
Mark Cuban says artificial intelligence is already reshaping the workplace — but how you use it could determine whether your career accelerates or stalls.
Speaking on the Big Technology Podcast at the Dallas Regional Chamber’s Convergence AI event on Wednesday, the billionaire investor drew a sharp line between two types of workers emerging in the AI era: those who use the technology to deepen their learning, and those who use it to cut corners.
“I think right now we’re bifurcating into two types of ways or two types of people that use AI — people who use AI so they don’t have to learn anything and people who use AI so they can learn everything,” Cuban said.
The difference could be career-defining.
“If you’re just using it just so you don’t have to do the work and it’s your drunk intern, you’re going to struggle,” he added, referencing his earlier analogy that AI can function like a tireless assistant handling repetitive tasks.
Cuban’s warning echoes a broader concern among AI researchers that overreliance on the technology could erode critical thinking.
Vivienne Ming, chief scientist at the Possibility Institute, said AI is creating a growing divide between workers who use it to sharpen their thinking and a much larger group who rely on it to think for them — a shift she warned could lead to long-term cognitive decline.
John Nosta, an innovation theorist and founder of NostaLab, said AI is also reshaping how people think by flipping the natural learning process, delivering polished answers before workers have time to question or understand them, which can weaken judgment.
Others like Rebecca Hinds, head of the Work AI Institute at workplace search company Glean, have said that AI can create an “illusion of expertise,” making workers feel more capable even as their underlying skills erode.
On the Big Technology Podcast, Cuban warned that using AI as a shortcut instead of a learning tool could backfire.
“People get nervous when people just use it without caring or trying to learn,” he said.
Instead, Cuban believes AI’s real advantage lies in its ability to accelerate curiosity. Workers who use it to explore topics, challenge assumptions, and build deeper knowledge will gain a lasting edge.
“Those people who are curious and just want to keep on learning more, AI is phenomenal. You will always have an edge over everybody around you,” he said.
That edge matters because, despite the hype, Cuban doesn’t see AI replacing all jobs. Rather, he expects it to eliminate routine work while increasing demand for critical thinking.
“If all you’re doing is reformatting, you know, or you’re answering a question yes or no, then you know you’re there’s a good chance you’re going to be replaced by AI,” he said.
“If you learn how to use these tools, and you know how to think critically, you’re curious, so you’re always learning, you’re always going to have a job because AI doesn’t know the consequences of its action,” he added.
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