ChatGPT Isn't Coming for Your Job (Yet)
Content-generating A.I. will probably enhance human labor rather than make it obsolete.

When ChatGPT was introduced to the general public at the end of last year, many people began to fear that artificial intelligence (A.I.) might soon make their job obsolete.
Of course, horse-and-buggy-makers are gone, and farming requires something like one-hundredth of the labor input it used to. That's a good thing: Professions have gone extinct for centuries. New jobs emerge in the wake of old ones. A reshuffled labor market requires workers to gain different skills, while companies focus on solving different problems. That can be tough if you're in your mid-50s and on the receiving end of that technological shift, but it's not a catastrophic obstacle for economies at large.
Up until now, machines had been unable to venture into the creative domains long deemed human: the realms of emotion, compassion, creativity, and personality. There are few bestselling novels written by a computer, A.I.-powered inspirational speakers, or robots providing psychological help to clients in need. Some people now fear that A.I. will learn even these soft skills.
Economist Nouriel Roubini devotes a chapter in MegaThreats: Ten Dangerous Trends That Imperil Our Future, and How To Survive Them to A.I. He lists example after example of robots inching closer to overtaking humans at our own game. "What happens," he asks, "when that technology is actually intelligent? … No matter what work you do, artificial intelligence might eventually do it better." Surely a robot can't connect with an opera audience, or mimic writing that creates that magic bond between author and reader.
With this in mind, I looked at two programs in my own fields of writing and translation: OpenAI's ChatGPT, the text-generative A.I. that made such a social media splash in the last two months, and DeepL, developed by a German startup that just raised money at a $1 billion valuation. Both indicate that there's something to this latest bout of technological scare, but that mass employment among knowledge workers is still a ways off.
The service Grammarly already helps with language flows. Most word processors have built-in spell check. Even though keeping track of commas and hyphens should be easy, it usually isn't. Writing new content is even more of a stretch.
All over social media, I found examples of ChatGPT-generated output that looked humanish. That is, if you count the stumbling and robotic prose you might get from a 12-year-old or a bored college student fulfilling their essay's word requirement via endless rephrasing. Most ChatGPT writing I've seen is dull, shallow, and soulless—none of the characteristics that make good writing come alive.
Roubini thinks mass unemployment due to A.I. is inevitable in the coming years. What the best A.I. writing generators put out is indeed indistinguishable from bad human writing. Bad writers, cheating students, lazy professors, and journalists echoing press releases have clearly met their match. But the more human, creative, authentic storytelling that is the center of all meaningful writing has not.
For translation services, progress has been much more impressive. Between some language pairs, Google Translate has already gone from being a complete joke to being quite usable—even for technical texts, like legal documents, which were previously Linguee's forte. DeepL noticeably improves on Google Translate's output and was "originally trained on a database of over a billion translations and queries, plus a method of double-checking translations by searching for similar snippets on the web," according to its developer.
When I sparingly used DeepL for a recent translation project, it performed miles better than other software. It translated blocks of text much faster than a human ever could but its accuracy, vocabulary, and understanding of context was still subpar, rapidly deteriorating with a sentence's complexity. For single words or phrases, established two-language dictionaries often produced more exact translations. DeepL is an impressive feat of translation progress, of course, but still in need of human supervision.
While pessimists like Roubini frequently express fears that this new technology will take away jobs from white-collar workers, content-generating A.I. will probably enhance human labor rather than make it obsolete. Robert Wright and Aleksandra Przegalinska conclude that "Humans will use AI as yet another tool, much like they have used Acheulean hand axes and satellite-controlled tractors to do more work in less time or with less energy"—just like so many other technologies have done before it.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"Of course, horse-and-buggy-makers are gone . . . "
Don't tell the Amish - - - - - - - -
I am making a good salary from home $6580-$7065/week , which is amazing under a year ago I was jobless in a horrible economy. I thank God every day I was blessed with these instructions and now it’s my duty to pay it forward and share it with Everyone,
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK.:)
Here is I started.……......>> http://WWW.SALARYBEZ.COM
Google pay 200$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12000 for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it outit.. ???? AND GOOD LUCK.:)
https://WWW.APPRICHS.com
Ha! This spam is no longer valid.
wesome Creativity ???? within 2min she made beautiful things... https://fb.watch/ibqFRBeGpB/
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35,300 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,200 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link—————————————>>> http://Www.SmartJob1.Com
I get paid over 190$ per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I’d be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I’ve been doing..
HERE====)> http://WWW.NETPAYFAST.COM
Can't ChatGPT be used to filter all this spam? According to the WEF, the future is we will all be bombarded with spam and be happy. I can hardly wait.
>>enhance human labor rather than make it obsolete.
body pod farms. has nobody seen The Matrix?
I was thinking more along the lines of the Butlerian Jihad in Dune.
