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  • 13 hours ago
In 2026, artificial intelligence has progressed from merely handling repetitive tasks to replacing legal professionals and radiologists. Law firms are integrating AI for drafting contracts and conducting legal research, whereas hospitals are utilizing AI for analyzing medical images. A report from Goldman Sachs indicates that nearly 40 percent of jobs in the professional sector may face disruption within the next three years, while there is a notable increase in demand for skilled tradespeople.
Transcript
00:00For years, experts said artificial intelligence would automate routine jobs.
00:04Factory workers, data entry clerks, customer service representatives.
00:09But 2026 has shattered that prediction.
00:12AI is now replacing lawyers, radiologists, financial advisors,
00:16and even some early-stage medical diagnosis functions.
00:20Law firms are using AI to draft contracts, review documents,
00:24and conduct legal research that previously required junior attorneys
00:29billing at $300 an hour.
00:32Hospitals are deploying AI imaging analysis
00:35that reads scans faster and more accurately than many radiologists.
00:39Goldman Sachs has updated its projections,
00:42now estimating that up to 40% of professional class jobs
00:46could be disrupted by AI within three years.
00:49The jobs that remain safe are those that require physical dexterity,
00:54face-to-face human connection, and licensed trades.
00:57Plumbers, electricians, nurses.
01:00And therapists are seeing surging demand.
01:02If you are in a white-collar professional role,
01:05the question is no longer if AI will change your work.
01:09It is how much of your work is already being done by AI right now.
01:13you're working on the impact all people now.
01:13So first of all,
01:13I'm hoping the answer to thelin trial
01:13and the answer is that you've been pumped.
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