Original Reddit post

How prevalent is this capability currently? At my large financial services firm we use copilot and it’s helpful for meeting summaries, documenting meeting deliverables , recapping emails I need to act on etc. But in terms of replacing client service or operations staff or many other admin/enablement type roles, I don’t see it happening soon with out maybe VERY programmed agents, much cleaner data and possibly the reversal of our current tech infrastructure which involves MANY different systems that people have to swivel chair to log into (some have single sign on). How could AI bots have your access rights and go to multiple systems and do random steps there and pull data from here or there to do it and email this group and get approval here and and and …. I’m just wondering if my firm is “protected” from not AI’ing all jobs away because of our highly inefficient, disparate tech stack (read as hot mess that humans cover up the problems of). Thoughts? submitted by /u/Remarkable-Captain14

Originally posted by u/Remarkable-Captain14 on r/ArtificialInteligence