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In reply to the discussion: AI: Something Big Is Happening [View all]Kid Berwyn
(23,867 posts)2. Wow!
More from the OP article:
The experience that tech workers have had over the past year, of watching AI go from "helpful tool" to "does my job better than I do", is the experience everyone else is about to have. Law, finance, medicine, accounting, consulting, writing, design, analysis, customer service. Not in ten years. The people building these systems say one to five years. Some say less. And given what I've seen in just the last couple of months, I think "less" is more likely.
Snip
Let me give you a few specific examples to make this tangible... but I want to be clear that these are just examples. This list is not exhaustive. If your job isn't mentioned here, that does not mean it's safe. Almost all knowledge work is being affected.
Legal work. AI can already read contracts, summarize case law, draft briefs, and do legal research at a level that rivals junior associates. The managing partner I mentioned isn't using AI because it's fun. He's using it because it's outperforming his associates on many tasks.
Financial analysis. Building financial models, analyzing data, writing investment memos, generating reports. AI handles these competently and is improving fast.
Writing and content. Marketing copy, reports, journalism, technical writing. The quality has reached a point where many professionals can't distinguish AI output from human work.
Software engineering. This is the field I know best. A year ago, AI could barely write a few lines of code without errors. Now it writes hundreds of thousands of lines that work correctly. Large parts of the job are already automated: not just simple tasks, but complex, multi-day projects. There will be far fewer programming roles in a few years than there are today.
Medical analysis. Reading scans, analyzing lab results, suggesting diagnoses, reviewing literature. AI is approaching or exceeding human performance in several areas.
Customer service. Genuinely capable AI agents... not the frustrating chatbots of five years ago... are being deployed now, handling complex multi-step problems.
A lot of people find comfort in the idea that certain things are safe. That AI can handle the grunt work but can't replace human judgment, creativity, strategic thinking, empathy. I used to say this too. I'm not sure I believe it anymore.
The most recent AI models make decisions that feel like judgment. They show something that looked like taste: an intuitive sense of what the right call was, not just the technically correct one. A year ago that would have been unthinkable. My rule of thumb at this point is: if a model shows even a hint of a capability today, the next generation will be genuinely good at it. These things improve exponentially, not linearly.
Continues
https://shumer.dev/something-big-is-happening
PS: The Reich at least will always need prison guards right?
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The science fiction of our younger years has spent the subsequent years becoming reality....
Jack Valentino
Feb 11
#144
Wait until a physics AI develops faster than light drives and fusion power and better is developed
LiberalArkie
Feb 11
#62
Sooner of later the U.S. will join the rest of the world in recognizing that the citizens are its income source and
LiberalArkie
Feb 11
#68
Huh, the CEO of an AI company tells me I need to adopt AI? Never would have guessed. Anyone who's familiar with
WhiskeyGrinder
Feb 11
#3
He was also urging people on X to invest in AI companies as the best way to survive. One of the
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#10
I think most people are rightfully extremely concerned what this means for jobs (among other things) but mostly jobs
themaguffin
Feb 11
#12
According to this guy, here's what you should do about the upcoming AI apocalypse...
EarlG
Feb 11
#14
Matt Shumer, who wrote that hype, is well known for hype, has been accused of fraud, and has an
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#125
News articles that are actually shady sales pitches have been around since newspapers started.
Crowman2009
Feb 11
#48
The guy who wrote that advises people to buy AI company stock so they won't need jobs.
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#61
Imagine the outcry when painters (artists) started using pre-prepared paints instead of creating their own when creating
LiberalArkie
Feb 11
#21
Not at all the same thing. Using genAI is more like hiring someone else to do the work for you and
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#37
I've mentioned in a number of posts about how unethical voluntary use of genAI is that I know some
highplainsdem
Feb 12
#151
But God forbid we should be able to use non-HP toner ink, or fix a tractor or combine we already paid for!
hatrack
Feb 11
#140
We had no problem when the pencil was created and humans stopped using charcoal.
LiberalArkie
Feb 11
#22
I am old enough to remember when the languages come out (C, Fortran etc) and writing in Assembler was being looked
LiberalArkie
Feb 11
#28
I think it might really be great when the AI's can create a modern processing structure that can replace the
LiberalArkie
Feb 11
#35
It really will be a sea of new and more useful features for things we already use
Johnny2X2X
Feb 11
#39
How long before some idiot hands over control of the BIG RED BUTTON to AI?
Ferrets are Cool
Feb 11
#32
There's no point in trying to fight it? Wrong. There's every reason to fight it, for our freedom from
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#69
It's not just to misrepresent one's own intellect. A lot of use cases are pretty mundane.
Lucky Luciano
Feb 11
#80
Whenever new AI models are revealed, there's always trememdous hype about how amazing they are,
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#73
That's already been exposed as mostly fraud, with humans having written the posts getting the
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#66
Think of all the scribes that were put out of work when Gutenberg invented the printing press.
LiberalArkie
Feb 11
#56
Gutenberg, Edison and whoever did not set out to destroy an entire class and population
usonian
Feb 11
#67
According to a Wharton study, 75% of enterprises "report positive return on investment."
Renew Deal
Feb 11
#121
The messenger in the OP, Matt Shumer, is already known for both hype and fraud.
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#132
By that standard, Trump was doing things right with all his business failures.
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#134
Reading the comments to this thread is an interesting mix of skepticism, optimism, fear, and...
Ol Janx Spirit
Feb 11
#87
Matt Shumer is known for overhyping and has been accused of fraud. See this:
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#113
No way that's going to happen with the AI bros and the Trump regime. And their intent is to rig
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#118
If the predicted 50% of the 70 million or so white collar/professionals/knowledge workers lose their jobs.
pat_k
Feb 11
#139
LOL!!! Matt Shumer's company offers AI generators for "team member praise" and heartfelt sympathy
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#119
LOL! Shumer needed AI to help him write that piece! Talk about someone being AI-dependent...but
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#120
LiberalArkie, did you bother to find out ANYTHING about Matt Shumer's background before you posted this?
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#127
It's a chatbot with a very annoying voice. And they won't reveal the training data, which suggests very
highplainsdem
Feb 11
#141
AI is getting really hyped as they try to sustain their AI bubble. Microsoft pushing AI has met with a
highplainsdem
Feb 12
#159
The AI companies and the tech bros are fighting regulation. Same for the crypto companies. Both
highplainsdem
Feb 12
#160