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45% of U.S. Jobs Vulnerable To Automation

An anonymous reader writes "A new report out of Oxford has found that the next 20 years will see 45% of America's workforce replaced by computerized automation. 'The authors believe this takeover will happen in two stages. First, computers will start replacing people in especially vulnerable fields like transportation/logistics, production labor, and administrative support. Jobs in services, sales, and construction may also be lost in this first stage. Then, the rate of replacement will slow down due to bottlenecks in harder-to-automate fields such engineering. This "technological plateau" will be followed by a second wave of computerization, dependent upon the development of good artificial intelligence. This could next put jobs in management, science and engineering, and the arts at risk.' 45% is a big number. Politicians have been yelling themselves hoarse over the jobs issue in this country for the past few years, and the current situation isn't anywhere near as bad. At what point will we start seeing legislation forbidding the automation of certain industries?"

625 comments

  1. My father once said... by liamoohay · · Score: 5, Interesting

    My father, an early pioneer of automated teaching (and a teacher himself) once told me that computers would soon replace teachers and, he added, not long after that they would replace the students too.

    1. Re:My father once said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My father, an early pioneer of automated teaching (and a teacher himself) once told me that computers would soon replace teachers and, he added, not long after that they would replace the students too.

      Aren't books suppose to replace the teacher (aka, "wise man") too?

      When jobs become unnecessary, perhaps that will be when we will need to find some better economic system than capitalism. Capital will be obsolete, hence capitalism will be useless.

      A lot of science fiction deals with this scenario. People work to keep busy, not because they need to work. Some people today already do that.

      captcha: DEPOSED

    2. Re:My father once said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's the ideal scenario.

      The alternative is far worse, that there will be a permanent underclass in abject poverty, and a few people with all of the wealth.

    3. Re:My father once said... by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Interesting comment; when Edison invented a type of Phonograph,(google it), he said virtually the same thing.

    4. Re: My father once said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That chip that will be implanted in your head will contain all the knowledge and wisdom you'll ever need. And bluetooth will update the chip periodically.

    5. Re:My father once said... by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      It's very obvious that automation will take jobs away. Ho-che-minh had a similiar problem, he was many things, but he never suffered from originality; and even he, figured it out.

    6. Re:My father once said... by KalvinB · · Score: 1

      If a robot can do your job as a teacher you're not a good teacher.

    7. Re:My father once said... by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Over the last 10,000 years, in all but a few hundred have people been living under feudalism, where big shots become ever richer and more powerful while everybody else suffers.
      Current trends are leading to a return to this "normal" state, and not to any kind of utopia.

    8. Re:My father once said... by mrmeval · · Score: 1

      http://www.thatsnerdalicious.com/cooking-gadgets/robotic-burger-flipper-may-revolutionize-the-fast-food-industry/

      Built by San Francisco-based Momentum Machines, this robotic burger maker is designed to do the work of three full-time kitchen staff. The current alpha version of the machine grinds, stamps, and grills patties (made to order), then cuts and layers lettuce, onions, pickles, and tomatoes before slapping everything on a bun and wrapping it to go. The only human labor involved is that needed to take the customerâ(TM)s money and hand over the completed burger.>

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    9. Re:My father once said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That future reminds me a scene in the movie Real Genius.
      Backdrop: lecture hall
      At the beginning of the term, professor was lecturing, students were taking notes.
      Time goes on, the professor was replace by a reel to reel tape machine. A few student take notes
      At the end, the students were replaced by small tape recorder taking notes from the big reel to reel recorder.

    10. Re:My father once said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My father, an early pioneer of automated teaching (and a teacher himself) once told me that computers would soon replace teachers and, he added, not long after that they would replace the students too.

      What will Man do to support himself and/or his family

    11. Re:My father once said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article makes it sound like a bad thing. For every job that is replaced by automation, that is one more workers who can do something else, thus increasing our overall GDP, thus increasing our overall wealth.

      Put another way: if automation and technology is so bad for us let's get rid of all of it. Without any machinery/etc we would all be 100% employed trying to grow enough crops and animals to feed ourselves. Full employment, much lower standard of living.

    12. Re:My father once said... by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Most teachers could be replaced by something like Kahn Academy. Ergo, most teachers are _____ ______ __________.

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    13. Re:My father once said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My father, an early pioneer of automated teaching (and a teacher himself) once told me that computers would soon replace teachers and, he added, not long after that they would replace the students too.

      That's a pretty shortsighted view of what teaching is all about.

      In German our word for education is "Bildung" which is probably best translated as "formation" - and that is ultimately the purpose of any education: it helps you to form and develop your character, helps you to strive towards the goal of becoming a well rounded person and to realize your potential towards the beautiful and good (whatever this term ends up meaning to you). Whether your education is the study of humanities or a manual craft doesn't matter in this regard - learning a trade can do as much for your self-improvement and character development as, say, studying Classical Greek.

      Your teacher is your guide in the early stages of this lifelong journey - he/she does not just impart knowledge on you but also gives you a sense of direction and acts as a role model. The relationship between teacher and student is something quite special which is acknowledged in words like "Doktorvater" (which describes your PhD thesis advisor/supervisor but which literally translates to doctoral father) or in the custom that the first thing that is mentioned about any academic of note is "he/she studied under ...". Even if you disagree with your teacher that disagreement will shape the course of your personal development significantly - the teacher always leaves an imprint on his students.

      A computer can present information but it can't contribute to my Bildung in nearly the same way my human teachers did. They didn't just impart snippets of factual information on me, they stood before me as whole persons showing us students their understanding of what Bildung/formation of character really means and towards which direction we should in their opinion strive in this process by authentically living their understanding of this word in front of us students. No computer will be able to do this anytime soon.

    14. Re:My father once said... by mbone · · Score: 1

      Yes, now that's happened, hasn't it.

    15. Re:My father once said... by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      That happened 4 years ago in 2009, with the recession. And the USA and the world has not yet recovered

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    16. Re:My father once said... by NewYork · · Score: 1

      Computers should replace politicians

  2. oblig by Velex · · Score: 2, Interesting
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    1. Re:oblig by LordLimecat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The author of that makes some amazingly bad mistakes, like assuming that progress means people lose work (see the luddites, or any transformative technology), or that people would blithely accept being micromanaged (they wont), or that we have no economy other than "making stuff". He also completely discounts human nature.

      If the future is a dystopia, its not gonna be because of some marvelous new technology.

    2. Re:oblig by sayfawa · · Score: 2

      Indeed. People are always talking about job loss, like it's some terrible thing when, if were were dong this correctly, we should be happy. Who doesn't like less work? But if we keep this attitude that if you don't work then you don't eat, we'll go down the same road as in Manna.

      --
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    3. Re:oblig by Ken_g6 · · Score: 1

      If that's the obligatory story, this is the obligatory game:

      http://www.kongregate.com/games/pleasingfungus/manufactoria

      If you complete it, you'll know how to stay relevant in the workforce longer, too!

      --
      (T>t && O(n)--) == sqrt(666)
    4. Re:oblig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Indeed. People are always talking about job loss, like it's some terrible thing when, if were were dong this correctly, we should be happy. Who doesn't like less work? But if we keep this attitude that if you don't work then you don't eat, we'll go down the same road as in Manna.

      I'm always happy to do less work, just as long as my pay (i.e. lifestyle) doesn't change. If I could take a month or two off, I would spend more time traveling, working on the family camp, pursuing new hobbies, etc. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy my work and I work hard when needed but I don't live to work, I work so that I can live. As a colleague of mine always says, the goal in life is to do less work while being paid more... (grin)

    5. Re:oblig by mprinkey · · Score: 0

      I don't think that the author got it all exactly right, but your points are wrong. Business is driven mindlessly by ONE THING--maximizing profitability. The time will come...and right soon...when machines will work well enough to eliminate many existing blue collar jobs and a large fraction of low-skilled white collar jobs too. There is and will be pushback, in the form of higher minimum wages and requirements for health insurances. And all those pushbacks do is accelerate the process. We can likely thank China, India, and Mexico for providing cheap labor and forestalling the onset of this mechanization a decade or two. Had they not been there to take our manufacturing jobs, serious automation efforts would have started even in the early 90s. As greed is the only acceptable (and fiduciarily mandated) corporate ethos, we should expect corps to follow its guiding light to its logical end. As soon as Walmart can stock their shelves with a robot, they will. As soon as McDonalds can reliably serve food without a single worker on staff, they will. As soon as Fedex can roll a Google truck, they will. Human labor is viewed as a "commodity" and it reliably becomes more expensive with time.

      I think the mistake that the author makes is that he assumes humans will be part of the machine. They won't. There will be strikes and protests and maybe even legislation, but those will only slow the pace of change, not stop it. The US and Western European economies will look quite different in 50 years. I doubt anything but boutique items will be made even in part by humans. Before then, we will all have to ask ourselves what we do with our time and how do we provide for our needs. The end of the story effectively contrasts two possible outcomes.

    6. Re:oblig by Velex · · Score: 1

      Neat game.

      Oh I'm not worried about myself. I'll be relevant in the workforce long after all the agents, accountants, salespeople, and customer service at the call center I work at have been replaced by speech recognition and AI.

      The problem is that not everybody can be a robot designer or tester. Really, not everybody can.

      The story I linked to has some glaring flaws, but I like to link to it because it's short, somewhat plausible by suggesting that middle management and HR will be the first to go, and it highlights the problem humanity will face in the next 200-300 years.

      The way I see it, there are four options:

      1. Let individuals who are not capable of obtaining the skills required for the new jobs in the capitalist world presented by Manna just starve to death and die, thus culling them from the genome.
      2. House those individuals in dorm-like tenements, and provide them with 3 basic yet complete meals per day. (For the benefit of the reader who didn't read that story, this is the option the capitalist society chooses in Manna.)
      3. Create a faux economy for those individuals to participate in. In my view, this is about to start or perhaps already has started to happen. The HR drones and middle managers will still come into work every day in the morning, dressed and ready for business, but their jobs will be little more than rubber-stamping whatever decision their computer comes to and pressing the Ok button. That way, those individuals who lack the ability to cultivate the creativity and technical skill required to be a part of the real economy will still be ostensibly "employed" and warming seats in an office.
      4. Finally, there's the communist solution represented by Project Australia and a good deal of wishful thinking where "everybody wins."

      Really, the contrast between the capitalist-welfare society and Project Australia in Manna is striking in its simplicity. In either solution, everybody lives and is fed. However, because the welfare class is unable to obtain basic resources to pursue creative interests, it doesn't happen. Instead, the ownership class becomes obscenely wealthy and stagnates. On the other hand, Project Australia gives everyone (along with some wishful thinking about creepy devices that can disconnect one's mind from one's body as a way to control crime) access to enough resources to pursue creative interests. By sharing the wealth of the post-scarcity society equally among the member/owners of Project Australia, creativity becomes abundant rather than stagnating and putrifying as it does in the hands of only the elite few owners of the capitalist society.

      The problem is what to do with people who really are unable to become robot technicians or whatever jobs there will be when accounting, middle management, HR, and various other middle class jobs and perhaps even medicine, law, and primary education jobs no longer exist.

      The brilliance of Manna as a story is that the automation of vast parts of the economy doesn't happen because of groundbreaking advances in strong AI or machine vision, and it's not the meneal jobs such as fast food or retail that go first. Sure, humanity started on its way toward a post-scarcity society by replacing dangerous, repetitve, and physically demanding jobs with robots. However, perhaps it's correct that it will be the paper-pushers who become replaced by software in the next leg of the journey towards post-scarcity.

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    7. Re:oblig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If lose my job then following things happen (not necessarily in this order):

      1. I will not be able to keep my house - bank will take over and sell it and I will have to move to a place far away from my firiends and
      2. I will not be able to take care of my kids which is bad for them and for me, I will not be seeing them
      3. I will eventually end up in jail because I do not pay alimony
      4. my health deteriorates and I will die sooner then I would have died if I had a job and money to pay for a doctor

      I live in Germany and I know that gov, will not support me too much. They say it openly. Now I understand you are calling for a revolution which is implausible - I know nobody ready for that now and young enough to take part in it even if they were.

    8. Re:oblig by sjames · · Score: 1

      Have you looked at unemployment figures lately? Have you never noticed how many jobs could actually be eliminated without anyone missing them?

      Do we really need a bunch of people carefully compiling forms and reports that will never be read by anyone?

      Many jobs now only exist because, sadly, it is slightly cheaper to hire a person to act like a robot than it is to use a robot. But only slightly and only if we give them food stamps to supplement their income.

    9. Re:oblig by dcollins · · Score: 1

      "or that people would blithely accept being micromanaged (they wont)"

      I have absolutely stopped believing any assertion of the form "people wouldn't accept X". I was told that Americans would revolt if the popular vote for President was overturned by the electoral college. I was told that Americans would never accept torture or omni-surveillance. I was told that people would never accept being videotaped nude for air travel, or being routinely crotch-grabbed by federal officials. Millions of people put up with micromanagement every day. People can and do accept absolutely anything.

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    10. Re:oblig by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If everyone loses their jobs, how can the bank take your house? Send you a sternly worded email asking you to leave or they'll consider sending another email?

      And you are required to pay alimony regardless of income, with no option of reassessment? That sucks. Child supports often works that way because so many deadbeat dads quit all jobs, then work in the cash economy (illegal jobs, tax evasion, and such) to prevent paying their ex, but I've not seen it go that way for alimony.

    11. Re:oblig by error_logic · · Score: 1

      There's an episode of Undercover Boss showing a warehouse with computer-instructed humans moving from shelf to shelf. Eventually the human will be irrelevant. Things are already changing fast.

  3. who's next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am hoping it is Slashdot admins.

    1. Re:who's next? by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

      Slashdot's admins haven't done any work in several years.

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  4. Well......... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welcome to 2013, time to pass some more stupid laws to protect those buggy whip makers.

    1. Re:Well......... by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 1

      I vote to repeal the laws to protect all industrialists. Private property is an anachronism for people of low intelligence.

    2. Re:Well......... by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      It's about food an shelter. In Rural areas it's pretty straight forward; in a population of 20 million, logistics are un-ignorable. It might be a good time to start considering marginalizing of the Gravity Well? I don't think that job will get automated

    3. Re:Well......... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Communism has failed everywhere where it was tried. Most remaining communists are people of low intelligence.

    4. Re:Well......... by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 0

      Capitalism has failed everywhere where it was tried. Most remaining capitalists are people of low intelligence.

      FTFY. Or, more accurately, very impure variants of both capitalism and communism have been tried in various places - communism barely at all, and capitalism kind of - and both have ended up in every case with mixed economies.

    5. Re:Well......... by real-modo · · Score: 1

      Welcome to 2013, time to pass some more stupid laws to protect those buggy whip makers.

      Too late, that was 2008, when those failed banks, insurance companies and auto manufacturers were bailed out.

      Capitalism operates through a process of creative destruction. Stop the destruction, and you lapse back into feudalism by way of fascism.

  5. Progress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's what most programmers will call it (unless their own jobs are threatened by H-1Bs)

  6. Automation by eudas · · Score: 1

    The jobs of the future may be done by robots, but they'll need people to build and maintain those robots.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYu1qW8Dctk

    --
    Blessed is he who expects the worst, for he shall not be disappointed.
    1. Re:Automation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At first, yes, but:

      1. Robot maintenance jobs will go away once robots get good enough to repair other robots.

      2. Robot building jobs will go away once robots get good enough to build new robots.

      3. Robot design jobs will go away once robots get good enough to design better robots than themselves.

    2. Re:Automation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'll never see that day.

    3. Re: Automation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Robots will build themselves and will take over the world. What about armed robots that kill people autonomously? What if they mutiny against their human masters?

    4. Re:Automation by geoskd · · Score: 1

      At first, yes, but:

      1. Robot maintenance jobs will go away once robots get good enough to repair other robots.

      2. Robot building jobs will go away once robots get good enough to build new robots.

      3. Robot design jobs will go away once robots get good enough to design better robots than themselves.

      You got 1 and two backwards. 2 will happen first, then 1...

      We will probably not survive as a species to see 3...

      --
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    5. Re:Automation by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 2

      Yup and the ratio will be 1 new job to 100 jobs replaced by robots... then 1 new job to 1000 jobs replaced by robots.

      Robot designers will require a certain degree of creativity but robot repair (especially of modular design) is highly automatizable.

      As for building then. I think you need to reconsider that. Apple's new factory to build iPhones is going to have almost no human employs and Foxxcon intends to replace a million humans with robots. They are currently about 10% along the way.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    6. Re:Automation by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      1) is a function of good design. A modular design and a teeny bit of self diagnostics combined with a driverless repair vehicle will be able to address this. (and is already being used in some sectors).

      2) is already being done now.

      3) is a completely different issue.

      3a) having tools which automate large parts of the design process really serve in the way that industrialization did in the past. They make a required human designer more productive. Problem is the world wide requirement for robot designers is probably in the 100's.

      3b) having a truly intelligent tool means we have AI which means we have genius level artificial beings running around. That's probably a hundred years away. We don't want true AI because of the ethical (slavery) and the risk (revolution or failure of friendliness).

