malloc wrote: ↑Tue Sep 12, 2023 5:31 am
More importantly, the jobs eliminated by generative AI are not crap that people consider intolerable burdens.
Yes, they are, that's the real danger. Look at the point Moose has been making. No one is going to destroy Art. What the CEOs might do is reduce the amount of human-made craft.
What LLMs are good at is, in fact, writing crap. Probably the vast majority of written materials, and jobs involving writing, deal with producing crap. We normally call it things like "marketing materials, corporate guidebooks, job descriptions, brochures, menus, fundraising, grant proposals, SEO pages, spam, propaganda, articles for minor news outlets, etc."
That doesn't mean it's a good thing to eliminate crap-writing jobs. They are not necessary crap jobs-- some of them are skilled labor, and most of them are more desirable than, say, retail. And there's hundreds of thousands of such jobs (though AI is not going to eliminate them all).
Nobody is complaining about the onerous chore of writing novels
CEOs don't give a shit about novels; they are not going to eliminate novelists.
or drawing pretty girls
CEOs don't really care about that either.
The art-related jobs threatened by AI are creating commercial illustrations, the sort of thing use to illustrate magazine articles. These jobs do not, sad to say, consist solely of drawing pretty girls. A lot of them are fairly mindless work: "make me an illo to go with this listicle on finding hotels."
I doubt we know the economic impact of AI illustration yet. I do worry that a lot of CEOs think that they can fire their artists/freelancers and use Midjourney prompts instead. On the other hand, people may get tired of the AI style. Plus, the cheapness may mean that we get ten times as much art of this sort as when only humans could produce it. That may mean that most AI art would not be putting a human artist out of work; it's adding art to things that didn't use to have any.