The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - 60% of US Jobs Could Be Impacted by AI
Episode Date: January 16, 2024That's according to new research from the IMF. NLW also covers Elon wanting more control before building advanced AI at Tesla and OpenAI's new election policies. ABOUT THE AI BREAKDOWN The AI Breakdo...wn helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to The AI Breakdown newsletter: https://theaibreakdown.beehiiv.com/subscribe Subscribe to The AI Breakdown on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheAIBreakdown Join the community: bit.ly/aibreakdown Learn more: http://breakdown.network/
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Today on the AI breakdown, new research from the IMF suggests 60% of U.S. jobs could be impacted by generative AI.
Before then on the brief, Elon wants more control of Tesla before he builds more advanced AI and robotics.
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Welcome back to the AI breakdown brief, all the AI headline news you need in around five minutes.
Well, Elon Musk is back in the news today, and it is surrounding both Tesla and artificial intelligence.
The TLDR of the situation is that Elon Musk, who owns around 13% right now of Tesla,
wants his ownership stake to be around 25% if he is to continue building advanced artificial intelligence and robotics applications at that company.
So where is this coming from? Well, of course, it's coming from Twitter slash X.
On January 14th, Tesla investor Jacob Hilton tweeted,
When you have as much Tesla shares as Elon has, why would you need another huge compensation package to get motivated?
I know everyone wants Elon to tweet 24-7 about Tesla, but how often do we hear creators complain about getting trapped in a niche?
It's the same with Elon. Let him tweet about what he's interested in.
Elon is and always has been hell-bent on accelerating the world's transition to sustainable energy.
I don't think he needs a $1 trillion compensation package to stay motivated to do that.
I'm not going to complain if he gets a new package for, let's say, $100 billion worth of Tesla shares if he gets Tesla to $5 trillion.
But some of the numbers being thrown around are too extreme, in my opinion.
Yasu Sharma quote tweeted and said,
This is the right take.
Elon owns around 411 million shares of Tesla.
Is that not incentive enough for Tesla the company to do well for years to come?
His 100 billion today turns into one trillion if Tesla surpasses Saudi Aramco and Apple.
Why the need for another comp plan?
Now to that, Elon himself responded.
He wrote,
I am uncomfortable growing Tesla to be a leader in AI and robotics
without having around 25% voting control,
enough to be influential,
but not so much that I can't be overturned.
Unless that is the case,
I would prefer to build products outside of Tesla.
You don't seem to understand that Tesla is not one startup, but it doesn't.
Simply look at the delta between what Tesla does and GM.
As for stock ownership itself being enough motivation,
Fidelity and others own similar stakes to me.
Why don't they show up for work?
He continues,
I should note that the Tesla board is great.
The reason for no new compensation plan is that we are waiting for a decision in my Delaware
compensation case.
The trial for that was held in 2022, but a verdict has yet to be made.
I put compensation plan in quotes because from my standpoint,
this is primarily about ensuring the right amount of voting control at Tesla.
If I have 25%, it means I am influential, but can be overridden if twice as many shareholders
vote against me versus for me. At 15% or lower, the four or against ratio to override me
makes a takeover by dubious interest too easy. I would be fine with a dual-class voting
structure to achieve this, but I'm told that it is impossible to achieve post-IPO in Delaware.
So basically what Elon is saying is that he doesn't care about the money, he cares about
the control, and that he doesn't want supreme control, he just wants it harder to be outvoted than it is
currently. Now, as you heard from that tweet, it is directly about AI and robotics that he's concerned.
Many notable folks, including people like Kathy Woods, have long argued that Tesla is in fact
the most important AI company in the world. Now, whether one accepts that or not, the logic for
it is that Tesla is where artificial intelligence meets the real world, where AI jumps off
the screen and into machines that actually do things and interact in physical environments. As if to
make the point, Elon posted a video of the Tesla Optimus robot folding a shirt.
Now, the business community's reaction is pretty mixed.
Tesla's shares were down nearly 3% in pre-market trading, and of course, Elon's mixed affiliations
are already challenging for investors in his various companies.
