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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]SO I asked AI: "Jobs least likely to be replaced by AI involve high levels of human interaction, creativity, emotional intelligence, and complex physical tasks in unpredictable environments. These include: Healthcare professionals (e.g., doctors, nurses, therapists): Require empathy, nuanced judgment, and hands-on care. Teachers and educators: Demand personal connection, motivation, and adapting to individual student needs. [b]Creative artists (e.g., writers, musicians, designers): Rely on unique human expression and originalit[/b]y. Skilled trades (e.g., plumbers, electricians, carpenters): Involve complex, context-specific tasks in varied settings. Social workers and counselors: Depend on deep emotional understanding and trust-building. Strategic leaders (e.g., CEOs, policymakers): Need vision, ethical judgment, and high-stakes decision-making. Research scientists: Require innovative thinking and hypothesis-driven experimentation. While AI can augment these roles (e.g., diagnostic tools in healthcare or automation in trades), full replacement is unlikely due to the human-centric or unpredictable nature of the work. Jobs with repetitive, data-driven tasks (e.g., basic data entry, routine customer service) face higher risk of automation."[/quote] This one is tricky and in theory AI can greatly benefit established/famous creatives..and possibly make it harder for new people to break in. There is a famous screenwriter who just said AI does an amazing job of coming up with film ideas and writing film treatments. Someone like that could have AI come up with 100s of ideas, decide on 10 they think are best, have AI write 10 treatments, do some editing and then send those off to production companies, understanding likely one will get picked up because who they are. Also, Coca Cola just created a series of AI-generated commercials that required like 1/10 the normal number of creatives that traditional commercials require, not to mention saving tons on production costs. People claimed they weren't great...but does the average person buying Coca Cola care that much? I don't think so.[/quote]
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