Not immediately, but eventually. AI is ruinously expensive to program, train, and run not just in employee hours but in energy costs. If they can't find a way to make it profitable, then it will collapse sooner or later, leaving only the handful of areas where it is actually helpful. Remember the dotcom bust? Like that.
Computers and humans are just good at doing totally different things. If it's a task based on logic, precision, or math then a computer will often excel. But if it requires creativity, intuition, or making something from scratch then you're better off with a human. So while we may see AI stick around for certain things like telling you which of 20,000 lidar images have ruins in them, it is not good enough to do most human jobs.
Well ...
Computers and humans are just good at doing totally different things. If it's a task based on logic, precision, or math then a computer will often excel. But if it requires creativity, intuition, or making something from scratch then you're better off with a human. So while we may see AI stick around for certain things like telling you which of 20,000 lidar images have ruins in them, it is not good enough to do most human jobs.