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AI jobs that pay $200K or more

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AI jobs that pay 0K or more

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I know that many of you are afraid that AI is going to take your job. And you might be right. 

The 2025 Global State of AI at Work report just confirmed what we’re all sensing. AI isn’t the future. It is now. But before you panic, let me offer a new way to look at this.

Instead of fearing what’s coming, maybe it’s time to think outside the box. Nearly three out of five companies say they’re hiring for AI-related roles this year. And most of these jobs don’t require a computer science degree or even coding skills.

So, what are they looking for? Real people with real-world experience. They want folks who can think critically, solve problems and communicate clearly. That might sound a lot like … you.

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RUDE CHATGPT PROMPTS, BETTER ANSWERS? WHAT THE DATA SAYS

Generative AI tools can help job seekers make their resumes and applications more visual and get ideas for content.  (Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Here are some of the highest-paying, fastest-growing AI roles right now. Let’s dig in.

Prompt Engineers

$175K to $250K-plus

These are the “AI whisperers.” Their job is to write the right prompts so tools like ChatGPT give useful, accurate and smart responses. You don’t need to know how to code, but you do need to be a great communicator, logical thinker and problem solver. Bonus: English majors, writers and marketers often pivot into this role.

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MICHIGAN WOMAN WINS $100K POWERBALL JACKPOT USING CHATGPT TO PICK NUMBERS

AI Trainers (or Evaluators)

$90K to $150K

Ever wonder how chatbots learn to sound polite or helpful? That’s the trainer’s job. They score AI responses, tweak tone and accuracy and help refine what the AI “knows.” This is a great role for detail-oriented folks, even part-timers and remote workers.

A photo taken on October 4, 2023 in Manta, near Turin, shows a smartphone and a laptop displaying the logos of the artificial intelligence OpenAI research company and ChatGPT chatbot. (MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP via Getty Images)

Machine Learning Engineers

$150K to $210K

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If you’re the technical type who likes to code, solve complex problems and build the actual brains behind AI, this is where you belong. These jobs are in super high demand, and the pay is great.

AI FLAW LEAKED GMAIL DATA BEFORE OPENAI PATCH

AI Product Managers

$140K to $200K

Not technical? Not a problem. AI PMs are the bridge between engineers and business teams. They guide strategy, make sure projects stay on time and budget and turn AI ideas into real-world results. You’ll need communication skills, curiosity and business smarts.

Generative AI Consultants

$125K to $185K

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This is perfect for freelancers or small-business owners. Companies are desperate to figure out how to use AI, and they’ll pay you to show them. You might help build automations, train teams or set up tools like ChatGPT, Jasper or Midjourney.

In this photo illustration, a Midjourney logo appears on a smartphone screen. (Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Want help getting started?

If you’re nervous about pivoting or don’t know where to start, I’m here to help. Whether you want to become a prompt engineer, a consultant or just to understand how to use AI to boost your current work, I’ve got your back.

Let’s chat. Click here to schedule a time with me. We’ll map out your path together. You’ve got this, and the future is wide open.

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Taylor Farms pulls iceberg lettuce from the US market after cyclosporiasis outbreak

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Taylor Farms pulls iceberg lettuce from the US market after cyclosporiasis outbreak

Food producer Taylor Farms released a statement on the Cyclospora outbreak Friday, confirming that it’s “voluntarily removing all iceberg lettuce sourced from central Mexico from the US market.” Reuters reports that, according to a source, Taylor Farms told customers like Yum Brands owner Taco Bell and the food distributor Sysco on Thursday to pull shredded lettuce that had been produced initially as 5-pound bags at a facility in Guanajuato, Mexico, from distribution.

Taco Bell said on Thursday that “The affected ingredient from our supplier is being indefinitely removed from our supply chain nationwide and will be replaced within 24 hours in select states.”

The Cyclospora parasite infects humans’ small intestine, can take up to one to two weeks to incubate, and causes symptoms including “watery diarrhea, with frequent bowel movements… vomiting, body aches, headache, low-grade fever, and other flu-like symptoms,” that may seem to go away and then come back more than once.

As The Verge reported this week, not all of the reported cases have been linked to Taco Bell, and Taylor Farms is a giant, which has said it sells more than $7 billion in produce every year and makes two out of every five of the salad kits sold in grocery stores. However, its name doesn’t appear on most of those items, and while the extent of the outbreak is still under investigation, the CDC has said it’s also looking into illnesses and outbreaks in other states that are unrelated.

Based on information provided yesterday by the FDA, Taylor Farms de Mexico is voluntarily removing all iceberg lettuce sourced from central Mexico from the U.S. market.

While the FDA traceback is indicating a specific independent farm that represents less than 1% of the U.S.’s iceberg lettuce supply as the potential source of the outbreak, we have removed all iceberg lettuce from the region indefinitely.

