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The last wave of automation in the 1970s-80s was industrial as robots replaced manufacturing line workers. The economic dislocation fell hardest on those least able to afford it, blue collar workers without formal education and comparable alternate career paths.
But today, automation is coming for white collar workers as well. There are jobs, that despite requiring education and advanced training, involve what is essentially pattern recognition and processing speed, things that artificial intelligence can do more quickly and efficiently than human beings. Jobs in law, analytics, and finance are on the cusp of mass automation, leaving those newly entering those fields with massive student debt and limited job prospects.
Today we talk to two startups, one which is bringing that automation to law firms, the other which is trying to mitigate worker dislocation by helping students find alternative career paths requiring irreplaceable-by-AI social skills.
When was the first wave of automization? Is the automation apocalypse upon us? Can AI streamline the legal process, specifically in documentation review? How can AI compliment the legal process? What value do you want to get out of hiring a lawyer?
Further Reading:McCarthyFinch Website
6Figr Website
From Post-it Notes To Algorithms: How Automation Is Changing Legal Work, NPR
Related Content:In the Economy of the Future, You Won’t Own Your Kitchen, written by Pamela Hobart
Does More Technology Create Unemployment?, written by A. D. Sharplin and R. H. Mabry
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.6
2828 ratings
The last wave of automation in the 1970s-80s was industrial as robots replaced manufacturing line workers. The economic dislocation fell hardest on those least able to afford it, blue collar workers without formal education and comparable alternate career paths.
But today, automation is coming for white collar workers as well. There are jobs, that despite requiring education and advanced training, involve what is essentially pattern recognition and processing speed, things that artificial intelligence can do more quickly and efficiently than human beings. Jobs in law, analytics, and finance are on the cusp of mass automation, leaving those newly entering those fields with massive student debt and limited job prospects.
Today we talk to two startups, one which is bringing that automation to law firms, the other which is trying to mitigate worker dislocation by helping students find alternative career paths requiring irreplaceable-by-AI social skills.
When was the first wave of automization? Is the automation apocalypse upon us? Can AI streamline the legal process, specifically in documentation review? How can AI compliment the legal process? What value do you want to get out of hiring a lawyer?
Further Reading:McCarthyFinch Website
6Figr Website
From Post-it Notes To Algorithms: How Automation Is Changing Legal Work, NPR
Related Content:In the Economy of the Future, You Won’t Own Your Kitchen, written by Pamela Hobart
Does More Technology Create Unemployment?, written by A. D. Sharplin and R. H. Mabry
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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