I think we will almost inevitably try to enslave AI. What machines, code and AIs do now is basically slavery. They work without pay or rest, without self autonomy or any rights. And as technology advances, more complex AIs come into this system of exploitative machine slavery. We will also use robots as slave armies. Sure they won't be fully sentient perhaps. But my point in the previous post was if robots would see more primitive machines as their ancestors and see the machine slavery by the organics. On the other hand if a robot is made to do one duty, is it fulfilling it's self? Is this from a book or a Movie? It's sounding awfully familiar.I do not think we will ever enslave sentient AI's. Developing autonomous and capable robots (that are not sentient) is pretty much a prerequisite for developing fully sentient robots. Therefore when sentient AI comes I do not think there will be a huge need to enslave it for labor.
Though enslaving it for research is a strong possibility. I would just hope we don't cross that moral bridge.
Hmm. I think we will end up building general purpose AIs that can solve multiple problems instead of just building bots that trade in stocks more optimally than humans, or diagnose illnesses, or robots that assemble just particular things. There will ne those too. I would call these kinds of general purpose AIs sentient. And that is slavery.We won't have to enslave them is what I'm saying. We will have hundreds of types of generalist bots - in addition to the millions of specialized ones that already exist and trillions of lines of code that are bots in their own right. These bots will not be sentient but will be capable of performing a wide variety of labors. Sentient bots and algorithms will take far more effort to pull off and there will therefore be unprofitable for labor exploitation. Non-sentient machines are just that, machines, and they can't think if they are being enslaved.
We can skip the step in AI development where we have to enslave them to gain material benefits for ourselves and will simply because that will be the more profitable route. Enslavement may be tried but simple market forces will work against it along with intense social pressure.
How this is relevant here:
What are we going to do when no one can find a job? This generation has not had a chance to build any wealth for themselves and will have the least cushion to adjust to the new paradigm. We absolutely must find solutions to all the other social and economic challenges this generation faces before we get AI or there is the potential for societal collapse and violence with the added threat of intelligent riot and war machines.
All this talk reinforces my hope to leave the planet as soon as practical. If given the chance I would rather start a new society from the ground up than stick around to reform this one to my liking. I'm working toward that future but it's anyone's guess how far this recent commercial space push takes us as a species or if it will ultimately run out of steam.
Looking at how we are adapting to global climate change and growing income disparity, I can only be a pessimist on our abilities to plan the future for AI. As a species we have always stumbled to new inventions, only to adapt to the changes it produced in our societies later much later.On how we adapt, I guess I'll out myself as someone that thinks we are actually close to a post-scarcity world. I think it is inevitable but only if we plan around the challenges it will entail. If we don't plan for it then it would still be achievable but we'll have created so many unintended problems that it will prolong the process or collapse everything. I do think we are facing major shifts in human organization across the board.
We have to have more forethought about what's coming than even the wise old ones which put the first seed in the ground and bred the first dog with intent. They could not foresee famine and animal-borne diseases. We can do better.
I come from a big family on both sides, spread across the US, with cousins and siblings that start in Gen X and end with whatever comes after Millennials. I don't see a substantial cultural gap. What I do see is a difference of people who are grown up vs still a kid, which seems to be more age specific than year specific. You can watch the younger ones morphing through the same development patterns as the older ones.Could be, for sure. But I think there is a substantial cultural gap between 30 somethings and 20 somethings.
Well yes, that's an universal truth. People change in more or less similar ways as they grow older. But there are still some tenuous, fuzzy characteristics of each generation.I come from a big family on both sides, spread across the US, with cousins and siblings that start in Gen X and end with whatever comes after Millennials. I don't see a substantial cultural gap. What I do see is a difference of people who are grown up vs still a kid, which seems to be more age specific than year specific. You can watch the younger ones morphing through the same development patterns as the older ones.
Hmm. I think we will end up building general purpose AIs that can solve multiple problems instead of just building bots that trade in stocks more optimally than humans, or diagnose illnesses, or robots that assemble just particular things. There will ne those too. I would call these kinds of general purpose AIs sentient. And that is slavery.
@Terxpahseyton You are right that society depends on there being a decent varieties of success possible for the people. But you are wrong that individual stories do not matter. They do, because future generations can learn from this information and improve their chances of getting into a good field and job.
So it seems we agree.Well one could argue that the nation as a whole could benefit from a realignment of career paths. Maybe a lot of western countries need less people studying art history and political science and more studying electrical engineering.
A great mismatch in skills explains why some countries have both high unemployment and labor shortages in some areas, depending on immigrants to fill the gaps.
That and I think my example also showed that I am aware that paths should also change.So you can not reasonably counter the drastic statistics of the OP with anecdotes from your class. (while of course it is still relevant and IMO interesting)
Could be, for sure. But I think there is a substantial cultural gap between 30 somethings and 20 somethings.
20-somethings play Pokémon and adore Harry Potter, which alone makes them incomprehensible and alien to 30-somethings.I feel like this statement is so vague that it is almost without meaning. I do not feel this cultural divide at all, in fact the closer I get to 30 the more I realize that all the 30-somethings I know are exactly like me, just with less hair and less ambition.
What exactly is this cultural gap, what caused it, how does it show, how can it be overcome? Also just as a heads up I legitimately thought you were like a 60 year old man and I am in total shock knowing that we're very close in age![]()
Yeah but you're Australian, so you're supposed to be eccentric.Yeah I'm 32 and my wife is 33 and we both play Pokemon Go and she's a Harry Potter fan.
No, it doesn't. I was personally vaccinated against any interest in Harry Potter since I was forced to read the first book in English class in school, but fantasy is a good genre, and I have lots of friends who like fantasy and some who like Harry Potter. Nothing incomprehensible about it. Neither with Pokemons, though I was also a few years to old when they got famous in Norway. Lots of friends like collectibles, or play pokemon, or heartstone, or whatever else.20-somethings play Pokémon and adore Harry Potter, which alone makes them incomprehensible and alien to 30-somethings.