I was going to argue this point but we're getting to the point in B12 where the specialists come out.
I will just say this: the video wasn't quite as dramatic as some people are saying. He wasn't saying they're going to replace humans, he was saying they're going to put an unprecedented amount of people out of work. His stated number for at risk jobs (jobs that would lose part but not all of their workers) was 45%. He also clearly did a lot more research than he bothered to express in the video. The stuff on neural nets alone goes way beyond common knowledge, and from what I know is accurate. He also made a point of showing many vehicles that self-driving cars, a tech that already exists, would put out of business. He just didn't bother to list them all verbally.
Besides, software automation is already creeping in on the edges. I work in retail (shitty low level job till I can get some better, hopefully), and I can see it from there. Our store has predictions for how much money we'll make every day, how many cashiers we need, which products need to be pulled for stocking. It even hands out coupons based on predictions of what customers will buy in the future*. These things are not done by human analysts. All of our inventory, expiration dates, even employee productivity are all tracked by programs. Sure, some of these are things a human never would have done, but plenty of them ARE, and once these programs are written they can be copied infinitely at theoretically no cost. This sort of specialized, not-sci-fi-dramatic AIs are in their infancy; with neural nets much crazier things will be possible.
There's the counterargument, of course, that people like me aren't there 100% for the sake of doing the job, we're here in case something goes wrong like a spike in business, a confused/angry customer, something breaking, to discourage shoplifters, ect. And yeah, the bots won't have those kinds of troubleshooting abilities. But some day someone is going to try to replace a McDonalds or an Ikea or a similar store with what is effectively a giant vending machine, and if they succeed a bunch of retail jobs are going to be replaced by a small number of security guards.
*this one is a guess but I know from external knowledge my employer does this kind of thing already in other ways