英伟达黄仁勋提议在工资之上发放人工智能代币。
Nvidia's Huang pitches AI tokens on top of salary

原始链接: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/20/nvidia-ai-agents-tokens-human-workers-engineer-jobs-unemployment-jensen-huang.html

## AI 与工作未来:英伟达的愿景 英伟达首席执行官黄仁勋提出了一种新的薪酬模式——用“AI 代币”补充工程师的工资,以激励他们利用 AI 代理提高生产力。这反映了对未来工作场所的更广泛愿景,工程师将管理由数百万个自主 AI 组成的机队,可能每个员工管理数十万个。 然而,这一进展加剧了对失业的担忧。包括高盛和橡树资本管理公司在内的专家预测,人工智能可能会自动化大量白领工作,可能影响美国高达 25% 的工作时间,尽管历史趋势表明新技术会创造新的职位。 有趣的是,尽管担心失业,但存在“人才悖论”:公司难以找到熟练工人,*同时* 预计人工智能将减少员工数量。对具备人工智能素养的专业人士的需求激增,而入门级职位尤其容易受到冲击。 黄仁勋反驳了这些担忧,认为 AI 代理将*增加*对软件和计算基础设施的需求,从而创造新的增长周期。尽管如此乐观,但自 2018 年以来,人工智能项目的高失败率(80-85%)凸显了成功实施的挑战。

## Nvidia 的 AI 代币提案:摘要 最近的讨论源于 CNBC 的报道,报道称 Nvidia 首席执行官黄仁勋建议用“AI 代币”来补充员工工资。然而,许多评论员认为报道误解了黄仁勋的意图。他似乎提议这些代币作为 AI 工具的预算——一种工作资源,类似于会议或学习与发展资金——而不是直接的工资奖金。 核心争论在于这是否是一种真正的福利,还是一种微妙地转移薪酬的方式。一些人担心这可能会演变成一个强制系统,AI 访问(以及代币)变得对工作*和*生活至关重要,从而可能产生对 Nvidia 生态系统的依赖。如果员工将代币用于副项目,也可能出现所有权问题。 许多人强调了“公司代金券”的历史先例,并质疑大量非货币薪酬的合法性。另一些人指出,科技行业内部的 FOMO 驱动下,正在出现一种衡量 AI *使用* 而不是 *生产力* 的趋势。最终,这场讨论凸显了人们对将薪酬与公司自身产品/货币挂钩的怀疑。
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原文

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang delivers the keynote address at the GTC AI Conference in San Jose, California, on March 18, 2025.

Josh Edelson | Afp | Getty Images

The perks of working in Silicon Valley have long included high salaries. Now, some engineers may be offered a new incentive: artificial intelligence tokens.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on Monday floated a novel compensation model that would give engineers a token budget on top of their base salary, effectively paying them to deploy AI agents as productivity multipliers.

Tokens, or units of data used by AI systems, can be spent to run tools and automate tasks and are becoming "one of the recruiting tools in Silicon Valley," Huang said.

"[Engineers] are going to make a few hundred thousand dollars a year, their base pay," Huang said at the chipmaker's annual GPU Technology Conference.

"I'm going to give them probably half of that on top of [their base pay] as tokens ... because every engineer that has access to tokens will be more productive."

The pitch signaled Huang's broader vision of the workplace, in which engineers oversee a fleet of AI agents capable of completing complex, multi-step tasks autonomously with minimal user input.

It is a vision that Huang has been building toward publicly. Last month, he told CNBC that Nvidia's employees would one day work alongside hundreds of thousands of AI agents.

"I have 42,000 biological employees, and I'm going to have hundreds of thousands of digital employees," he said.

The comments come as concerns grow that AI agents — software systems capable of independently executing complex, multi-step tasks — will hollow out white-collar work.

In a memo to investors, Howard Marks, founder of Oaktree Capital Management, warned of "an incredible leap ahead in AI's capabilities" that now allows it to "act autonomously" — a distinguishing point that determines its ability to substitute human labor.

"That difference is what separates a $50 billion market from a multi trillion dollar one," the veteran investor said.

Goldman Sachs estimates AI could potentially automate tasks accounting for 25% of all work hours in the U.S., enough to fuel fears of what some have grimly dubbed a "job apocalypse."

The bank sees a 15% productivity boost from AI, which could lead to 6% to 7% of jobs displaced over the adoption period.

"Risks are skewed toward greater displacement if AI proves more labor-displacing than prior technologies," said Joseph Briggs, Goldman's senior global economist.

Some 60% of today's workers are employed in occupations that didn't exist in 1940, Briggs said, citing a study by economist David Autor, suggesting that AI will render some roles obsolete while creating others that don't yet exist.

AI agents drive software demand

Huang has taken an optimistic view of the impact of AI agents on the software industry, describing it as "counterintuitive." Rather than reducing demand for software, AI agents will become its most voracious customers.

His logic goes: more AI agents mean more demand for the underlying software infrastructure they run on — the programs, tools, and computing resources that power them.

"The number of C-compilers that we use, the number of Python programs that we have, the number of instances, are growing very, very fast — because the number of agents we have that use these tools are going up," he said.

Bruno Guicardi, president and founder of the information technology company CI&T, described the change as nothing short of a paradigm shift. "A new layer of abstraction is being created through agents," he said.

"Now software engineers can 'tell' what computers should do, not in a programming language but in plain English. Work that used to take months to be done now takes a couple of days. And we see it only accelerating from here."

'Talent paradox'

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