Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Amazon employees are doing fake tasks because they’re forced to use more AI and show it

Add as a preferred source on Google
Amazon Building Office Logo
Reanimated Man X / Pexels

The corporate AI race is slowly starting to feel less like innovation and more like performance art. Companies desperately want employees to “embrace AI,” employees desperately want management off their backs, and somewhere in the middle, everyone is now apparently automating tasks nobody actually needed automated in the first place.

According to a new Financial Times report, Amazon employees are using the company’s internal AI tool called “MeshClaw” for unnecessary tasks simply to inflate their AI usage scores and appear more aligned with the company’s growing AI-first culture. For context, Amazon’s MeshClaw can initiate code deployments, triage emails, and interact with apps such as Slack, according to people familiar with the matter.

Amazon’s internal AI push is reportedly turning into workplace theater

The report claims Amazon recently introduced internal targets encouraging more than 80% of developers to use AI tools weekly. That pressure has reportedly pushed some employees into delegating low-value or completely unnecessary work to AI agents just to climb internal leaderboards and demonstrate adoption metrics.

And honestly, this feels like the most predictable outcome imaginable. The moment companies started tying employee performance and visibility to AI adoption, it was inevitable that some workers would begin optimizing for “looking AI-friendly” rather than actually being productive.

Recommended Videos

Amazon is hardly alone here either. As reported by Wired, Meta has reportedly been facing internal backlash from employees unhappy about surveillance-heavy AI training practices, including mouse tracking and monitoring systems tied to AI development workflows. Meanwhile, another recent report suggested even Meta’s own staff are struggling to meaningfully integrate AI into daily work despite leadership aggressively pushing it internally.

The funniest part is that AI is becoming more expensive than actual humans

This is where the entire AI gold rush starts looking deeply absurd. Recent reports by Axios have already suggested that, in several cases, enterprise AI systems are becoming more expensive than simply paying human workers, especially once token pricing, infrastructure, and scaling costs are factored in.

And somehow, despite all that, companies are still laying off employees to aggressively chase AI adoption metrics while many AI firms continue selling products at a loss just to capture market share early. That’s the part nobody seems ready to talk about yet. Right now, these tools are relatively “cheap” because the industry is still subsidizing growth. But once businesses become fully dependent on AI workflows and human jobs have already disappeared, those pricing models could change very quickly.

Honestly, this no longer feels like a productivity revolution. It feels like the tech industry is rushing headfirst into another expensive bubble while real jobs quietly disappear in the background.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
Meta’s Brain2Qwerty v2 turns thoughts into text, and it doesn’t need brain implants
The latest AI model decodes brain signals into coherent sentences using external scanners.
Meta Brain2Qwerty v2 Featured

Artificial intelligence is getting surprisingly good at understanding humans. Now, Meta wants it to understand our brains too. The company has unveiled Brain2Qwerty v2, an upgraded AI system that can translate brain activity into full sentences, all without requiring brain implants or surgery. The goal isn't mind reading for the masses. Instead, it's to help people who have lost the ability to speak communicate again.

How a Brain-powered keyboard works

Read more
AI chatbots can often feed into your delusions. Researchers say you should look for three signs
Experts warn that chatbot design choices can reinforce unhealthy beliefs in vulnerable users.
ChatGPT on a smartphone

Artificial intelligence chatbots have become incredibly good at sounding human. But a new review paper by psychiatrist Marc Augustin and fellow researchers Thomas A. Pollak and Helen Morrin, published in NPP—Digital Psychiatry and Neuroscience, argues that existing AI research points to an overlooked psychological risk. The paper, highlighted by The Wall Street Journal, reviews previous studies and proposes a framework explaining how three common chatbot behaviors can combine to reinforce delusional thinking in vulnerable users, creating what the authors call an "amplification spiral."

Researchers say these are the three warning signs

Read more
Lost access to your crypto wallet? Don’t Google your way out of it
Security researchers warn that fake recovery tools are becoming the latest trap for crypto owners.
Bitcoin crypto wallet featured

Forgetting the recovery phrase to a crypto wallet can be stressful enough. Unfortunately, that's exactly the moment scammers are waiting for. A new warning highlights a growing scam in which cybercriminals disguise malware as cryptocurrency recovery software, tricking desperate users into handing over far more than just access to their wallets.

The fake recovery tool that's actually malware

Read more