Culture Office

Sundar Pichai Urges Stanford Graduates to 'Choose Optimism' — and Skirts AI Controversy Google CEO Sundar Pichai delivered a cautious and upbeat commencement address at Stanford University on Sunday, deliberately steering clear of mentions of artificial intelligence amid growing student skepticism toward the technology. Pichai, a Stanford alumnus himself, took the stage at a moment when AI has become a flashpoint on campuses. Just last month, students at the University of Arizona booed former Google CEO Eric Schmidt when he spoke positively about AI’s potential. Similar jeers greeted Big Machine Records CEO Scott Borchetta at Middle Tennessee State University when he addressed the topic. Aware of the tension, Pichai acknowledged the advice he had received beforehand. “I know today is about giving you all advice,” he told the graduates. “But people have also been giving me a lot of advice on what to say. Actually, it’s been the same advice, and it’s about what *not* to say.” He kept his remarks light, making a self-deprecating joke about his surname: “People thought it would be really difficult for me. It is the last two letters of my last name, after all.” (A subtle nod to “AI.”) While videos from the ceremony later showed dozens of students walking out in protest — some carrying Palestinian flags — Pichai focused his message on resilience and perspective. He encouraged graduates to “choose optimism,” a theme that appeared tailored to the anxieties many young people feel about AI’s disruption of the job market. Pichai illustrated the idea with a personal story from his arrival in California in the 1990s. Expecting a lush, green landscape, he was instead greeted by brown hills. His host gently corrected him: the color wasn’t “brown” — it was “golden.” “That’s exactly what I mean by choosing optimism,” Pichai said. “It’s about reframing for the positive: Where I saw brown, she saw golden. This slight change of perspective had a huge ripple effect on how I thought about the world around me.” The message lands at a challenging time for new graduates. Industry leaders, including OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Anthropic’s Dario Amodei have repeatedly warned that AI could upend traditional entry-level roles. Multiple major companies have cited AI as a factor in layoffs this year, and many recent graduates report struggling for months to secure full-time positions. Pichai, who has led Google since 2015, has described the current wave of AI as unprecedented in its transformative power. On a recent episode of the *Hard Fork* podcast, he noted that today’s graduates will both drive AI progress and grapple with its consequences. In choosing optimism over a deep dive into technology’s risks, Pichai offered the Class of 2026 a gentle but pointed reminder: perspective is a powerful tool in uncertain times.

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