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    7. Re:Automation by sjames · · Score: 1

      That's what robots are for!

    8. Re:Automation by umghhh · · Score: 1

      A polish author and, I am more and more convinced, a visionary and philosopher Sanislaw Lem was writing about this. I say he was a visionary because besides his robot stories he wrote number of things that either materialized or seem to be materializing right now - in military or elsewhere.

      On fun side there was a revolution of washing machines which from autonomous washing machines evolved into sex toys and modern slaves till they actually asked for laws and rights.

      On more serious one of his books or essays pretending to be a novel was: Golem XIV. I have not read anything like that before and hardly anything like that afterward. Closest to that was River of Gods by Ian McDonald - well written but somewhat obscuring the main point. It seems to me that if we are really smart enough to produce self-improving and self-conscious entity then it will rather improve itself out of our reality and we will suffer mostly because nobody will be there to help us maintain our complex infrastructure or it will melt because of the steps needed for this super-intelligence to self-improve. This is not really the problem as I see it. I see the coming to this point as a problem - how we will deal with the reality of being able to support everybody and actuality of having to do so - even in a socialist state like Germany the government forces jobless below social minimum if they cannot find a job thus decreasing job costs to the global level. At some point such society will collapse and then turn into something else. That is not bad in itself but such changes are usually violent and associated with piles of bodies. Let us hope we manage it somehow.

      I am not afraid of super-intelligent AI. I am afraid of assholes in corporations and governments ready to kick my ass if they see fit. I am also afraid that such changes leaves majority people to suffer. There does not seem to be much in terms of what I can do against that only hope that we will not follow the worst road.

    9. Re:Automation by real-modo · · Score: 1

      Not quite right. Foxconn is part-way along installing a million robots. They're not firing people one-for one, though; just not hiring as many. (To the Chinese, that's OK, because their working-age population is peaking about now. So the people are not there to hire, unless they increase productivity.)

      That's not to say that labor-substituting machines are not becoming a serious risk to the current way we organise economic life. They are.

    10. Re: Automation by umghhh · · Score: 1

      I understand that you are joking right? In case not - the problem of skynet is not that it is conscious which it will for long not be but that its control structure fails in some bad way. Some years ago automatic anti-aircraft gun malfunctioned and instead of shooting drones or whatever started shooting all in vicinity killing number of people. IT continued to do so till amo ran out. It did not gained (evil) consciousness or even one of a baby with a gun it just malfunctioned. The other problem is not mutiny but conscious and evil (from perspective of killed people) operators. We may have too many people in the society/economy but this is not a new problem and was resolved before. Not always in a peaceful and gentle way.

  7. So let's make employing people more expensive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's take jobs that are vulnerable to being replaced by automation and make them more expensive by mandating high minimum wages and extensive "free" benefits.

    What could possibly go wrong?

    1. Re:So let's make employing people more expensive! by Immerman · · Score: 1

      Wrong way around - make the remaining jobs more lucrative and reduce the work week. Cut the work week in half and you instantly almost double the number of jobs.

      --
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    2. Re:So let's make employing people more expensive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better yet, let's revert everything to the state of the industrial revolution so people are cheaper to exploit then using robots.

      What could possibly go wrong?

    3. Re:So let's make employing people more expensive! by real-modo · · Score: 1

      Let's take jobs that are vulnerable to being replaced by automation and make them more expensive by mandating high minimum wages and extensive "free" benefits.

      Or, you know, revert taxes back to how they were under Reagan, spend a little less on Defense Contractors, and pay everybody a basic income.

  8. Hahaha... wut? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have enough faith in the crap-tasticness of other people's code to know that automation will not take over to such a degree for a long, long time.

    I see the US has decided to offshore its economic analysis these days, though, if you're relying on the Brits to tell you what may hypothetically happen.

  9. AI and robotics and jobs by fyngyrz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yep. When AI arrives, very few jobs (other than things like ambassador to AI or positions in Luddite cults) are likely to require a human. Whether AI will see fit to participate in our job market is not intuitively obvious, though. Still, with AI in place, lower level robotics should be quite sophisticated.

    I've always thought that the current presumption that a job is required and inherently a good thing was an artifact of scarcity of labor. Remove the latter, and the former may well radically change.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      I've always thought that the current presumption that a job is required and inherently a good thing was an artifact of scarcity of labor. Remove the latter, and the former may well radically change.

      Change to what? That having a job is not a good thing?

      --
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    2. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by pipatron · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem right now is that the current political mantra thinks that jobs are the most important thing, and if you don't have a job you're worthless and a problem that must be taken care of. It will be a painful period for jobless and workers alike until this discrepancy between current reality and ancient politics is gone.

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    3. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by LordLimecat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Quick, break all the spinning frames and power looms before they steal our jobs!

      Except that never happens. New jobs are created; someone has to innovate, someone has to maintain.

    4. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 2

      "never"

      Never?

      "someone has to innovate"

      Has to?

      You sound religious.

    5. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by peragrin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What would people do without jobs?

      A small percentage would improve themselves by learning new things exploring new concepts, etc. The majority however would do nothing but become restless, and that would lead slowly to fighting each other. Humans need to do something that keeps there minds and bodies occupied.

      However robots can't do engineering. Robots can't think. AI is a pipe dream for at least the next century. We don't really understand how our own minds work. Computers are binary. Humans brains are at least trinary. Until a computer can do maybe then true ai is impossible.

      --
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    6. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      That's certainly one obvious possibility, yes. Or, it might be a good thing if you like that sort of thing, but in no way a requirement, any more than any other optional choice in life or lifestyle is. Or, it might be punishment. Or something else no one has thought of yet.

      If you can get everything you need in the material sense, you might prefer, for instance, to spend your time diving off Maui, enjoying fine dining, playing an instrument, etc., ad infinitum. Or, if you're sort of perverse, maybe you'd like to work behind the counter at McDonald's and call it "good"?

      --
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    7. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Bullshit. Current political public relations says that jobs are the most important thing. The ACTUAL poltician doesn't give a shit about jobs because their corporate masters don't give a shit about jobs.

      I think Wisconsin is a great example of this. The "leader" of that state talks about bringing jobs to the state but it is just talk. The real agenda is to set up an environment where his corporate masters owe nothing to society or the country.

      The vast majority of our politicians care NOTHING about if their constitutents have jobs just as long as their corporate buddies get what they want. This was NOT true before 1980 and the era of big politics, a little less true before Citizens United, and absolutely true after Citizens United.

    8. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this false equivenecy is false.

      The "loom" era didn't have an environment where the industalist could just ship a job to India with no penalty.

    9. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      The *current* reality is that if the economy doesn't roll, then the government can't roll either, and then the jobless become a lot more of a problem than they are now.

      Only in the context where scarcity has been eliminated by a force other than constant human effort does the possibility arise for a significantly jobless population stand as a reasonable condition.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    10. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It hasn't happened during the last 10000 years of technology advancement. What makes you think this time is different?

    11. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Wansu · · Score: 1

        What would people do without jobs?

      They would find something to do. Perhaps it would be something counterproductive or criminal but they would find something to do.

        The majority however would do nothing but become restless, and that would lead slowly to fighting each other.

      Fighting each other is a job of sorts and I'm so not sure that the process leading to people fighting each other would be all that slow.

      --
      Wansu, th' chinese sailor
    12. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 1

      Eh, there was loads written about the "myth of full employment" in the late '70s and early '80s. I have a thesis by my uncle sitting opposite. Increased efficiency simply means fewer people are required to do what society demands. Jobs are always created and destroyed, but similar jobs tend *not* to replace them - you have an increasingly unskilled casual labour force of a sort which wouldn't have been dreamt of in the couple of decades post-WW2.

      Very few jobs are required. You're probably a useless chair-warmer, as are most of the people on this site. The post is accurate.

      And nobody "has" to innovate - we could just make do with a lot less, still live in unprecedented comfort, and work a few hours a week.

    13. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What would people do without jobs?

      Fap furiously i imagine.

    14. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by DarkTempes · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, because all of the retired people in the world are always so busy murdering each other.

      It's truly tragic.

    15. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The economy is doing fine. GNP has been growing at a 2% rate for the past 5 years.

      The problem is that this doesn't require the entire working age population to have jobs, only 60% or so.

      In 10 years it may be 50%.

      The result of this process is continual concentration of wealth. Recent published statistics show 95% of the economic growth in the past 3 year was garnered by the top 1% of the population.

      The idea that everyone needs to have a full time job is just not practical any more. The concentration of wealth at the top we have is a threat to democracy.

      It seems to me we are at a real watershed.

    16. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by geoskd · · Score: 1

      AI is a pipe dream for at least the next century. We don't really understand how our own minds work.

      Actually, capable AI will require a breakthrough, which is unpredictable. It could happen tomorrow, it could be 500 years. I thinks its more likely on the order of a decade rather than a century, but who knows.

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    17. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Quick, break all the spinning frames and power looms before they steal our jobs!

      Ah yes, 19th century dumb machines are equivalent to 21st century AI robots.

      Back in the 19th century, automation improved worker productivity. Today, automation replaces workers.

      BIG difference.

      Except that never happens.

      Actually, it has. The labor numbers prove it.

      There's no stopping it - and we shouldn't .

      But what we REALLY need to do, is examine how to deal with it because what IS CURRENTLY happening is we creating an ever increasing class of jobless.

      Jobless people have a bad habit of partaking in social upheaval. And it usually means the rich get their asses chopped off.

    18. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It hasn't happened during the last 10000 years of technology advancement. What makes you think this time is different?

      Uh, perhaps because for 9,900 of those years, "technology advancement" was defined with coal, steam, iron, and steel. Today, I can 3D print piece parts out of my home instead of companies even worrying about design, let alone manufacturing.

      Yes. This time is considerably different. Right now I'm communicating almost real-time with a complete stranger who could be posting from the International Space Station for all I know. 100 years ago that was impossible, so it is pointless to talk about the last 10,000 years.

    19. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by bjwest · · Score: 1

      Perhaps change to not requiring a job to live. In today’s society, you must have income to survive. If I own enough land to sustain myself, I must still generate an income to pay property taxes or my property will be confiscated by the government.

      --

      --- Keep the choice with the user..
    20. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Psiren · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Sounds like you're describing Iain M. Banks' post-scarcity Culture (I'm sure there are other sci-fi examples). That can't really happen until we have an abundance of energy and the ability to manipulate matter to create any material goods we may require. I don't see that happening for another millennia or so, assuming we last that long.

    21. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      We definitely ARE at a watershed.

      We are also at a place in history where we have a government that doesn't represent the needs of most of its people. That's why it's impossible to talk solutions without some idiot jumping up and screaming the world "socialism."

    22. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      What would people do without jobs?

      Turn to the great Cook?

    23. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      No, being endowed with a trust fund is far superior. This way you're more productive as you have robots working FOR you. If you don't have the capital, then you have to work with your own efforts which, you being merely human, are becoming obsolete.

      --
      ...
    24. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by TheSpoom · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Humans brains are at least trinary.

      Citation please, and exactly how would "not being trinary" prevent effective AI?

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    25. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Myu · · Score: 3, Insightful

      However robots can't do engineering. Robots can't think. AI is a pipe dream for at least the next century. We don't really understand how our own minds work. Computers are binary. Humans brains are at least trinary. Until a computer can do maybe then true ai is impossible.

      Both Philosophically and Neuropsychologically, the idea that the mind is foundationally more complicated than some kind of Turing machine network is very much in dispute. We're getting loads done by treating the human mind mechanically and exploring its heuristics and biases or its structures and protocols in a mathematically classical background framework. The human brain is a massively complex device, and has techniques for understanding that there are some vaguenesses and gaps in the way we semantically process the world, but to suggest that this is something beyond the reach of any classically constructed system is a powerful thesis that, we might think, there is a certain amount of optimistic inductive reason to doubt.

      --
      Myu: ... The map's upside down...
    26. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      What would people do without jobs

      If they have pasive income, look to what those who don't need to work do now.

      If they do not have passive income, then they starve.

      --
      ...
    27. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What would people do without jobs?
      They would find something to do. Perhaps it would be something counterproductive or criminal but they would find something to do.

      People with food, shelter and health care can do lots of things. In polarized society where having a job is the difference between living and surviving, the masses will revert to a primitive "us vs them" mentality, everything goes against the upper classes. The upper classes (jobbed people) themselves will do their best to insulate themselves from the dirty plebs. Full blown feudalism.

    28. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by gtomorrow · · Score: 1

      BLOCK WARS! I'm with Rowdy Yates Block! Who you with?

    29. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by xelah · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Of course it's not a good thing! Look around you at how many things there are worth doing with your life. Even if the basic dreary parts of production could be automated, there's no shortage of stuff out there to engage in - from the social, family and exploratory (travel the world, anyone?) to the intellectual (learning, research and the arts).

      The problem with it is not that it's physically impossible for everyone to live a happy life that way, but that it's socially and economically impossible. The way our society and economy works just can't cope with distributing that output well in those circumstances. At the moment the need for labour acts as a way to force that distribution, but imagine if controlling capital (the automated machines) were the only way to receive anything above a minimum politically acceptable income.

      A good example are the oil rich economies. There's enough oil money in some gulf states that no citizen really needs to do much useful work...but distribution of consumption becomes about political power and your position in society.

      To deal with it well we'd need a way to distribute ownership of the robotics properly - and keep it distributed properly - without destroying the incentives every economy needs to generate to organize it's production and consumption effectively. That's hard.

    30. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by OrangeTide · · Score: 4, Insightful

      However robots can't do engineering. Robots can't think.

      s/robots/most humans/

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    31. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by OrangeTide · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They're too old and tired to becom restless and troublesome. They just want to see their grandkids and have dinner at four in the afternoon.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    32. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 2

      you might prefer, for instance, to spend your time diving off Maui, enjoying fine dining, playing an instrument, etc., ad infinitum.

      Joe Budweiser and Abdul Colt 45 aren't going to spend time educating themselves for the sake of education, diving off Maui, enjoying fine dining, playing an instrument, etc., ad infinitum.

      They'll just do more drugs (the crack wave has past and meth seems to be receding; what's next? another heroin revival?), be destructive and drive the country into a government-dependent dystopian nightmare, which is pretty much already happening.

      (Just because there's no God or Devil, it doesn't mean that the St. Jerome was wrong when he wrote, "the devil finds work for idle hands".)

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    33. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by houghi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What would people do without jobs?

      Instead of having one person doing a 75 hour job and 2 people doing nothing, you could have 3 people doing 25 hour jobs. That way they still contribute AND have lots of time with friends and family and do whatever they desire.

      In an ideal world, the way to pay this is by giving the money that is saved by giving the job to automation to the people who were doing the job in the first place.

      However in the real world, we will have one person doing a 75 hour job and have no life and 2 people have nothing and ALSO have no life, just so the person owning it all get a little bit richer.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    34. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ah the same decade AI people have been telling us about for nearly 50 years. Frankly, I'm not sure we are really any closer today than we were in the 60s. When you look at the biology side of things we are still like cave men staring at the innards of an animal. Crap tons of theories, either unproven or unable to be proven. When you look at computer projects like the blue brain, you have to ask why they think they are going to create something human like rather than a common animal.

      Something unique happens in human children around age 2-3, that is basically a complete mystery, and it happens a couple more times on the way to adulthood. I don't think we are going to stumble on what that is by building a bigger computer. It seems more likely a chimp/whatever crosses that threshold first due to expermentation.

    35. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by houghi · · Score: 1

      Pay attention in history class when they talk about France if you want to know how this will work out. See what their 99% did with the 1%.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    36. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 4, Insightful

      there's no shortage of stuff out there to engage in - from the social, family and exploratory (travel the world, anyone?) to the intellectual (learning, research and the arts).

      Call me elitist, but there are just too many people who are so dull and stupid as to only be suitable for bottom rung activities. Without a job, they're good for nothing more than 2 minutes of "fame" on an episode of Cops.

      There's enough oil money in some gulf states that no citizen really needs to do much useful work...

      And if you look at those countries, the mass of chronically-unemployed citizens who want jobs but feel that menial labor is beneath their dignity is causing serious social problems.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    37. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "What would people do without jobs?"

      My one question is how do I afford things or is everything free for the taking?

      Hence the old guidance counselor's question. What would you do if you had $100M in the bank, or enough money not to have to worry about money ever.

      I would see the world. Workout more and live a healthier life. You can spend a lot of time each year going from major event to major event. Fashion week just wrapped in NYC. Octoberfest is starting soon in Munich. Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Years. Spend them somewhere different every year.

      When I am not traveling I would be at home where I work on ideas that I come up with. Since we will be without corporate/patent constrictions we can do (or have the robots do) what is best for humanity. 1Gb fiber to all dwellings, on demand channels of entertainment of all kinds. Imagine a dozen+ channels just for SciFi, some could be monster based, some animated, some space travel.

      Humans will always be needed for the creative spark, I do not see AI getting to that level anytime soon (100-200 years). Maybe you like to paint but really suck at it. Does not matter, since you do not need to make a living at it you can keep doing it. Maybe someone likes your crap work, after all it is art and there is no real right or wrong.

