Technology Rise of AI leads to death of blue collar jobs

Debi

Owner/Admin
Staff
Joined
Sep 16, 2013
Messages
241,673
Reaction score
234,472
Points
315
Location
South of Indy
Robot Revolution: Rise Of Artificial Intelligence Could Lead To Mass Unemployment, The End Of Blue Collar Jobs

A robot revolution could be coming ahead, with a new report warning that the rise of artificial intelligence could lead to mass unemployment as machines take over jobs once held by blue collar workers.

he nearly 300-page report came from Bank of America Merrill Lynch and warned that as artificial intelligence becomes more widespread and begins to be used across industries, it could lead to a number of jobs being wiped out. The report predicted that up to 47 percent of workers in the United States could have their jobs replaced by robots, largely in blue collar jobs but also in some white collar professions, as well, the Guardian noted.


Some have noted that these warnings were used in the past. The rise of computers in the 1970s and 80s would lead to mass unemployment, many warned, but this never came to pass.

Others think the so-called robot revolution could be different.

“The poster child for automation is agriculture,” says Calum Chace, author of Surviving AI and the novel Pandora’s Brain. “In 1900, 40 [percent] of the US labor force worked in agriculture. By 1960, the figure was a few per cent. And yet people had jobs; the nature of the jobs had changed.”

“But then again, there were 21 million horses in the US in 1900. By 1960, there were just three million. The difference was that humans have cognitive skills – we could learn to do new things. But that might not always be the case as machines get smarter and smarter.”

Artificial intelligence is already being used to replace some tasks, even in typically white collar professions. The Associated Press used an automated system to write earnings reports from thousands of American companies, work that was once done by journalists.

Forms of artificial intelligence have also been implemented in technology, with advancements like self-driving cars and Apple’s personal assistant, Siri.

Toyota has also added artificial intelligence research and development to its business objectives, investing $1 billion for a five-year effort to develop AI at its Toyota Research Institute in Silicon Valley.
_____________________________________________________________________________

You can see the changes coming, and they are coming on fast!
 
Yup....that's what I see in the future. We'll be standing by to service the robots. I find the scenario very disturbing, actually.
 
Yup..... those robots can't build and maintain themselves. Still painful for the proverbial buggy whip maker in the interim.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Debi