Sam Al -Tamman predicts that artificial intelligence will lead to the appearance of “color and sponge” functions
The subsistence farmers were trying to survive. They did not try to make the content.
Sam Tamman, CEO of Openai, predicts that it is naive as the appearance of the Podcast Pro for our ancestors for a long time, the current jobs will look equally after artificial intelligence in the workforce.
“Like, PodCast BRO was not a real job that was not long before, and I discovered how to income from him and you are doing a great job and we are all happy for you,” Altman told his brother Jack, and he was bothering him during an interview on the Jack Altman. “But do you want to look at this job on this job or like playing a game to entertain yourself?”
“I think they will subscribe to this podcast,” said Jack.
Jacques Altman, who runs his VC company, Alt Capital, his older brother about a wide range of topics, including Openai CEO ideas about Meta competition in the space of artificial intelligence (does not believe that the technology giant is “good in innovation), what life will be Will robots wandering in the streets, and Gua Shaa Lymphatic Massage received Jack before the interview.
Data already shows that artificial intelligence takes jobs. He asked the CEO of Shopify and Duolingo from its managers to justify the reason for the unable to fill new roles. One economist found that the share of the applicable tasks is Amnesty International in online job publications, it decreased by 19 %.
During their discussion, Jack Altman said that customer service jobs are already replaced.
Sam says that he is not afraid of this disorder that is looming on the horizon, because society has shown unlimited potential for adaptation, even if “a lot of jobs disappear” and its alternatives appear “alternative and more stable looking from our current perspective.”
Al -Taman said: “We have always been good in discovering new things to do, ways to occupy ourselves, status games or ways to be useful to each other, and I do not like the believer that this is running out.”
Germans said the changes will be less dramatic for the next generation, which will grow without knowing how life was before.
“It will not seem strange to him,” Al -Taman said of his son. “It will just grow up in a world where, of course, computers are smarter than it. It will only discover how to use them fluently and do amazing things.”