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New research from MIT FutureTech shows that human workers may be safer from short-term AI automation risks than previously thought. Although AI, particularly computer vision, could theoretically automate many tasks, the study suggests that only a quarter of these tasks are economically viable for firms to transition to AI.
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The study indicates that the rate of AI adoption in the medium term will hinge on two main factors: the rate at which AI deployment costs decrease, and the speed at which companies develop AI-as-a-service platforms for widespread economic use.

For example, if privacy concerns can be addressed, one could easily imagine a few AI providers reading x-rays for much of the health system.

The authors anticipate the rise of numerous AI-as-a-service platforms, driven by the economic advantages of large-scale AI deployments. This shift will necessitate firms outsourcing to AI providers many of tasks traditionally done internally.

Paper: Video:

@MITFutureTech Viable for now ... until it goes to scale.

@MITFutureTech And At what point does your digital assistant create more work than it saves you?

