Artificial intelligence is becoming an integral part of the new world at the speed of light. A technological order where digital technologies are the foundation, not just service applications, is being born in real time.

Some visionaries and tech gurus are excited about this, explaining which professions will become unnecessary in the near future, which services AI will raise to a level that is currently unattainable, and what profits will be made by those who master AI technologies.

However, there is also a more rational view of what will change in our lives when chatbots finally displace humans from service communication lines, and Claude, Grok, and ChatGPT make the ability to find information, analyze large amounts of data, and write texts unnecessary.

This development will have a huge impact on, for example, the education sector, but not only.

Diplomacy is one of the most conservative areas of human activity. It is important to take a closer look at what will change in the field of international relations with the advent of AI.

Bill Gates is quite expectedly one of the visionaries who welcomes the arrival of the latest IT technologies in almost all areas of activity. In his opinion, over the next five years, if not sooner, AI will cause the disappearance of dozens of technical and support professions, although he is quite rational in saying that it is impossible to completely exclude humans from the decision-making process in education or medicine.

At the same time, he reasonably believes that creative professions in the arts (e.g., theater and cinema), as well as in areas such as psychological assistance and social support, scientific research that requires ethical standards and intuition, i.e., those that are creative or impossible without a high level of emotional involvement, compassion will remain for humans.

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