AI Agents Are Too Cheap for Our Own Good

WIRED 

In 2007, Luke Arrigoni, an AI entrepreneur, earned 63,000 at his first job as a junior software developer. Today, he says AI tools that write better code than he did back then cost just 120 annually. The numbers don't sit right with him. Arrigoni, who runs Loti AI, a company that helps Hollywood stars find unauthorized deepfakes, worries that underpriced AI tools encourage companies to eliminate entry-level roles. He wants to flip the incentive structure so people's careers don't end before they begin.