07/29/2024
I wrote an article about AI in a foreign language (Hebrew), and then asked the AI to do the following:
1. Translate,
2. Proofread,
3. Correct typos and grammar,
4. Improve the text,
5. Reorder rephrase,
6. Optimize.
Here's what I had in return:
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We knew it was coming. We were prepared. We were told that artificial intelligence is the new Superman, yet we refused to believe it.
Now, we find ourselves amid the Fourth Industrial Revolution. In contrast, countries like North Korea and China are not waiting for Western powers to resolve their debates over individual rights, data protection, and other theoretical legal issues associated with artificial intelligence. These countries are investing substantial sums into developing the "industries of the future." The human professions we know today will cease to exist, disappearing over the next twenty to thirty years.
It was only a matter of time before AI technologies dominated every field, no matter how complex, including traditional marketing tasks. These technologies are making such tasks relatively simple and straightforward to implement and integrate, including finding new customers and optimizing sales data.
Although we are only at the beginning, the direction is clear and the objectives are well-defined: to liberate small and medium-sized business owners from the relentless pursuit of new customers—a burden that weighs heavily on every business owner and is the main determinant of whether a business will thrive or struggle, potentially leading to closure if unsuccessful.
Over the past year, I've tested various paid marketing channels, but none truly met expectations. Even with relatively generous advertising budgets, no one was willing to guarantee campaign profitability or a minimum number of sales in exchange for the costs associated with managing and optimizing the campaigns.
Anyone who followed my earlier posts about artificial intelligence recognized the stark ambivalence these sophisticated tools introduce into our work environment. On the one hand, they offer near-perfect technical solutions, providing efficient, quick, and cost-effective answers to almost any task. However, they are also rapidly and systematically eliminating the livelihoods of countless creators and professionals. These individuals' acquired skills, years of experience, and thousands of hours invested in mastering their crafts are suddenly becoming economically unviable and, therefore, unnecessary. Their services pale in comparison to the impressive quality delivered by these nearly flawless robots.
Just as cobblers and tailors, watchmakers, and milkmen have vanished from our streets and lives, so too will writers, translators, designers, sales representatives, and customer service agents. Even programmers, stock traders, teachers, instructors, clerks, cashiers, drivers, pilots, doctors' diagnoses, and lawyers' defenses will be replaced. Most of the traditional jobs we know today, performed by humans, will soon become a thing of the past, joining film, typewriters, and record players in the museum of outdated technology.
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