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There is a 50/50 chance AI will take your job

There is a 50/50 chance AI will take your job

There is a 50/50 chance AI will take your job
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Imagine logging into your work computer to find that half of your daily tasks have been seamlessly automated overnight. Your email responses are drafted, your data is analyzed, and your reports are summarized — all by artificial intelligence. Science fiction? 

Far from it. A study published in Science in June, titled “GPTs are GPTs: Labor market impact potential of LLMs,” suggests this scenario is not just possible — it is on the horizon for nearly half of us.

Researchers from OpenAI, the Centre for the Governance of AI, and the Wharton School examined our AI-driven near future, and the view is startling. Their findings? About 1.8 percent of jobs could see over half their tasks affected by AI using current large language models. These include OpenAI, ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude and Google’s Gemini, using simple chatbot interfaces. 

But here is the kicker: When accounting for likely near-term software developments that complement LLM capabilities, this jumps to a staggering 46 percent. These developments include specialized software that can interface between LLMs and domain-specific tools, AI-powered coding assistants to generate and debug complex software, and advanced data analysis tools that interpret and visualize large datasets based on natural language prompts.

This is not about some far-off future or hypothetical breakthroughs. We are discussing integrating existing AI technologies with software developments already in progress or on the immediate horizon. The scale of potential disruption is not just possible — it is probable.

Surprisingly, it is not always the jobs you might expect that are most exposed. The study found that occupations requiring extensive preparation — think lawyers, pharmacists and database administrators — are more exposed to AI than those with lower entry barriers. This challenges the common perception that AI primarily threatens people in low-skilled jobs.

However, “exposure” does not necessarily mean job losses. The study emphasizes that AI’s impact is more about transformation than replacement. When we say a job is “exposed” to AI, we mean that many tasks within that job may be augmented or automated. This often leads to shifts in job roles rather than outright elimination. The critical question is how quickly these changes will occur and how prepared we are to adapt.

For workers, the imperative is clear: Adaptability is crucial. Regardless of your field, developing skills that complement AI rather than compete with it will be essential. This might involve focusing on uniquely human capabilities like creativity, emotional intelligence, and complex problem-solving.

How we develop, deploy, and regulate AI technologies in the immediate future will shape their impact on the workforce.

Mohammed A. Alqarni

Businesses need to start planning for an AI-augmented workforce now, not in some distant future. This does not just mean adopting new technologies but rethinking entire business processes and job roles to leverage the strengths of humans and AI.

Policymakers face an urgent challenge. The study calls for immediate public investment in tracking AI adoption and its labor market impacts. We need robust policies to ensure the benefits of AI are broadly distributed and to support workers through what could be rapid transitions. This might include reforms in education, upskilling and reskilling programs, and social safety nets.

The “50/50” nature of AI’s potential impact on jobs underscores a crucial point: While significant disruption appears likely, the specific outcomes are not predetermined. How we develop, deploy, and regulate AI technologies in the immediate future will shape their impact on the workforce. We have the power — and the responsibility — to influence this future, starting right now.

As millions of us face this looming transformation in our working lives, it is clear that we need to rethink the future of work fundamentally. This is not just about adapting to AI — it is about reimagining what work means in an AI-augmented world. We must ask ourselves: How can we redefine productivity and value creation? What new forms of work might emerge? How can we ensure that the benefits of AI are distributed equitably across society?

This rethinking needs to happen at all levels. Individuals should consider how their roles might evolve and what skills they will need in an AI-rich environment. Companies must reevaluate their organizational structures and how they can best leverage human-AI collaboration. Policymakers and educators must overhaul our education and training systems to prepare people for this new world of work.

The question is not whether AI will change our jobs but how quickly and dramatically. Our challenge — and our opportunity — is to harness its imminent potential to create a more productive, equitable, and fulfilling world of work for all. This requires not just adaptation but a bold reimagining of “work” itself. The time for this rethinking is now before the change overtakes us. 

Let us seize this moment to shape a future of work that benefits everyone, putting human needs and aspirations at the center of our AI-augmented future.

