Accounting. It's surprising that such a demanding profession, with a career outlook favored by the mainstream of society, has a 97.6 percent chance of being replaced by robots. But if you look at the details, the essence of accounting is to collect and organize information, and there are strict internal logical requirements that inherently require 100% accuracy, and as a result, the advantages of intelligent robotic operations are obvious.
Insurance salesman. In January of this year, Japan's Fortune Life Insurance replaced its original 34 human employees with IBM's artificial intelligence platform, Watson Explorer, to perform insurance claim-type analysis. These 34 human insurance salespeople became the first of a generation of "robots are stealing my job".
It engineers. Experts predict that artificial intelligence will threaten the IT departments of many companies. It will replace many of the routine tasks in the IT department, with operations such as systems administration, help desk, project management, and application support most likely to be affected.
Other high-paying chefs, HR staff, and photographers are likely to be phased out by future high-tech applications.