-margin AI chips over consumer parts. There’s even a trend of more people buying second-hand laptops because they can’t afford new ones. 
  1. Delaying GPUs and the devices that use them. The demand for AI compute power, which usually relies on Graphics Processing Units (GPUs), has created a massive backlog for the processors and with it, the devices that use them for, you know, processing graphics. 
  2. Creating COVID-like shortages. The diversion of chips to AI infrastructure is causing problems for non-AI hardware launches. Shortages of basic power and auto chips are affecting industries from automakers to home appliance makers. It’s like COVID all over again. 
  3. Diverting investment in startups. Non-AI startups are struggling to raise money. Investors are funneling cash almost exclusively into AI ventures, forcing non-AI founders to pivot or adopt “AI-first” aspects (called “AI washing”), even when unnecessary. 
  4. Draining brains from research labs. There’s always been a relationship between tech-related university research labs and tech. Now, this is being distorted by AI. Private AI companies are hiring away top academic researchers and engineers with massive salaries. This hollows out university departments and non-AI research labs, threatening the pipeline of future talent for critical fields like traditional software engineering. 
  5. Discouraging grads from entering tech fields. As companies pivot to AI, they’re cutting entry-level jobs in other areas. US postings for entry-level roles dropped by 35% between 2023 and 2025. This disrupts the career ladder and discourages young people from pursuing non-AI tech careers.
  6. Weaponizing cyberattacks. Malicious actors are using AI to attack non-AI systems. AI enables even moderately skilled hackers to launch sophisticated attacks. Tools that clone voices and generate fake identities are breaching traditional security protocols, overwhelming standard IT infrastructure defenses. 
  7. Creating a new digital divide. Technical people, developers, and those embracing AI for vibe-coding and other tasks are pulling away from less technical or less inclined people. 
  8. Turning the public against the tech industry. The public’s admiration for Silicon Valley is souring in part because of the excesses of the AI sector’s toxic “996” work culture, threats to jobs, AI slop, ridiculously high salaries, skyrocketing electricity bills, and environmental damage from new data centers. There’s also the unauthorized theft of personal data and copyrighted art to train models, and the flood of deepfakes, disinformation and AI slop people see on social networks like Facebook.
  9. Destroying demand for apps. The regular software market is shifting toward “vibe-coding,” where people abandon paid app subscriptions in favor of creating their own custom, disposable applications using AI platforms like Replit, Lovable, and Cursor. Gartner predicts that consumers will cut their mobile app usage by 25% as they rely on generative AI assistants to handle tasks rather than scrolling through separate applications, even without vibe coding. Either way, the app development ecosystem is being hammered. 
  10. Threatening the future of facts. AI chatbots are transforming search engines by providing direct answers instead of lists of links, a shift that starves publishers of the website traffic and revenue they need to survive. That reduces the incentives and finances for the production and publishing of new facts (for lack of a better term) while frequently presenting false information as fact. This harms technology, an industry that depends on education, new knowledge and training. 

All this sounds dire. And, in the short term, it’s not good. What we don’t know yet is the long-term impact of the AI revolution and whether it will prove to be a net benefit or a net harm to the non-AI technology people, business, projects, culture and communities we have loved for decades. 

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

5 eye-opening Google Android app tricks from 2025 – Computerworld

ServiceNow deal will see it embed OpenAI models into its AI Platform – Computerworld

European banks may lay off 200,000 due to AI – Computerworld

AI has taken over customer service – but companies could soon regret the shift – Computerworld

A trio of tasty new Android notification enhancements – Computerworld

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Trending Stories

News

Tech Moves: Code.org has a new leader; Synapse vet joins Amazon; ex-Tableau CEO lands at Code Metal

February 20, 2026
Games

DICE agrees that some Battlefield 6 vehicles are ‘death traps’ and is planning a Labs test dedicated to ‘vehicle improvements’

February 20, 2026
News

Xbox chief Phil Spencer retiring after 38 years at Microsoft; Asha Sharma named new gaming CEO

February 20, 2026
Games

Nothing beats putting all my little stuff on my many little shelves in a super cozy shop sim like Thrifty Business

February 20, 2026
Games

Imagine if politics were full of monsters! Haha, no, I mean fun monsters like vampires, orcs, and goblins who use cards to hurl insults and smears at each other

February 20, 2026
Software

Agentic AI – Ongoing coverage of its impact on the enterprise – Computerworld

February 20, 2026

Always Stay Up to Date

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Follow US on Social Media

Facebook Youtube Steam Twitch Unity

2024 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tech Journal Now

Quick Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?