A New York Times bestselling author and tech columnist's counter-intuitive guide to staying
relevant - and employable - in the machine age by becoming irreplaceably human. It's not a
future scenario any more. We've been taught that to compete with automation and AI we'll have
to become more like the machines themselves building up technical skills like coding. But
there's simply no way to keep up. What if all the advice is wrong? And what do we need to do
instead to become futureproof? We tend to think of automation as a blue-collar phenomenon that
will affect truck drivers factory workers and other people with repetitive manual jobs. But
it's much much broader than that. Lawyers are being automated out of existence. Last year
JPMorgan Chase built a piece of software called COIN which uses machine learning to review
complicated contracts and documents. It used to take the firm's lawyers more than 300 000 hours
every year to review all of those documents. Now it takes a few seconds and requires just one
human to run the program. Doctors are being automated out of existence too. Last summer a
Chinese tech company built a deep learning algorithm that diagnosed brain cancer and other
diseases faster and more accurately than a team of 15 top Chinese doctors. Kevin Roose has
spent the past few years studying the question of how people communities and organisations
adapt to periods of change from the Industrial Revolution to the present. And the insight that
is sweeping through Silicon Valley as we speak -- that in an age dominated by machines it's
human skills that really matter - is one of the more profound and counter-intuitive ideas he's
discovered. It's the antidote to the doom-and-gloom worries many people feel when they think
about AI and automation. And it's something everyone needs to hear. In nine accessible
prescriptive chapters Roose distills what he has learned about how we will survive the future
that the way to become futureproof is to become incredibly irreplaceably human.