CYAICLGNApr 16, 2025

AI Safety Should Prioritize the Future of Work

arXiv:2504.13959v29 citationsh-index: 23ICML
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This position paper highlights a human-centric problem in AI safety for workers and policymakers, but it is incremental as it builds on existing economic and governance discussions.

The paper argues that current AI safety efforts overlook the impact of AI on the future of work, recommending transition support and a pro-worker governance framework to address risks like income inequality and monopolistic practices.

Current efforts in AI safety prioritize filtering harmful content, preventing manipulation of human behavior, and eliminating existential risks in cybersecurity or biosecurity. While pressing, this narrow focus overlooks critical human-centric considerations that shape the long-term trajectory of a society. In this position paper, we identify the risks of overlooking the impact of AI on the future of work and recommend comprehensive transition support towards the evolution of meaningful labor with human agency. Through the lens of economic theories, we highlight the intertemporal impacts of AI on human livelihood and the structural changes in labor markets that exacerbate income inequality. Additionally, the closed-source approach of major stakeholders in AI development resembles rent-seeking behavior through exploiting resources, breeding mediocrity in creative labor, and monopolizing innovation. To address this, we argue in favor of a robust international copyright anatomy supported by implementing collective licensing that ensures fair compensation mechanisms for using data to train AI models. We strongly recommend a pro-worker framework of global AI governance to enhance shared prosperity and economic justice while reducing technical debt.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes