If You Have Any of These Jobs, Be Wary of AI
In recent years, the field of artificial intelligence (AI) has seen rapid and innovative developments, opening new horizons for progress and innovation in various fields and industries. However, AI also raises questions and concerns about its impact on the job market and whether it will be a friend or foe to workers and employees.
Some experts believe that AI will lead to the replacement of many human jobs with machines and smart robots, especially those requiring low to medium skills, or involving repetitive or routine tasks. According to a report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), about 14% of jobs in member countries are highly susceptible to automation, and around 32% are at risk of partial automation. Among the jobs that could be affected by AI are:
Data Analysts
In our digital world, companies and organizations produce huge amounts of data, such as sales figures, demographic data, climate models, and more. Data analysts study this data to discover hidden patterns and trends and provide actionable recommendations.
This is what AI offers, using advanced algorithms to analyze data and produce reports, graphs, and forecasts.
Content Marketers
There is a current challenge in the path of people who create and publish diverse content on the internet and social media to attract and persuade the target audience of the products or services they promote.
AI can generate smart content appropriate to the context and purpose based on the keywords, titles, or images entered. This reduces the need for human marketers who need to exert more effort and time to produce quality.
Graphic Artists
If you think that artistic and creative works cannot be automated, you might need to think again. There are smart programs that use AI to create images and graphics based on texts or entered words. An example is DALL-E 2 from OpenAI, the same company that created ChatGPT, a chat program that can generate texts naturally.
DALL-E 2 can produce dozens of different designs for any prompt you write, like “create a business card for a flower shop called Daisy Mae’s”. According to one professional graphic designer, the results are “crazy” (in a good/scary way).
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