Real news, real insights – for small businesses who want to understand what’s happening and why it matters.

By Vicky Sidler | Published 10 April 2026 at 12:00 GMT+2
If you accidentally backed your car into your neighbor's living room, you would probably step out of the vehicle and apologize. You certainly would not stand in the rubble, cross your arms, and complain that your neighbor isn't showing enough gratitude for your innovative new parking strategy.
But according to a highly entertaining new report by Joe Wilkins at Futurism, that is the exact emotional state of the Silicon Valley elite right now. Tech billionaires have spent the last few years aggressively shoving artificial intelligence into every corner of our lives. It has actively destroyed trust online, flooded our search results with generic garbage, and threatened the livelihoods of millions of knowledge workers. And now, the executives responsible for this digital chaos are genuinely, profoundly hurt that the public is not throwing them a parade.
We love to imagine that the people running the global economy possess an unmatched level of strategic genius. But as consumer sentiment turns incredibly sour, these executives are publicly throwing a corporate temper tantrum.
Before you try to automate your own customer service department, we need to look at why the general public absolutely despises this technology, and how you can capitalize on Silicon Valley's massive public relations disaster.
Tech CEOs like Nvidia's Jensen Huang and OpenAI's Sam Altman are publicly complaining that the massive consumer backlash against AI is "extremely hurtful."
Historians note that this is the first major technological boom in history defined almost entirely by active public hostility and a total lack of enthusiasm.
Only 3% of US users are actually willing to pay for AI, proving that building your business on automated slop is a massive strategic failure.
👉 If the general public actively hates artificial intelligence, why are you using it to write your marketing emails? Your prospects can instantly smell the robotic jargon, and it is destroying your credibility. Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix to spot exactly where your messaging sounds dangerously artificial, so you can replace it with actual human connection.
Tech CEOs Are Genuinely Confused Why You Hate Their Artificial Intelligence
Why Are The Billionaires Literally Crying?
Is This The Most Hated Tech Boom In History?
What Do The Actual Sales Numbers Reveal?
How Do You Sell To A Market That Hates Robots?
1. CEOs Admit AI Is A Bubble, But Are Spending Billions On It Anyway
2. You Didn't Write That Email. And Everyone Can Tell.
3. The AI Doom Loop: Why Massive Corporate Layoffs Are Actually Great For You
4. AI Slop Is Killing Trust Online. What Now?
5. Why A Nobel Prize Economist Says The AI Bubble Is About To Burst
1. Why are tech CEOs upset about the public reaction to AI?
2. Is public hostility toward new technology normal?
3. Do people actually want artificial intelligence in their lives?
When you spend billions of dollars building a machine designed to make human employees obsolete, you should probably expect a slightly chilly reception at the company picnic.
But the architects of the AI bubble are absolutely baffled by the pushback. In a recent interview, Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang publicly complained about the battle of AI narratives, stating that the public backlash is, frankly, "extremely hurtful." He actually insisted that his incredibly profitable technology is suffering unfair damage from people pushing a "science fiction" doomer narrative.
He is not alone in his emotional distress. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently lamented the pushback against the absorption of AI in broader society, whining that public adoption feels "surprisingly slow."
These incredibly wealthy executives are sitting on top of the most aggressive technological rollout of our lifetime, and they are genuinely pouting because regular humans do not want to be replaced by software. They are utterly convinced that the only reason you don't love their hallucinating chatbots is because you have been reading too many dystopian novels. But historians are pointing out a much more embarrassing reality.
If you invent the bicycle, people are generally thrilled that they no longer have to walk to work in the mud.
But artificial intelligence is experiencing a fundamentally different reaction. William Quinn, co-author of Boom and Bust: A Global History of Financial Bubbles, told the New York Times that he cannot remember a technological boom with such active hostility attached to it. When electricity and motorcars were introduced, there was natural fear, but it was heavily outweighed by massive public hope.
As Quinn notes, AI is entirely unique for its complete and total lack of enthusiasm.
