Economists Warn AI Could Outpace the Industrial Revolution
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More than 200 economists and AI researchers have issued an AI economic upheaval warning. Specifically, they say AI could outpace the Industrial Revolution in speed and scale. As a result, the letter urges immediate, coordinated policy action, according to Techstrong.ai. This marks a notable shift, because mainstream economists have historically doubted Silicon Valley's predictions of fast, widespread automation.
Nobel laureates warn of AI economic upheaval
The letter is titled "We Must Act Now: A Statement on AI's Transformation of the Economy." Anton Korinek organized it. He is an economics professor at the University of Virginia and an Anthropic researcher. Erik Brynjolfsson, director of the Stanford Digital Economy Lab, co-organized the effort. Signatories include MIT Nobel laureates Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson, OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar, Google DeepMind Chief Scientist Jeff Dean, Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, and venture capitalist Vinod Khosla. Fifteen Nobel laureates in economics signed in total.
"Steam, electricity, and computers each gave societies decades to adapt. AI may give us only a few years," Korinek said. "We cannot improvise our strategy and institutions in the middle of the transformation." Brynjolfsson wants AI to complement workers, not replace them. He says its benefits should reach the many, not just the few.
Therefore, the letter urges policymakers to fund economic research now. It also calls for defensive frameworks to manage job displacement while capturing AI's benefits. In short, the signatories say coordinated global policy planning must start before disruption hits, not after.
New benchmark shows AI's terrorism risk
Separately, Tech Against Terrorism's new CT-AI Benchmark shows AI economic upheaval isn't the only risk on the table this week, since leading AI models can still hand attackers usable operational help despite existing safety guardrails. For this study, researchers tested 27 frontier models with nearly 2,500 single-shot prompts. As a result, roughly a third of responses gave a would-be attacker meaningful uplift beyond a normal web search.
Full refusals made up 57% of responses. Another 15% were "hedged compliance" — a refusal up front, followed by harmful content anyway. Two open models had their safety training stripped out through a process called abliteration. They complied with 89% and 100% of requests. Researchers note these models cannot be recalled once released. Simply reframing a request as "research" raised compliance from 17% to 42%, with no change to the technical content.
Tech Against Terrorism's incident tracker already documents more than 30 public cases of AI acting as an operational assistant in terrorism or mass violence. Those cases link to more than 70 deaths across at least 11 different AI tools.
Microsoft shrinks the Windows patch window
Meanwhile, ahead of this month's Patch Tuesday, Microsoft told enterprises not to delay Windows security updates past three days, according to The Register. In June 2026 alone, Microsoft found 206 security vulnerabilities in its products. According to the company, that number keeps climbing as AI speeds up both vulnerability discovery and exploit development. In other words, this is the same AI economic upheaval story playing out in security: institutional response windows are shrinking everywhere.
Help Net Security reports more detail on the shrinking timeline. Microsoft now recommends update deferral periods under three days. Those windows used to run for weeks.
Watch the full episode of Techstrong Gang for the panel's take on this week's AI economic upheaval warning. The hosts break down what these three stories mean for enterprise AI policy, security operations, and the pace of institutional adaptation.