Media and Communication Workers, All Other
All media and communication workers not listed separately.
Assessment Not Available
"Media and Communication Workers, All Other" is a residual SOC classification that groups miscellaneous roles not individually defined. These catch-all codes lack the specific task data needed for risk scoring.
Related News
Recent articles about AI affecting this occupation

Stanford Study: AI Bots Are Rapidly Overtaking Human Content Creators Online
New Stanford research quantifies the rapid takeover of online spaces by AI-generated content, validating the dead internet theory. This flood of automated content threatens the livelihood of digital creators, copywriters, and social media managers.

Fiverr Freelancers Pivot to Generating AI Content to Survive Gig Economy
Freelance platforms are transforming from hubs of specialized human skill into marketplaces for cheap, AI-generated content. Gig workers are being forced to adopt generative AI tools just to keep up with client demands and maintain their income streams.

AI deepfakes force publishers to rethink fact-checking roles
Media companies are racing to implement new verification workflows as synthetic media becomes indistinguishable from reality. This surge is creating an urgent demand for specialized digital forensics skills in modern newsrooms.

How AI Automation is Forcing Tech Media to Restructure Operations
A leading tech publication is restructuring its newsletter operations to adapt to the realities of AI automation. The shift illustrates how independent media and content creators are changing their business models to survive an AI-driven information landscape.

AI moderation tools reshape community management roles and workflows
Automated systems are taking over spam filtering, toxicity flagging, and risk assessment at scale. Community managers must pivot from manual moderation to high-level strategy and AI oversight to avoid being automated out of their roles.