Mohammed A. Alqarni is an academic and AI business consultant
 

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

Pakistan welcomes Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire, hopes for peaceful resolution via diplomacy

Pakistan welcomes Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire, hopes for peaceful resolution via diplomacy
Updated 2 min 3 sec ago

Pakistan welcomes Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire, hopes for peaceful resolution via diplomacy

Pakistan welcomes Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire, hopes for peaceful resolution via diplomacy
  • Thailand, Cambodia agreed to ceasefire on Monday after days-long fighting killed at least 35, displaced over 270,000
  • Pakistan’s foreign office hopes for resolution of conflict through regional cooperation between the two neighbors

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office on Tuesday welcomed the Thailand-Cambodia ceasefire after days of fighting, hoping the two sides would resolve their outstanding issues through diplomacy and regional cooperation. 

The foreign office’s statement followed Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim’s announcement of an “unconditional ceasefire” between Thailand and Cambodia on Monday. Talks between the two neighboring countries were held at Ibrahim’s official residence in Malaysia’s administrative capital, Putrajaya. Acting Thai Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet both attended the meeting, along with the ambassadors of China and the United States. 

Fighting over a border dispute between Thailand and Cambodia broke out last week, killing at least 35 people and displacing more than 270,000 from both sides of the border. Ibrahim said Cambodia and Thailand agreed to a ceasefire effective at midnight on Monday (17:00 GMT) while a meeting between the military commanders of both nations will follow on Tuesday.

“Pakistan welcomes the successful conclusion of the special meeting hosted by Malaysia on the Cambodia-Thailand situation,” the foreign office said in a statement. “We appreciate the spirit of dialogue and express hope for a peaceful resolution through diplomacy and regional cooperation.”

Thailand and Cambodia have wrangled for decades over border territory and been on a conflict footing since the killing of a Cambodian soldier in a skirmish late in May. The development led to a troop buildup on both sides and a full-blown diplomatic crisis that brought Thailand’s fragile coalition government to the brink of collapse.

Both countries accused each other of starting the fighting last week, that within hours increased from small arms fire to heavy artillery and rockets, and Thailand’s unexpected scrambling of an F-16 fighter jet to carry out airstrikes.

Pakistan had also engaged in a military conflict with its nuclear-armed neighbor India in May. Both countries pounded each other with fighter jets, artillery fire, drones and missiles before that killed over 70 on both sides of the border before agreeing to a ceasefire brokered by Washington on May 10. 


Terror threat to Singapore ‘remains high’, says home affairs report

Terror threat to Singapore ‘remains high’, says home affairs report
Updated 5 min 17 sec ago

Terror threat to Singapore ‘remains high’, says home affairs report

Terror threat to Singapore ‘remains high’, says home affairs report
  • The ministry said a key threat was online self-radicalization, in a variety of extremist ideologies, especially of youths

SINGAPORE: The terrorism threat to Singapore remains high, said its home affairs ministry in a report released on Tuesday, pointing to the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict and “continued traction of radical narratives.”
While there was no current intelligence of an imminent attack against Singapore, the ministry said Islamic State uses propaganda to exploit the war in Gaza and local grievances to reinforce its narrative of armed violence.
Since the surprise attack by Hamas on Israel in October 2023, six Singaporeans have been found to support or were making preparations to take part in armed violence because of the conflict, said the report.
“Singapore and our interests continue to be viewed as attractive and legitimate targets by terrorist and extremist elements, due to our friendly relations with Western nations and Israel, the presence of iconic structures in Singapore, and our status as a secular and multicultural state,” it said.
The ministry said a key threat was online self-radicalization, in a variety of extremist ideologies, especially of youths.
Since 2015, Singapore has used the Internal Security Act against 17 youth aged 20. Most recently it was used against two teenagers — one planned to shoot mosques, the other planned to join Islamic State.
The law allows suspects to be held for lengthy periods without trial, or to be given a restriction order limiting travel and Internet access, among other conditions.
The threat assessment report also said artificial intelligence was emerging as a terrorism enabler for “generating and translating propaganda, producing convincing synthetic multimedia, creating personalized recruitment messages at scale, and planning and developing attacks.”


