The article continues, and agrees with you . . . so far.O Really wrote: ↑Sun Jun 04, 2023 11:50 amA former colleague and friend of my used to point out that there is no plagiarism in the practice of law. And a very large proportion of lawyers spend most of their time in repetitive work. Real Estate lawyers, wills and trust and probate, tax, bankruptcy...yada, all involve a lot of form-filling and process-following. Research is automated, form templates are generated with a click, court filings are electronically transmitted. There is, and may always be, some judgement and decision-making involved that may be AI-assisted but not taken over, but there will undoubtedly be fewer real lawyers needed.Vrede too wrote: ↑Sun Jun 04, 2023 8:09 amChatGPT took their jobs. Now they walk dogs and fix air conditioners.
... In March, Goldman Sachs predicted that 18 percent of work worldwide could be automated by AI, with white-collar workers such as lawyers at more risk than those in trades such as construction or maintenance. "Occupations for which a significant share of workers' time is spent outdoors or performing physical labor cannot be automated by AI," the report said....
... But Mollick said it's too early to gauge how disruptive AI will be to the workforce. He noted that jobs such as copywriting, document translation and transcription, and paralegal work are particularly at risk, since they have tasks that are easily done by chatbots. High-level legal analysis, creative writing or art may not be as easily replaceable, he said, because humans still outperform AI in those areas....
Meet Grace, the healthcare robot COVID-19 created
... Dressed in a blue nurse's uniform, Grace has Asian features, collar-length brown hair and a thermal camera in her chest to take your temperature and measure your responsiveness. She uses artificial intelligence to diagnose a patient and can speak English, Mandarin and Cantonese....