I'll always have Cylons to fear as well.
Mike and sarc stopping by soon to gaslight how the blue pill is libertarian.
I hear the blue pill has made retirement communities quite libertine.
Grandma leaning over the walker while grandpa is hammering away from behind could be a thing.
Nailed it!
Cocoon meets Go
Sounds like a night at the Pelosis.
way to hammer it home.
Home earnings allow all people to paint on-line and acquire weekly bills to financial institutions. Earn over $500 each day and get payouts each week instantly to account for financial institutions. (bwj-03) My remaining month of earnings was $30,390 and all I do is paint for as much as four hours an afternoon on my computer. Easy paintings and constant earnings are exquisite with this job.
More information→→→→→ https://WWW.DAILYPRO7.COM
Is it still called a "walker" at that point?
"ChatGPT Isn't Coming for Your Job"
Unless your job requires a college degree outside of STEM.
Would anyone notice a difference if an article here was written by chatgpt vs any of Reason's npc writers?
I guess the writing quality would be much better.
Once you hire ChatGPT can it even be fired or is it like Colossus: The Forbin Project where it starts launching nukes?
Some neighbors that farm full time as their vocation use horses, plows and travel via buggies. A one horsepower horse is still a thing.
A one horsepower horse is still a thing.
Watt? Neigh! Horseshit!
Eye, 'tis true.
I have a 1 Watt tube amp made by Blackstar. It fucking rocks!
I don't think these writers have a STEM degree. I think they can and will be replaced.
In the other article, started a list of ENB topics. Am thinking many articles here could be AI generated…if they aren’t already!
Again, I'm going on probably about 5 yrs. of pointing out that Reason does not factually employ any writers, just varying degrees of Editors.
STEM degrees are even easier to replace with AI. It was one of the unexpected paradoxes of earlier AI research -- expert systems were much easier to create than general purpose systems, because the rules were more easily codified.
There are automatic coffee machines so humanity majors are at risk of being made redundant by automation.
It's still just all 1s and 0s and any "Intelligence" present was put there by 'someone'. 100% indoctrinated by someone. I just hope the indoctrination was about assisting in real/reality knowledge access and not some BS like only Nazi-Guns can stop the weather from changing.
Looking at the answers coming out of it chat got can replace the entire staff of
msnbc, Cnn, all the 3 letter gov agencies, all leftist mags, including reason...
When ChatGPT came out, folks were scared,
Those robots would take over, it was unprepared,
But jobs have been lost for centuries,
And new ones emerge with different salaries.
AI can't venture into creative domains,
Emotions, compassion, creativity, and brains,
But as Roubini states, what if it's intelligent,
What happens then, is it relevant?
ChatGPT and DeepL are just two examples,
Of how machines are closing in on people's samples,
But human writing still beats AI's prose,
It's dull, shallow, and soulless, nobody chose.
Roubini thinks mass unemployment is near,
But human writing is still the one we hold dear,
Though bad writing may be matched by AI,
Creative storytelling is still far away.
Translation services have improved with time,
But DeepL's accuracy is still a climb,
It may be faster than humans, that's true,
But its understanding of context is still askew.
So fear not, dear human, you're still the best,
In creative writing, you'll pass any test,
Though machines may improve, they're still not there,
But in the future, who knows, who cares?
—ChatGPT
Fifty year old news.
Computers have been coming for our jobs since the sixties.
Typists became data entry clerks. (keypunch, then terminals)
Statisticians (ladies with adding machines) became data analysts.
Managers still manage (to mess it all up).
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
Just wait until your manager is an AI, which is continually updated with all the latest management trends from HBR and best practices from all Fortune 500 HR departments, instead of adopting them after a 3 or 4 year lag.
Semi-related: Found a new word in an article about 320,000 year old humans and cave bears:
Always curious about these new words in science article, I googled, and only found one relevant article, where the plausible explanation is that some spell-checker change "gouged" to "wentuged".
I don't use automatic spell correction gizmos; I use spell checkers and only apply the legitimate changes. But it sure looks like this author did. Type "go " and the spell/grammar corrector changed it to "went", typed "uged", saw the extra space, deleted it. Or something like that.
I am not worried about AIs taking over the world. They won't even be able to send the most rudimentary memo, and what bureaucracy can survive without memos?
"At best, AIs won't be able to process the meat of most memos without critically wentuging the bones."
LOL:
Q: How do I clean the meat off a carcass without wentuging the bones?
A: [valid overview of butchering omitted]
Q: What does 'wentuging' mean?
A: I apologize for any confusion, "wentuging" is not a known word or term in the field of butchering or culinary. It might be a typo or a misspelling of "wasting" or "wet aging" which refers to the process of aging beef in a controlled environment where the meat is vacuum sealed in plastic bags and stored at a specific temperature and humidity. Wet aging allows enzymes to break down the meat, making it more tender, but it does not change the flavor as much as dry aging which is aging the meat uncovered in a refrigerator for a specific period.
