It is crucial to develop emerging AI skills rather than excessively worrying about job security. While all skills and knowledge might be eventually filled with AI, there is one area that might never be replaced by any technology. A positive attitude could shape a productive culture, foster innovation and creativity, leading to unlimited potential for the organisation.
A roundtable discussion at the RMIT-Deloitte HR Forum 2023 showed that industry practitioners are not clearly aware of how generative AI could add specific value to their daily tasks. Associate Professor Pham Cong Hiep, Interim Deputy Dean of Research and Innovation at The Business School, RMIT Vietnam raised an important issue that AI is designed to communicate with people in a chatting interface.
He said: “Learning AI should be treated like learning a new language. Once more people are trained to communicate effectively with AI the more it can help create and drive more valuable outcomes”.
Contrary to a common misconception that AI provides superior and impartial information, a major concern arises regarding the reliability and ethics of AI dominating knowledge creation in society. Associate Professor Hiep pointed out that “generative AI tries to answer our questions even when they do not clearly understand them”.
Moreover, the reliability and validity of the answers generated by AI are often questionable, raising issues of originality and plagiarism. The potential scenario of an increasing amount of content created based on a dominant AI poses the risk of bias shaped by a specific AI algorithm. Additionally, there is a wide range of reporting and studies suggesting that AI can spread racism and other discrimination in our society. Therefore, establishing a regulatory framework is imperative to prevent these negative effects.
Story by: Dr Jung Woo Han, Senior Program Manager for Human Resource Management and Entrepreneurship, RMIT Vietnam