Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

User avatar
Ozzie guy
Posts: 487
Joined: Sun May 16, 2021 4:40 pm

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by Ozzie guy »

US Employment Rate
In January 60.2%
In February 60.2%
In March 60.4%
In April 60.4%
In May 60.3%
In June 60.3%

I am starting from January 2023 so each time a year passes I can replace months for that year with the yearly average. It is also after covid recovery and before AI has any impact. (I might later include a yearly average for a year such as 2022 or 2019 if technological unemployment happens this year.)

Lowest US has been since 1948 aka covid crash is 51.30

So low 50s = $hit hitting the fan.
User avatar
wjfox
Site Admin
Posts: 8946
Joined: Sat May 15, 2021 6:09 pm
Location: London, UK
Contact:

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by wjfox »

End of the bartender? The UK vending machines pouring pints for the masses

Sat 22 Jul 2023 09.00 BST

The queue for the bar has long been a bugbear for the thirsty sports fan, a gamble that all too often results in a rushed pint, downed just before the whistle for the start of the second-half.

After missing a key try at an international rugby match while waiting for a beer a few years ago, Sam Pettipher decided to do something about it. Studying for an MBA at Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen at the time, he dedicated his final project on “technology commercialisation” to finding a better way of lubricating crowds at mass events.

His solution: the EBar. An invention that will either fill your heart with gladness or make you fear for the future of the bartender, depending on how you feel about self-service checkouts and the prospects of robots taking all of our jobs.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/20 ... are_btn_tw


Image
Credit: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian
User avatar
wjfox
Site Admin
Posts: 8946
Joined: Sat May 15, 2021 6:09 pm
Location: London, UK
Contact:

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by wjfox »

ChatGPT creator says AI advocates are fooling themselves if they think the technology is only going to be good for workers: 'Jobs are definitely going to go away'

Jacob Zinkula
Jul 25, 2023, 7:31 PM BST

Generative artificial intelligence technology such as ChatGPT could boost productivity for many workers in the years ahead. But some people are likely to lose their jobs in the process.

That's according to Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT. Altman said in June that AI's development could provide the "most tremendous leap forward" for people's quality of life. But he also said in March it'd be "crazy not to be a little afraid of AI" and its potential to create "disinformation problems or economic shocks."

In a new interview with The Atlantic, Altman pushed back on the idea that the AI boom would have only a positive impact on workers.

"A lot of people working on AI pretend that it's only going to be good; it's only going to be a supplement; no one is ever going to be replaced," he said. "Jobs are definitely going to go away, full stop."

https://www.businessinsider.com/chatgpt ... ?r=US&IR=T
User avatar
Ozzie guy
Posts: 487
Joined: Sun May 16, 2021 4:40 pm

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by Ozzie guy »

US Employment Rate
In January 60.2%
In February 60.2%
In March 60.4%
In April 60.4%
In May 60.3%
In June 60.3%
In July 60.4%

In a way I kind of like the lack of tech unemployment this year. It means I can use the year as a bit of a baseline.
User avatar
Ozzie guy
Posts: 487
Joined: Sun May 16, 2021 4:40 pm

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by Ozzie guy »

US Employment Rate
In January 60.2%
In February 60.2%
In March 60.4%
In April 60.4%
In May 60.3%
In June 60.3%
In July 60.4%
In August 60.4%
User avatar
wjfox
Site Admin
Posts: 8946
Joined: Sat May 15, 2021 6:09 pm
Location: London, UK
Contact:

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by wjfox »

“AI took my job, literally” — Gizmodo fires Spanish staff amid switch to AI translator

9/5/2023, 8:57 PM

Last week, Gizmodo parent company G/O Media fired the staff of its Spanish-language site Gizmodo en Español and began to replace their work with AI translations of English-language articles, reports The Verge.

Former Gizmodo writer Matías S. Zavia publicly mentioned the layoffs, which took place via video call on August 29, in a social media post. On August 31, Zavia wrote, "Hello friends. On Tuesday they shut down @GizmodoES to turn it into a translation self-publisher (an AI took my job, literally)."

Previously, Gizmodo en Español had a small but dedicated team who wrote original content tailored specifically for Spanish-speaking readers, as well as producing translations of Gizmodo's English articles. The site represented Gizmodo's first foray into international markets when it launched in 2012 after being acquired from Guanabee.

