Artificial intelligence has already had a huge impact on many areas of life, for example: I am talking to a programmer friend. He said that they now constantly use artificial intelligence to write code.
I also notice the influence of artificial intelligence in betting, and because many of my friends who previously relied solely on their experience of sports outcomes and events have now begun to compare their thoughts with the thoughts of AI.
See? This means AI will eventually replace developers/programmers, and even software engineers. It might replace casino staff as well. All in an effort to help reduce costs and increase efficiency. Since AI is regulated, it will only do what it's permitted to do. So if it's integrated in gambling sites, it will only serve as a companion for gamblers and the house itself. Not a "tool" to help anyone cheat and game the system.
We're already seeing some gambling sites with an AI-powered chatbot, so the future is already here. For complete automation, decentralization, and provably-fairness, using a combination of AI and smart contracts would be best. Just my two sats.
I have changed my view on this a little bit. I know that coders have been using AI for a while now. Even before public chatGPT. But that doesn't mean AI is replacing those coders. It can replace some of the coders if they are doing more menial and repetitive code, but it can't handle bigger concepts, or understand specific nuances of something specific. It's using only stuff it has feed to, and sometimes it can't even make sense of that.
When you trust AI to code bigger concepts, you are going to have bugs, and there's no way that a company or their third party code provider can just forward their responsibility to faulty AI. So they won't give too much responsibility to it. And there's least one study that says that exponential growth of AI capabilities has already stopped, and limits of it are near.