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It hasn’t identified other companies or products to avoid yet. ProPublica’s Annie Waldman reports that the tracing effort is working without more than 240 consumer safety specialists who left as the Trump administration cut funding to federal health agencies, and the CDC scaled back its Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network (FoodNet) that worked with 10 states.

The Washington Post also mentions that a few months ago, the FDA pushed back the compliance deadline on implementing its Requirements for Additional Traceability Records for Certain Foods (Food Traceability Final Rule) from January 20th, 2026, until July 20th, 2028. Its requirement for standardized record-keeping about goods and shipments could’ve made finding the “specific independent farm” tied to the outbreak easier and faster.

This all follows statements from the CDC and FDA saying the “explosive diarrhea parasite” outbreak has been linked to shredded iceberg lettuce served at Taco Bell locations across five states: Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia. In Michigan alone, there are over 5,000 reported cases, with 102 reports of hospitalization.

According to the FDA, “FDA and state partners are actively investigating the source and scope of the contamination. Because the investigation remains ongoing, additional implicated brands, restaurants, retailers, or distribution channels may be identified as the investigation continues.”

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Fox News AI Newsletter: IBM’s AI warning sends ‘shockwave’

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Fox News AI Newsletter: IBM’s AI warning sends ‘shockwave’

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Welcome to Fox News’ Artificial Intelligence newsletter with the latest AI technology advancements.

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER:

– IBM sends ‘shockwave’ through tech industry with AI warning

– Dimon urges calm over fear about AI’s impact on jobs: ‘Stop being breathless over it’

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– AI is changing modern dating, but experts warn it’s making people ‘relationally stupid’

MARKET JOLT: Shares of IBM were down more than 23% when the market opened on Tuesday, raising fresh questions about whether companies are seeing enough near-term returns from artificial intelligence spending.

COOL DOWN: JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon on Wednesday said there is still a lot of uncertainty over how AI will impact the workforce and people shouldn’t be “breathless” in their concerns as new technologies have historically created new jobs.

JPMorgan Chase Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon speaks onstage during day two of the America Business Forum at the Kaseya Center in Miami, Florida, on Nov. 6, 2025. (Alexander Tamargo/Getty Images for America Business Forum)

PLUG PULLED: New York’s decision to pause the construction of large artificial intelligence data centers is drawing criticism from some lawmakers and energy officials, who argue the move could weaken the United States’ ability to compete in the global AI race while encouraging investment to move elsewhere.

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New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s AI data center pause is drawing criticism from lawmakers and industry leaders. (Shawn Dowd/Rochester Democrat and Chronicle / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

RARE PRAISE: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., praised the late Sen. Lindsey Graham for backing legislation that would allow victims of nonconsensual AI-generated deepfake pornography to file civil lawsuits.

‘RELATIONALLY STUPID’: Artificial intelligence has seeped into almost every aspect of modern life, helping users plan vacations, create workout routines and tackle countless everyday tasks. Some have resorted to using it for their love lives by asking chatbots to help them write witty responses to messages, craft dating app profiles and work out relationship issues. However, relationship experts fear that the increased use of AI in dating could lead to disastrous results.

DIGITAL AXE: A group of 26 Meta employees sued the tech giant over accusations that it used AI-powered software to choose people for mass layoffs, disproportionately targeting workers with disabilities or those who took medical, parental or family leave.

LOCAL LIFT: Meta is expanding its massive data center project in Richland Parish, Louisiana, to 5 gigawatts of compute capacity, making it one of the largest data centers in history, the company announced Monday.

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ACCOUNT CONTROL: There are few emails that make your stomach drop faster than one about “new privacy settings.” That usually means a company has moved another data switch, renamed a control or tucked a new choice inside an account menu you rarely visit. Google is now rolling out one of those changes for Search services. The setting is called Search Services History. It controls whether Google saves your activity from Search services when you are signed into your Google Account.

SCREEN FREE: A major university is taking aim at tech in a sweeping ban against electronic devices in an effort to “ensure students actually learn to think critically, strategically and independently without relying on AI,” according to administrators.

The University of Chicago has banned electronic devices for first-year law students as part of a broader effort to promote critical thinking and address the growing use of artificial intelligence in legal education. (iStock)

Subscribe now to get the Fox News Artificial Intelligence Newsletter in your inbox.

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Stay up to date on the latest AI technology advancements and learn about the challenges and opportunities AI presents now and for the future with Fox News here.

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Apple’s plot to crush OpenAI

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Apple’s plot to crush OpenAI

Apple is suing OpenAI. The complaint is readable and intense, as these things often are, though many experts seem to think many of the allegations are just the ways things are done. So what does Apple really want here, and why is it picking such a public fight with OpenAI?

On this episode of The Vergecast, Nilay and David go through the lawsuit, and look at Apple’s history of splashy litigation to determine whether Apple is worried about a possible competitor or simply looking to capitalize on a weak moment for OpenAI. All this is happening as Apple ships the public betas of its new software, headlined by the new Siri AI, and we have thoughts about what it all means — and whether the new Siri is actually any good.

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