Newly published articles on the site now contain a link to the English version of the article and a disclaimer stating (via our translation from Google Translate), "This content has been automatically translated from the source material. Due to the nuances of machine translation, there may be slight differences. For the original version, click here."

https://arstechnica.com/information-tec ... ranslator/
User avatar
wjfox
Site Admin
Posts: 8946
Joined: Sat May 15, 2021 6:09 pm
Location: London, UK
Contact:

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by wjfox »

User avatar
raklian
Posts: 1755
Joined: Sun May 16, 2021 4:46 pm
Location: North Carolina

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by raklian »

Yep. :?

To know is essentially the same as not knowing. The only thing that occurs is the rearrangement of atoms in your brain.
Nanotechandmorefuture
Posts: 478
Joined: Fri Sep 17, 2021 6:15 pm
Location: At the moment Miami, FL

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by Nanotechandmorefuture »

wjfox wrote: Sun Jul 23, 2023 7:31 am End of the bartender? The UK vending machines pouring pints for the masses

Sat 22 Jul 2023 09.00 BST

The queue for the bar has long been a bugbear for the thirsty sports fan, a gamble that all too often results in a rushed pint, downed just before the whistle for the start of the second-half.

After missing a key try at an international rugby match while waiting for a beer a few years ago, Sam Pettipher decided to do something about it. Studying for an MBA at Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen at the time, he dedicated his final project on “technology commercialisation” to finding a better way of lubricating crowds at mass events.

His solution: the EBar. An invention that will either fill your heart with gladness or make you fear for the future of the bartender, depending on how you feel about self-service checkouts and the prospects of robots taking all of our jobs.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/20 ... are_btn_tw


Image
Credit: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian
Besides grouping the sports people who are annoying as it is this is on the level of passive aggressiveness that all the Europeans especially ones that own countries do. Even if they clean the dang things it still gets moldy so like the whole using feet to squish grapes meme from years back its an out of the way manner to hurt people the passive aggressive way.

I guess here in the USA they were right if the opposition to different races ever became a real issue which if allowed to grow can easily be within a year's problem. If whites in Europe are dealing with this sort of issue its not looking good for anyone here in the USA. The opposition winning here in the USA would immediately resort to infighting.
User avatar
wjfox
Site Admin
Posts: 8946
Joined: Sat May 15, 2021 6:09 pm
Location: London, UK
Contact:

Re: Technological Unemployment News & Discussions

Post by wjfox »

After ChatGPT disruption, Stack Overflow lays off 28 percent of staff

Ron Amadeo - 10/16/2023, 9:44 PM

Stack Overflow used to be every developer's favorite site for coding help, but with the rise of generative AI like ChatGPT, chatbots can offer more specific help than a 5-year-old forum post ever could. You can get instant corrections to your exact code, optimization suggestions, and explanations of what each line of code is doing. While no chatbot is 100 percent reliable, code has the unique ability to be instantly verified by just testing it in your IDE (integrated development environment), which makes it an ideal use case for chatbots. Where exactly does that leave sites like Stack Overflow? Apparently, not in a great situation. Today, CEO Prashanth Chandrasekar announced Stack Overflow is laying off 28 percent of its staff.

In a post on the Stack Overflow blog, the CEO says the company is on a "path to profitability" and "continued product innovation." You might think of Stack Overflow as "just a forum," but the company is working on a direct answer to ChatGPT in the form of "Overflow AI," which was announced in July. Stack Overflow's profitability plan includes cutting costs, and that's the justification for the layoffs. Stack Overflow doubled its headcount in 2022 with 525 people. ChatGPT launched at the end of 2022, making for unfortunate timing.

Of course, the great irony of ChatGPT hurting Stack Overflow is that a great deal of the chatbot's development prowess comes from scraping sites like Stack Overflow. Chatbots have many questions to answer about the sustainability of the web. They vacuum up all this data and give nothing back, so what is supposed to happen when you drive all your data sources out of business?

OpenAI is working on web crawler controls for ChatGPT, which would let sites like Stack Overflow opt out of crawling. Stack Overflow hopes to get AI firms to pay to scrape the site, but it's unclear if the company will get any customers paying a sustainable price. As we've seen with chatbots convincing each other that you can "melt eggs," Chandrasekar has argued that sites like Stack Overflow are essential for chatbots, saying they need "to be trained on something that's progressing knowledge forward. They need new knowledge to be created."

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/10 ... -of-staff/


Image
Post Reply