Close Menu
    What's Hot

    Why Wear Anything Other Than a Sun Hoodie This Summer? Our Picks for the Best

    Teva Pharmaceutical’s Innovative Shift Continues With Ecopipam Addition (NYSE:TEVA)

    Uruguay, Man United’s Manuel Ugarte suffers knee ligament injury

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Why Wear Anything Other Than a Sun Hoodie This Summer? Our Picks for the Best
    • Teva Pharmaceutical’s Innovative Shift Continues With Ecopipam Addition (NYSE:TEVA)
    • Uruguay, Man United’s Manuel Ugarte suffers knee ligament injury
    • Free 2026 World Cup anytime goalscorer picks, odds: Jonathan David tops South Africa-Canada best bets Sunday
    • Russell beats Verstappen at Austrian Grand Prix to boost F1 title hopes | Motorsports News
    • TechCrunch Mobility: All eyes on Tesla FSD
    • Irish Derby: Redemption for Benvenuto Cellini as he wins at the Curragh for Aidan O’Brien and Ryan Moore | Racing News
    • O.J. Simpson won’t be honored among Bills legends at new stadium
    interluknewsinterluknews
    • Home
    • Business
      • Corporate News
      • Industry Insights
      • Startups & Entrepreneurship
      • Technology & Innovation
    • Economy
      • Economic Policy
      • Financial Analysis
      • Inflation & Interest Rates
      • Trade & Markets
    • Global
      • Conflicts & Security
      • Diplomacy
      • Global Trends
      • International Affairs
    • Lifestyle
      • Fashion
      • Food & Dining
      • Personal Development
      • Travel
    • Opinion
      • Columns
      • Editorials
      • Expert Opinions
      • Reader Voices
    • More
      • Politics
        • Elections
        • Government & Policy
        • International Relations
        • Political Analysis
      • Sports
        • Cricket
        • Football / Soccer
        • International Sports
        • Local Sports
      • Technology
        • Artificial Intelligence
        • Cybersecurity
        • Gadgets & Reviews
        • Tech News
      • South Africa News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    interluknewsinterluknews
    Reader Voices

    Opinion | A.I. Claims to Make Our Lives Easier. Does It?

    adminBy adminMay 11, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Opinion | A.I. Claims to Make Our Lives Easier. Does It?
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    My wife and I recently found a rat in our garden. Normally I would have called an exterminator, but instead, I turned to ChatGPT, which suggested that I set up a cage trap baited with meat. I did and felt a small surge of satisfaction — the satisfaction of handling something yourself, without paying a professional and without waiting for one to show up. (It didn’t work; the rat ignored the trap.)

    The lived experience of an Oxford academic does not usually generalize well, but I know I’m not the only one who has recently become my own exterminator, repairman or accountant. Roughly one in four Americans used artificial intelligence to help file their taxes. A study of 1.1 million ChatGPT conversations found that nearly three-quarters of messages were not work related. People turned to ChatGPT most frequently for practical guidance — on health, household repairs, financial decisions and other matters a professional might once have weighed in on or handled.

    We have been told that A.I. will take people’s jobs. What no one mentions is that many of those jobs are landing on us. The A.I. revolution involves a massive transfer of labor — not from worker to machine, but from worker to consumer. The ability to do everything ourselves may be satisfying, but it can gradually overload us with busywork without our noticing. Tasks that we used to delegate will still be done. They will simply move out of the work force and into the household as new forms of invisible, unpaid labor.

    The movement toward self-service is one of the most powerful and least appreciated forces in the history of work. Consider the washing machine. In many 19th-century cities, laundering was a major urban service occupation, and one of the hardest. The work meant hauling water, chopping fuel, boiling linens in lye, scrubbing each garment by hand against a washboard, wringing, drying, starching and ironing with heavy flat irons heated on a stove. It consumed the better part of a week. Laundresses worked everywhere: Even families who did their own cooking and sewing paid someone else to wash their clothes. In the 1880s, when Black laundresses in Atlanta organized a strike, linen piled up and the city ground to a halt.

