>The only area that a human will be able to compete with computers/automatization will be creativity.
And even in that field it's because of vanity.
You can make AIs that can create unique art that's just as good in any measurable sense as art made by humans, even including all the subtle mistakes and imperfections.
But even then there will be demand for art created by humans, and the value of that will be knowing that someone spent 20 years of their mortal life actually learning how to create this.
I actually envision a lot of shit-tier service jobs to become quite high tier jobs once automation takes over.
In 100 or so years rich fucks will find it exotic to be served by an actual living being, and not by a robot. So being some restaurant waiter or whatever will be quite high tier job with strict and demanding requirements with a lot of competition for and great pay.
Some humans will always value being served by humans, no matter how technically inferior the service is. There is just something about knowing that someone actually wastes their personal time on this plane of existence serving you.