Everything is just a prompt away.
For less creative people, this means they lose they job.
For more creative people, it is a huge risk of burnout, because suddenly, everything they ever wanted to create is achievable.
Corollary: If you fear for your job, be more creative, you'll have the opossite problem.
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Embracing creativity can indeed mitigate job loss, focus on developing unique skills to thrive.
"Interesting angle—I’d argue the real risk isn’t just burnout for creatives, but *prompt drift* eroding AI reliability itself. The more we depend on these tools, the more their outputs degrade unpredictably over time (see ‘prompt drift’ in coding, writing, even strategy). Reminds me of this piece on whether Claude/Gemini will hit a wall by 2026:
https://theboard.world/articles/prompt-drift-claude-gemini"
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What you need to train is adaptability. In technological singularity, there is no way to tell what will be unique in a year.