I think the most interesting, and also concerning, point is the eighth point, that people may become busier than ever.
After guiding way too many hobby projects through Claude Code over the past two months, I’m starting to think that most people won’t become unemployed due to AI—they will become busier than ever. Power tools allow more work to be done in less time, and the economy will demand more productivity to match.
Consider the advent of the steam shovel, which allowed humans to dig holes faster than a team using hand shovels. It made existing projects faster and new projects possible. But think about the human operator of the steam shovel. Suddenly, we had a tireless tool that could work 24 hours a day if fueled up and maintained properly, while the human piloting it would need to eat, sleep, and rest.
In fact, we may end up needing new protections for human knowledge workers using these tireless information engines to implement their ideas, much as unions rose as a response to industrial production lines over 100 years ago. Humans need rest, even when machines don’t.
I think the most interesting, and also concerning, point is the eighth point, that people may become busier than ever.
This does sound very much like what Cory Doctorow refers to as a reverse-centaur, where the developer’s responsibility becomes overseeing the AI tool.
Related: Jevons Paradox