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AI Is Here To Kill Your Job (2017

Edition)
by Maarten Albarda, Featured Contributor, Yesterday

Loyal readers know that I have frequently written about the dawn of the robots. (Or, as Isaac
Asimov reversed it in the title of one of his science fiction novels, The Robots of Dawn.) A recent
flurry of articles on the subject of our automated future has more than strengthened my belief that
it will be AI - 1, Humanity - 0 in the foreseeable future.
Its not that I dont see the business benefits from automation or artificial intelligence. For
example, the Weather Channel app has become infinitely more accurate with the help of IBMs
Watson. And now Watson will do my tax returns, too, courtesy of H&R Block.

McKinsey released a report last month outlining a number of jobs set to be hit by the upcoming
wave of AI automation. And yes, your job and mine is likely included.

A Guardian article lists a range of professions under attack, like lawyers and paralegals,
journalists, teachers, actors, most professional driving services (from cars to trucks to delivery
vans), hotel and hospital staff. There are systems out there that can decide very quickly whether
a lawsuit has merit, listing a number of related cases as examples and predicting a probable
outcome. The current crop of chat bots can easily evolve into fully matured journalist bots (they
are already out there but in small and embryonic numbers). Fake news? How about synthetic
news? And who needs an actor of flesh and blood when you can artificially create one? A 1976
version of Carrie Fisher as well as Peter Cushing (who actually died in 1994) played in the most
recent Star Wars movie.

McKinsey also includes middle management in its list of endangered job categories, although
for now at the lower end of the automation threat (34%). There are systems in development that
will eliminate most of the HR departments job. And equally, there are business simulation
software models that, with the use of smart algorithms, can compute various business outcomes
based on different marketing strategies, budgets and plans. And programmatic is endangering
media planning and buying jobs.

Meanwhile, in a Wired piece, Cade Metz writes that the biggest threat from AI is the death of the
middle class. And that conclusion is especially meaningful in light of who won the most recent
presidential election. Donald Trump masterfully played to a group of disillusioned lower-middle-
class and blue-collar voters. Workers were hurt not only by movement overseas, but perhaps
more so by a wave of automation that over the last 20 or so years permanently eliminated many
of their jobs.

There are those who say, but there will be a need for new services and technologists to create
and support our automated future. It's certainly true that automation, coding and engineering are
growth sectors. Sadly, our education system is many, many years away from catering to these
new realities.
And regardless: Go visit any large manufacturing plant today (cars, soda, beer, ice cream, it
doesnt matter). The number of people necessary to build and run such a facility today versus 10,
20 or 50 years ago is dramatically lower. Now think of your own current job and be afraid. Very
afraid!

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