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Korea's top industrial union says workers shut out of AI transition
The Korea Times

Korea's top industrial union says workers shut out of AI transition

In a logistics center attached to one of Korea's biggest auto plants, a robot quietly rolls across the floor, following a digital map to fetch parts that previously were hauled by a human worker. No one negotiated the shift from human labor to robots. That, says Park Sang-man, head of the Korean Metal Workers' Union (KMWU), is the problem — and it is happening everywhere. His position is simple: "No AI deployment should happen without workers at the table." Park, who started his three-year term as leader of the country's largest industrial union in January, warned that Korea's push into artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics is fast becoming a one-way transition, with companies and the government deploying machines far faster than they are writing rules to protect the workers those machines replace. “If management unilaterally pushes robots and AI without any serious effort at negotiating with the union, I’m opposed to that,” Park said during an interview with The Korea Times last week. “If capital insists on pushing this through unilaterally, you may have to ask whether a

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