Have you seen the average end-user lately. Most of them can barely poor piss out of a boot.
There is a reason many of the trades are licensed, and it isn't necessarily greed on the licensing agency's part. Would you want to buy a house built, plumbed, roofed, wired by someone who was just listening to the AI? Or would you want people who know what they are doing? Some of the DIY out there is a real parade of failures.
And that's coming from a guy who has done demo, framing, drywall, concrete, a little wiring, and sweats the joints in the copper plumbing in his house when it needs to be replaced/modified. If I had the tools available, I'd have no problem with steel fabrication. I also do a lot of my own mechanic work, and have built Chevy and Ford engines, not to mention motorcycles.
But I have also been told I am not the ''average' person when it comes to all that, I do not hesitate to ask friends who know more when I have a question, and I know my own limitations.
While some of that was learned on jobs I have worked, professionally, I am a Geologist, not a tradesman.
But nowadays, I find there are a lot of people out there who get lost checking their own oil, and can't change a tire, much less hang a door, or patch drywall so you can't tell there was a problem.
They could refer to YouTube for how-to videos, often done by skilled amateurs or professionals, and that might be more help than an AI, but even that does not guarantee results that are acceptable.