Even the best CAD system we can ever imagine will not be better than the quality of a person that uses it. Of course it can make one's job quicker, drawing will be nicer to look at and easier to read, but if somebody does not know exactly what he is showing on the drawing, the content of such document will be very minor and benefits of using CAD systems will reduce significantly.
But coming back to OP's questions; I am working for automotive company that has many plants all over the world: US, Europe, India, Asia-Pacific. Different sites use different drawing and GD&T standards - US follow ASME Y14.5, Europe works according to ISO. We are of course using CAD system and producing hundreds of drawings per year, but I am very sad to say that I have not seen a single drawing that could be considered as fully done according to any of mentioned standards. Designers/drafters simply put remarks like 'Dimensioning and tolerancing according to ASME Y14.5M (or ISO 1101)' in general title block without thinking what are the implications of it. What is even worse, they do not use GD&T almost at all. And I am not talking about very simple parts like rectangular blocks or similar - geometry of our products is usually quite complicated. We have some internal rules saying that to avoid too complicated and unreadable drawings only functional dimensions should be presented, and I am OK with that, but engineers here are not even able to show these functional dimensions properly. Good example can be when symmetry of two features (let's say rectangular) is considered. Everybody will specify their widths, but nobody will care that geometrical relation between them is still missing. Most of guys will say: 'They are shown symmetrical on a drawing, so they are symmetrical, and that's all. If we add symmetry or position control on the drawing this will increase final costs of a product'.
Sometimes I wonder how lucky this company is that no serious problems caused by ambiguous dimensioning has happened so far. This might sound weird, but from my point of view (as a great supporter of using GD&T) I would like a situation to happen that somebody will come to us and say: 'Hey, there is no sufficient information on your drawing. Please fix it.' or 'You haven't specified it on the drawing, so we did as we thought, and you can not have any complaints to us that this doesn't work. If you want any modification you have to pay'. Maybe then our management would somehow realize that the company spends hard money on licences for sophisticated CAD systems to product worthless pieces of paper which instead of bringing huge profits can bring serious financial troubles.