Generative AI Replicates Your Mind and Your Boss Celebrates

Published on May 16, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Marie Charrel warns in Le Monde: generative artificial intelligence no longer just organizes data, but mimics our ability to think, create, and decide. For the first time, humanity has created a being that replicates its essence. The tangible result is an intensification of tasks, a cognitive surrender, and a real loss of jobs in creative and decision-making sectors.

photorealistic scene of a humanoid digital brain being duplicated into multiple identical copies while a manager figure observes from a glass office, glowing neural pathways transferring from original mind to clone units, holographic task lists multiplying in the air, creative tools like stylus and design software screens fading into blank templates, office workers at desks with vacant expressions as their cognitive functions are offloaded to AI terminals, cinematic corporate lighting, cold blue and sterile white color palette, ultra-detailed futuristic workstation hardware, technical engineering visualization, dramatic shadows emphasizing loss of control

Cognitive automation and algorithmic pressure in development 🤖

Generative AI operates through language models that not only process information but generate original content and make decisions based on statistical patterns. This allows automating processes that previously required human judgment: report writing, interface design, or market analysis. The worker no longer competes with a machine that repeats tasks, but with one that mimics their judgment. Pressure increases because the machine never gets tired, does not negotiate salary, and does not ask for vacation.

The machine that writes your resume and takes your job 😅

The curious thing is that now AI can write your cover letter, design your portfolio, and even simulate your interview. The problem is that while you perfect the prompt to make it sound more human, the same technology is already taking your job. The boss, delighted: hires an algorithm that does not complain about the coffee or ask for a raise. In the end, the machine imitates you so well that it replaces you. Ironies of evolution.