I don't see any clear examples in this article of people being laid off due to AI. I see one anonymous source who suspects his team was halved and that the higher-ups expect them to do twice the work using AI assistants. But, teams were slashed in half and expected to do more with less before AI, so I'm not sure that counts. I'm not naive enough to think AI companies wouldn't come after knowledge workers, but I'm waiting for confirmation that they are capable of doing that yet. If not, Betteridge's Law is confirmed in this case.