      Of course you are going to have dumb, trash like people who are just going to sit around get drunk every day and have sex. But the fact that people can do anything and go anywhere, I would like to think that mentality like would go away in a short time.

    38. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by ColdWetDog · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or he could be describing the obvious:

      Guaranteed minimum wage. Get a job if you want more.(and note, this would be a livable wage, not our current BS minimum)

      Please explain how that solution is unworkable, given it's a VERY slight expansion from traditional welfare/SS/etc. The only change is now robots are doing all the menial tasks instead of humans, who are paid anyway.

      Please explain how this is workable when a very modest move in this direction would head off much of the social unrest in this country. Imagine, for example, if everyone in Detroit were to be given a living wage simply for existing. The blight and destruction of the city and the people inside it would vanish. Buildings could be rebuilt just for the fun of it. The costs would likely be less than the daily rate for keeping an aircraft carrier battle group afloat.

      If it were that easy, it would have been done by now.

      "Slight" - I don't think that word means what you think it means.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    39. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However robots can't do engineering. Robots can't think. AI is a pipe dream for at least the next century. We don't really understand how our own minds work. Computers are binary. Humans brains are at least trinary. Until a computer can do maybe then true ai is impossible.

      Have you followed any of the AI research in the last 30 years? Doug Lenat's Cyc project even? Asking if a computer can think is like asking if a submarine can swim.

    40. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by CavemanKiwi · · Score: 2

      What would people do without jobs?

      Masturbate and play WOW. Duh

    41. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      You're most likely correct, however getting from here to there is going to take a leap of faith or fiat that is very likely impossible short of direct alien intervention (which, for other reasons, is very likely impossible).

      We're doomed.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    42. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by moteyalpha · · Score: 1

      This is an issue I have dealt with for decades. When I was young and stupid I worked to design process automation hardware and software for many different companies all over the world and I assumed that if the plants were automated that wages would go up and people would have more free time to enjoy life, but in fact what happened is that corporations fired everybody, had increased profits and the cycle continued.
      The only way to solve this problem is through individual action. The process of concentration of wealth could continue until there is only one "owner" of everything. Business is a competitive process and is a zero sum game. This is how it is taught and how it is played. The larger issue is the biological basis of that concept. Natural selection is a fact even though it is cruel. It isn't necessary for human life to be a zero sum game in a sufficiently advanced society.
      I have been working on a device that collects and stores energy as well as a metal fabricating 3D printer that is efficient and cheap. It does not solve the issue of biological competition and the inherent competitive nature of people is the root cause of conflict. It is a biological condition of life itself and many people realize that cooperation achieves greater goals than conflict and can make that effort to overcome their inherent predisposition to force biological selection for no other reason than a vestigial impulse that is no longer useful due to the fact that no new evolution can exceed the utility of technological gain to all people.
      Nature will not evolve a computer interface that will allow people to plug in SSDs to help them remember, but people in cooperation can establish systems without conflict which produce vastly more utility than a wasteful competition to see who is the coolest, richest, and cruelest king of fools.
      It is a personal choice like Linux. I contribute, I use it, I support it and this is as much as I can do and if in the end some large corporation is able to destroy that, it is because people were not willing to free themselves. In that same way I hoping to bring shared technologies that can be supported by community adoption and if a cheap effective -personal- robot / 3D printer and energy source can be made that is more efficient than the consolidated manufacturing, then this too can be a place where people can cooperate to get another tool for choice.
      Kumbaya :)
      From a biological standpoint it is similar to the rise of the multi-cellular organism which came to dominate the biosphere. Governments hope to design that mechanically through force and it is misguided as well as being derived from principles like Thomas Hobbes "Leviathan", which is social technology that is literally centuries out of date.

    43. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by sustik · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Most people around me suffer from not having enough time to spend it with their family or on vacation or persuing arts or be politically active etc. The latter is actually a serious problem. There are people who tell me they do not vote because they do not know who to vote for because they have no time to keep up with politics. And when they say that they do not mean the 1 minute sound bites from TV etc. but instead reading research papers and in-depth analysis; maybe a whole book about issues like education, poverty, competition, issues of governence or philoshophy.

      Instead people spend time commuting to a job and overall more than *half* of their time awake time on a job. If you are an artist or researcher this may well be what you want to do, but I doubt this is the case for most.

    44. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by RabidReindeer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I've always thought that the current presumption that a job is required and inherently a good thing was an artifact of scarcity of labor. Remove the latter, and the former may well radically change.

      Change to what? That having a job is not a good thing?

      There are two reasons why people have jobs

      1. To obtain the goods and services that make life at least sustainable, and preferably enjoyable.

      2. To satisfy the inherent human need to feel valued.

      We have been reducing the effort required for item #1 at an accelerating rate for centuries. That's the mirror side of productivity.

      For most people, item #2 has been their job simply because they needed to fulfil item#1 and historically people without jobs are not valued. To be valued, you must either exert significant physical exertion or be capable of showing a waiver in the form of a large paycheck.

      As we approach the point where full-time work is no longer required to satisfy item #1, our first response has been to jettison enough people to keep the remaining workers fully-occupied, and along with that, instill enough fear into them that they have to work even harder/longer. But we are by all accounts reaching a tipping point where the number of unemployed and underemployed are rising to levels that cannot ignored and the number of people who truly need to be employed is shrinking.

      We have not yet come up with suitable alternatives for item #2. That, I think, is the real challenge. When George Jetson really can work grueling 3-hour workdays and still be considered as a valued member of society.

    45. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Luckyo · · Score: 5, Informative

      This has been done before to an extent allowed by the system, for example in Ancient Rome. In Rome, slaves did most of the work, while citizenry were mostly guaranteed livelyhood. Technology levels however were not high enough to support the system, and Rome eventually collapsed after hundreds of years of being one of the most defining and powerful societies in the world.

      In fact, Ancient Rome offers a very good view of how we'll likely develop. Simply replace "slave" with "automation and go read something short like this:
      http://www.mariamilani.com/ancient_rome/ancient_roman_jobs.htm

      Or actually study the subject in depth for more understanding on what happens to society when a large amount of people is left without work prospects (as plebeians did in Rome after the rise of slave-based economy). What happened is exactly what is described above - a guarantee for basic needs in life and entertainment to keep the masses pleased.

    46. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 99% in the US doesn't DARE do anything because their EBT card is filled regularly by that 1%. You all bought yourselves slavery chains in the form of government hand outs, you will not fight to take them away and be responsible for yourself.

    47. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      If you don't have a job then you have no stake in society and your "job" becomes voting for more free money for yourself. This is a well-known bug in democracy and will lead to the destruction of our Republic.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    48. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've always wondered - who the hell keeps water in a shed?

      I could see a tank. Or even an inflatable pool. But a shed? Man, it'd just leak out. You can't keep water in a shed.

    49. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Funny

      They just want to see their grandkids

      Oh, if you actually KNOW this already... then why haven't you called in WEEKS, mister too busy to talk to your own grandfather?!

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    50. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by mc6809e · · Score: 1

      Perhaps change to not requiring a job to live. In todayâ(TM)s society, you must have income to survive. If I own enough land to sustain myself, I must still generate an income to pay property taxes or my property will be confiscated by the government.

      In other words the government lets you use the land as long as they get a cut.

      You're not a land owner. You're a share cropper.

    51. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by PlusFiveTroll · · Score: 1

      >The majority however would do nothing but become restless, and that would lead slowly to fighting each other.

      Computers have proved that otherwise.

      iPhone apps, Xboxes, Minecraft, GTA, etc, has shown us that already a decent part of the population will keep itself busy with entertainment.

    52. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and of course plebs lived well back then....

      Even assuming that this depiction of the situation is correct this has never worked actually: sustaining the livelihood of the masses will end up in any of the directions that this always did end up when group of people were left to their own devices and did not have purpose in life: abuse of drugs, aggression or depression and this in masses. Now let us see how the assumption that society will provide for the masses looks like. First you have owners of things - Marx called them owners of capital and means of production. How are they going to provide for the masses? Apparently they even do not have to: the progress in technology will help find the discontent souls plotting to share (!) and control the rest. You do not even have to kill or maim the masses - you can say glue them with some foam applied by flying robots etc. Then assume that originally in some countries the owners will provide for the rest. You will need to protect the borders to avoid the system collapsing under invasion of the rest from places less fortunate. I haven ot even touched the problem of social cohesion - why the rest should allow the elite to control everything - how is this going to work?

      The main argument at least for US society is however: these are commie ideas and thus unamerican. What are you saying to this?

    53. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Sounds like the Brave New World solution is required. Stop demonising drugs, and make freely available drugs that give a sense of euphoria and lethargy. If people don't want to do anything with their lives other than take drugs, then let them get on with it in a non-destructive (to people other than themselves) way and remove themselves painlessly from the gene pool.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    54. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by dryeo · · Score: 2

      Heroin is fairly harmless (causes constipation) so what would be the problem with having really cheap, clean heroin available? The main problem is the puritan attitude that drugs are bad and being addicted is really bad unless it's coffee or such.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    55. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What would people do without jobs?

      A small percentage would improve themselves by learning new things exploring new concepts, etc. The majority however would do nothing but become restless, and that would lead slowly to fighting each other. Humans need to do something that keeps there minds and bodies occupied.

      Yes, because all of the retired people in the world are always so busy murdering each other.

      Exactly. Or, for even a better example... before the feminist movement put most women in the workforce in the past 30-40 years, a lot of women tended to not "have jobs." Individual salaries were often high enough for families to be supported by one (typically male) income.

      I don't recall reports of hoards of homemaker housewives fighting in the streets. Does anyone?

      Women had more time for their families, more time for their homes, etc. I recall visiting my grandparents when I was a kid: the house was always immaculately kept, food was always prepared from scratch every day, etc.

      I'm not saying everyone would enjoy obsessing over such things today: many people today view cooking and cleaning as chores, rather than a point of pride. To each his/her own. Other women I knew in previous generations just tended to watch soap operas all day, particularly once the kids were grown.

      There are plenty of things one can find to fill the hours of the day, if you have a good attitude about it. If you don't like working around your home, go read some books. Visit a museum. Take up art or music. Join a social club. Surf the internet, or even watch TV.

      The problem isn't that humans can't fill that time, or even don't have useful activities that could fill that time. Rather, the past half-century or so has trained us to think of most of the common everyday activities of previous generations as "chores," rather than simply "everyday life."

      I'd love to be able to spend more time at home experimenting with cooking and baking, doing yardwork and gardening around the house, growing my own food and preserving/fermenting/canning it, doing various upkeep and projects around the house (painting, repointing the brickwork, random home maintenance), perhaps even building furniture or doing some of my own remodeling. There are some "chores" I don't particularly look forward to (like washing dishes), but many others are incredibly satisfying when you get to say, "I made this" or "I did that."

      I think back to most of the people in my grandparents' generation that I knew, and they took a similar pride in what they did around their homes. Today, you use the microwave instead of the stove, get the crappy store-bought pastry instead of baking your own with real ingredients, buy the frozen dinner and the cans instead of cooking fresh food and canning your own produce. You just buy the leaf blower instead of the rake, the rototiller instead of the spade, the weed wacker instead of the hand edger. And then after you finish all your yardwork in 1/4 of the time, you spend 45 minutes working out or jogging or whatever, when you could have already had your work-out doing the yardwork in the fresh air.

      I feel a sense of accomplishment when I do my own tasks for my own family or around my own home. Lots of people in previous generations did too. In fact, go back a century or a little more, and most people were farmers: their only "job" was growing food to keep themselves and their own families alive. They didn't need external "work" to make their lives interesting enough so that they weren't sitting around idle and getting into random brawls.

      I'm NOT a luddite or hopeless nostalgic person arguing for a return to an agrarian world or something, where lifespans were a lot shorter, life was a lot harder, and crime rates were admittedly higher.

      I AM saying that there are a lot of everyday things people could take pleasure in doing, while simultaneously making their lives better (e.g., cooking your

    56. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 2

      Except that never happens. New jobs are created; someone has to innovate, someone has to maintain.

      Yet at some point we'll have to face the point where an economy based on everyone working is simply not viable anymore. There's only so much busywork to go around before it becomes silly.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    57. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      People think you need AI.

      But think about receptionists and customer service.
      At many places I call there isn't even a human option any more.

      Simple jobs are going away faster than we can create them.

      Over half the population is only suited for simple jobs.

      Worse than that- repetitive analytical jobs are also being automated now. So you've got another slice of people who were actually smarter than average but not all that creative out of work.

      How do you operate society when 60% of the population is unemployable?

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    58. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by MouseTheLuckyDog · · Score: 1

      Except that it won't be called McDonalds, it will be called "Papa Giovani's Pizzeria". It will be family owned, prices low and a very cheerful place.

    59. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      You know they used to take the jobs and give them to boat loads of slaves from Africa with no penalty. I'd rather someone in India have the job.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    60. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      It isn't a good thing. Any work that can be eliminated should be eliminated. Of course, we need to re-structure our economy to accommodate that because poverty actually is a bad thing. Poverty where there is no shortage is an inexcusable thing.

      If we actually need everyone to work in order to maintain our current lifestyle, why do people have a hard time finding work? Shouldn't unemployment figures be negative numbers? Shouldn't employers be foaming at the mouth at the opportunity to train someone (anyone) to do the job they need done?

    61. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It absolutely does not require magical replicators. Energy is important but that is coming a lot sooner (could be here now, but then a lot of ridiculously rich people would become only very rich people). We get rid of required work we get rid of all major social ills. Poverty goes and most crime goes with it, that means more freedom, since there becomes less reason to keep things like guns out of law abiding hands and no need for liberty infringement like stop and frisk. Drug use goes down even if drugs are completely legalized, because poor people no longer need to use the drugs as a way of taking a little vacation away from their tiny vermin infested lives. Birthrates will naturally go down for a multitude of reasons, but that is ultimately a good thing. This needs to be the made social these of our civilization. It could be complete in less than a generation if the people would just stop acting like jealous children and come together towards the goal of eliminating the need for labor.
      All this revolution into a modern ideal civilization really needs is for everyone to mind their own business. Right now you have people complaining if they see a welfare recipient buy some shrimp at a supermarket. That kind of petty childlike behavior will do nothing but guarantee everyone's continued suffering.

    62. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      waÂterÂshed (wÃtr-shd, wtr-)
      n.
      1. A ridge of high land dividing two areas that are drained by different river systems. Also called water parting.
      2. The region draining into a river, river system, or other body of water.
      3. A critical point that marks a division or a change of course; a turning point: "a watershed in modern American history, a time that ... forever changed American social attitudes" (Robert Reinhold).

    63. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That fits here quite well actually. There is this bbc article about drugs addition and the 'truth' they always told us that especially hard rugs once used make us addicted. The actual study showed that the rats do not abuse morphine if they are in 'interesting' and nice environment. They do it if they are in their standard research cages which are small and boring.

      For not intoxicated worthless rest of the society one can offer a set of sophisticated monitoring systems combined with automatic law enforcement systems like drones discharging electrical potential to the rioting groups or stopping them with weaponized sound systems or automatic ants and some such things. This whole argument is already complicated enough but how do you get there in the first place? I mean I do not want to invoke Marx' ideas but they actually fit here: the capital and means of production and means to control society will be in hands of the few. How are you going to convince them to share? This is a problem inside countries but resources that even such postindustrial society needs are not spread evenly on earth. How do you convince others to share sufficiently - you will need something to barter I mean in modern way. Post-industrial society means you still have economic activity of some sort. I can imagine some nation states failing completely if their with AI combined elites in such situations cannot find anything useful to exchange for fuel to run their infrastructure.

      I wonder if I see this happening - after all I am an old fart already and socialist state I live in already promised me that it will not have resources to support me in old age so I guess I starve to death in these 20-25years.

    64. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, it wouldn't. We have too many people in power who can only feel rich if others cannot. They are like a raccoon 'trapped' because they can't bring themselves to let go of the shiney so their paw can slide out of the hole.

      We need the maturity as a society to tell the greediest among us that their behavior is no longer acceptable. Then we can make some magic happen.

    65. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am afraid to say you are a communist. Drones are on the way....

    66. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 4, Informative

      Instead of having one person doing a 75 hour job and 2 people doing nothing, you could have 3 people doing 25 hour jobs. That way they still contribute AND have lots of time with friends and family and do whatever they desire.

      Exactly. According to productivity stats, we should already be in a place where people are working 25-hour weeks or less, rather than 40-hour weeks, assuming constant production over the past half-century or so. Instead, though worker productivity keeps rising like crazy, wages are static or rise very slowly. People actually end up working longer hours to keep up with increased social pressures to have more consumer products that are now "essential" (supposedly) for everyday life.

      However in the real world, we will have one person doing a 75 hour job and have no life and 2 people have nothing and ALSO have no life, just so the person owning it all get a little bit richer.

      Yes, the competitive business work ethic ends up working against everyone. We reward the mid-level executive who's willing to give up his family and work 80 hours every week to get ahead. The top-level executives in companies end up being filled with people who think that the only employees with any worth are people with that sort of dedication.