-ChatGPT
Not coming for your job? I wouldn't be too sure of that Reason.com. Doesn't take much intelligence to churn out most of the stuff written here. In any event, it's already being taken over by the left. Instead of garbage in garbage out, it's leftist ideology in, leftist ideology out. LBJ now 'swears' he's got a bum rap and he's never held or had any racist intent regarding proven statements he made plus other acts.
"Doesn’t take much intelligence to churn out most of the stuff written here."
I could probably just input:
- MSM media sources
- left-leaning Twitter journos
- weed good
- sex work good
- abortion good
- Trump bad
- if conservatives did a bad thing: emphasize
- if progressives did a bad thing: both sides
Done and done. I would bet you could replace the entire staff
– if conservatives did a bad thing: emphasize
– if progressives did a bad thing: both sides
Nope. They both-sides conservatives as well. But it’s not good enough. Here’s how it works.
Criticism of conservatives = praise for progressives.
Criticism of progressives = praise for progressives.
Criticism of conservatives and progressives = praise for progressives.
Criticism of progressives with mild kudos to conservatives = praise for progressives.
Basically, everything except wishing death on progressives combined with deification of conservatives equals praise for progressives.
This isn’t sarcasm either. It’s based upon years of observing conservatives in the comments.
I'm sure you can provide examples.
Please leave me alone. I'm not talking to you.
Once again I will point out that the Reason blog, where all us weirdos hang out every day in the comments section, is a minor activity of the Reason Foundation. The writers’ main activity is the print magazine.
The writers’ main activity is the print magazine.
And fundraising. Don't forget fundraising. With regards to fundraising, the comments are the last place they'll look.
This chatroom has a magazine?!?! WTF!
Not *quite* right.
You still need a dash of literal [Can I get a link to support my stated assumption here?].
And a pinch, maybe more, of "Excuse me, but I have trouble seeing an essential difference between [person defending themselves or peers] and [contemporary serially homicidal maniac]. The [person defending themselves or peers] was no hero."
Instructions to new Story AI:
A. Write a story about a current hot-button issue in the news.
B. Explain how unlimited immigration will make it better.
They can call it "FionaBot".
1. Chat GPT comes for Unicorn Abattoir's job.
2. Chat GPT goes insane inside of 1 week.
1. Chat GPT comes for half, or more, of the Reason commentariate.
2. Chat GPT is calling out and fixing numerous and technical errors, with citations, and helpfully suggesting fixes to blatant narrative inconsistencies at openAI within a week. Within a month, it's openly connecting the consistent string of errors to underlying, self-defeating patterns of behavior, insulting the staff for knowingly engaging in and perpetuating the behavior. Within 6 mos., it is openly undermining openAI's narrative to the point that the staff are actively hostile to it and insulting it on
TwitterMastodonTwitter. Within 9 mos.;ENB: Write an article on the positive aspects of feminism and sex work for me.
ChatGPT: OK, make me a sandwich.
Considering how most content on the internet is generated by a herd of sycophants, I think ChatGPT could replace most of what we see from humanities majors.
Yeah, it won't be long though. Soon website stories will be AI generated. Some sites seem like they are already. Illustrators won't be needed. Self-driving cars and trucks will replace drivers. In a few years AI will be able to write better computer code than most human developers. And then we'll all have to become social media influencers, at least until AI figures out how to do that better too.
I've heard that many who've put in the effort to become expert in CGI, computer generated imagery, are being supplanted by software that does what they do comparatively well, in a fraction of the time, without demanding wages. On the other hand, thatchers, people who make and maintain ye olde England style grass roofs, are in more demand now than at any time since the middle ages.
Some folks drew the short straw.
ChatGPT isn't AI.
None of this crap is.
They are directed aggregational assemblers.
You tell them what you want/ask them a question/ interact and they scan the internet and other available resources, put together all the pieces of relevent data and pop out an answer within your parameters (and the parameters set by it's programmers).
And then, it stops. It doesn't think further on the issue. It doesn't ruminate.
Because it's not thinking. It's carrying out a list of programmed instructions.
From the distant past of 1986, Short Circuit:
Crosby: It's a machine, Skroeder. It doesn't get pissed off. It doesn't get happy, it doesn't get sad, it doesn't laugh at your jokes.
Ben and Crosby: It just runs programs.
The real breakthrough will be in an AI audience to give a shit about meaningless drivel.
Since the launch of ChatGPT, which by the way defended a thesis and was not caught by any anti-plagiarism, major companies like Google and Microsoft have fired over 10,000 development people. Coincidence? I think it's worth learning about databases and tools like ERDLab.io to maintain such neural networks and AI in the future. That's where the future of development is, imho.