This is partially a repost of my comment in the news megathread but not really.

OpenAI just announced Sora, a tool for creating video from text, and the results are really fucking good (especially compared to state-of-the-art AI video generation tools), and this has me thinking about job security again.

Generative AI is already displacing workers.

A study surveying 300 leaders across the entertainment industry reports that three-fourths of respondents indicated that AI tools supported the elimination, reduction or consolidation of jobs at their companies. Over the next three years, it estimates that nearly 204,000 positions will be adversely affected.

The Concept Art Assn. and the Animation Guild commissioned the report, which was conducted from Nov. 17 to Dec. 22 by consulting firm CVL Economics, amid concerns from members over the impact of AI on their work. Among the issues is that concept artists are increasingly being asked to “clean up” AI-generated works by studios, lowering their billed hours and the pool of available jobs, says Nicole Hendrix, founder of the advocacy group.

“We’re seeing a lot of role consolidation and reduction,” Hendrix says. “A lot of people are out of work right now.”

According to the report, nearly 77 percent of respondents use AI image generators enabling, for example, individuals to upload landscape photos to virtual productions screens or speed up rotoscoping in postproduction. They have applications in 3D modeling, storyboarding, animation and concept art, among other things.

Generative AI displacing workers isn't some future hypothetical, it's something that's already happening right now, and as someone working in a field which is vulnerable to automation by AI tools, I'm really worried that OpenAI (or some other company) is going to create a new tool that just completely puts me out of a job.

Is anyone else worried for their job? Is there anything that can be done?

  • tamagotchicowboy [he/him]
    ·
    9 months ago

    No, under crapital humans will always be cheaper long term, we don't need stable electricity, internet nor reasonably temperature/humidity controlled environments to function like sensitive electronics do. Its a similar concept to why ancients preferred slavery to steam power. My main job is a cashier, even with self checkout, and in most places it getting phased out not for theft but because the machines are expensive to repair combined with above being lacking in all retail environments I've seen making repairs ever more frequent, even when people ask me (usually they don't, assume I'm too insert ableist slur here) I scoff while they shake in fear silly at the soggy wet paper tiger that is modern AI, my secondary gig is actually curating AI and then I just laugh since the economic-social base is just not there for it.