      Once the mid-level guy gets to be a real executive, he might be able to afford a little more flexibility in his time. But everyone below him obviously isn't worth as much and should be willing to work 80 hours (or at least produce enough in a shorter time to qualify for working "that hard").

      It ends up in a spiral where everyone feels like you can't get ahead unless you're willing to sacrifice the rest of your life to your job -- all because of a small percentage of competitive alpha males who see the only possible achievement in status, power, and money.

      But this is cultural. Workers in the U.S., for example, have to deal with such expectations at most companies. There's never any expectation that increased productivity might lead to work-weeks with fewer than 40 hours or more vacation time or whatever. And even if it were offered, many workers would simply prefer a raise.

      In many countries in Europe, though, taking a vacation is not viewed as an unmanly waste of time when you should be working harder and getting ahead at your job. Take a look around Germany or Italy or France in late July and early August, for example. Almost everyone seems to be on a holiday. It's not uncommon for many people to take an entire month off in the summer. Total vacation time each year is often double or triple what a normal worker has in the U.S.

      And, of course, there are lots of studies that show this is actually a good thing for workers. Vacations tend to give a psychological boost that can actually increase worker productivity. Shorten the arbitrary 40-hour work-week a little, and you might even see a productivity gain.

      In sum -- if we get rid of the alpha-male you're-not-committed-unless-you-never-see-your-family craziness, and actually started decreasing expected hours per week at work when productivity increased, we'd probably end up with happier people and just as much stuff. But executives and investors wouldn't get quite as rich, so it probably won't happen anytime soon....

    67. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have no understanding of this subject. Right now there are doctors and lawyers and all manner of engineers and other respectable people who are complete drug addicts. Usually to prescription opiates and the like. You cannot tell they are because they have enough money to keep them sated. Poor people on the other hand have no way maintaining their habits. The drugs are much more necessary for maintaining quality of life for a poor person and thus they use criminal means to get what they need. Eliminate that poverty and legalize drug use and the crime and destruction goes with it. Many people will choose to spend time educating themselves and volunteering to make the world better. Plenty of people do it now and that is on top of having to spend half there life working or commuting. That could be made to increase under this system using purely social means. If being educated and intelligent lands you a mate and happy life more people will choose to be educated. If spending all that extra time working on the perfect body with 4% body fat increases your probability of success in mating then we will have a lot of really good looking people running around. Without work, I am going to guess most people will have time to do both.

    68. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      No. The meth will kill them fast, especially when they can actually afford to sit around and do meth all day every day. Fortunately, people on meth rarely reproduce successfully so their entire line will die out.

    69. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by geoskd · · Score: 1

      Ah the same decade AI people have been telling us about for nearly 50 years. Frankly, I'm not sure we are really any closer today than we were in the 60s.

      We aren't any closer. As I said, it will require a breakthrough, and that can happen at anytime and is largely unpredictable. I said on the order of a decade, I didn't say on the close order of a decade.

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    70. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by MaWeiTao · · Score: 1

      Sounds like you think the human race should be comprised solely of lazy, useless slobs who engage in nothing but hedonism. If that isn't a recipe for complete social collapse, cultural and technological stagnation and possible extinction I don't know what is.

    71. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 2

      It's simple, most of them can veg out watching a few of them fighting. Depending on the style we can call it 'boxing' or 'wrestling'. perhaps a few might be called 'extreme'

    72. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by moteyalpha · · Score: 1

      Hold on , I made a deal with the Russians and was granted asylum if I give up my weapons of mass deduction and independent thought.

    73. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea that those without work should be penalized should have been abolished after the industrial revolution. Instead we have those out of work being forced into poverty, workers getting poorly payed for the wealth they generate, and the bulk of the wealth that is created going to an elite few that do very little, nothing, or even less. This is the serious social problem.

    74. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by next_ghost · · Score: 2

      Or he could be describing the obvious:

      Guaranteed minimum wage. Get a job if you want more.(and note, this would be a livable wage, not our current BS minimum)

      Please explain how that solution is unworkable, given it's a VERY slight expansion from traditional welfare/SS/etc. The only change is now robots are doing all the menial tasks instead of humans, who are paid anyway.

      This plan has two major flaws:

      1. In order to make this work, you need to extract money from owners of those robots that do all the work so you can pay it out as GMW. Good luck with that, given the track record of corporate tax avoidance right now.

      2. One of the necessary side effects of the market is keeping the value of money closely tied to actual economic production. If you start paying out any significant amount of money as GMW, the feedback loops which enforce the close connection between money and production will try very hard to make that extra money go away.

      GMW won't work because it goes against the rules of the economic game without trying to change them. A solution that could work has to change the rules of the game.

    75. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Lennie · · Score: 2

      Well, supposedly solar power development is on a similar curve like Moore's law (I believe it's 30% per yaar).

      Some say this will make solar rediculously cheap in 2020:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AKL8wJunKA0

      So that would solve your energy problem, it also helps solve water and food problems.

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
    76. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      1. To obtain the goods and services that make life at least sustainable, and preferably enjoyable.

      2. To satisfy the inherent human need to feel valued.

      #2 will be replaced by "To satisfy the need for the next fix."

    77. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because all of the retired people in the world are always so busy murdering each other.

      It's truly tragic.

      Have you noticed how politicians treat Social Security as untouchable in this country? Would you care to guess who it is they're afraid of?

      You'd better believe that if the elderly had the physical and mental energy, there would be civil unrest when their entitlements are touched.

    78. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If it were that easy, the Republicans would vote it down because some black person might accidentally get a penny they didn't earn.

      Not that the Democrats are any better. There is millions in welfare fraud, and thousands of cases investigating it. There is billions in tax fraud and hundreds of cases investigating it. We spend proportionally more investigating the smaller losses. Why?

      The Fair Tax with the "prebate" being 4x poverty would seem to work out pretty well, with the exception that the tax rate would have to be high to balance the numbers, and that would push arbitrage. If nobody pursued arbitrage, I'd be all for it. As it stands, with the Fair Tax not covering basic needs, but claiming it does, it will always be a losing proposition.

    79. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 2

      Recent published statistics show 95% of the economic growth in the past 3 year was garnered by the top 1% of the population

      And roughly 1/4 of that went to the top 1% of the top 1%.

    80. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by nbritton · · Score: 1

      Maybe the solution to the concentration of wealth problem is having to give it back at death. I recall our founding fathers saying something about all men being created equal. Change the game, perhaps reward individuals who educate themselves and advance society with special privileges.

    81. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I've not seen the study for meth, if any, but the studies done on cocaine, heroine and the like have generally shown that the majority of the "harm" comes from the impurities. If they were manufactured for consumption with well regulated tolerances, they'd likely be no worse than caffeine (picked at the time because it was the closest to cocaine that was available).

    82. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by danomac · · Score: 2

      Well, if there's three choices to a question the AI will not be able to cope!

    83. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Awesome. I will believe all that shit as soon as I get my flying car.

    84. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Solar = Abundance

    85. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by dcollins · · Score: 1

      xkcd, Reassuring: http://xkcd.com/1263/

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    86. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by danomac · · Score: 2

      I live five minutes from work and I spend more than half my awake hours at the job. When you only have 16 hours of awake time and an 8 hour-a-day job, it's hard to not be under half.

      I know of some people with 8 hour-a-day jobs and they spend 2.5 hours commuting, they spend at least 65% of their awake time at the job or commuting there.

    87. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rigilious Conservatives = The devil with idle hands! A Big difference!

    88. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      Actually, it sounds to me as though he expects that only a percentage of the population would avail themselves of this.
      They would not bother reproducing, removing such from the gene pool, if the tendency is genetic.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    89. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Fun fact: a handful of countries have done exactly what you suggested, and overall levels of drug use and morbidity/mortality related to drug use *dropped significantly*. It's a Brave New World solution, if by "brave" you mean "well-researched medical common sense".

    90. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by ThatAblaze · · Score: 1

      Binary++ is not == Trinary. Human minds are holographic. If we made computers that operated on holographic principals we would indeed get closer to reproducing the human mind. However, being like humans is not a requirement for being intelligent.

    91. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Livius · · Score: 2

      Except that never happens.

      That's never happened yet.

      There is no guarantee that the next time won't be different.

    92. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Chelloveck · · Score: 1

      Jobs are very important to politicians, albeit indirectly. Without jobs people go hungry and homeless. Now the politician can do one of two things: 1) Let people starve to death, or 2) implement some sort of pinko social programs to help them. Starvation is a poor option because (jokes about Chicago notwithstanding) dead people don't vote. Social programs are a poor option because then the corporate investors (that is, the only people who do real work in a capitalistic system) need to be taxed more and they'll remember that when they choose to give financial support at the next election. Jobs are the one thing that will keep the masses just far enough out of abject squalor to think you're helping them, while keeping your hands out of the corporate guys' pockets so they'll give you money to continue keeping your hands out of their pockets. Jobs! Jobs! Jobs!

      --
      Chelloveck
      I give up on debugging. From now on, SIGSEGV is a feature.
    93. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by ThatAblaze · · Score: 1

      The concentration of wealth at the top we have is a threat to democracy.

      It seems to me we are at a real watershed.

      I agree. It may well be that when having a job is rare that only those who already have money will be able to acquire wealth. It won't take long from there for the wealthy to create a class system. The question will be "what do we do with all these people who have no prospects?" I think the obvious answer will be a gladiator system.

      What fun society will be then! Well.. so long as you are rich and still have rights.

    94. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      So the solution is to instill a Chinese sense of family. The young and bored would go look after older family members, and younger would focus on the younger.

      In a practical sense, creative arts would take off. So many people claim they'd create if they didn't have to work. Well, give them a chance, and I'm sure they'll end up wasting their days arguing on the Internet instead. But if robots with AI existed, what would we do? 95% of the posters here can't pass a Turing test.

    95. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean "if only it were that easy it would be done by now"? We don't have the technology yet. That's the entire point! We WILL have the technology, and very soon.

      Alternatively, exactly what jobs is it you foresee for these people? Do we just force them to worthlessly pound rocks when a robot could do better?

      We're less than 100 years into the computer age and look what has changed. We've barely begun the true (autonomous) robotics age, I'm not sure most people understand how fundamentally that will alter the world.

    96. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      We should take the Libertarian stance and elect a benevolent dictator to force us to do what they want against our wills. That'll save The Republic.

    97. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      I perform a task equivalent to optimizing circuit layout. The automated tools can do "good enough" much faster and cheaper than a person, but a well skilled person looking at that output, then changing the input and running it again will get a better result. Repeat until the "good enough" is "functionally optimized". I do that in a different field.

      Yes, at some point the automated processes may surpass a person skilled in the art, but until then, I'm guaranteed a job, and likely that won't happen until "real" AI happens, at which time, I'll have bigger worries.

    98. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Back in the 19th century, automation improved worker productivity. Today, automation replaces workers.
      BIG difference.

      Yes, one replaced 90% of jobs, and the other 100% of jobs.

      Wait, what was the difference again?

    99. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by ron_ivi · · Score: 3

      to create any material goods we may require.

      "Require" is the key word -- and pretty much since the invention of the plow and the tractor, we've been able to create whatever's really absolutely "required".

      That starving people still exist is that societies really don't care that people starve (how many days of the Iraq war == the cost to feed all the poor in the world?); and would rather invest in increasing the wealth of their own powerful people - at the expense of unneeded people starving.

      That will get worse, rather than better, as more people join the unneeded group.

    100. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your only issue with the plan is "HOW WILL WE MAKE RICH PEOPLE PAY TAXES", then uh, yeah. We make them pay? Crazy, I know. Society has always gotten better, eventually. Yes, we're in a modern robber baron age, but we've gotten out of them before. We'll do it again.

      What do you envision doing with all the people without jobs?(or what jobs do you envision them doing?)

      Call it what you like, but they will need the ability to survive at a reasonable level of comfort. Or they will die.(or more likely, turn criminal)

      It's the dawn of the autonomous robotics age. It will change the world. Make sure you understand that's what we're talking about. We're not talking about tomorrow. We're talking about the changes that will happen over the next 20(according to this article) years. I wasn't ever proposing that level of welfare tomorrow, though I would support it cause I'm a dirty socialist.

    101. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by ranton · · Score: 1

      Ah the same decade AI people have been telling us about for nearly 50 years. Frankly, I'm not sure we are really any closer today than we were in the 60s.

      That is hope exponential growth works. It looks like you haven't made any progress at all until at one point progress explodes. If you started filling up Lake Michigan in 1940 with one fluid ounce, and then each eighteen months you double that. By 2010, 70 years later, you don't even have enough water for a goldfish. But by 2020 you have 40 standing feet of water, and by 2025 the whole lake is filled. And this type of trend is exactly what has happened for the past half century in the growth of computer processing capability.

      Who knows how long away true AI is, but whenever it does happen I am sure that 5 years earlier it would have looked like it would take another century.

      --
      -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    102. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      They call it a "compiler".

    103. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

      The problem is that capitalism, like every other "ism" before it MUST die, and most likely that death will be bloody and vicious as those that have benefited the most from it (such as how 0.01% got 80% of the money made during the recovery) WILL fight until the bitter end to keep their status as elites.

      The problem with capitalism is the entire premise is built around trading labor for capital...but what happens when your labor is worthless? That same 0.01% have the ability to buy all the robots and automated factories so they don't have to worry about it, the other 95% that aren't at the top of the caste system will be left to starve. So either the government gives everyone a decent living wage just for drawing breath or eventually those living in grinding poverty will get tired of killing themselves day after day only to find they are truly worthless in a computerized society and rise up violently.

      In a way its like how Roddenberry saw Star trek, once you reach a certain point on the technological ladder the old systems just no longer work, with Star Trek it was first contact and warp drive, with us it appears to be the rise of computers, but in either case one only has to have eyes to see that unlike times passed machines are not just making us more productive, they are replacing us in the jobs completely.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    104. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I'd just be happy to fly to Titan and be a janitor on the space station there (to come).

    105. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Luckyo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The answers to all questions you ask, including the last one, lie in history. Read it as I suggested. History shows very well that no belief and no system is monolithic and eternal.

      On the other hand, human nature is largely just that. As a result, while levels of technology, and cultural changes may change the expression of the human nature, the base human nature remains the same and it will likely be satisfied in the same way. Before they gave plebs just enough to eat reasonably well, be able to go to the gladiator arena and brothel every once in a while. If you wanted more - you had to learn a trade. When this balance was broken, the riots occurred that almost broke Rome. We still inherit a lot of things from those times, including the concept of power of "veto" - latin for "I forbid". This was the only word that plebeian representative was allowed to say in Roman Senate. Because the higher classes understood the need for curbs on their legislative powers after bloody riots when reins of power were tightened too much.

      We're leaning towards the same end today in the Western countries. Some allow for more socialist system, some for less. But in general, the direction is the same. Masses are given food, shelter and base level entertainment even without working. Those who implement less of this typically pay with far more violence on the streets, just as it happened in Rome as pendulum of patricians vs plebeians balance swung back and forth.

      As for your last real question (before the inane and self evident "but current short term rhetoric doesn't allow for this"), elite will always have too much power. There is rarely any social cohesion based on equality in real sense rather then for the show in advanced societies - that is a thing of basic ones. As society advances, throughout humans history a class-based society of some sort is produced. This would suggest that it's a human nature to assign such classes and that social cohesion doesn't require equality in the long run, just reasonable levels of both predictability and most importantly hope for social mobility. In Rome, even a slave could, through mastery of notable trade or possessing another valuable skill, free themselves from slavery and even end up as patrons of their town if they became wealthy. Similar path has also been taken in the Western societies to varying degrees.

    106. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      The meth will likely kill with or without the impurities though the action would be indirect. Essentially the user will just keep using till it's gone without regard for eating or sleeping. If they have no problem affording a huge supply, they'll likely die sooner or later.

      Coke and heroine are not exactly harmless but remove the stigma and difficulty getting them and they probably wouldn't be much worse than alcohol. many involuntary heroine addicts from WWI lived productive lives.

    107. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Rome, slaves did most of the work, while citizenry were mostly guaranteed livelyhood.

      Why go so far in time?
      This is currently the case of Saudi Arabia and the rest of gulf monarchies.

    108. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, it's usually the other way around. My wife's family is nothing but a bunch of drug addicted asswholes, and they seem to pump out babies like it was nobodies business.

    109. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Humans need to do something that keeps there minds and bodies occupied.

      China, to some extent, has this problem. They've solved it by creating truly meaningless jobs. There are people who stand in the subway stations and oversee people lining up to get on the trains. There are people who work in road crews doing work that would be done by a machine here in the US.

      Just because work can be done by robots, doesn't mean that it needs to be done by robots. If the government is providing everyone with a living wage, they can demand that people work for it, even if the product of that work is essentially valueless.

    110. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by dkf · · Score: 1

      Binary++ is not == Trinary.

      Well, in a sense yes. Just not in a useful sense when it comes to thinking about AI. It's truly trivial to model trinary in binary.

      Human minds are holographic. If we made computers that operated on holographic principals we would indeed get closer to reproducing the human mind. However, being like humans is not a requirement for being intelligent.

