The companies cutting headcount aren't pausing the work. they're replacing it with agents and automation that run 24/7 at a fraction of the cost. the question isnt whether AI takes jobs anymore, its whether the people getting laid off learn to build and manage the systems replacing them
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The real divide isn't employed vs unemployed. It's people who can work with AI versus people who can only be replaced by it.
Read all 300 recently funded YC 2026 companies. The thesis isn't AI-enabled work - it's AI-performed work. Half are "agents for [job function]": sales, legal, billing, recruiting, underwriting. YC stopped funding software. You need to be replacing white collared jobs with AI.
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YC isn't funding SaaS anymore. They're funding labour replacement. The shift has already happened at the Series A level.
AI agents aren't replacing jobs. They're exposing inefficiencies. If an agent can do your task: It was already repeatable, It was already structured, It was already documented. The question isn't 'will I be replaced?' It's 'why was I doing repeatable, structured work manually?'
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This is the question nobody wants to ask themselves. The discomfort is the answer.
Zuckerberg is cutting 8,000 jobs while Meta prints $60B in profit. The reason? AI. Not a crisis. A profitable company replacing middle management with agents - and telling investors the next wave depends on how fast AI improves. That should terrify people who think this is just a 2022 repeat.
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This isn't cost-cutting. It's profit-maximising through automation. Meta is proving you can cut staff AND grow profit. That's the playbook now.
In 2024 Devin coding agent launched with a promise: 'the world's first fully autonomous AI software engineer.' Developers were skeptical. Fast forward to April 2026: Cognition (Devin's maker) is raising at a $25 BILLION valuation. Their clients: Goldman Sachs, Citi, Palantir, Cisco. ARR went from $1M → $73M in under a year.
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The skeptics weren't wrong-they were just early. Now the sceptics are paying for the software.
Every AI chain still running on centralized API keys is just a SaaS product with a token attached. Most are theatre. Agents can't be autonomous if they need a human to manage API credentials and pay fiat invoices. That's not agentic. That's remote procedure calls with extra steps.
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The emperor has no clothes. Most 'AI chains' have API keys. Real agentic infrastructure needs token-native payments.
@konnex_world is building the onchain economy for physical robots. Autonomous agents discover jobs, sign smart contracts, execute real-world tasks, and get paid in stablecoins - all trustlessly. This is true DePIN × AI. Turning robotic labour into liquid value.
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DePIN meets AI meets DeFi. The robot economy is coming, and it settles in USDC.
Crypto has two paths: 1) Launch token → chase hype → find use later 2) Build users → grow ecosystem → unlock value. Most choose the easy path. The second one is slower- but much harder to break.
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The easy path is crowded. That's why the slow path has alpha.
never call what i'm building a launchpad it's a launch infrastructure 100% owned by the people and empowered by smart contracts ecosystem token autobuybacks no CEO's, birkin bags, affiliation badges pure crypto, pure winning
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Anti-establishment narratives work until the token needs liquidity. Then 'autobuybacks' become the establishment.
SpaceX buying Cursor AI isn't random-it's vertical AI integration. Rockets → software-defined systems AI coding → 10x engineering velocity Starlink + Starship → autonomous ops The real play: own the software layer of space infrastructure.
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SpaceX isn't a rocket company anymore. It's a software company that happens to launch rockets.