we’re within the human range of most skill types already
That would imply that most professions would be getting automated or having their productivity very significantly increased. My impression from following the news and seeing some studies is that this is happening within copywriting, translation, programming, and illustration. [EDIT: and transcription] Also people are turning to chatbots for some types of therapy, though many people will still intrinsically prefer a human for that and it’s not affecting the employment of human therapists yet. With o3, math (and maybe physics) research is starting to be affected, though it mostly hasn’t been yet.
I might be forgetting some, but the amount of professions left out of that list suggests that there are quite a few skill types that are still untouched. (There are of course a lot of other professions for which there have been moderate productivity boosts, but AFAIK mostly not to the point that it would affect employment.)
That would imply that most professions would be getting automated or having their productivity very significantly increased. My impression from following the news and seeing some studies is that this is happening within copywriting, translation, programming, and illustration. [EDIT: and transcription] Also people are turning to chatbots for some types of therapy, though many people will still intrinsically prefer a human for that and it’s not affecting the employment of human therapists yet. With o3, math (and maybe physics) research is starting to be affected, though it mostly hasn’t been yet.
I might be forgetting some, but the amount of professions left out of that list suggests that there are quite a few skill types that are still untouched. (There are of course a lot of other professions for which there have been moderate productivity boosts, but AFAIK mostly not to the point that it would affect employment.)