Plenty of people do frame the effort of needing to learn a skill as a form of oppression that they claim AI liberates people from. They say things like "AI is finally democratizing $SKILL" or "AI is taking $SKILL" away from the gatekeepers, when in reality, these things have never been more democratized and there are few if any gatekeepers involved.
You seem to be on some kind of tilt about having to deal with local building codes about raising your garage ceiling, which is an entirely different thing. Many people are able to deal with that just fine. Maybe AI would make dealing with local bureaucracy easier, maybe it wouldn't? You're probably still going to need to fill out a form to raise your garage ceiling or whatever.
>when in reality, these things have never been more democratized and there are few if any gatekeepers involved.
This comment reeks of "64k ought to be enough for anybody".
>local building codes
Because anything to do with land and building example of a highly bureaucratic and expensive process. The process doesn't care who writes the stuff as long as the numbers check out. I can't do it (well enough) and I can't justify the expense. I'm not asking for bespoke work, just cookie cutter stuff. So if the cost were to come down....
>Maybe AI would make dealing with local bureaucracy easier, maybe it wouldn't?
The bureaucracy isn't the hard part. They are like a shitty vending machine. They need the right amount of inputs for a given output and it needs to be of good quality, no wrinkled bills. The justifying the juice for the squeeze is the hard part. I literally cannot stamp drawings no matter how hard I learn and no engineer can stamp my drawings without essentially recomputing everything. Whatever situation one cares to look at there's always someone at a margin like this.
Think about it from the engineer's perspective. He's not some huge national firm that can afford bespoke software to tie his existing software together and make his employees lightening fast at what they do. He needs to pay someone to do all the "work" of plugging things in, choosing what sort of calculations to run, etc, etc. He can't bid me a price I can justify. Maybe we'll get to a point where an AI inbox assistant can reformat and shovel inputs to his team so that they can work faster, and therefore cheaper and scoop up all the potential work like mine.
Now replace the engineer with something else. Maybe you do tolerance studies for manufacturing. If you can make your stuff cheaper more people can afford to benefit from your stuff.
And so on and so on for every comparable situation (someone wants to do something, but can't justify the cost of the desk work they'd have to buy along the way) in the whole economy. There's a TON of potential upside. The cost of flooding the world with low quality written content, scam chatbots, AI porn and everything else seems low in comparison to me.
You seem to be on some kind of tilt about having to deal with local building codes about raising your garage ceiling, which is an entirely different thing. Many people are able to deal with that just fine. Maybe AI would make dealing with local bureaucracy easier, maybe it wouldn't? You're probably still going to need to fill out a form to raise your garage ceiling or whatever.