Please Note: This email did not come from ANU, Be careful of any request to buy 
gift cards or other items for senders outside of ANU. Learn why this is 
important.
https://www.scamwatch.gov.au/types-of-scams/email-scams#toc-warning-signs-it-might-be-a-scam
Big Tech usually dismisses fears that AI kills jobs. Now it’s studying them.

Microsoft, Google, IBM, Cisco and others will produce a report on how 
artificial intelligence might change tech jobs

By Gerrit De Vynck  Published April 4, 2024
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2024/04/04/jobs-ai-replace-study-microsoft-google-cisco/


As artificial intelligence continues to envelop the tech industry, debates 
about how it will affect workers and the economy are ramping up.

Big Tech companies that are investing heavily in the technology, including 
Google and Microsoft, are forming a group to study how artificial intelligence 
might affect technology jobs.

The group, led by telecommunications equipment maker Cisco, also includes IBM, 
chip maker Intel, business software company SAP and tech consultant Accenture. 
Unions including the American Federation of Labor-Congress of Industrial 
Organizations (AFL-CIO) and the Communications Workers of America (CWA) are 
listed as “advisors” to the group.


The rise of generative AI, like chatbots and image generators, has shaken the 
tech industry — with many companies diving headlong into the tech, designing 
new artificial intelligence tools and causing executives to promise investors 
that the advancements will revolutionize the world and help them make lots of 
money.

Long-held concerns about AI taking away jobs from humans have grown more urgent 
as lawmakers debate how to legislate the tech.

Some people who write for a living have already lost their jobs as companies 
turn to chatbots for advertising or social media copy. Hollywood writers won 
protections against being forced to work with AI-generated material as part of 
their new union contract last year.

Many computer coders say they use AI to generate code, helping them move 
faster. A study released in 2023 by the Pew Research Center said around 20 
percent of American employees are in jobs with “high exposure” to AI, such as 
tax preparers, copywriters and web developers.

But overall, it’s unclear how or even if the AI revolution will meaningfully 
affect work. It’s also uncertain what exactly this new group will do.

Cisco’s announcement about the group said it will focus on producing a report 
with “actionable insights for business leaders and workers.” It will study how 
AI might change work for 56 kinds of technology jobs, but the announcement does 
not detail what those jobs are.

A spokesperson for Cisco said the companies are working to determine the jobs 
the report will focus on.

Spokespeople for Google, Microsoft, CWA and AFL-CIO did not respond to requests 
for more information on the group.

Corporations often form working groups or write reports on issues facing their 
industries with the goal of swaying a debate in their favor. Tech companies 
have been among the biggest spenders on lobbying over the past decade, first as 
Congress tried to regulate social media and now as lawmakers turn their 
attention to AI.

Many tech executives have spoken publicly about “reskilling” or “upskilling” 
workers as the economy changes, essentially providing training for people to 
learn new skills. But those same companies have often laid off tens of 
thousands of employees.

During conference panels, interviews and earnings report calls, most AI company 
executives shrug off concerns about job losses.

They argue that though the tech might replace some jobs, it will overwhelmingly 
make existing workers more efficient by taking away drudge work like reading 
long documents or sorting through databases.

Google and Microsoft are pushing AI into their software tools, like Google Docs 
or Microsoft Outlook, pitching them as being able to write emails or summarize 
meeting notes.


Gerrit De Vynck is a tech reporter for The Washington Post. He writes about 
Google, artificial intelligence and the algorithms that increasingly shape 
society. He previously covered tech for seven years at Bloomberg News. Twitter

_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to