Submitted by AdditionalPizza t3_yde0tj in singularity
Even with interviews online of CEO's and some of the most brilliant minded engineers stating most jobs will be automated in <10 years, AI breakthroughs several times a month, text to image, advancements in IT industries across the board; It still feels the same as 2015 trying to discuss with people and them thinking you're crazy. You don't even have to get into far-out things either, just automation of jobs is enough to get disregarded by them.
Anyone seeing less resistance from these ideas with people they know?
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Also,
I did a poll and an AskReddit, while neither are at all indicative of the general population, and they don't gain enough traction to get a substantial enough survey, the trend quickly goes to people thinking "most of their jobs will not be automated before 2100" or "my job will never be automated."
I thought the general public were more on board with at least knowing automation will take over the majority of duties by 2050 or something.
phriot t1_itrnoq2 wrote
As a recent anecdote: I was talking with some friends the other day. (College educated, but not my "STEM friends.") Someone had been required to let a subordinate go who couldn't handle a task that probably could be automated. This friend had to take over that job, in addition to their own, for no additional pay for the time being. I jokingly suggested that they look into having an AI language model do the work, instead. There were some questions, but no one really thought that the idea was that farfetched. A separate friend mentioned a few aspects of their field that they knew were automated by software.
I think a few years ago, this group would have taken the whole idea a lot less seriously. Today, they pretty much accepted that narrow AI could do a bunch of different things. The conversation didn't progress into discussing the impact on our actual jobs.