BT has become the first big British business to replace thousands of jobs with robots.

The telecoms company announced it is axing 55,000 roles by 2030 — with more than 10,000 eliminated because of advances in artificial intelligence.

BT announced it is axing 55,000 roles by 2030 with 10,000 eliminated because of advances in AI

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BT announced it is axing 55,000 roles by 2030 with 10,000 eliminated because of advances in AICredit: Getty
BT Boss Philip Jansen said there was a 'huge opportunity to use AI to be more efficient'

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BT Boss Philip Jansen said there was a ‘huge opportunity to use AI to be more efficient’Credit: Getty

Yesterday’s bloodbath came as Prime Minister Rishi Sunak warned we must lead the way in regulating AI and chatbots to make sure they don’t take over the world.

Speaking at the G7 summit in Japan, he said automated tech has huge potential for transforming our society and economy in future.

But Mr Sunak said there must be “guardrails” to do it “safely and securely”, with the UK set to lead the way in curbs on robot tech.

BT plans to reduce its workforce from 130,000 to between 75,000 and 90,000 — potentially almost half — to save costs.

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Boss Philip Jansen said there was a “huge opportunity to use AI to be more efficient”.

He said: “Whenever you get new technologies you can get big changes. I believe generative AI is a huge leap forward.

“We have to be careful, but it is a massive change.”

He said tools such as ChatGPT — which can write essays, poems, music and computer programmes and answer questions — “gives us confidence we can go even further”.

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BT already uses AI to block spam texts and calls and via customer chatbot Aimee.

Britain has proposed a new AI regulatory framework.

The PM’s spokesman added: “Everyone is aware of the potential benefits and risks to AI.

“Some of that, as technology is moving fast, is unknown.

“What is right is to have guardrails in place so the public can have confidence in its use and transparency in how it’s being used.”

This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk

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