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Taxis and ride-sharing in Toronto

That's not my point. My point is that this so called "progress"* is zeroing in on just about every aspect of life all at the same time. In a vacuum, if you removed one so-called "pointless" profession, there would still be others. But again, the tech bros don't want that. They're trying to make it so that machines are better than humans at everything. When that happens, according to your parameters, all professions will be pointless. Hooray!

It's really disturbing how so many people openly celebrate this type of "progress". Progress, as defined in the 2020s, refers to the enshittification of life for non-billionaires, and nothing more.
Regardless of what techbros want, professions won't all become 'pointless' overnight. AI doesn't really automate jobs, it automates tasks. Jobs are collections of tasks. Some tasks are more harder to automate than others. Jobs where some of those tasks remain difficult to automate will continue, but will tend to become more productive. Perhaps all tasks will eventually be automatable to superhuman levels, but that will take quite some time and won't be uniform. And if we get to the point where all tasks can be produce autonomously at low cost, we will have material abundance. The problem of allocation becomes political. Smashing the looms won't help.
 
A couple articles about Waymo/AVs

Has this gem:
Waymo has told advocates that expecting it to respect bike lanes is “too high a bar” because customers expect to be dropped off in them, said Christopher White, executive director of the San Francisco Bike Coalition.

“People always point out that unlike human driven cars, the AVs stop at lights and obey the speed limit. However, they are really only as good and effective and safe as they are programmed to be,” White said. “Waymos pull over into bike lanes all the time for pickups and drop-offs and that’s neither legal nor safe but the companies say that is a normal practice and that’s what customers expect.”

One cyclist in the City by the Bay is suing Waymo for driving into a bike lane to drop off a passenger who subsequently doored the cyclist. And in Austin and Atlanta, Waymos keep mysteriously passing school bus stop arms as kids disembark.

Q&A interview with transportation historian Peter Norton who "sees a pattern in the promises that autonomous vehicle companies make as they push self-driving cars into cities."
 
Could Toronto allow “dollar vans” on Toronto streets like what NYC has? I’m sure if someone had tried that in Toronto, it probably would be shut down very quickly.
 

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