What jobs will artificial intelligence replace? Which professionals will be most affected? These two questions have resonated, as in recent years humanity has witnessed the power that this technology can have.
Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal, shared his insights into these questions on the Conversations with Tyler podcast. The businessman pointed to the fact that a certain group of workers could be the first to be replaced by large language models.
people that They work with numberscould be the most affectedThiel pointed out. According to him, artificial intelligence would be “particularly bad for mathematicians.”
The conversation with Thiel ranged from issues like Catholicism to political philosophy, but when asked about the impact of artificial intelligence on creative fields like writing, Thiel took a somewhat unusual perspective.
Critics of AI often fear that text chatbots, currently on the rise, aim to replace individuals in the creative and verbal sectors.
“My hunch would be the opposite, that it looks much worse for people who study math than for people who use words,” Thiel explained.
“Within three to five years, artificial intelligence models will be able to solve all the problems of the US Math Olympiad“, which will “really change things up a little bit.” In this case, Thiel offered an example of why jobs that involve solving mathematical operations are at stake.
In fact, Thiel's view may not seem so far-fetched given that some figures in academia and technology share similar views.
A prime example of this is the case of NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang, who recently stated that the future of programming jobs will be hanging by a very thin thread.
During his participation in the World Government Summit with the Minister of Artificial Intelligence in the United Arab Emirates, he said: It is no longer necessary for new generations to learn programming.
“Our mission is to develop technology so that programming no longer becomes a necessity,” he said. Artificial intelligence systems have advanced so much that they are able to perform this function on their own, overcoming technological obstacles.
“Now, anyone in the world can program. This is the wonderful thing about artificial intelligence. (…) For the first time, we have removed technological barriers.”
For his part, Christopher Pissarides, Nobel laureate in economics, expressed a somewhat similar opinion. In an interview with Bloomberg. The academic pointed out that professions related to mathematics would be at risk.
Pissarides pointed out that although artificial intelligence is beneficial to the industrial sector, it may lead to the elimination of some technological jobs in the future.
Ironically, these jobs, which are critical to the advancement of AI, could be replaced by the very technologies that helped develop them. Pissarides stated in the interview that Current skills related to data analysis and development of new stages of artificial intelligence may not be necessary in the future.
“Even though you see growth, they are still falling short of the number needed to provide jobs for all STEM graduates because that is what they want to do. (…) This demand for these new IT skills is holding Seeds of self-destruction.
Thus, existing STEM careers that could see a greater impact due to AI will include software developers, data analysts, systems and network specialists, computer security specialists, and hardware engineers, among other experts.
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