American entrepreneur, co-founder and CEO of Snap Inc.
Major tech firms have cut and restructured thousands of roles while also shifting staff into AI work and hiring at AI-intensive companies. Recent filings show Oracle has reduced headcount by about 21,000 over the past year, while studies from Ramp/Revelio, SignalFire and Draup find heavy AI adopters are expanding head count and demanding judgment, systems design and AI-tool fluency.
Snap has announced it is cutting 1,000 jobs, representing 16% of its workforce, citing rapid AI development. The company aims to reduce costs by over $500 million and improve profitability, with layoffs affecting mainly North American staff. The move follows similar layoffs across the tech sector driven by AI integration.
A wave of AI-related anxiety is growing as experts warn about job displacement, while executives acknowledge adoption challenges and potential public pushback. The debate shifts toward policy plans and accountability as lawmakers and companies respond to rising concerns about energy use, safety, and economic inequality. This update synthesizes recent reporting from multiple outlets.
Snap has unveiled Specs, its consumer AR glasses, priced at $2,195 with a $200 refundable deposit. The device aims to merge AI with real-world computing, featuring EyeConnect for shared experiences and on-device AI. Market reaction remains cautious as investors scrutinize affordability and the competitive hardware landscape.
Meta has announced a new line of smart glasses with AI-assisted features, priced at $299 and developed with EssilorLuxottica. The glasses lack Ray-Ban/Oakley branding, and Meta is positioning them as fashion-forward wearables. Competitors like Snap and Google are racing to release their own AI eyewear.