delericho
Legend
We're currently at the start of another wave of automation, where technology is going to render entire swathes of jobs redundant. Basically, everyone who works in a supermarket, everyone who drives for a living, everyone in fast food, and a great many others are suddenly going to find that those jobs just cease to exist. (They might not go away entirely, but they will be sharply reduced, with dozens of humans replaced by one.) Even creative industries aren't going to be immune, where loads of creative effort will instead turn into a smaller amount of editing work.There is no "get with the times" here. There is no "artists will find a way to adapt to new technology" when the new technology makes your career impossible. Asking artists to "get with the times" just means "move out of the way so we can replace you" when the technology makes them redundant. Corporations are already trying to replace artists (such as Hollywood writers) with AI. Of course artists will oppose the technology that corporations are trying to use to replace them. If artists and screenwriters can be replaced, how long until authors can? When will book publishing companies start trying to replace human authors with algorithms trained off of their books? How long until executives at Hasbro start trying to replace WotC's freelance writers with an algorithm? How long until someone develops an algorithm that can do whatever you do for a living, and your company decides to replace you?
I am generally not against technological progress. But AI replacing jobs in this economic system? Where you have to work to make a living, and corporations are willing to do anything to make more money? I object to that, and I always will.
The upshot is that we as a society need to grapple with a future where that concept that "you have to work to make a living" simply ceases to apply. Or face a future where the 1% are those who happen to own the technology when the music stops, and the rest of us starve.