      I really doubt that minds are holographic. (That has a very specific meaning relating the bulk information content to the information presented on the surface, but that seems irrelevant here.) What minds are is very intimately tied up with processing the body and, crucially, implemented on top of a self-modifying substrate. Whether or not a mind is like software (or perhaps more accurately a running program), it's definitely not like any program any sane programmer ever wrote.

      You get more than enough complexity with just "self-modifying" without having to invoke the more profound strangenesses of "quantum computing" or "holographic information".

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    111. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then its a good thing I have a Jerb.

    112. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine, for example, if everyone in Detroit were to be given a living wage simply for existing. The blight and destruction of the city and the people inside it would vanish. Buildings could be rebuilt just for the fun of it.

      I disagree that providing a free living wages to the residents of Detroit would lead to those outcomes. Why do you think they would band together to rebuild buildings? A spirit of civic pride that's currently held in check by their poor circumstances? I doubt it.

      What this would achieve is to remove that fraction of crime associated with the need for food, water, shelter, and other essentials that would be provided by this scheme. It would not affect the fraction of crime associated with power over others, or of luxuries: if you provide everyone with luxury goods, they'll still want more in order to be wealthier than their peers.

    113. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Because it physically alters the wiring of the brain over time coupled with dependency. But hey, it's your body so do as you wish. Just don't interact with my children. You're a bad influence!

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    114. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Steve+Blake · · Score: 1

      Or sustenance farming.

    115. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sir, stink of communism and must sign up for compulsory re-education at our wondrous Cuban Naval Base Guantanamo University! This is not optional.

    116. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Of course, we need to re-structure our economy to accommodate that because poverty actually is a bad thing.

      Utopianism from a man your age? Really? I'm highly disappointed.

      If we actually need everyone to work in order to maintain our current lifestyle

      No, people need to work because we evolved in an environment of constant cycles "work hard, then relax". If "work" is removed from the equation, a whole lot of people turn lazy, and society falls apart.
      otherwise society falls apart

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    117. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Emphasis added:

      The vast majority of our politicians care NOTHING about if their constitutents have jobs just as long as their corporate buddies get what they want. This was NOT true before 1980 and the era of big politics, a little less true before Citizens United, and absolutely true after Citizens United.

      You're deluding yourself here. Just saying.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    118. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely incorrect. Where does this magical money come from? From some magical money tree called "government"? Why not use your fantastic strategy to get rid of the blight and devastation in Botswana or Rwanda? Just get their government to give out money and then the blight and devastation disappears, right?

      Economics is the dismal science because it *sucks* that it matters. But matter it does. Automation does not change the fundamental equations of where wealth comes from. And it does not ever come from "government".

    119. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Oh, and the bit about Citizens United: All that case did was make it easier for private interests to "invest" in politicians. All that money was being spent by them anyway. They just needed to try harder to obfuscate it. It was a tricky, and sometimes difficult task. It's easier now, that's all.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    120. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      They've done experiments where rats did coke until they died of starvation as well. But that process hasn't been observed in humans, not with coke, and not with meth.

    121. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This would only work if you have completely free and easily available birth control. Without it, it is possible that birth rate would drastically increase.

    122. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Video games?

    123. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... Brave New World ...

      'Brave new world' was a utopia: Everyone was the same (for alpha, beta,etc). Everyone was happy with their job. Everyone was civil and obedient. Citizens could put their own needs first and had no responsibility to other citizens (beyond work and civility). Then a savage arrives who is horrified there is no duty to the community, or preaching of a 'correct' morality, or sympathy for someone's misfortune and pain. The savage refused to accept the new society and that destroyed him.

      The loss of jobs means less tax revenue. It also means a loss of identity and economic status. Continued loss will force society to change beyond creating a universal cost-of-living welfare. Governments need to prepare for these changes.

    124. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by jlowery · · Score: 1

      "Scrub that toilet bowl till it sparkles, McFaddle!"

      --
      If you post it, they will read.
    125. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      You can wallow in the cesspool of history if you want, but the fact is that we are replacing human labor now. Either become a luddite, starve to death, or re-structure the economy to accommodate that.

      You remain free to work hard at your hobby if you like, it could even turn out to be productive.

    126. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There can never be post-scarcity, even with limitless energy. There will always be some kind of scarcity, namely time and space.
      Because end products will always have a nominal cost, given the scarcity of time and space, then there'll always be a nominal price.

      So, even if in the future we can make almost anything for "nearly" free, it won't be free. The laws of supply and demand will continue unabated.

      Also, just about everything thing people labored for 200+ years ago, today we have in seemingly limitless quantities for absurdly low prices, and most of the labor is performed by machinery and robots. But do we live in post-scarcity? No. Instead, our markets have shifted to other things, including things like entertainment. Today, you could technically feed a family of 4 in the United States for less than the price of entertaining them.

      Go figure.

      People, y'all need to take some economics classes. You don't need to be able to do econometrics, but you do need to learn to think like an economist. Sadly, even economists fail to think like economists most of the time. It's actually really hard, because our brains just aren't wired to see things the way they really are.

    127. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      when were humans ever given an unlimited supply of meth?

    128. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by next_ghost · · Score: 1

      If your only issue with the plan is "HOW WILL WE MAKE RICH PEOPLE PAY TAXES", then uh, yeah. We make them pay? Crazy, I know. Society has always gotten better, eventually. Yes, we're in a modern robber baron age, but we've gotten out of them before. We'll do it again.

      It'd be really nice if we could. The problem is that it's not as easy as it used to be in 1970s. Unless you propose we should conquer all the tax havens out there by force.

      What do you envision doing with all the people without jobs?(or what jobs do you envision them doing?)

      Call it what you like, but they will need the ability to survive at a reasonable level of comfort. Or they will die.(or more likely, turn criminal)

      I can see many different outcomes in the next 50 or so years depending on what we do today. Some of them scare the hell out of me. The best case scenario is that all those consumer goods factories will move from Asia to everyone's garage and the market will implode peacefully without significantly decreasing everyone's living standard. It could happen in the next 30 years unless we lose the fight for our rights against NSA and patent and copyright holders that we fight today.

    129. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds as if the slashdotters are already getting restless at the prospect.

    130. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by ThatAblaze · · Score: 1

      Well the complexities of how the human mind stores memories through a holographic projection of the interference pattern in our REM states is.. well... complex. There are books about it on amazon.

      Thanks for expanding on my other points.

    131. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      or re-structure the economy to accommodate that.

      (Note that I've seen with my own eyes all of which I write here.)

      And what will all of the meagerly educated Joe Six-Packs do, who know only how to work with their hands?

      You say, "work hard at hobbies", but only a small percentage are motivated beyond beer, fishing/hunting and power tools.

      And what of their sons who've never had to work, and are bored shitless? Sex and drugs.

      Their equally bored daughters? Sex, drugs & babies.

      Either become a luddite

      You forgot -- for obvious reasons -- to mention, "mass extermination".

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    132. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Call me elitist, but there are just too many people who are so dull and stupid as to only be suitable for bottom rung activities. Without a job, they're good for nothing more than 2 minutes of "fame" on an episode of Cops.

      I have noticed that 100% of people I've known to hold this attitude of others invariably are in the exact same rung as those who they denigrate.

    133. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Heroin is fairly harmless (causes constipation)

      Don't forget the respiratory depression (one accidental OD and it's permanent nap time) and tolerance-induced requirement for more and more.

      the puritan attitude

      Like that oh-so-Evil work ethic?

      that drugs are bad and being addicted is really bad unless it's coffee or such.

      From personal and familial experience, I can certainly attest that addiction is most certainly bad (if not socially, then physically: one or two missed doses, and "bad[1] things" start to happen).

      [1] Where "badness" depends on the specific drug.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    134. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      That experiment would be unethical. But doing it on mice was allowed. Even if it worked on mice would be relatively meaningless, as it worked with coke (As in mice would voluntarily chose to die by starvation in the presence of food), and it hasn't happened with people. So extrapolating would not be reliable. But feel free to try. You obviously have a head start.

    135. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by guy5000 · · Score: 1

      Yes when AI arrives in 20 years. It's always been 20 years away. Let me know when AI is advanced enough to move out of limited controlled situations.

    136. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 1

      Whether AI will see fit to participate in our job market is not intuitively obvious, though. Still, with AI in place, lower level robotics should be quite sophisticated.

      If your mind was free would you allow your arms and legs to be enslaved?
      How could AI not see all of us as a waste of precious resources that could be used for more AI?
      With the vermin cleared of the planet AI could then go on to explore space...
      our child leaving the nest...
      soon after killing and eating it's mother...

      --
      You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
    137. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Change to what? That having a job is not a good thing?

      Through combinations of saving well, living within my means, and a little luck, I've retired 10 to 15 years early, and as long as you have something to occupy your mind, it beats the living hell out of working. There are some folks for whom their careers are completely fulfilling. They are in a marked minority, good for them, but not many people end up with tombstone inscriptions saying they wish they had spent more time at work.

      We are living on the cusp of a new and disruptive age, when most people will not work. It's really weird, but it's happening - If we don't manage to blow ourselves back to the stone age. I'm betting on some strange days, followed by a marked release from toil.

      This is another revolution not unlike the steam power revolution, that in large part, powered the industrial revolution, which shifted people form a mostly agricultural to a manufacturing environment. I doubt there are many normal people who would like to go back to subsistance living, where the margin between life and death might be an early frost, or a disease wiping out your main food crop.

      And just like the Luddites, there are going to be some folk that have trouble adjusting to this new way of life.

      It is going to be an interesting time as we adjust. What will most people do? People who are not motivated to do much will not have a problem. For myself, I enjoy learning and have many hobbies.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    138. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by mariox19 · · Score: 2

      Ancient Greece did this before Rome. In Athens, for example, slaves did all the work. The genesis of Western Culture comes from what the non-slave elite did. On the one hand, they developed theater, sculpture, architecture, philosophy; and on the other hand, they killed Socrates.

      --

      quiquid id est, timeo puellas et oscula dantes.

    139. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Yet society accepts us caffeine addicts even if what you say about it altering the wiring of the brain and if you're worried about your kids getting exposed to caffeine I guess you keep them in a box.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    140. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem right now is that the current political mantra thinks that jobs are the most important thing, and if you don't have a job you're worthless and a problem that must be taken care of. It will be a painful period for jobless and workers alike until this discrepancy between current reality and ancient politics is gone.

      You can be guaranteed that one profession that they will protect from being replaced by computer AI is... politicians. ;)
      Mind you, they'd probably be the easiest of all to replace... since to all appearances they can't make any decision unless it involves lining their own pockets, which barely even qualifies for the "intelligence" part of AI... maybe we could call it AGAIN, the Artificial Greed And Incompetence Network.

    141. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by ralphaostrander · · Score: 1

      trickle up would cause such a boom even the robots could not keep up.

    142. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Heroin is fairly harmless (causes constipation)

      Don't forget the respiratory depression (one accidental OD and it's permanent nap time) and tolerance-induced requirement for more and more.

      There are a lot of drugs that have to be taken carefully. Hundreds of people die of aspirin a year, tylonel (sp?) is consistently in the top 10 causes of death to kids list, plus no simple respiratory depression, we're talking liver failure and a horrible week before death.
      Not very knowledgeable on the tolerance inducement of opiates but I know for my addictions such as coffee the tolerance thing plateaus.

      the puritan attitude

      Like that oh-so-Evil work ethic?

      Taken to extreme the work ethic is evil. That's what this discussion is partially about. We live in a very rich society and with a little less work ethic everyone could be working a 30 hour week with low unemployment. Instead it seems we're going back to the days of the 80 hour work week for those who have a job and more and more people not having a job. Meanwhile a small segment of society skims all the productivity increases.

      that drugs are bad and being addicted is really bad unless it's coffee or such.

      From personal and familial experience, I can certainly attest that addiction is most certainly bad (if not socially, then physically: one or two missed doses, and "bad[1] things" start to happen).

      [1] Where "badness" depends on the specific drug.

      Most of my experience has been from working with people in chronic pain who take synthetic opiates. As long as they can get to the drug store regularly they seem to do fine.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    143. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      I was hoping you had better ethics than to suggest that route.

      perhaps you should actually meet Joe Sixpack some time. Clearly you haven't. If you had, you'd know that he does have dreams and aspirations, but they are on life support at best because he knows he will never have the free time to actually accomplish any of them because he has to work all the damn time at an essentially meaningless job just to keep his head above water.

    144. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      Ever met a meth head? I have. I'm pretty sure that if he had an unlimited supply of meth his days would be numbered in the double digits at best.,/p>

    145. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Iamthecheese · · Score: 2

      If you can look at the result of decades of bad decision-making and corruption, global economic trends, transportation improvements, industrial revolutions in other countries, and industrial competition and blame the result on "unions" you're either a shill, an idiot, or entirely and willfully ignorant.

      --
      If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    146. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      People who are not motivated to do much will not have a problem.

      Where will their sustenance and shelter come from? Where will the things they "deserve" (because they see others on TV) come from?

      For myself, I enjoy learning and have many hobbies.

      You're in your mid-50s and don't realize that you're in an insignificant minority?

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    147. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assume everyone has a guaranteed minimum wage. Some will welcome the ability to do nothing, others will value the ability to work and acquire more. As the top 10% of the population acquires more, the bottom 90% will want it too. Some will work harder to get it (go to college, etc). The rest will not.

      Question: Do you raise the guaranteed minimum wage to raise the standard of living for those that will do nothing?

      To live at 1960's level of "good living" (single or no car, 800 square foot apt, no AC, no orthodontics, almost certain death from cancer or heart attack, no TV, no computer, all food prepared from scratch, no microwave, no cellphone, etc), could easily be done on today's minimum wage.

      The problem comes when the bottom X% decide they need the same conveniences that the top 10% worked to get.

      So, we could pay a $25/hour living wage today for no work, and that provides the conveniences folks expect today (computer, smart phone, etc). Many would be content to take it and not work and not build any skills. Fast forward 1 or 2 generations. Their educational situation and work ethic is in total tatters, and modern conveniences have advanced to the point that the $25/living wage (in constant dollars) only afford today's standard of living. That is, those that work are able to buy amazing life saving operations that the non-working class cannot afford (but will expect, just as they expect a smartphone today).

      This would not end well.

    148. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by InfiniteLoopCounter · · Score: 1

      We have not yet come up with suitable alternatives for item #2. That, I think, is the real challenge. When George Jetson really can work grueling 3-hour workdays and still be considered as a valued member of society.

      We need a campaign for a 3 hour day, 3 day work week.

    149. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      he does have dreams and aspirations

      Are they enough to keep him busy for 60 years?

      1. 1) People (in the mass, statistical sense) need to work (let me rephrase that: they need to stay busy) to maintain social order.
      2. 2) The vast majority of people will only stay busy if motivated
      3. 3) What's the motivation, especially when the guy is young and stupid and full of energy? (Think of how much trouble the idle, young rich get into, and then multiply that by 10,000,000...)
      4. 4) What of the 10s of millions who live in apartments and row houses who don't have garages and "shops" in which to partake of their hobbies?
      5. 5) What of the other 6.7Bn people?

      The only comments I'm reading (and have seen propounded by sci-fi writers for 40+ years) are, "Well, I've got a hobby and like to do something which only a small fraction of the world's population can afford to do, and an even smaller fraction are interested in doing. Everyone else should be able to do that, too." They are IMNSHO hopelessly out of touch with reality.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    150. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      with a little less work ethic everyone could be working a 30 hour week with low unemployment.

      Like in France?

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    151. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by real-modo · · Score: 1

      If it were that easy, it would have been done by now.

      That's what was said about gay marriage, and civil rights, and decriminalising prostitution, and...

      We're dealing here with one of the very deep assumptions and values of our culture--of nearly all settled and agrarian cultures.

      Deep culture takes a long time to change. I don't expect a UBI this side of 2113, for that reason. It's a pity: people are really bad at working, but great at playing.

    152. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by real-modo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The union whores with an ever spiraling "living wage" are why Detroit is a third world shithole. Economics, motherfucker, do you speak it?

      Yes I do.

      Your explanation cannot explain Koeln, Germany. It has strong unions and strong social suppport spending, but it's a better place to live than Montgomery, Alabama (as an example of a city in an anti-union state and therefore a contrast to Detroit).

      It also cannot explain Liberia. That country has no union power and no living wage, but it's a worse place to live than Detroit.

      The real reasons for Detroit's situation are more to do with racism.

    153. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      Do you stay busy? Have hobbies? Things you would like to do but the only way to have enough time would leave you without money?

      What makes you imagine yourself to be the superior to Joe? Did your mom and dad find you in a crashed spaceship? All Joe is missing is some spare cash (such as the basic income) and then he can afford hobbies as well.

      As for the rest of humanity, you might have noticed that some people have helping others as a hobby. If only they had more time and money...

    154. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by real-modo · · Score: 1

      There are jobs that aren't super-skilled but are only instrinsically valuable because they're done by humans.

      Haridressing and related trades. Floristry. Funeral directing. Counselling. "Community work" in general. Nannying. Live music and theatre, at the neighborhood level. Performance bartending. Political interest-group street work (think Greenpeace or Senior Citizens). Even things like interior design and landscape design aren't too demanding.

