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Notes -
The part that you might not quite appreciate if you weren't monitoring every advance in this field is how quickly things have improved, which is to say how rapidly this disruption occurred.
We passed a point where computers became better at chess than any possible human a couple decades ago. Computers became better at Go about 6 years ago. This year they became better at producing art than 99.9% of humans, and they're certainly faster at it than any human could be. Most of the advances there occurred in the last 2 years.
And now there are models that can be applied to basically any game or task that can be effectively digitized, and can reliably train themselves to [better-than-human levels in a matter of days, maybe weeks.]
That's not to say that we're going to see unprecedented levels of 'hard' unemployment, but it is likely to sweep into unexpected places in very short order.
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