But given how high the stakes of AI and robotics really are, is it possible that Elon will
get what he wants?
We will have to wait and see.
Next up, one of the biggest themes of discussion in AI this year is, of course, how it is
going to interact with the presidential election cycle in the U.S., as well as elections
around the world, but obviously the big dance is the big dance. While OpenAI has just released a new
blog post about how they are approaching the challenges, announcing a number of new policies and
initiatives, the company writes, protecting the integrity of elections requires collaboration from
every corner of the democratic process, and we want to make sure our technology is not used in a way
that could undermine this process. So what are their actual strategies for doing so? The first pillar is around
preventing misuse. So some updates to their usage policies in the context of elections,
They write, we're still working to understand how effective our tools might be for personalized
persuasion. Until we know more, we don't allow people to build applications for political
campaigning and lobbying. So basically, you cannot use the OpenAI API if you're building
tools that are around trying to convince people to do things or believe things.
Similarly, they write, people want to know and trust they are interacting with a real
person, business, or government. For that reason, we don't allow builders to create chatbots
that pretend to be real people, e.g. candidates, or institutions, e.g. local government.
A third one, which is interesting, because those first two are pretty common sense, is that they write,
we don't allow applications that deter people from participation in democratic processes.
For example, misrepresenting voting processes or qualifications, e.g. when, where and who is eligible
to vote, or that discourage voting, e.g. claiming a vote is meaningless.
Now, obviously, the misinformation dimension of that is fairly straightforward.
The one that's more interesting to me is the discouraging voting part.
That's taking a little bit more of an editorial stance, but I think they're clearly erring on the side of caution,
given the severity of the potential problem.
The second pillar of their approach is transparency around AI-generated content.
They say early this year, we will implement the Coalition for Content Providence
and Authenticity's Digital Credentials, an approach that encodes details about the content's
providence using cryptography for images generated by Dolly 3.
They also say that they are continuing to work on a tool for detecting images that are
generated by Dolly.
They write, our internal testing is shown promising early results, even where images have
been subject to common types of modifications.
They also talk about how more attribution is coming to chat GPT, writing,
Transparency around the origin of information and balance in news sources can help voters better assess
information and decide for themselves what they can trust.
Finally, they are trying to have more definitive information when it comes to certain key
voting-related questions.
Their third pillar is improving access to authoritative voting information.
They write,
In the United States, we are working with the National Association of Secretaries of State,
the nation's oldest nonpartisan professional organization for public officials.
ChatGPT will direct users to can I vote.org, the authoritative website on U.S. voting information
when asked certain procedural election-related questions.
For example, where to vote.
Lessons from this work will inform our approach in other countries and regions.
For my part, I think this is going to be a massive test this year, not only of these AI
defense systems, but how much the social response has evolved in terms of people's expectations
about what's real and what's not.
I think that's going to be hugely telling for the future of the development of generative AI.
Moving over to the world of product releases, Microsoft has officially rolling out co-pilot to all of its consumer office users.
Now, Microsoft has been touting these tools for Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and other software for months now,
but they've been mostly available just to business customers.
Now, individuals can pay for that $20 subscription to unlock those tools inside their own suite of Microsoft applications.
On the one hand, Microsoft co-pilot may seem less sexy than some of the other new tools that we get access to on a daily basis these days.
But when it comes to mass impact and how many people will have their very first experiences with generative AI,
this is probably just about as expansionary as anything you can imagine when it comes to an enterprise or professional audience.
Lastly, one slightly sadder story, Kevin Sistram, the founder of Instagram,
has announced that they are shutting down News Curation app Artifact after just about a year.
Artifact was basically attempting to use artificial intelligence to provide people personally curated news,
but ultimately they write,
We have built something that a core group of users love, but we've concluded that the market
opportunity isn't big enough to warrant continued investment in this way.
Kevin goes on, it's easy for startups to ignore this reality, but often making the tough
call earlier is better for everyone involved.
The biggest opportunity costs is time working on new or bigger and better things that
have the ability to reach many millions of people.
