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Widespread fear of AI-driven job loss will be eclipsed by its life-saving applications in medicine. When people experience AI directly saving a family member's life, their perspective on the technology will fundamentally and positively change.

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Mala Gaonkar argues the most profound applications of AI are improving non-tech industries. For example, AI has improved the accuracy and speed of medical scans by 70% and is transforming the 300 million surgeries performed globally each year through robotics, reducing errors.

While fears of AI-driven job loss are valid in some industries, healthcare faces a massive and growing supply-demand mismatch. With record shortages of clinicians and unlimited demand, AI is less a job destroyer and more a critical tool to augment existing workers.

The reluctance to adopt always-on recording devices and in-home robots will fade as their life-saving applications become undeniable. The ability for a robot to monitor a baby's breathing and perform emergency procedures will ultimately outweigh privacy concerns, driving widespread adoption.

Many people's negative opinions on AI-generated content stem from a deep-seated fear of their jobs becoming obsolete. This emotional reaction will fade as AI content becomes indistinguishable from human-created content, making the current debate a temporary, fear-based phenomenon.

Surveys show public panic about AI's impact on jobs and society. However, revealed preferences—actual user behavior—show massive, enthusiastic adoption for daily tasks, from work to personal relationships. Watch what people do, not what they say.

The current AI narrative often removes human agency, creating fear. Reframing AI's capabilities as tools that empower people—much like how Steve Jobs pitched personal computers—can make the technology more inspiring and less threatening to the general public, fostering wider acceptance.

Widespread fear of AI is not a new phenomenon but a recurring pattern of human behavior toward disruptive technology. Just as people once believed electricity would bring demons into their homes, society initially demonizes profound technological shifts before eventually embracing their benefits.

While AI's impact on business is significant, the ultimate catalyst for market euphoria will be its application in healthcare. When AI-driven drug discovery makes 'living forever' a tangible possibility, it will unlock an unprecedented level of investor optimism.

AI leaders' messaging about world-ending risks, while effective for fundraising, creates public fear. To gain mainstream acceptance, the industry needs a Steve Jobs-like figure to shift the narrative from AI as an autonomous, job-killing force to AI as a tool that empowers human potential.

To convince people of AI's utility, abstract arguments are ineffective. Instead, share personal anecdotes where AI provided critical help in high-stakes situations, such as a medical crisis. This demonstrates a strong 'revealed preference' that lands with more emotional and logical weight.