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DailyMail.com reveals the jobs least at risk from automation

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작성자 Sue 조회조회 15회 작성일 23-12-05 07:25

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Netflix turned heads last month after it posted a job advert for an artificial intelligence (AI) expert paying up to $900,000 per year. 

The listing may have sparked lip smacking among the coding community, but it also ignited the ire of striking Hollywood actors, who have downed tools over fears about how AI is destroying their livelihoods.

The strikers have found an A-list figurehead in Tom Cruise, who made a surprise appearance at a negotiating session last month to press their claims.

The actor strike has shone a light on how industries once thought safe from the rise of the robots are no longer secure.

Previous waves of automation have predominantly wiped out 'routine' tasks that can be easily programmed into a computer.





The US Career Institute has ranked the top 10 jobs with the lowest risk of automation, based on the skills required to do them and projected growth by 2031





Tom Cruise made a surprise appearance on behalf of striking Hollywood actors at a negotiating session with TV networks and streaming services last month. He made the case for regulation of artificial intelligence (AI) within the industry, a cornerstone of actors' demands





The actors' strike, which began last week, come in addition to a protest currently being leveled by The Writers Guild of America, which called a work stoppage May 2

But the advent of generative AI - a form of AI that can actually make things, such as words, sounds and images, sometimes at the level of human creativity - means even  actors and musicians are now getting edgy.

Chatbots launched by major tech firms, such as OpenAI's ChatGPT, have left observers stunned by their talent for penning poems or painting pictures in the style of famous artists.

Goldman Sachs estimated in March that AI capable of content generation could do a quarter of all the work currently done by humans.

Across the European Union and US, its report notes, realizace interiérů 300 million jobs could be lost to automation.

Experts agree that no sector will be untouched, so DailyMail.com asked: Is anyone safe from our new robot overlords?

These people, our soothsayers say, can breathe easiest…


 



The creative arts
Actors, artists, musicians

A decade ago, few would have thought these careers would be at risk of automation.

But generative AI has put graphic design and visual art-related roles in immediate danger.

Basic algorithms can direct a bot to analyze millions of images, allowing it to learn and recreate patterns and aesthetics.

Meanwhile, there are already dozens of examples of AI being used to simulate famous actors and musicians, meaning the real thing may one day be superfluous.

Tom Hanks mused in a recent podcast interview that artificial intelligence (AI) may, in effect, render him obsolete.




Tom Hanks recently said AI will be able to recreate him in Hollywood films long after he is dead













The listings, aside from showing the lavish spending now being allocated to AI programs, illustrates the Silicon Valley's firm continued commitment to integrating AI across its various business sectors, despite the ongoing double strike by Hollywood's actors and writers





Previous waves of automation wiped out 'routine' tasks that can be easily performed by computer. But the advent of generative AI - a form of AI that can create content - means even those careers once considered safe from the rise of the machines are now less secure





AI has long been used to recreate Hollywood stars in movies, 3d planovač interieru including this early attempt to simulate Hanks in the 2004 Christmas hit The Polar Express 





Experts believe those with specialist knowledge in their field will still be able to use new technology better than amateurs. For example, celebrated British artist David Hockney, 83, painted this image of Ludwig van Beethoven to celebrate the German composer's 250th birthday using an iPad





Hockney created the work with an Apple Pencil stylus on his iPad at his home in France

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