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Jacquelyn Gill @jacquelyngill.bsky.social

I get it. It’s going viral. I’m normally careful at fact-checking, but in this case I saw a published piece by a trusted source, shared by another trusted source. That was my first encounter with the Microsoft preprint. The preprint is a list of jobs with high AI “applicability.”

aug 22, 2025, 3:22 am • 24 0

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Rob’t Whitlock @whirob15.bsky.social

My vote is to pull the plug on AI. It’s too dangerous right now, especially with the felon in chief. Maybe one day when we have a genuinely altruistic governmental and political system…

aug 22, 2025, 3:29 am • 3 1 • view
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Jacquelyn Gill @jacquelyngill.bsky.social

A lot of people are interpreting this as “jobs AI can replace.” The authors even note that it’s tempting to do this, but job trends are difficult to predict. And I do think it’s reasonable to be concerned that employers will see these as jobs where AI can replace people. It’s already happening.

aug 22, 2025, 3:24 am • 30 0 • view
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Jacquelyn Gill @jacquelyngill.bsky.social

This is a good reminder to always go to the source. But I also think the response to this preprint is a good indicator that there are large-scale conversations about AI and labor that need to happen. And those researching this need to be more careful about how their work will be interpreted.

aug 22, 2025, 3:27 am • 35 2 • view
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Jenny Creek @jcreek.bsky.social

Labor AND the economic implications. What will be the policy response to job replacement? Taxing AI work hours? Unfortunately this administration isn’t thinking about a healthy society.

aug 22, 2025, 6:19 am • 0 0 • view
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Verne Ball @beeveeme.bsky.social

Someone that is close to me has used AI for very technical medical advice because the medical advice they have been getting sucked. And because things have been improving the Dr. has taken a victory lap. And it reminds me of the bikers that like WayMo because the cars are not threatening.

aug 22, 2025, 3:49 am • 4 0 • view
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Verne Ball @beeveeme.bsky.social

Which is to say, life is complicated, and I hope my loved ones survive the bad medical system and bike-hostile roads, and that collective action responds to this crisis.

aug 22, 2025, 3:55 am • 3 0 • view
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Dan Flashes @dan-j-flashes.bsky.social

I think this gets at the heart of my argument and message to our students: generative AI is one tool in your toolbox. You can use it, but it doesn't replace all of the other tools you should also have and use, because not every question/problem is a nail.

aug 22, 2025, 1:40 pm • 0 0 • view
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Dan Flashes @dan-j-flashes.bsky.social

To wit: when my dad was dying of cancer, I used ChatGPT to "translate" the scan results/notes from his Dr. I didn't assume it was a stand-in/replacement for the Dr simply because I could understand it better, but it helped me to know what questions to ask the Dr to better home in on what dad needed.

aug 22, 2025, 1:41 pm • 1 0 • view
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Dan Flashes @dan-j-flashes.bsky.social

But most people don't think/act with that level of nuance; they ask Siri or Alexa or Gemini or ChatGPT something and it spits out an answer and they think surely it knows everything. It only knows that on which it's been trained, and even then on which it's been trained *correctly*.

aug 22, 2025, 1:44 pm • 1 0 • view