this post was submitted on 31 Mar 2026
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Change My View
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My perspective is more in response to the seemingly widespread view that generative AI will just go away if we complain enough, and/or the AI bubble pops.
I'm actually not too concerned about AI in the case of programming. Generally, the sort of programming work simple enough for an LLM to do well is stuff handed off to IT or small contractors to figure out, rather than dedicated programmers. My thinking was more for """low-level""" arts jobs and customer service. For example, most stock art corporations use is just meant to be fast, minimal, and cheap. Previously, this would have meant buying a bunch of stock assets, or hiring an artist or two to create graphics packs or templates to be used in stuff like publications. Similarly, for something like game art. For projects targetting a more discerning playerbase, this won't work, but for casual games, its already common. The art is just something to distract players while they're on the toilet, so cheaper is better. Customer service jobs on the other hand, AI doesn't replace quite as well, but the cost difference is so great, I'd be shocked if they don't stick around. This isn't going to upend the economy like AI bros claim, but will replace a significant number of entry level jobs.