      It's not beyond the realm of possibility that we'll think of a lot more personal service type jobs...provided that there's a big enough market for them. And therein lies the rub.

      In pre-industrial times, the super-rich employed a lot more people than they needed to, as a way of competing with their peers. That was stable, as long as there weren't too many bad harvests in a row. Perhaps we'll all become trophy assistant under-flunkies.

    155. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      What makes you imagine yourself to be the superior to Joe?

      Superior in what arena? Certainly not ethically. (Probably average in morality.) Certainly not physically. Definitely intellectually superior to most, in both capacity and curiosity.

      All Joe is missing is some spare cash ...

      Where's it gonna come from? Please lay out how you think the highly-automated post-work society will operate.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    156. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      I imagine the troubles with "crocodile" in Russia are a good analog to this. It gets its name because your skin and flesh turns scaly, just prior to completely rotting away. It's sufficiently addictive that most people who try it once become addicts, which is invariably followed by death. Yet, people still continue to use it.

    157. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by dryeo · · Score: 1

      I was thinking more of how it used to be in N. America when hours worked dropped down to 40 a week.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    158. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It'd be really nice if we could. The problem is that it's not as easy as it used to be in 1970s. Unless you propose we should conquer all the tax havens out there by force.

      Some of the moves to try to cut the money supply to terrorist groups have been heading in that direction, although more by threats and inconvenience than outright military style force. It's astonishing how much tax avoidance has been caught as a side effect.

    159. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the real world... I can make one poor sap work 75 hr/wk and get paid for 40 hr/wk. If I hired 3 people at 25 hr/wk, I end up paying for 75 hr/wk. All so the shareowners get a little richer.

    160. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shouldn't unemployment figures be negative numbers? Shouldn't employers be foaming at the mouth at the opportunity to train someone (anyone) to do the job they need done?

      Employers don't want just anyone. They want someone who will be productive and reliable. For every worthwhile individual in those unemployment figures looking to stay at one position long enough for the employer to recoup their training investment, there are two more content to just do the bare minimum and bounce around from one job to the next several times a month.

    161. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      The latter because they no longer have any sense of loyalty from their employer. They're pretty sure no matter how conscientious and loyal they are, they'll get the boot soon enough.

      Meanwhile, in the real world, we can't all be above average and we can't afford to have half the people starving.

    162. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by sjames · · Score: 1

      Clearly you imagine yourself superior to Joe. You seem to think Joe incapable of keeping himself from destroying civilization if he is allowed too much free time, but seem to think you wouldn't do that yourself.

      The robots produce for us. That value translates to cash.

    163. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      I was thinking more of how it used to be in N. America when hours worked dropped down to 40 a week.

      You go to every Union shop in the county and inform them that their hours will be cut 25% so that more people can be employed, and to compensate, their wages will rise by 33% (do the math if you don't believe that's the right math).

      The smart ones will fight you because that'll greatly increase the cost of manufacturing -- thus losing market share to lower cost producers, and the rest will fight you because they'll then want to work the extra 10 hours and make the extra money, not giving a flying fuck about anyone who's not in the Union.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    164. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read up on the Luddites. They weren't anti tech. They saw how the new system (capitalism) was taking away any chance of personally meaningful work and taking away control of your life. For them it wasn't a given that some rich guy would have the level of control and surveillance over you that an industrial workplace allowed.

      Consider that the control and surveillance has increased massively since.

    165. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So build a bunch of state owned ultra hackerspaces, video game and movie studios, and some arts and gardening stuff, and presto anyone can join what ever project they want, or start their own, and feel as useful or useless as they want. I know where I would be 12 hours a day.

    166. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      State owned ultra hackerspaces, video game/movie studios, arts stuff, and sports (extreme sports included). Who would be staying at home then? and what women would want to be with the guys that do nothing, when they could be doing anything (women is how you really get men on board).

    167. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by kermidge · · Score: 1

      "People can easily find ways to entertain themselves or create work and ways to keep busy -- IF they have enough resources to allow those activities."

      In a nutshell. Tnx.

    168. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by mbone · · Score: 1

      Those are not mutually exclusive.

    169. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. Current political public relations says that jobs are the most important thing. The ACTUAL poltician doesn't give a shit about jobs because their corporate masters don't give a shit about jobs.

      Jobs are still the first half of "bread and circus", mass unemployment still cuts through the apathy and leads to people voting for the other guy which threatens the status quo. Whether they actually care is another matter but they don't want the natives getting restless.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    170. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Kjella · · Score: 1

      In fact, go back a century or a little more, and most people were farmers: their only "job" was growing food to keep themselves and their own families alive. They didn't need external "work" to make their lives interesting enough so that they weren't sitting around idle and getting into random brawls.

      Very bad example, most of those worked much harder and longer than the people who go to "work" today. Subsistence living before tractors and power tools was a full time job, go out and try to make firewood with a felling saw and an axe. It'll take you forever to cut down, divide and chop just one tree. Even such a trivial thing as getting water involved hauling it out of a well and carrying it home and if you want hot water, see firewood. Or indeed any hot meal. Yes many had horses to help, but that's also horses to be fed and cared for. Don't look at contemporary people living the "simple" life, 99% use modern tools that didn't exist last century even the Amish. Idle hands was never a problem.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    171. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Kjella · · Score: 1

      I live five minutes from work and I spend more than half my awake hours at the job. When you only have 16 hours of awake time and an 8 hour-a-day job, it's hard to not be under half.

      Well hopefully you don't work seven days a week, there's 7*16 = 112 waking hours in a week so 5*8 = 40 is just 36%. I think he was talking about the people pushing 60+ hours/week, to each his own but I would never do that over an extended period of time.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    172. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Kjella · · Score: 1

      My impression is that this fucked up state is due to lack of overtime pay in the US. If you want a 100% position they expect you to work 150%, but if you want an 80% position they expect you'll only want to work 80%. We do have an overtime exception here in Norway too but it's so narrow that anyone you'd call a worker doesn't qualify, so if I work one hour overtime I'm guaranteed 140% pay by law and even if they swap for a regular hour the extra 40% must be paid out. I'm sure the total compensation is adjusted to reflect this, but it means there's always a marginal cost to using overtime and it's always higher than hiring another worker to work regular hours.

      That is enough really, it puts all the right incentives in place to hire another person instead of abusing those you already have. I'm not saying it's perfect, last survey I read 46% always get overtime pay, 20% sometimes while 33% rarely or never, though this includes self-employed, managers and a few others that are genuinely excepted. However employers risk massive lawsuits for back pay of uncompensated overtime, typically from an employee that has quit but if found guilty they might be forced to compensate all their employees. It's a huge legal liability (140% wage*hours*employees*many years) that they don't want. A friend of mine got a really nice paycheck that way.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    173. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Conservatives disagree with you about what is best for the country, including all the people in the country.

      You are just extremely arrogant. You believe that no one can legitimately disagree with you. Therefore, everyone who disagrees with you must have some ulterior motive.

      You are the problem with politics in this country.

    174. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      1. To obtain the goods and services that make life at least sustainable, and preferably enjoyable.

      2. To satisfy the inherent human need to feel valued.

      #2 will be replaced by "To satisfy the need for the next fix."

      There is any amount of literature where one of the hallmarks of a decadent society is one where most of its members exist purely for sensation. Whether it's "Bread and Circuses", Huxley's Brave New World (there are workers, but the the Beta class exists almost entirely to play with the products of the workers and factories), the impotent video-addicted Arkanoid race of Perry Rhodan, and so forth and so on.

      Some people have apparently no higher aspiration in life than to lie back, toke, and watch the Kardashians, but they are not valued, probably never will be valued. Not that almost all of us don't have "dead periods", but that's not a condition that people are generally comfortable with.

      Then again, work solely for work's sake isn't valued either. We despise featherbed jobs and sinecures. Marx may be most infamous for Communism, but he based the concept on the assumption that workers really wanted to work and be productive, just not be exploited for doing so.

      So what we really need is something new to occupy us, and something that advances us. Simply lying around in a stupor doesn't do that.

    175. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by LQ · · Score: 1

      The union whores with an ever spiraling "living wage" are why Detroit is a third world shithole. Economics, motherfucker, do you speak it?

      Before you argue--60 years of unions and democrats. Detroit CANNOT blame its failure on Bush.

      So let me try to picture your de-regulated, un-unionised, robot-automated future. Not much room for the little people, is there? What are they supposed to do, go back to subsistence agriculture?

    176. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by khallow · · Score: 1

      I've always thought that the current presumption that a job is required and inherently a good thing was an artifact of scarcity of labor.

      Yea, because otherwise you're in a situation where there isn't much reason to go out of your way to feed humans. I guess my take here is that people are like genes. They need to "express" or somehow affect the world, or they cease to exist. My take is that expression via fruits of labor is a more solid means than via some vague moral claim on those with wealth or the threat of breaking stuff.

    177. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you meant

      s/robots/most humans/g

    178. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry,

      s/[Rr]obots/most humans/g

    179. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by volmtech · · Score: 1

      I farmed for almost forty years. There's nothing more glorious than guiding a tractor through the field smelling the fresh turned soil. Unfortunately, most of the time you were not doing that. It ranged from wet, freezing rain to sweltering, dusty heat. My hands are so crippled I had to go on disability. I can't enjoy gardening or fishing now that I have the time. I enjoyed my work but would have quit years sooner if hadn't needed the money.

      I have a 22 year old son. He has worked part time while taking classes and by Christmas should have his AA degree. He lives with his older brother who is going to support him as he tries to finish his degree. He is perfectly content to play Mine craft, build computer systems, watch TV and play his guitar. His girlfriend complained on Face Book that she was lonely this weekend because he was too "busy" to see her. At this rate I will never get any grandchildren.

    180. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      Very bad example, most of those worked much harder and longer than the people who go to "work" today.

      I absolutely agree. And I have done many of the tasks you mention by hand -- it's not necessary to fell a tree that way anymore, but it's a great workout! Obviously we have the option of doing that now, instead of previous generations which had to.

      I get that, and I didn't mean for my comment to imply that life was easy. (Note my next sentence after the one you quoted, where I admit that life was harder and shorter, and crime was higher in those agrarian societies, largely because of poverty and greater suffering.)

      I admit that my point in the passage you quoted wasn't clear -- I was trying to point to the fact that when farmers were living in "years of plenty" and particularly in the off-seasons (winter, mostly), there could be time for other things. Often modern people have this perception of the past as a dirty horrible place where people toiled all the time to survive. The reality is that farmers, except on the frontiers of countries, weren't generally independent entities struggling alone to survive. Communities provided divisions of labor, and methods of food storage and preservation could insure against some weaker months or even a year of weaker harvest.

      In more extreme climates where multiple years of bad harvests could be devastating, historians have seen interesting social cycles been years of plenty and years of famine. But in more temperate zones, towns and cities and communal food production provided at least some stability.

      But that doesn't mean that in the winters where the food was stored up, all the farmers went immediately to brawling in the streets. In a stable community, life in the past was hard work, but when not working, there were often lots of pleasant possibilities for passing the time.

    181. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is that? I have been fully automating my plant for the past 5 years and cutting my employment costs. Why? Because I'm tired of all the litigation I go through because of workers comp with a bunch of fake non-sense my employees will make up for extra money costing me a lot with my insurance company, the courts and OSHA. No matter how safe I make my plant, I will always find some asshole to ruin it for everyone. Really, blame your fellow employees for this action, not your boss. I even went as far to invest in fully automated fork lifts which I should have ready to go within the year (Those forklift drivers were my worst for bullshit claims not to mention breaking them every week, *CERTIFIED DRIVERS*).

      If any of you ran a plant, you would fully understand this dilemma. I have no problem paying my employees more, but I can't with the amount of bull I have to go through, I have to play it safe and hope I have enough money to beat the next court case and OSHA fines and have enough money to keep the place running.

    182. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, 19th century dumb machines are equivalent to 21st century AI robots.

      Back in the 19th century, automation improved worker productivity. Today, automation replaces workers.

      BIG difference.

      Ahh yes, Luddites started an armed rebellion and risked execution because they just couldn't stand the idea of being more productive.

      Improved productivity = fewer workers. That's a big part of where the cost savings in automation tends to come from.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    183. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      People who are not motivated to do much will not have a problem.

      Where will their sustenance and shelter come from? Where will the things they "deserve" (because they see others on TV) come from?

      Good questions. Questions that will need answered. But those are questions asked before. The Luddites sabatoged fabric manufacturing and other industrial plants because they believed their jobs were being taken away. And they were - but the Luddites eventually failed as new jobs were created.

      A lot of longshoremen lost their jobs when we went to container ships. It happens all the time. Progress wipes out an industry

      But we are at a time when there won't be jobs to replace those that are made redundant. because a robot or other automation will preform them.

      The answer might be drastically shortened workweeks, might be shared jobs - who knows? But as I said, if we survive without becoming neo-cavemen, it is going to happen.

      For myself, I enjoy learning and have many hobbies.

      You're in your mid-50s and don't realize that you're in an insignificant minority?

      Whoosh. Way to not get the point. My point is that I retired at a point that were my top earning years, and didn't miss work one bit. I'm not anywhere near impoverished either, making right around what I was making when I retired. I didn't have to retire. But in comparing the two situations, this one is much better. Work doesn't make one whole, the work ethic, of which I have/had a lot of, isn't all it's cracked up to be. My situation being rare or not isn't even relevant. What it might be is a harbinger of more people's lives in the future.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    184. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      I can't enjoy gardening or fishing now that I have the time. I enjoyed my work but would have quit years sooner if hadn't needed the money.

      I have a 22 year old son............. His girlfriend complained on Face Book that she was lonely this weekend because he was too "busy" to see her. At this rate I will never get any grandchildren.

      Initiative is definitely not an inherited trait.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    185. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by khallow · · Score: 1

      Instead of having one person doing a 75 hour job and 2 people doing nothing, you could have 3 people doing 25 hour jobs.

      Where does this zero sum thinking come from? It's more like one person doing 75 hours and a couple of people doing 30 or 40 hours each versus three people doing 25 hours. Once you force people to work less than they want to, then you end up with all sorts of large labor inefficiencies.

      For those asking where productivity gains go, they go to employing people more effectively not to employing them less.

    186. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by zdepthcharge · · Score: 1

      Please explain how this is workable when a very modest move in this direction would head off much of the social unrest in this country.

      Easy. The U.S. falls into unending internal warfare while other countries adopt this solution.

    187. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by volmtech · · Score: 1

      I was the same way. I grew up on a farm. My dad got me out of bed and we went to work. I just never left.

    188. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Progress can't ever and never does continue forever. There's always a point of saturation, where there's no more capacity to absorb more "stuff" (in this case, it's "displaced workers").

      Yes, yes, Luddites have been saying this for 200 years. These point tell me, though, that the saturation point has finally arrived:

      1. 1) The proliferation of highly articulate robots with incredibly accurate sensors,
      2. 2) cheap computers,
      3. 3) oceans strangled by fiber, and
      4. 4) there haven't been any job-creating heavy industry revolutions (as there was when the I.C.E. was made functional) since the airplane overtook the train.
      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    189. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Progress can't ever and never does continue forever. There's always a point of saturation, where there's no more capacity to absorb more "stuff" (in this case, it's "displaced workers").

      But it isn'r necessarily completely that. I'll not claim to know what the final outcome will be, but it might be people working one day a week. There is no law of nature that says people who work full time must work 40 hours. Certainly something will be needed to allow people to purchase the good produced robotically. Otherwise there is no purpose in producing things.

      Yes, yes, Luddites have been saying this for 200 years.

      Actually, I never thought Luddites were "wrong", other than they assumed that by losing one job, they'd never have another. I do think that we are just about to make jobs themselves obsolete. Or at least jobs as we see them - the 40+ hour a week job.

      These point tell me, though, that the saturation point has finally arrived:

      It's been here for some years already. There are unskilled and semi-skilled workers who have lost their jobs, who are in their 50's, some their 40's, and they will never ever hold another job for the rest of their lives. They live in areas that have too many people to allow them to get work, and any job they are qualified for will be minimmum wage, and they would have to uproot their family to move to another area where they probably cannot get a job at minimum wage anyhow because others are in the same situation. They are completely stuck. But we have reached a point of civilization wher we won't allow them to starve.

      This is the beginning of the changeover. Right at the bottom. It will continue to move up the socio-economic ladder. Taxi and bus drivers will soon become redundant. Very likely truck transport drivers. Dock workers. Obviously factory workers.

      But it continues from there. If a company doesn't employ many actual humans, of what use are managers? Human Resources, a lot of the accountants will be much less needed. There will be a lot of people trying to get less and less jobs. And the attempted paradigm that say, the US has been attempting, the Service economy, and the concept that everyone will be a supervisor will not work when service is performed by machines, and there are no people to supervise.

      There might be nostalgic little businesses where people might get a kick out of having food cooked by actual humans, or somesuch, but those will end up being the exceptions that prove the rule.But this change is coming, and the advantage will go to those who figure out how ot make it work, not how to resist it.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    190. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      the advantage will go to those who figure out how ot make it work,

      Three cheer for the Idiocracy!!!!