Vietnam flash flood kills five, dozens evacuated

Vietnam flash flood kills five, dozens evacuated
Updated 6 min 56 sec ago

Vietnam flash flood kills five, dozens evacuated

Vietnam flash flood kills five, dozens evacuated
  • A weekend flash flood in Vietnam’s mountainous north killed five people, authorities said Tuesday, while another person remains missing after the deluge

HANOI: A weekend flash flood in Vietnam’s mountainous north killed five people, authorities said Tuesday, while another person remains missing after the deluge.
Heavy rains triggering flash floods were reported Saturday night in Son La province, destroying 22 houses, damaging scores more and forcing dozens of families to evacuate, the agriculture ministry said Tuesday.
Three bodies were recovered on Monday, a ministry statement said, adding to two others already found dead in the aftermath, with the search for another person still continuing.
More than 445 acres (180 hectares) of crops and 2,600 cattle and poultry were also swept away.
Vietnam is prone to tropical storms, which often cause deadly flash floods and landslides.
Human-driven climate change is causing more intense weather patterns that can make destructive floods more likely.
Last week, Tropical Storm Wipha killed three people and flooded nearly 4,000 homes in the country’s central Nghe An province.
A sudden whirlwind and abnormal weather pattern overturned a tourist boat in Vietnam’s UNESCO area of Ha Long Bay July 19, killing 39 people, including several children.
And in September 2024, Typhoon Yagi devastated northern Vietnam, leaving 345 people dead and causing an estimated economic loss of $3.3 billion.


Pakistani American surgeon’s health firm launches ‘Hami,’ world’s first AI physician assistant

Pakistani American surgeon’s health firm launches ‘Hami,’ world’s first AI physician assistant
Updated 22 min 21 sec ago

Pakistani American surgeon’s health firm launches ‘Hami,’ world’s first AI physician assistant

Pakistani American surgeon’s health firm launches ‘Hami,’ world’s first AI physician assistant
  • Hami streamlines medical intake, analyzes clinical data and generates evidence-based recommendations for physicians, says firm
  • Says Hami is currently in active deployment across multiple hospitals in Pakistan and will expand globally over the coming year

ISLAMABAD: A US-based health tech firm founded by Pakistani American trauma surgeon Dr. Adil Haider announced on Tuesday it had launched “Hami,” the world’s first artificial intelligence-powered physician assistant to enable personalized, evidence-driven patient care to people. 

Boston Health AI announced that Hami functions as an interactive AI-powered physician assistant that streamlines medical intake by actively listening to patients, gathering their complete health stories, including past illnesses and concerns. It is equipped with features such as a real-time AI-enabled ambient scribe, which enables Hami to listen, transcribe, and intelligently format physician-patient conversations into structured notes.

Boston Health AI is a US-based health tech firm founded in 2024 by Dr. Haider which describes itself as a “passionate team of innovators, clinicians, health care professionals and technologists re-imagining how health care is delivered.”

Hami, which supports multilingual input and delivers language-agnostic experiences, is currently in active deployment across multiple hospitals in Pakistan and will expand globally over the coming year, the firm said. 

“With Hami, we’re using the power of AI to break barriers and support physicians in delivering expert level care to every patient, whether they’re in Boston or Badin,” Dr. Haider said in a press release issued by Boston Health AI. “It’s a reimagining of what accessible, intelligent and physician-empowered health care can look like at scale.”

Dr. Haider, who founded Boston Health AI and has served previously as the dean of Pakistan’s prominent Aga Khan University Medical College, said Hami bridges the gap between physicians and patients. He noted that the AI assistant streamlines medical intake, analyzes clinical data and generates structured, evidence-based recommendations for physicians. 

“It reduces administrative burden, enhances physician efficiency and supports high-quality consultations,” he noted. “Through Hami, we aim to reach and improve the lives of 1 billion patients worldwide.”

Boston Health AI pointed out that as per the World Health Organization’s projections, the global shortfall of health care professionals will reach 11 million by 2030. It said In Pakistan alone, over 87 million people lack access to essential care. Patients in these environments often face long wait times and rushed consultations, severely limiting the quality and continuity of care.

The firm said Hami reduces the administrative burden on physicians, freeing them to focus on important decision-making and high-value consultations. It added that Hami also provides interactive after-visit summaries to help patients revisit key points and stay aligned with their recommended care plans.

Boston Health AI disclosed that Hami is bound by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and European Union’s GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) which ensures patient’s data is kept confidential. 


Russian strike on Ukraine prison kills 16, Kyiv says

Russian strike on Ukraine prison kills 16, Kyiv says
Updated 19 min 44 sec ago

Russian strike on Ukraine prison kills 16, Kyiv says

Russian strike on Ukraine prison kills 16, Kyiv says
  • Russia carried out eight strikes on the Zaporizhzhia region, hitting the prison, according to Ivan Fedorov, the head of the military administration
  • The attack comes around the three year anniversary of an attack on another detention facility in occupied Ukrainian territory that Kyiv blamed on Moscow and that was reported to have killed dozens of captured Ukrainian soldiers

KYIV: A Russian strike on a prison in central Ukraine overnight killed more than 16 people and wounded dozens others, Kyiv said Monday, after Washington pressured Russia to end its war.
The attack comes around the three-year anniversary of an attack on another detention facility in occupied Ukrainian territory that Kyiv blamed on Moscow and that was reported to have killed dozens of captured Ukrainian soldiers.
It also comes just one day after US President Donald Trump issued Moscow with a new deadline to end its grinding invasion of Ukraine — now in its fourth year — or face tough new sanctions.
Russia carried out eight strikes on the Zaporizhzhia region, hitting the prison, according to Ivan Fedorov, the head of the military administration.
He said 16 people were killed there and that another 35 were wounded in the attack that he said destroyed the facility and damaged homes nearby.
“Putin’s regime, which also issues threats against the United States through some of its mouthpieces, must face economic and military blows that strip it of the capacity to wage war,” Andriy Yermak, a senior aide to Ukraine’s president wrote on social media in response.


Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets said the Zaporizhzhia attack was further evidence of Russian “war crimes.”
“People held in places of detention do not lose their right to life and protection,” he wrote on social media.
The Ukrainian air force said that Russia had launched 37 drones and two missiles overnight, adding that its air defense systems had downed 32 of the drones only.
People were also killed and more wounded in attacks on the Dnipropetrovsk region, according to regional government officials.
A missile strike on the town of Kamyanske killed two people, wounded five and damaged a hospital, Sergiy Lysak, head of the regional military administration said on Telegram.
Another person was killed and several wounded in an attack on the region’s Synelnykivsky district, he said.
In a separate attack on Velykomykhaylivska, Monday night, a “75-year-old woman was killed. A 68-year-old man was wounded. A private house was damaged,” he posted on Telegram.
In southern Russia, a Ukrainian drone attack killed one person, the region’s acting governor said Tuesday.
“A car was damaged on Ostrovsky Street. Unfortunately, the driver who was in it died,” Yuri Slyusar, acting governor of the Rostov region, said in a post on Telegram.
Kyiv has been trying to repel Russia’s summer offensive, which has made fresh advances into areas largely spared since the start of the offensive in 2022.
Over the weekend, the Russian army said its forces had captured a small settlement in the industrial Dnipropetrovsk region, weeks after it seized the first village in the territory.
Kyiv has contested those claimed Russian advances.
Both Ukraine and Russia blamed each other for the strike over the night of July 29 three years ago on the detention in the Russian-occupied Donetsk region, which the Kremlin says is part of Russia.
Ukraine says that dozens of its soldiers who laid down their arms after a long Russian siege of the port city of Mariupol were killed in that attack on the Olenivka detention facility.