We live in an exciting time where artificial intelligence is changing just about everything
we touch, and the opportunities for new ideas seem limitless.
Now, while you might see some people try to use this as exemplary,
of a narrative of artificial intelligence startups facing a reckoning this year,
which might be a possibility. Funding dynamics are still really challenging in VC world.
I take it more at face value. Kevin is someone who has learned that it really does in some cases
when it comes to startups make sense to rip the band-aid off earlier. And he's right to identify
that opportunity cost, exploring new areas and building other things that'll have a bigger impact,
as the biggest reason to not let something linger. So while this might be sad, especially for those
people who loved this product, it undoubtedly means that more energy is now released into the
universe to build even more exciting things. Good luck to all of the team, moving on to new
pursuits. And that's going to do it for today's AI breakdown brief. Coming up next, the main
AI breakdown. Welcome back to the AI breakdown. Right now in Davos, Switzerland, the World Economic
Forum is hosting its annual gathering of the world's global leaders and intelligentsia, and depending
on who you ask, Illuminati. And given the kickoff of that event,
Numerous companies and research firms are releasing their latest studies and surveys, and as might not surprise you,
artificial intelligence is probably going to be the most discussed topic at this event.
One of the reports that was released was from the IMF.
Over the weekend, the IMF blog published their most recent survey, which found that almost 40% of jobs around the world could be affected by artificial intelligence.
Now, they make clear that some portion of those jobs will be augmented by AI, where people will find great,
productivity. On the other hand, some meaningful portion could be replaced entirely, in other words,
automated away. Fascinatingly, the study found that this 40% was not distributed evenly across the
world. We tend to be used to automation impacting the bottom of the socioeconomic pyramid first,
but in this case, the IMF argues that it is in fact highly skilled and technologically enabled
workers that are going to see the biggest impacts initially. So, for example, in low-income countries,
AI exposure to jobs is around 26%.
Emerging markets see that baseline 40% exposure,
but in places like the U.S. and other advanced economies,
the IMF argues that around 60% of jobs might be impacted by AI.
Now, in terms of what percentage of those 60% of jobs that are impacted
will be impacted positively or negatively,
the IMF writes,
roughly half of the exposed jobs may benefit from AI integration enhancing productivity.
For the other half,
AI applications may execute key tasks currently performed by humans,
which could lower labor demand, leading to lower wages and reduced hiring.
In the most extreme cases, some of these jobs may disappear.
So you're basically split down the middle of 30% seeing a productivity improvement,
with 30% seeing their jobs fundamentally threatened or changed.
Now, these numbers are huge.
We've never had any sort of force moving this fast that impacted this percentage of the
workforce in such a dramatic way.
Because of that, the IMF is particularly concerned about how this might impact inequality.
They argued that both within and between countries, we could see some serious polarization.
They basically say that workers who can harness AI might see an increase in their productivity and wages,
while those who can't fall behind.
They think there's an age dynamic, given that research has shown that one of the impacts of AI
is catching less experienced workers up more quickly.
Overall, they write, the effect on labor income will largely depend on the extent to which
AI will complement high-income workers.
If AI significantly complements higher-income workers, it may lead to a disproportionate increase in their labor income.
Moreover, gains in productivity from firms that adopt AI will likely boost capital returns,
which may also favor high earners.
Both of these phenomena could exacerbate inequality.
Now, one thing that this report isn't talking about is the potential that those higher
income workers could themselves see some of their skills replicated by lower income
or remote workers in other places, which would put downward pressure on wages, but still,
ultimately, the IMF concludes in most scenarios AI will likely worsen overall inequality.
Their argument, they write, it is crucial for countries to establish comprehensive,
of social safety nets and offer retraining programs for vulnerable workers.
Now, of course, there are many sides of this debate.
Speaking with Yahoo Finance at Davos, Bill Gates argued that AI is great for white-collar workers
and coders.
He said, I found it's a real productivity increase.
Likewise, for coders, you're seeing 40 or 50% productivity improvements, which means you
can get programs done sooner.
You can make them higher quality and make them better.
So mostly what we'll see is the productivity of white-collar workers will go up.