The public does not view this technology as a helpful tool; they view it as a hostile corporate takeover. A 2025 Pew Research survey proved that the aversion runs incredibly deep. A massive 60% of respondents stated they want "more control" over how AI is used in their lives, while a pathetic 17% feel comfortable with this technology remaining in the hands of a few tech billionaires.
If the public hates it this much, how is the industry actually making any money?
You can force a feature into a software update, but you cannot force a consumer to open their wallet.
While mainstream analysts spent all of 2025 parroting uncritical tech hype, the actual consumer data tells a completely different, hilarious story. By mid-2025, before investor sentiment finally turned freezing cold, the number of US AI users who regularly paid for the privilege of using these tools stood at a completely laughable 3%.
Let that sink in. Despite the relentless media coverage, the aggressive corporate integration, and the billions of dollars spent on marketing, 97% of the market looked at the premium version of this technology and simply walked away.
When your target market completely refuses to buy your product, you cannot just blame science fiction writers for your failure. You have to take a hard look at the terrible product you are actually selling.
If 97% of your potential customers refuse to pay for artificial intelligence, you have to completely stop sounding like one.
The tech billionaires are desperately trying to convince you that AI is the future of human connection. But the public has already spoken. They do not want to read hallucinated blog posts, they do not want to receive hollow, AI-generated emails, and they absolutely refuse to argue with automated customer service bots that cannot solve simple problems.
The Fortune 500 is completely distracted, pouring billions of dollars into technology their own customers actively despise. This is your ultimate strategic advantage as a small business owner.
You must loudly and proudly offer the exact opposite. You have to sell undeniable, premium human competence. But you cannot do that if your website is secretly filled with the exact same robotic jargon the billionaires are trying to force on us.
Get my 5-Minute Marketing Fix. It acts as a rapid diagnostic weapon, helping you strip the generic, highly unpopular AI language out of your funnels, so you can attract clients who are desperate for actual human expertise.
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If you want to know why these executives are crying, it is because they are bleeding cash. This article exposes the hilarious contradiction of Fortune 500 CEOs who openly admit AI is a massive spending bubble, yet continue to shovel billions of dollars into the furnace purely out of peer pressure.
The public doesn't just hate the concept of AI; they hate the way it actually sounds. This piece explores the deeply unsettling "uncanny valley" effect of automated communication, proving exactly why outsourcing your personal emails to a chatbot actively destroys your business relationships.
The public hostility toward AI makes perfect sense when you realize how many people are losing their jobs to fund it. Discover the terrifying economic "Doom Loop" where tech giants fire their human workers to pay for hallucinating software, and why this corporate collapse is your greatest opportunity.
Only 3% of users are paying for AI, but 100% of us are forced to look at the garbage it produces. This post explores how generic, AI-generated content has completely flooded the internet, destroying consumer trust online and forcing small businesses to radically rethink their content marketing strategies.
The tech CEOs are blaming science fiction writers for their struggles, but the actual economists have been predicting this disaster for months. Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz breaks down exactly why the massive artificial intelligence spending spree is mathematically guaranteed to end in a massive crash.
Executives like Nvidia's Jensen Huang and OpenAI's Sam Altman are publicly expressing frustration and "hurt feelings" because the general public is actively resisting AI adoption. They blame "doomer narratives" for the backlash, completely ignoring the legitimate concerns of consumers and workers.
No. According to financial historians, this level of active hostility is completely unique to AI. Past technological booms, like the invention of the bicycle or electricity, were met with massive public enthusiasm and hope, whereas AI is defined by deep suspicion and a total lack of excitement.
The vast majority do not. A 2025 Pew Research survey revealed that 60% of respondents explicitly want "more control" over how AI is used in their lives, and only a miserable 17% feel comfortable with this technology remaining under the control of tech billionaires.
Despite the relentless corporate hype and billions of dollars spent on marketing, consumer adoption of paid AI products is abysmal. Consumer data from mid-2025 showed that only a shocking 3% of US AI users were actually willing to regularly pay for the technology.
It means your clients actively dislike automated interactions. If massive corporations are forcing unpopular AI tools on their customers, small businesses have a massive strategic opportunity to win market share by aggressively offering authentic, premium human communication and highly personalized service.

Created with clarity (and coffee)