GENERATIVE AI AND LABOUR MARKET – ECONOMY

News: Generative AI: How will it affect future jobs and workflows?

 

What's in the news?

       As companies struggle to understand the implications and applications of generative AI (gen AI), one thing seems clear: AI and its future iterations are not going anywhere.

 

Key takeaways:

       A new report from the World Economic Forum, Jobs of Tomorrow, highlights the potential impact of large language models on job tasks.

       Generative AI has the capacity to enhance job quality and foster job growth if managed responsibly.

 

Generative AI:

       Generative AI (GenAI) is the part of Artificial Intelligence that can generate all kinds of data, including audio, code, images, text, simulations, 3D objects, videos, and so forth. It takes inspiration from existing data, but also generates new and unexpected outputs.

       Recently, San Francisco-based AI start-up OpenAI launched ChatGPT (Chat Generative Pre-Trained Transformer).

       Generative AI works by training a model on a large dataset and then using that model to generate new, previously unseen content that is similar to the training data.

       This can be done through techniques such as neural machine translation, image generation, and music generation.

 

Large language Model:

       A large language model (LLM) is a type of artificial intelligence (AI) algorithm that uses deep learning techniques and massively large data sets to understand, summarize, generate and predict new content.

       The term generative AI also is closely connected with LLMs, which are, in fact, a type of generative AI that has been specifically architected to help generate text-based content.

 

Positive Implications:

  1. Reduce the burden of human research: It can help shift through numerous legal research materials and produce a pertinent, specific and actionable summary. As a result, it can reduce the countless hours of human research and enable them to focus on more complex and exciting problems.
  2. Help in designing: It can also help create and simulate complex engineering, design, and architecture. It can help speed up the iterative development and testing of novel designs.
  3. Personalized Health treatments: It can also help health professionals with their medical diagnosis. AI can generate potential and alternative treatments personalized to patients’ symptoms and medical history. For instance, DeepMind Alpha Fold can predict the shape of the protein.
  4. Economic Transformation: LLMs are predicted to contribute $2.6 trillion to $4.4 trillion annually to the global economy.
  5. Enhanced Communication: LLMs redefine human-machine interaction, allowing for more natural and nuanced communication.
  6. Information Democratization: Initiatives like the Jugalbandi Chatbot exemplify LLMs’ power by making information accessible across language barriers.
  7. Industry Disruption: LLMs can transform various industries. For example, content creation, customer service, translation and data analysis can benefit from their capabilities.
  8. Efficiency Gains: Automation of language tasks leads to efficiency improvements. This enables businesses to allocate resources to higher-value activities.
  9. Educational Support: LLMs hold educational potential. They can provide personalized tutoring, answer queries and create engaging learning materials.
  10. Entertainment and Creativity: LLMs contribute to generating creative content, enhancing sectors like entertainment and creative industries.
  11.  Positive Societal Impact: LLMs have the potential to improve accessibility, foster innovation and address various societal challenges.

 

Concerns:

  1. Deep Fakes: Generative AI, particularly machine learning approaches such as deepfakes, can be used to generate synthetic media, such as images, videos and audio. Such AI-generated content can be difficult or impossible to distinguish from real media, posing serious ethical implications.
  2. Inaccuracy problem: Generative AI uses machine learning to infer information, which brings the potential inaccuracy problem to acknowledge.
  3. Increase in Biases: Recent evidence suggests that larger and more sophisticated systems are often more likely to absorb underlying social biases from their training data. These AI biases can include sexist, racist, or ableist approaches within online communities.
  4. Risk of Unemployment:  This could happen if generative AI automates tasks or processes previously performed by humans, leading to the displacement of human workers.
  5. Plagiarism: they are really just making new patterns from the millions of examples in their training set. The results are a cut-and-paste synthesis drawn from various sources—also known, when humans do it, as plagiarism. Either way, what’s missing is uniqueness.

 

WAY FORWARD:

  1. Ethical considerations: PM Modi called for a framework for ethical AI.
  2. International collaboration in regulation: consensus between the countries.
  3. Balanced values and risks: Address tensions between privacy, security, accountability, and freedom.
  4. Information integrity: Extend the identity assurance framework principles to information integrity. Validate the authenticity of information sources, content integrity, and information validity.

 

Thus, it is important for developers and users of generative AI to consider the potential impacts and ensure that the technology is used ethically and responsibly.