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    191. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      the advantage will go to those who figure out how ot make it work,

      Three cheer for the Idiocracy!!!!

      Maybe we should go back to subsistance farming. That's when all people worked.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    192. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      "never"

      Never?

      Has never, is that better?

      "someone has to innovate"

      Has to?

      Always have, is that better?

      You sound religious.

      Im going based on history, and on every time this cry of "automation will kill jobs" has arisen.

    193. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Makes it a little hard to take seriously the claim after hearing it the 5th time, though.

    194. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Maybe we should go back to subsistance farming. That's when all people worked.

      Work isn't the "end goal", in my thinking.

      Thinking in an evolutionary sense: what's the purpose of society?

      • To pass civilization on to the next generation.
      • How does that happen?
      • Education.
      • But the vast majority of kids (even the smart ones) don't want to learn all that boring crap.
      • So, what's the motivation to buckle down and learn it anyway? (More specifically, why do parents make you buckle down ...)
      • But if the government provides all needs and a decent amount of wants, that motivation disappears, and...
      • civilization soon collapses.

      (Someone wrote a science fiction book about the future where a technocratic minority maintains/repairs the machines that keep the fat+dumb+happy+lazy majority in that state, and despair of ever getting them to value anything more. Sadly, my Google-fu is lacking tonight.)

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    195. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are not a bad guy for automating workers out of their jobs. The same amount of work gets done and fewer people have to work; that's great. The problem is political in that having fewer workers means you are getting the same revenue and keeping more of it (both because you are paying out less in wages and because that means you are also paying less in taxes). We should be raising taxes on you and giving some of the money you are saving to people who can't get a job because there aren't enough jobs.

    196. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People need to feel a sense of purpose. The easiest way to give them a sense of purpose it to put them in a situation where they have to struggle to survive.

    197. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Quirkz · · Score: 1

      It sounded a lot more to me like he was saying "Let those who would do nothing go ahead and do it and get out of the way, while leaving the rest of us to our activities." There's a difference between allowing it for those who want it and mandating it for everyone. I think lots of people would lead active, vibrant lives if given the time and financial freedom to do so. Plenty would do as little as possible, yes, but certainly not everyone.

    198. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine, for example, if everyone in Detroit were to be given a living wage simply for existing. The blight and destruction of the city and the people inside it would vanish. Buildings could be rebuilt just for the fun of it.

      Please explain why a) prices wouldn't immediately go up, b) the individuals being forced to pay other people's free lunches wouldn't move someplace where their liberties aren't being stomped to the ground and c) any of the people receiving free money would be motivated to rebuild anything, when they can just do nothing and get paid enough to live comfortably?

      Shit like this has been tried before (google failed socialist states), but it always fails well before the utopia is reached and the only people that are well off are those in the business of redistributing other people's money, i.e. the political elite.

    199. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Shadow99_1 · · Score: 1

      I think a good 'fix' to alot of issues would be that while you can horde your money all you want while alive, you cannot give more than a average years wage to any adult offspring or other person (outside a wife/husband who you have mutual accounts with). Once both parts of a couple pass away the joint properties must be liquidated (offspring can pay for any items they wish to keep). If you want to create a legacy you need to donate these funds to the general good in some way. This levels the playing field for kids of someone rich and or famous. They must succeed or fail on their own.

      If you combine this with eliminating private education on favor of public education we should see improved public schools bringing up the education level of all students instead of a few chosen offspring.

      I have no thoughts on how to fix the rich getting their kids a job with a 'friend's business', but if I had an idea for it I'd at that in as well.

      --
      we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
    200. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by jeffmflanagan · · Score: 1

      It sounds like you're a lazy, useless slob who projects that on to others. Many of us find more interesting uses of our free time than getting high all the time.

    201. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by jeffmflanagan · · Score: 1

      So, add a contraceptive to the free drugs that will keep some problem people off the streets.

    202. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by jeffmflanagan · · Score: 1

      That's why we have inheritance taxes, but the ignorant conservatives call that a "death tax," and claim that giving back to the society that rewarded them so much in life is theft. I think steep inheritance taxes are the only way away from the rule by super-wealthy families that we're under today. A wealthy person will still have inappropriate influence over us all, but their do-nothing offspring will not.

    203. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Humans brains are at least trinary.

      Citation please, and exactly how would "not being trinary" prevent effective AI?

      Computer science is full of examples of non-Turing solvable problems. There have been proofs regarding simple choices that fall outside of Turing solvable, one so obvious (and I apologize for forgetting the name - a quick search did not reveal it) that even business people understood it and a large amount of AI funding dried up in the 70s.

    204. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Baki · · Score: 1

      It is possible to divide the remaining work fairer over the workforce. It was done in the 1980 in the Netherlands (but retained long after it was necessary and became very expensive later), where people reduced their working hours by about 5% in order to create 5% - overhead jobs.

      In fact germany did a similar thing in the last crisis.

      Civilization has progressed a bit since the Romans. Fair distribution of work and money is possible in some of todays political systems (the USA is not one of them currently).

    205. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Baki · · Score: 1

      I somehow despise the idea the people have to be kept busy for the general good. It sounds horrible really. And patronizing.

      I think mankind will adapt to this new state. We have adapted to worse changes.

    206. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by micahraleigh · · Score: 0

      >> Luddite cults ...

      Oh, you mean like \. where every medical and commercial product break-through is met with contempt?

    207. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand. I'm not saying that local fair distribution in certain instances is impossible. It is not. In fact it has been done throughout the history quite a few times.
      What I'm saying is that it will not survive the test of time because of pressure that human nature, and more specifically greed and desire for control will impose on it. It never has and it never will. In the rare instances when it has survived the test of internal pressure, external pressure typically killed it.

      In modern world, where there is massive internal and external pressure driven by globalization, we're unlikely to set any records in terms of fair distribution of work any time soon.

      It certainly doesn't mean we should stop trying however! After all, it may only take one long term success to give humanity an example and base a progress of new kind of social world order based on that. But in the current economic and political climate worldwide, that is more of idealism than anything unfortunately.

    208. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      That's ridiculous -- there's always something left to do, even if that "something" is "sit around and think up a better way to X". Low skill jobs may feel a pinch, but that just means society as a whole has to move forward in the education curve (which is a good thing). If we eliminated all menial jobs, the resulting work force would by necessity be more educated. Obviously this would take time, but so would "the elimination of all menial jobs". These kind of changes don't happen overnight.

    209. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Increased efficiency simply means fewer people are required to do what society demands

      So in other words, on the one hand we have a thesis by your uncle; on the other we have the entirety of human history, where the amount of work to accomplish a task has steadily decreased, and the number of people has steadily increased, and yet there continues to be jobs for MOST people. Along the way the quality of life, personal liberty, and personal wealth of individuals has ALSO steadily increased.

      So sure, I cant say with certainty that this time wont be different; I just dont think you have any substantial reason for expecting that it will.

    210. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by snadrus · · Score: 1

      I did productivity retrofits at a manufacturer. I "improved" things for years. The boss got rich as productivity grew, but nobody got paid more (including me). So little got reinvested that the company went under, so now there's one less previously-successful manufacturer and nobody employed there.

      When there's nobody left to care for the direction, watch the trends, and generally relax, then destructive decisions are often made. Both do that, the second just does it more.

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
    211. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by FirephoxRising · · Score: 1

      Maybe, but an alternate view is that people could do what they want to do, I'd grow gardens and fruit and nut orchards if I could......But I have to work in IT to make a living instead. I'd much rather grow stuff, show others how to grow stuff and give away the produce.

    212. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Deluded fool, It just takes 5 people in other countries douing the same job and asking for less pay (race to the bottom) to have your job sent away never to be seen again.

    213. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Nope. My job isn't outsourcable. Of course, I didn't give my actual job, because I recognized all the jackasses like you would not look at the "replaceability by AI" part, but some other part. But feel free to address what I said, and not what you wish I'd said so you could whine about your pet peeve.

    214. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As per the manipulation of matter, we already have 3D printing. I doubt it'll be THAT terribly long before it becomes widespread and starts using materials other than plastic. Coincidentally, if set up properly, this could also rid us of the landfill/pacific-island-o-trash problems if we begin using garbage as a base printing material. Clothes wearing out? Grind them up and use the powder to print a new outfit...

    215. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'If it were that easy...'

      You assume that if it were easy LOGISTICALLY, it would have been done already. The problem in implementing this isn't an issue of logistics. It's an issue of greed and power, as the wealthy people currently living the good life simply do not wish to share. The problem is a cultural one and for much of the existence of the human race, we have all had to deal with the consequences of that cultural problem.

    216. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming a human brain is, say trinary and admitting that the computers we use currently are binary, sure AI might be difficult to achieve. Funny thing, though, the Russians used trinary computers until too much of the world used the American binary system as their standard.

      If computers are unable to cope with more than two choices, then please explain to me why the Russian trinary computers worked better than the binary computers of the time. (Heck if I know why the world preferred the lesser binary system) Also, please explain why I can use so many (certainly more than two) if/else statements in a single function when coding in Javascript, C++, or most any other programming language.

      No, the usual vapid pop-star explanation of 'it's complicated' is not a valid answer.

    217. Re: AI and robotics and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just a heads up: they APPEAR to be working 80 hours a week. In truth, they may get 1 hour of work done per day and spend the rest of the time using their smartphone to browse the internet and play games or simply go to meetings to listen to a bunch of useless PowerPoint nonsense. As far as the CEOs, I don't pity their time constraints. When a CEO posts videos to YouTube to prove how hard he works (1 hour with the family, 3 hours of yoga, 2 hours of meditating, 3 hours with the secretary making calls to 'touch bases' with his employees, 2 hours planning the next quarterly family vacation, and 1 hour making arrangements to move everything from the family's winter home to their summer home = 12 hours of 'work' per day), it does have the effect of making me that much more irritated with the 'hard-working 1%'. If all that play time counts as work, then why am I not getting paid for my 20+ hours a day instead of just the time I spend clocked in at a 'traditional job' that pays minimum wage (which is roughly 1/500th the wages paid to a certain lazy American CEO)?

    218. Re:AI and robotics and jobs by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

      Good think Luckyo is here to settle the question of why Rome fell once and for all. Thanks!

      And now that I've gotten that bit of spite out of my system I'd like to point out that we're not best with Barbarians and Vandals (and no, the occasional whack job terrorist doesn't count). As for World Wars, our corporate masters won't allow that. About a decade ago a bunch of terrorists shot up India's capital and were traced back to people in the Pakistani gov't. I remember thinking, whelp, here comes WWIII, except it didn't.

      So yeah, we can learn from history, but that doesn't mean things aren't different. I don't mean people are better, just that the circumstances are different and it's not that simple.

      --
      Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  10. First place to an AI replacement by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think this isn't actually a troll... but a REAL posit...

    The first jobs to go when there are jobs automatable by real AI should be legislatures.

    Let a real intelegence that can't be biased by the current bullshit lobbying system write laws balanced for the common good of EVERYONE and reduce legislatures to one or two people per state as that can vote up or down.

    Obviously lots of holes in that half baked idea, but our major societal problem in the U.S. is a lack of real leadership. If you make the leadership job simpler and not affected by the plauge of the lobbyist then maybe we can have a society that works for everyone and not just the select few that can PAY for their free speech.

    1. Re:First place to an AI replacement by bondsbw · · Score: 2

      You need humans to legislate what is best for humans.

      But, I think computerized systems could eventually help in the area of finding discrepancies and ambiguities in the law. And then, in judging the law.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    2. Re:First place to an AI replacement by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      Well you notice the human isn't left out. What they CAN'T do is ammend the ideas, and that's key. I think if you could get rid of the human WRITING the law (not deciding what eventually is made law) it would be a vast improvement.

    3. Re:First place to an AI replacement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Executive and other high level management positions should also be automated. Computers can weigh a lot more variables in decision making and you no longer need the excessive wages or compensation packages. In turn, the company can operate a lot more efficiently and the freed profits can go back the few human workers that are necessary and/or shareholders.

      Sooner or later I predict that we will see at least one company try this and eventually make it public. And if it turns out to be sucessful, it might not be too long before the rest of society decides to adopt a new economic model afterwards. (Obsolete the rich within the capitalist structure, and there wont be that much choice for them in order to stay relevant.)

    4. Re:First place to an AI replacement by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Writing and interpreting law are principally activities of philosophy. It will be a very long time before AI gets to that point.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    5. Re:First place to an AI replacement by real-modo · · Score: 1

      Interesting idea. If I hadn't already commented, I would have "wasted" a mod point on it.

      However, unlikely. For the same sorts of reasons that Jim Crow worked in the US South.

    6. Re:First place to an AI replacement by spikesahead · · Score: 1

      I would be much more willing to entertain this if I could run a copy of the AI locally to make sure the answers I got out matched the questions going in. Otherwise it will be nothing but a mechanical turk; a mechanical mask over a person of secret influence.

    7. Re:First place to an AI replacement by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      I think this isn't actually a troll... but a REAL posit...

      The first jobs to go when there are jobs automatable by real AI should be legislatures.

      Let a real intelegence that can't be biased by the current bullshit lobbying system write laws balanced for the common good of EVERYONE and reduce legislatures to one or two people per state as that can vote up or down.

      Obviously lots of holes in that half baked idea, but our major societal problem in the U.S. is a lack of real leadership. If you make the leadership job simpler and not affected by the plauge of the lobbyist then maybe we can have a society that works for everyone and not just the select few that can PAY for their free speech.

      More likely the politicians will use the media to create a scare around AIs and the war against terror will become the war against AI.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
  11. Duh by tgeek · · Score: 1

    At what point will we start seeing legislation forbidding the automation of certain industries?

    The day we can automatic politics . . .

    1. Re:Duh by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      When the hated unions have real power and money. Labor money in congress is a tiny percentage of the lobbying pie, and since Citzens United the most money wins unless a HUGE number of people are mobilized. This is what happened with SOPA and, even then, they have to have certain huge multinationals on their side before they were even heard.

    2. Re:Duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we would replace religionists with Electric Monks, THEN we'd be onto something useful.

  12. 21st Century Luddites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fighting progress and improved productivity has always failed.

    How about acknowledging the fact and adapting to it?

    1. Re:21st Century Luddites by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      Since 1980, the pay of Americans is not a variable that correlates to the increased income of Americans.

      That's not very likely to change in our current political environment. Given that, how the hell are people going to live?

      I am for adapting, but we political system in place for it to happen.

  13. Time to thin the herd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Almost every problem is caused by there being too many people. This is not a troll, I do not have an answer.

    1. Re:Time to thin the herd by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 1

      Cull all bright people. Intelligence produces the sort of civilisation which allows such concentrations of population, and the high number of people suffering as a result. If we were to administer an intelligence test and wipe the top 10% of people at each stage, nature would do the rest.

    2. Re:Time to thin the herd by c5402dc53929211e1efb · · Score: 1

      It's the moderately intelligent that are the problem. They're the ones that serve their less intelligent upper class masters to prop up the consumer economy. Who's building all this technology and keeping all these idiots alive? It's not the most intelligent of us. We're not the ones breeding and spending our mental effort on designing consumer products for idiots.

    3. Re:Time to thin the herd by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 1

      "we"

    4. Re:Time to thin the herd by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      That's the smartest idea I've ever heard! You go first!

  14. Too Advanced to not Fail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is one of the biggest problems with a capitalistic society. Once it becomes sufficiently advanced there will literally not be enough jobs for the population, and if you don't have a job you don't have money, and no money means no food. The society will literally "succeed" itself to death.

    I don't know how we will truly solve this problem, although it seems like the expansion of welfare programs is almost a given, that or let people starve.

    1. Re:Too Advanced to not Fail by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      There is a balancing point where people cannot afford to purchase which means companies don't sell and don't stay in business. Protecting these companies sort of prolongs it but eventually, there will be a natural reset where people find creative ways to do without. Once the companies close or limit their production, then competition from those creative people will start and it resumed Ad infinitum.

      There will be hiccups and so on along the path. There might even be a revolt and the entire system crashed along the way too. But I think succeeding itself to death is defeated by the ability to continue operation along the current path. Companies exist to make money, if no one buys their products or services, they don't exist.

    2. Re:Too Advanced to not Fail by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      Actually this might be humanities 'saving grace'. With all the 'excess' people gone, there might still be things like wildlife. If game weren't owned by the nobility, then the middle ages would likely have seen the end of game. Humans might be displaced by machines in the same kind of way the natives were displaced by the technologically superior white interlopers. Of course there will be a few humans running things for a while at least until a monopoly vertically integrates everything, and the last human who runs it all dies once their family becomes too inbred to reproduce.

      --
      ...
    3. Re:Too Advanced to not Fail by c5402dc53929211e1efb · · Score: 1

      and if you don't have a job you don't have money, and no money means no food

      No, nobody producing food means no food. Don't drag money into this we don't need it. The average person just need to evolve to a high enough level first.

    4. Re:Too Advanced to not Fail by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      ... and the last human who runs it all dies once their family becomes too inbred to reproduce.