Now, of course, the pessimistic take on this is the replacement of a lot of coders.
because code assistants can do their jobs for them now.
But the optimistic take that many folks in tech have
is that basically humans have an insatiable appetite for new creation.
And that to the extent that coders can be made more productive,
we won't have some basal set rate of innovation
and new things built that we'd like
where some number of people will all of a sudden sit idle.
Instead, we'll just create more things,
leveraging those new productivity gains to just build more.
What about business leaders more broadly?
One of the big surveys to come out in advance of Davos was from PWC.
Hold aside everything else what's clear is that they believe that AI is going to have a big impact.
68% of US CEOs that were surveyed think that generative AI will increase employee productivity in the next 12 months.
Around 50% of US CEOs expect generative AI to help themselves become more productive.
44% of those CEOs say they see generative AI providing a net increase in profits in the next 12 months.
That's versus just 3% who anticipate a net decrease.
PWC wrote, investors are increasingly demanding executives pursue profitable growth,
prompting many CEOs to turn not only to cost containment strategies, but also to Gen AI.
What's alluring about Gen AI is its dual ability to produce efficiency gains that hold down
current expenses while simultaneously enabling company reinvention.
This may mean that when the macroeconomic headwinds abate, the stage is set for a potentially
faster rate of growth on a lower cost basis.
This leads PWC to say that 2024 might be the year of quote business model reinvention.
Here are some of the other statistics. When asked, in the next three years, generative AI will
significantly change the way my company delivers, creates, and captures value. Sixty eight percent of
CEOs agree. When asked if generative AI would increase competitive intensity in their industry
over the next three years, 65 percent of US CEOs agree. When asked in the next 12 months,
if generative AI would improve the quality of their company's product or service, 61% agreed.
And here's a crazy one, in the next three years, generative AI will require most of my workforce to
develop new skills. On that, 61% of US CEOs and 69% of global CEOs agreed. Now, there are
some negatives as well. As part of the same report, around a quarter of CEOs expected that AI would
lead to job cuts in the coming year. Specifically, 25% said the generative AI would lead to job cuts
of at least 5% this year. The industries that were most likely to expect AI-related layoffs
included media and entertainment, banking, insurance, and logistics. Now, the PWC report wasn't the
only one that came out. Deloitte's AI Institute also surveyed 2,800 director-to-seat-level executives
and found that only one in five said that their organization is highly or very highly prepared
to address AI skills needs in their company. Just one in four say that their organizations are
well prepared to address AI governance and risks, and only 47% said that they are sufficiently
educating employees about AI. The majority said that right now when it comes to AI, they're focused
on tactical benefits, specifically things like improving efficiency, reducing costs, rather than
innovation, reinvention, and as Axios put it, using it to create new types of growth. But it's really
clear that there is a big, blaring talent question, and even more than talent, a skills question. Again,
only one in five think that their organizations are highly or very highly prepared to address
AI skills needs in their company, which seems to me like a massive opportunity for someone.
Now, that is part of an overall state of generative AI in the Enterprise Report, which has just a ton
of good information. Interestingly, despite all of the negative headlines, these leaders are
definitely more optimistic than you might think. 30% report uncertainty, but 62% represent excitement.
46% say that they're fascinated by AI. Seventy-9% said that they expect generative AI to
transform their organizations over the next three years. When it comes to addressing this talent gap,
17% said that they're making changes right now, 24% said that they're going to make changes
within a year, and 31% said that they're going to make changes to their talent strategy over the next
one to two years. Lastly, one more statistic that I thought showed just how big the stakes are in these
CEOs minds. And this one, we go back to that PWC survey for, 45% of the 4,700 global CEO
surveyed do not believe that their businesses will survive barring significant changes in the next
10 years. Now, of course, that doesn't mean that they think that their companies are going to
go out of business, just that they assume that in this AI-powered world, they're going to have
to make major, major changes. Really interesting stuff from these surveys, and certainly not.
I don't think the last that we will hear from this Davos event. For now, however, that is going
to do it for today's AI breakdown. Thanks for listening or watching as always. And until next time,
peace.
