Artificial intelligence can help, for example, in identifying skin cancer or interpreting X-ray images. Artificial intelligence also recognizes faces, automatically converts speech into text and drives cars. Self-driving cars are developing strongly at the moment and they are also being planned by big digital giants such as Google. Artificial intelligence is changing the world, but it is not clear in what way. Oxford researchers Frey & Osborne and MIT's Brynjolfsson estimate that 20-50% of jobs will be replaced by artificial intelligence, automation and robotics within 10-15 years. However, the automation of routine tasks has a greater impact. At the same time, productivity increases and old tasks disappear. New occupations will be created to replace them, but we don't yet know what they will be and how they will replace the lost jobs. The threat is mass unemployment and an even sharper division of the population into the good and the bad. Working life is changing at a tremendous speed, but the changes so far may be just the beginning. Artificial intelligence and robotics have already replaced manual and routine work in factories, but their application possibilities are expanding all the time. Artificial intelligence is now entering the service sector, where routine tasks that follow clear instructions can be easily automated. These include usual customer advice, and for example loan decisions, benefit processing and investment advice. Valtina stores now have automatic cash registers, and the former cashier has become a cashier. The artificial intelligence applications of the future may also replace the work tasks of well-paid expert professions – such as lawyers or doctors: they may, for example, diagnose diseases or review preliminary decisions of the Supreme Court. In the future, the core of a doctor's work may lie in meeting the patient instead of diagnosis.