| I would say that AI is not to blame here. It just accelerated existing process, but didn't initiate it.
We (as a society) started to value quantity over quality some time ago, and, apparently, no-one care enough to change it. Why tighten the bolts on the airplane's door yourself if you can just outsource it somewhere cheaper (see Boeing crisis)? Why design and test hundreds of physical and easy-to-use knobs in the car if you can just plug a touchscreen (see Tesla)? Why write a couple of lines of code if you can just include an `is-odd` library (see bloated npm ecosystem)? Why figure out how to solve a problem on your own if you can just copy-paste answer from somewhere else (see StackOverflow)? Why invest time and effort into making a good TV if you can just strap Android OS on a questionable hardware (look in your own house)? Why run and manage your project on a baremetal server if you can just rent Amazon DynamoDB (see your company)? Why spend months to find and hire one good engineer if you can just hire ten mediocre ones (see any other company)? Why spend years educating to identify a tumor on a MRI scans if you can just feed it to a machine learning algorithm (see your hospital)? What more could I name? In my take, which you can say is pessimistic, we already passed the peak of civilization as we know it.
If we continue business as usual, things will continue to detiorate, more software will fail, more planes will crash, more people will be unemployed, more wars would be started.
Yes, decent engineers (or any other decent specialists) will be likely a winners in a short term, but how the future would unfold when there will be less and less of them is a question I leave for the reader. |
This is just an overreach of a process that means that airplane flights aren't $1m+. Aircraft issues have plummeted, if you'll excuse the expression, while flight numbers have soared. You've got to have noticed that.