industry is facing labor issues, potential strikes, and maybe big business is sitting back saying, maybe labor doesn t have the power it once did with a eye right around the corner. i think they are saying that everyone is looking for efficiency. the year of efficiency, as a coburg called, it and i think a lot of businesses are doing that. i did a panel this weekend at the book festival, and i met geraldine brooks, rebecca mckay, jacob weisberg, and we were talking about the impact on rioters. but you could pick anybody like the impact on, lawyers on doctors, and what s interesting about this is the impact on white collar workers more than anybody else with the a. i. revolution. because it s about words and text or knowledge. and so they are becoming panicked. well they didn t mind when mechanized firming went into
people. that s the way it goes. i want to talk about a.i.. it s what obviously everyone is talking about. people are excited about it. they re afraid of it. what is your current view of it, especially as it relates to workers? because we re in a moment where it seems like every other industry is facing labor issues, potential strikes, and maybe big business is sitting back saying, maybe labor doesn t have the power it once did with a eye right around the corner. i think they are saying that everyone is looking for efficiency. the year of efficiency, as a coburg called, it and i think a lot of businesses are doing that. i did a panel this weekend at the book festival, and i met geraldine brooks, rebecca mckay, jacob weisberg, and we were talking about the impact on rioters. but you could pick anybody like the impact on, lawyers on doctors, and what s interesting about this is the impact on white collar workers more than anybody else with the a.i.