Does your CEO have AI psychosis? Aaron Levie thinks most of them do.Box CEO warns executives are replacing jobs they don't understand with AI.
- AI psychosis defined: Executives deciding AI can replace roles they don't actually understand, according to Aaron Levie.
- Real examples: ClickUp recently cut 22% of its workforce specifically to replace with AI agents.
- 2026 trend: Tech layoffs in early 2026 are already nearly matching all of 2025, often citing AI replacement.
- Knowledge gap: Decision makers often lack deep understanding of the roles they're targeting for AI automation.
For design
Document and communicate the nuanced, relationship-heavy aspects of design work that aren't obvious to executives — make the invisible work visible before AI replacement decisions are made.
Powerful A.I. Super PACs Duel Over the Midterms: 'This Is a War'Anthropic and OpenAI-backed PACs spend millions on competing political agendas.
- Corporate politics: Major AI companies are backing opposing political PACs with millions in spending for midterm elections.
- Industry split: One PAC is allied with Anthropic, while another is tied to OpenAI, showing deep industry divisions.
- Campaign impact: The competing efforts are leaving candidates fearful and forcing ad cancellations across races.
- Regulatory stakes: AI companies are betting big on political outcomes that could shape future regulation.
For ethics
Monitor how your company's AI partnerships might implicate you in broader political positions — vendor relationships increasingly come with regulatory and ethical baggage.
Interesting Times: Why Are We Still Driving?Examining the cultural weirdness and implications of autonomous vehicle adoption.
- Cultural shift: Autonomous vehicles like Waymo represent a fundamental change in how we think about transportation and control.
- Adoption barriers: Despite technical capabilities, psychological and cultural factors slow widespread adoption.
- Future implications: The transition to autonomous vehicles raises questions about human agency and urban design.
- Societal weirdness: The author explores the strange feeling of giving up driving control to AI systems.
For product
When designing AI handoff experiences, account for users' psychological need to maintain some sense of control — even when the AI performs better, perceived agency matters for adoption.