So, there are a four categories of things in your comment: two concepts (interactive vs. static) divided into two genres (factual vs. incidental).
For interactive/factual, we have getting help on taxes and accounting (and to a large extent law), which AI is horrible with and will frankly be unable to help with at this time, and so there will not be AIs on the other side of that interaction until AIs get better enough to be able to track numbers and legal details correctly... at which point you hopefully will never have to be on the phone asking for help as the AI will also be doing the job in the first place.
Then we have interactive/incidental, with situations like applying for jobs or having to wait around with customer service to get some kind of account detail fixed. Today, if you could afford such and knew how to source it, one could imagine outsourcing that task to a personal assistant, which might include a "virtual" one, by which is not meant a fake one but instead one who is online, working out of a call center far away... but like, that could be an AI, and it would be much cheaper and easier to source.
So, sure: that will be an AI, but you'll also be able to ask your phone "hey, can you keep talking to this service until it fixes my problem? only notify me to join back in if I am needed". And like, I see you get that this half is possible, because of your comment about Zoom... but, isn't that kind of great? We all agree that the vast majority of meetings are useless, and yet for some reason we have to have them. If you are high status enough, you send an assistant or "field rep" to the meeting instead of you. Now, everyone at the meeting will be an AI and the actual humans don't have to attend; that's progress!
Then we have static/factual, where we can and should expect all the news articles and reviews to be fake or wrong. Frankly, I think a lot of this stuff already is fake or wrong, and I have to waste a ton of time trying to do enough research to decide what the truth actually is... a task which will get harder if there is more fake content but also will get easier if I have an AI that can read and synthesize information a million times faster than I can. So, sure: this is going to be annoying, but I don't think this is going to be net worse by an egregious amount (I do agree it will be at least somewhat) when you take into account AI being on both sides of the scale.
And finally we have static/incidental content, which I don't even think you did mention but is demanded to fill in the square: content like movies and stories and video games... maybe long-form magazine-style content... I love this stuff and I enjoy reading it, but frankly do I care if the next good movie I watch is made by an AI instead of a human? I don't think I would. I would find a television show with an infinite number of episodes interesting... maybe even so interesting that I would have to refuse to ever watch it lest I lose my life to it ;P. The worst case I can come up with is that we will need help curating all that content, and I think you know where I am going to go on that front ;P.
But so, yeah: I agree things are going to change pretty fast, but mostly in the same way the world changed pretty fast with the introduction of the telephone, the computer, the Internet, and then the smartphone, which all are things that feel dehumanizing and yet also free up time through automation. I certainly have ways in which I am terrified of AI, but these "completely change the way things we already hate--like taxes, phone calls, and meetings--interact with our lives" isn't part of it.
For interactive/factual, we have getting help on taxes and accounting (and to a large extent law), which AI is horrible with and will frankly be unable to help with at this time, and so there will not be AIs on the other side of that interaction until AIs get better enough to be able to track numbers and legal details correctly... at which point you hopefully will never have to be on the phone asking for help as the AI will also be doing the job in the first place.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CnpXLncOfbr/
Then we have interactive/incidental, with situations like applying for jobs or having to wait around with customer service to get some kind of account detail fixed. Today, if you could afford such and knew how to source it, one could imagine outsourcing that task to a personal assistant, which might include a "virtual" one, by which is not meant a fake one but instead one who is online, working out of a call center far away... but like, that could be an AI, and it would be much cheaper and easier to source.
So, sure: that will be an AI, but you'll also be able to ask your phone "hey, can you keep talking to this service until it fixes my problem? only notify me to join back in if I am needed". And like, I see you get that this half is possible, because of your comment about Zoom... but, isn't that kind of great? We all agree that the vast majority of meetings are useless, and yet for some reason we have to have them. If you are high status enough, you send an assistant or "field rep" to the meeting instead of you. Now, everyone at the meeting will be an AI and the actual humans don't have to attend; that's progress!
Then we have static/factual, where we can and should expect all the news articles and reviews to be fake or wrong. Frankly, I think a lot of this stuff already is fake or wrong, and I have to waste a ton of time trying to do enough research to decide what the truth actually is... a task which will get harder if there is more fake content but also will get easier if I have an AI that can read and synthesize information a million times faster than I can. So, sure: this is going to be annoying, but I don't think this is going to be net worse by an egregious amount (I do agree it will be at least somewhat) when you take into account AI being on both sides of the scale.
And finally we have static/incidental content, which I don't even think you did mention but is demanded to fill in the square: content like movies and stories and video games... maybe long-form magazine-style content... I love this stuff and I enjoy reading it, but frankly do I care if the next good movie I watch is made by an AI instead of a human? I don't think I would. I would find a television show with an infinite number of episodes interesting... maybe even so interesting that I would have to refuse to ever watch it lest I lose my life to it ;P. The worst case I can come up with is that we will need help curating all that content, and I think you know where I am going to go on that front ;P.
But so, yeah: I agree things are going to change pretty fast, but mostly in the same way the world changed pretty fast with the introduction of the telephone, the computer, the Internet, and then the smartphone, which all are things that feel dehumanizing and yet also free up time through automation. I certainly have ways in which I am terrified of AI, but these "completely change the way things we already hate--like taxes, phone calls, and meetings--interact with our lives" isn't part of it.