Elon Musk, the founder of X, forecasted on Thursday that artificial intelligence would usher in an "age of abundance" and a "universal high income" in place of a universal basic income, but he also issued a warning about "humanoid robots" that would chase people.
Musk was speaking during a conversation with British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak following a world-first AI summit at Bletchley Park in the UK.
The SpaceX and Tesla CEO said there would come a point when "no job is needed" in the one-to-one with Sunak which was held later in London.
Jobs instead would be just for those who wanted one for "personal satisfaction".
AI was like "a magic genie" that gives you any wishes you want, Musk added, quipping however that those fairy tales rarely end well.
"One of the future challenges is how do you find meaning in life?" he said.
Musk cautioned that "we should be quite concerned" about humanoid robots that "can follow you anywhere".
The tech billionaire stressed the importance of having a physical off switch.
"A humanoid robot can basically chase you anywhere," he said.
"It's something we should be quite concerned about. If a robot can follow you anywhere, what if they get a software update one day, and they're not so friendly anymore?"
Sunak responded that "we've all watched" movies about robots that end with the machines being switched off.
The two-day gathering at Bletchley wrapped up Thursday with Western governments and companies involved in so-called next-generation "frontier" AI agreeing to a new safety testing regime.
Japan adds yet another failure to series of recent setbacks for country's efforts in rocket development
Newly public feature enables users to receive "fast, timely answers" with links to relevant web sources
Justice Dept says TikTok, as Chinese company, poses "national-security threat of immense depth and scale"
SPLC analysed 28,000 channels and found that algorithm pushes users toward radical content
“Questions related to national security should be asked from policymakers,” says telecom regulator chief
Latest updates focus on enhancing video call functionality while adding a fun, creative touch