    The washing machine, together with the infrastructure that made it possible — running water, electricity, synthetic detergents — gradually ended this world. But it did not end the work. Customers bought machines and did the laundering themselves. The laundress was displaced by her former clients.

    The historian Ruth Schwartz Cowan documented a further irony. The housewife ended up doing more household work, more frequently, at higher standards — unpaid. Men stopped wearing detachable collars and cuffs, which meant entire shirts had to be laundered. Children’s clothes were changed daily rather than weekly. The laundress lost her job. The housewife gained a chore.

    That pattern has been repeating ever since. Self-checkout makes scanning and bagging the shopper’s job. The internet gives travelers direct access to the flight schedules and hotel reviews that agents once controlled. Online brokerages put a trading terminal in every pocket. And the smartphone replaced the bank teller with you.

    We’re used to being our own checkout assistants, travel agents and tellers. Handling these tasks ourselves often makes our lives more efficient. But A.I. is now extending the chore economy into territory that once required years of training, such as law and medicine. As of January, more than 40 million people worldwide were using ChatGPT daily for health questions — from symptoms to decoding bills and fighting insurers.

    There are tangible benefits. One man said his family used Claude to cut a hospital bill from $195,000 to under $33,000 by identifying duplicative charges and coding errors. A chatbot gave them accounting services they may not have had access to otherwise. When the washing machine became cheap enough for the middle class, it was a democratizing force. Millions of families gained access to clean clothes on a regular schedule. The same is true today.

    However, self-service does not automatically reproduce a professional’s judgment. The billing specialist notices the code the patient didn’t think to question. The accountant points out the deduction the taxpayer didn’t know existed. The tool answers what you ask, whereas the expert tells you what to ask. That is the A.I. trade-off: greater access, but thinner expertise.

    Second, no single act of self-service feels like a major burden. We notice the accountant’s fee we didn’t pay. We rarely notice the evening we spent doing her job. There is a name for this: opportunity cost neglect — the well-documented tendency to overlook the value of what we give up when the cost is time rather than money.

    As more consumers turn to A.I., professionals may become harder to find; it is hard to find a staffed checkout lane or a bank branch with a teller.

    When the work shifts to the consumer, it disappears from the labor statistics. A company can replace an employee with a machine or hand the task to the customer; in both cases, a paid job has disappeared. If you do the work at home, no one is measuring your hours. That’s why the digital revolution improves labor productivity — and boosts corporate profits — but leaves people feeling overburdened.

    The laundress disappeared from the statistics long before she disappeared from memory. Many more trades and professions are on the verge of the same shift. The A.I. revolution may not have taken your job yet. But it has already put you to work.

    Carl Benedikt Frey is an associate professor at the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford, and he directs the Oxford Martin School’s Future of Work program. His most recent book is “How Progress Ends: Technology, Innovation and the Fate of Nations.”

    The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.

    Follow the New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Bluesky, WhatsApp and Threads.

    A.I claims easier lives Opinion
    Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
    Previous ArticleLittle clarity on suspended president, Soweto Marathon
    Next Article When enterprise AI finally works, it won’t look like AI
    admin
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Opinion | Addressing a Corrupt Pardon System

    June 28, 2026

    Opinion | The Hamptons’ Essential Luxury Good: Human Labor

    June 28, 2026

    Opinion | Trump’s Science Cuts Betray America’s Past Since Lewis and Clark

    June 28, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Latest Posts

    Why Wear Anything Other Than a Sun Hoodie This Summer? Our Picks for the Best

    Teva Pharmaceutical’s Innovative Shift Continues With Ecopipam Addition (NYSE:TEVA)

    Uruguay, Man United’s Manuel Ugarte suffers knee ligament injury

    Free 2026 World Cup anytime goalscorer picks, odds: Jonathan David tops South Africa-Canada best bets Sunday

    Latest Posts

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Advertisement
    Demo

    We are a digital news platform delivering timely, accurate, and insightful coverage of politics, global affairs, business, economy, sports, and more. Our mission is to keep readers informed with reliable news, clear analysis, and stories that truly matter.
    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Powered by
    ...
    ►
    Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
    None
    ►
    Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
    None
    ►
    Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
    None
    ►
    Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
    None
    ►
    Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
    None
    Powered by