Indeed, CEO Chris Hyams says that AI will not steal your work, but it will certainly change it

To say that there is anxiety around what AI will mean for jobs is an understatement.
But there are nuanced means of thinking about it and, in a certain sense, less to worry than we could have thought.
“The good news is that there is only one job zero FortuneSummit on innovation in the workplace, describing the conclusions of OECD labor economists. “This does not mean that it will not replace workers, but AI cannot completely replace a job.”
Simultaneously, in fact, the conclusions have also shown that “for about two thirds of all jobs, 50% or more of these skills are things that the generator of today can do reasonably or very well”.
These two apparently At -Odds results indicate a seismic change in progress – not a simple scenario where whole sectors disappear overnight, but a much more complex transformation where jobs undeniably evolve.
“What is said is that almost every job will change if it does not already change,” said Hyams on stage. “It will happen quickly. I expect personally – I have been doing it for a little over 30 years – that if you look at the change that has occurred because of the Internet to almost all work, there is a handful of occupations in the next three years that will see 30 years of change.
Julia Villagra, chief officer of Openai, shares the point of view of Hyams that many are about to change.
“I think that one of the things we have to do right now is to start changing the way we are talking about replacement of work,” Villagra told the public. “I think it's really something bigger than that. It is a reimagination of jobs. It is a redistribution of how we work. And as a person and optimistic, I have a lot of faith and optimism on the way humans through history have really adapted and exploited technology for progress.”
This story was initially presented on Fortune.com