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OpenAI CTO says AI may replace some creative industry jobs that were replaceable

OpenAI executives say generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) While some jobs in creative fields may be displaced, some of those roles may not be replaceable at all or may not be needed at all.

Mira Murati, chief technology officer at OpenAI, told Dartmouth College’s School of Engineering earlier this month that she believes generative AI will primarily be a complementary tool for the creative industries, but that some roles may be eliminated.

“I think this is going to be a really collaborative tool, especially in creative spaces,” Murati says. Creative work Maybe it will go away, but maybe it should never have been there in the first place.

“I believe it’s really important to use it as a teaching tool. [and] Creativity expands our intelligence.”

Two-thirds of US jobs could be subject to automation by AI: Goldman Sachs

Mira Murati, CTO of OpenAI, said AI could eliminate some jobs in the creative industries. (Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images/Getty Images)

Murati also spoke at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity this week, suggesting that human and AI “collaboration” is on the way, with humans continuing to play a role in the workforce and AI technology acting as assistants.

What is CHATGPT?

Since the launch of ChatGPT by OpenAI As of November 2022, there is growing speculation about how emerging technologies will affect workers and whether their widespread adoption will result in mass unemployment or transform the modern workforce.

Analysts at the McKinsey Global Institute published a report last year stating: AI-powered automation By 2030, generative AI could take up about 29.5% of Americans’ work hours, while automation without generative AI could handle about 21.5% of work hours.

Accelerated adoption of AI could automate 30% of American work hours: McKinsey

Chat Open AI

The launch of OpenAI’s ChatGPT has sparked discussion about the potential impact of AI on the workforce. (Leon Neal/Getty Images/Getty Images)

The report looked at a range of occupations and found that in creative and arts management occupations, the time that could be covered by automation could increase by around 15% to around 25%.

“Our study does not estimate job losses, but we cannot definitively dismiss its conclusions, at least in the short term. Technological advances often cause disruptions, but historically, they ultimately lead to Economic and employment growth” the report noted.

What is Artificial Intelligence (AI)?

OpenAI ChatGPT Screen

Analysts suggest that AI may play a complementary role to human workers rather than replacing them. (Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images / Getty Images)

According to a report published by economists a year ago, Goldman Sachs Analysing the potential workforce impact of AI across 900 occupations, the report found that AI is likely to have a “significant” impact on the labour market. Most jobs and industries are “only partially affected by automation and therefore more likely to be supplemented by AI than replaced,” the report said.

The Goldman Sachs report also noted that the emergence of new technologies such as AI has historically spurred the creation of new jobs.

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The report cited research by economist David Autor, which concluded that roughly 60% of workers today work in occupations that didn’t exist in 1940. Goldman Sachs economists said this suggests that more than 85% of job growth over the past 80 years has been driven by technological changes that led to the creation of new jobs.

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