If an AI comes along that is able to do their job better than them then they will not have a say in that. No matter how many regulations the government puts up.
Is like trying to regulate cars to save the horse shoe industry.
And if doctors can be automated away so can software developers. I guess in the long term we are all obsolete.
> Is like trying to regulate cars to save the horse shoe industry.
Which was quite common in the early days of automobiles. There also wasn’t quite the massive bureaucratic regulatory system back then.
The big difference is these AI doctors will need to be certified by, wait for it… current doctors. Or, at the very least, the training data (haven’t RTFA so that’s the example being thrown around the comments) will need to be certified.
Judging by how the EU countries deal with labor issues I think there’s little chance robots will replace human doctors for a long, long time.
Is like trying to regulate cars to save the horse shoe industry.
And if doctors can be automated away so can software developers. I guess in the long term we are all obsolete.