“ University diplomas died ”: Vinod Khosla said to Nikhil Kamath ai tutors will crush elite schools

The American billionaire and the technological investor, Vinod Khosla, says that university diplomas become obsolete, thanks to the education tools led by AI which even surpass the best human tutors.
In a radical conversation on the podcast of Nikhil Kamath, Vinod Khosla has exposed a daring vision: a future where artificial intelligence democratizes not only access to high -level education, but also upsets traditional professions in law, medicine and finance.
“If each child in India has a free AI tutor – something quite possible today – it would be better than the best education that a rich person can buy,” said Khosla, referring to CK -12, an Ed -Tech company founded by his wife.
He thinks that AI tutors could soon replace expensive private instructors, offering continuous learning and on demand far beyond the scope of traditional education.
According to Khosla, this would allow students to pivot between disciplines without the commitment of years of formal college education.
“You don’t have to return to university for three or five years to move from electricity engineering to mechanical engineering-or from medicine to something else,” he said.
The billionaire did not stop for education. He envisaged a future where legal and medical expertise becomes universally accessible via AI.
“Imagine that each lawyer was free. Each judge was free,” he said, arguing that AI could reduce the bottlenecks in the overloaded courts of India and do justice to those who cannot currently afford a representation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o7O204WD82S
Khosla also predicted that AI would soon surpass human financial advisers, regardless of a person’s income.
“Even someone who makes 5,000 rupees per month will get the best wealth advisor-because it is in the system. And someone who makes it no longer a better one,” he said.
In its opinion, AI is not only a technological upgrade – it is a societal equalizer. Diplomas and guards, he suggests, are relics of the past.