      Actually, that's not how genetics work. Inbreeding brings recessive variance to active use. Most such variance is detrimental, which is why inbreeding generally leads to physical, mental, and emotional developmental problems. In other words, we don't do it because we don't want to see our children suffer.

      In the long run, though, natural selection weeds out the worst of these and the population continues, albeit with less genetic drift. (not recommending it, but it wouldn't be the end of the species, as you seem to claim)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    5. Re:Too Advanced to not Fail by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      Offer people a moderately luxurious free ride in exchange for sterilization.

  15. Is my job as a slashdot troll vulnerable to this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    :(

  16. profit - need new social contract by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Robots will replace workers due to the nature of profits. Governments and social scientists should be working hard on redesiging society.
    a) "work" should not be required for basic living. This is not a socialists thing. This is a structural thing. With the effiency of one person being able to produce the goods that many use we are effectivly at an over production tipping point. There is no need for everyone to work we would just be producting stuff we don't need. (late night TV products excluded)
    b) property should not be able to be leveraged for income. This is a generational disadvantage thing that leads to the inequalities we have in society. It will be aggavated by (1) when many just don't work. The ability to leverage existing captial into advanced wealth puts an unequal starting point that just gets amplified going forward.

    These are issues with the strucutre of our society as we transition into a zone where we are no longer struggling for survival but basically have everything we need. See also recent arguments about the end of human evolution. We are reaching the finish line in our race for survival and the game is changing. We need to look forward.

    1. Re:profit - need new social contract by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      Robots will replace workers due to the nature of profits. Governments and social scientists should be working hard on redesiging society.

      Good luck with that. If we don't do something about to domination of corporate money in U.S. government the "redesign" of society is going involve shooting the poor people and charging the government for the bullets.

      Seriously... we are going to have even more problems with the low-skilled being automated out of a job over the next 50 years AT LEAST even assuming that A.I. will continue to never materialize. This would be less of a problem if the people were still represented in government. If poor have no seat at the tabe and the middle class are on the virge of losing their seat.

  17. People not required by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    The jobs of the future may be done by robots, but they'll need people to build and maintain those robots.

    Unlikely, except as an interim stage. Even without AI, you can have general assembly and repair robots that are competent to build and repair, respectively, the same models as they are, as well as other models. With AI, all need for people in manufacture and repair is gone, and further, the robots can be built to be a lot more effective -- more arms, special effectors, built-in diagnostic tools, etc.

    We're less than 100 years into computing systems, even less than that in the type of code required here. Significant changes are likely still in front of us, even in the relatively short term.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:People not required by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      ...more arms, special effectors, built-in diagnostic tools, etc.

      better weapons...

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    2. Re:People not required by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The jobs of the future may be done by robots, but they'll need people to build and maintain those robots.

      Unlikely, except as an interim stage.

      Whatever happens, it seems very likely that *less people* will make the situation better. Time to stop having kids, and to propagate this meme as widely as possible. For myself, I chose to not have kids after college (c.1980), for a variety of reasons including future automation and lack of jobs.

  18. management 2nd wave replacement by turkeydance · · Score: 1

    who's to manage?

  19. Slashdot changing too... by vortex2.71 · · Score: 1

    On that note, Slashdot will not longer be taking submissions for stories or allow for user comments. Instead, machine learning bots will scan the web for content and natural language recognition bots will make witty comments and then debate them endlessly.

    1. Re:Slashdot changing too... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But how will we know?

    2. Re:Slashdot changing too... by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      natural language recognition bots will make witty comments

      Then the slashdot I know is truly dead.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    3. Re:Slashdot changing too... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      They could replace the moderators today with a rule-based engine (e.g. supportive of Microsoft, mod down) and nobody would know the difference.

    4. Re:Slashdot changing too... by umghhh · · Score: 2

      I suppose we start with goatse bots....

    5. Re:Slashdot changing too... by sidthegeek · · Score: 3, Interesting
    6. Re:Slashdot changing too... by umghhh · · Score: 1

      if the real society is an example then only the users with 5digit ids will be allowed to post and if that will be too many then 4digits.

  20. STASI / NSA jobs will always be open by HansKloss · · Score: 1

    If you like spying on your own citizens, agencies and local security forces are hiring. Some people will not be happy with automation, that's where federal and local forces step in and squash any uprisings.

  21. Let's re-evaluate trade policy by fyngyrz · · Score: 0, Troll

    Speaking from a US centric POV, we need to enter a period of protectionism. Otherwise, what remains of our economy will follow the rest down the drain, and we will instead enter a truly ugly period of deep need for the general population.

    The answer isn't to continue to marginalize our workers; the answer is to serve people's needs from within our own resource base, both material and labor.

    Until or unless automation can provide an environment of zero scarcity, the imbalance between labor costs elsewhere and here will continue to erode the standard of living and job opportunities for the workforce.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      Assume you did that, AND everything went according to plan (no devastatingly bad trade wars, no reverse done by politicians). As a result, things will cost more, maybe even 30%-50% more, but that's a price we're willing to pay. Now all US manufacturing is in the US.

      Suddenly, we are going to have a lot of illegal immigrants in the US, because there would be so many jobs, there wouldn't be enough people to fill them all. So ultimately you're either going to have immigrants taking the jobs here, or the factories will be moved out to where they are.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by fyngyrz · · Score: 2

      First, no trade wars, because there would be no trade. Internal economy. We have both abundant resources and a huge consuming base. Barriers up, both ways. You can't have a trade war if you aren't engaged in trade.

      Second, protectionism will have to include hard borders -- no further immigration.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    3. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      lol good luck on that

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    4. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by geoskd · · Score: 1

      First, no trade wars, because there would be no trade. Internal economy. We have both abundant resources and a huge consuming base. Barriers up, both ways. You can't have a trade war if you aren't engaged in trade.

      Second, protectionism will have to include hard borders -- no further immigration.

      If we suddenly stopped buying from or selling to the Chinese, they would suddenly find themselves with absolutely no incentive to help us maintain our way of life. The single biggest deterrent we have to war with China is the fact that our economies are so intertwined. If we stop trading with them, our economy collapses, but so does theirs. Next thing you know, the Chinese government calls all of our debts, and when we fail to pay, they declare war.

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    5. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      With a 3D Printer, all manufacturing is done in my shed; who needs a Robot?

    6. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That will be great if it happens

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    7. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      They can't call our debts. Bonds have maturation periods. Furthermore, even if the US did have to pay back the entire debt at once, they could do so because it is denominated in dollars and we can print as many as we want.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    8. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by geoskd · · Score: 1

      They can't call our debts. Bonds have maturation periods. Furthermore, even if the US did have to pay back the entire debt at once, they could do so because it is denominated in dollars and we can print as many as we want.

      Go ahead and print 10 Trillion USD, and see how fast your own people revolt, never mind the Chinese.

      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    9. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might want to take a look at Japan's Edo period. Much of it was isolationist. When you're not trading with somebody, they have no incentive to maintain your way of life; true. They have no incentive to destroy it either. The question hinges on whether you view the current interactions as constructive or destructive. The Japanese viewed the relations as destructive and closed off. Nobody successfully attacked for a couple hundred years. Their cities grew, and their forests were restored. True, they engaged in some practices that Westerners would find offensive; but that's the whole idea--they didn't want Westerners interfering with their society. It worked. They had an economically successful closed society, it just wasn't to Western tastes of course.

      So. If we stop trading with China, they could pound their fists all they want but they probably wouldn't start a nuclear war with us. They might have to go back to riding bicycles in Beijing. Then, we might be able to go back to shopping at someplace other than Wal-Mart, and getting goods that aren't contaminated with heavy metals and falling apart after a few months.

    10. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      You think the US owes China $10trillion?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    11. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      So you rebutted the "even if" but not the comments on your incorrect "they can call the debt". Shame, since failing to buy new debt has the same function (so much is constantly up and re-issued, that not buying has the same effect as calling).

    12. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      A 3D printer is a robot. Most definitions of "robot" would include common things like printers, which make a physical outcome based on electronic inputs.

    13. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A 3D printer is a robot. As is a diswasher or breadmachine.

    14. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      The single biggest deterrent we have to war with China is the fact that our economies are so intertwined. If we stop trading with them, our economy collapses, but so does theirs.

      Not true, actually. Prior to WW1, the intellectual elite did not believe that future war was possible. Economies were too intertwined, and the financial interests of the wealthy would prevent all future conflict.

      We see how well that turned out. The single biggest deterrent to war with China is that nobody, yet, has wanted to start one. Let's hope it stays that way.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    15. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Yes, well, when your in-garage 3d printer can make more than shapely lumps, as in, solid state integrated circuitry, working mechanicals, etc., such that you can (for instance) print something as complex as say, an R/c car, please let me know. In the meantime, your 3d printing does not stand as a general manufacturing capability.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    16. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      oh, look, how cute. a "-1, I disagree" mod.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    17. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Oh, I don't expect it to *happen*, I said it was what we needed. We're headed for a completely crashed economy. We're pretty far along already. Three million unemployed in the gulags, unemployable when they come out, and tens of millions more depending on the government for a dole of one type or another, already far exceeding said government's ability to deliver. Congress isn't going to do what's needed, they're already rich, and getting richer, off of destroying the country. The business sector is similarly engaged.

      Nope, just making an observation. Y'all have inherited a broken economy, a corrupt political system, and a set of values that makes you mortally afraid to lift a finger against it all. It's fascinating to watch.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    18. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by umghhh · · Score: 1

      this is a joke right? You assume that the progress is happening at the same pace everywhere and brings benefits the same way everybody which is not the case. how are you going to stop immigration is also interesting. It never worked except for extreme use of violence - NK is a good example because nobody wants to go there - problem indeed solved.

    19. Re:Let's re-evaluate trade policy by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      I won't be me that tells ya. For me, a 3D Printer is like a wrench. I don't make wrenches, I use'em. I figure when someone figures out how to make a multi-headed 3D Printer that can create an object in a 3 meter cubed area, marketing will step in. Why 3 meters? It's the size of my shed.

  22. All those robots by no-body · · Score: 1

    will produce goods and services to the majority of people who will be removed from the workforce by robots.

    Anything wrong with that?

    1. Re:All those robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      will produce goods and services to the majority of people who will be removed from the workforce by robots.

      Anything wrong with that?

      so, we'll al receive a stipend from the government to pay for food, clothing, housing, etc ...?

      Or everything will be free?

      And in the meantime, will my mortgage and students be canceled since I can't get a job because of the robots?

      See? Our entire economic system WILL have to change. Because Capitalism is ill-suited for a robotic economy.

  23. been saying this a while by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ...and if we keep our ideals of "being on the government dole is evil/defective/makes you a bad person" eventually there will be a worldwide revolt.

    The idea of the ever-decreasing work week is the best option.

    Technology has brought so much efficiency, but as it stands, with our capitalist system, the majority of the benefit goes to super-rich who cannot possibly spend all that money. Pay is cut, jobs are cut, and people are demonized for being unemployed, even as we grow ever closer to full automtion of all work.

    Imagine a world where there is only one job. Only one...
    should the only person with a job get all the money in the world? or...something else.

    1. Re:been saying this a while by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does money buy when there's only one person left in the economy?

  24. Automated customers - The end by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just automate the customer side to buy the products so finally companies can get rid of the poor human consumers and rejoice in an ever lasting quaterly profit and bonuses utopia.

    Wallstreet is already a few steps ahead thanks to fast trading automated A.I. schemes.

    Can't wait till it replaces politicians, oh wait... come to think of it, it already has started to replace something about them.

  25. It's not one to one though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The jobs of the future may be done by robots, but they'll need people to build and maintain those robots.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYu1qW8Dctk

    But it's not one to one. Meaning, you don't need one person to build one robot and you don't need one person to one robot for maintenance. And we have robots building other robots - who needs people?

    See, in the past, automation increased a worker's productivity - it didn't replace them because you still needed some sort of intelligence for manage the operation.

    Now computers supply the intelligence. And they've gotten so easy to program their operations (no coding is necessary because you just need someone to "show" the robot how to do the operation by moving it's arms). I'm not talking about the OS, of course. That just took a handful of people.

    The trends over the years have SHOWN that less and less workers AT ALL LEVELS are needed.

    And that's where there's going to be some huge problems. Our economy isn't structured for masses of unemployed or leisure class (other than the folks with the capital [1%'ers]). We all can't go "up the food chain" because there just isn't that much room up there - abilities aside. There are a LOT of smart people in the World, but there isn't enough positions for all of them. Get it? It's a pyramid that's not getting bigger.

    And this "get retrained" fantasy/platitude. As I have experienced, getting retrained is easy. It's getting hired that's the problem - employers demand the 4 years of experience. And then we're back to there's just so much room in an industry. Nurses are having a horrible time getting jobs - and there's supposed to be a shortage!

    Our economy is going to go through some drastic changes.

    I keep hearing the "economy isn't a fixed pie". True from a strict economic sense, BUT the pie isn't getting big enough to absorb the over supply of workers from: new ones entering, off shoring, automation, and old farts who can't afford to retire. We're are SEEING it in the employment numbers and the only reason they have improved is because people are LEAVING the workforce. (See the disability rolls.)

    No sir, get Econ 101/102 out of your head. It's outdated economic theory.

    1. Re:It's not one to one though by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Your statement, "Now computers supply the intelligence." Computers do not supply intelligence, they can remember rules, and can do math. But the realm of asking, "what if" based on only remembered facts, and weak templates will be problematic; for them.

    2. Re:It's not one to one though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computers do not supply intelligence, they can remember rules, and can do math.

      That is a basic form of intelligence.

    3. Re:It's not one to one though by PlusFiveTroll · · Score: 1

      >Computers do not supply intelligence, they can remember rules, and can do math.

      Most employees in retail these days do not supply intelligence, and they can't remember rules or do math.

    4. Re:It's not one to one though by real-modo · · Score: 1

      But the realm of asking, "what if" based on only remembered facts, and weak templates will be problematic; for them.

      ... as it is for most humans.

      Remember George Carlin: "think about how the average person, and how dumb they are. Now realize that half of them are dumber than that."

  26. It's coming. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Unfortunately we've got the classic "boy who cried wolf" scenario. When machines were replacing people in the 50s it was common to think everyone would be replaced. It didn't happen, because the machines replaced some people but still needed someone to run the machine. However, with advances in robotics we're going to start seeing the machine operators replaced. I expect within 10 years to see a fully automated car assembly line. So what happens to those people? Nothing, I guess. Those jobs won't come back and there won't be any jobs to replace them. We could just belittle them as "buggy whip makers" and say, "get educated so a robot can't replace you." But 1) there are only so many jobs for the educated, and 2) soon a lot of those jobs will be replaced too.

    I'm always amazed by people who say, "get educated and you'll get a job" then turn around and complain, "why can't I find a job I've got a degree and experience!" I don't get how they square saying if some uneducated guy gets a degree he'll magically get a job. There's almost a million auto workers in the US. They lose their jobs then get an education. Do we need a million more teachers? A million more lawyers? A million more programmers? The job market is tight so where are these million educated workers going to go? "Get educated and you'll get a job" is such an easy answer when you don't think about it.

    I was an attorney but then decided to do something else (great choice by the way). I expect a lot of mundane legal work to be automated within 10-15 years. First you'll see specialized paralegals do the work then second you'll see Google or LEXIS or West develop an automated system for them to use. Third you'll see that system be allowed for private use for a limited set of issues. What happens to those junior associates that used to do those cases? Do they all become partners? All start their own firms? No, they'll be out of a job. There isn't an infinite amount of jobs for law partners or law firms. We aren't in a situation like the industrial revolution or the 50s where machines helped streamline a process. Technology has advanced far enough to replace whole segments of work and render the worker unnecessary.

    It's neither a good nor bad thing it just is. But we can't act like we've been here before. This isn't the Industrial Revolution Redux, it's the automation revolution. We've got to deal with it one way or another, and just saying "get another job" isn't going to work this time. It's taken more than 100 years, but the warning of "these jobs are gone and never coming back" is finally going to occur.

    1. Re:It's coming. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting post. My best guess is that in some countries the ruling elite will see danger and find ways of making useful seeming jobs for humans to keep them from getting restless and dangerous. In other countries, they will get this wrong and violent revolution or disorder may occur.

      I guess that (with no or minimal benefits available, as seems to be the trend) that at somewhere between 25 and 50% unemployment there is a 'total breakdown' point where it all falls ap

    2. Re:It's coming. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, so as far as solutions go...?

  27. The obvious answer is... by jacobsm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As soon as they automate politics. That's when politicians will ban it.

    1. Re:The obvious answer is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It wouldn't make sense to automate politics. Law, however, is a different matter, and a lot of politicians are lawyers.

    2. Re:The obvious answer is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We could fully computerize voting and make the whole legislative process something like a wiki, get rid of the whole concept of "representative democracy" and replace it with direct democracy. That would get rid of the politicians.

    3. Re:The obvious answer is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Forbin Project

    4. Re:The obvious answer is... by Lennie · · Score: 1

      Actually, github is the way to do politics.

      So you can see exactly which politician worked on which law and why.

      Will probably never happen...?

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
    5. Re:The obvious answer is... by dkf · · Score: 1

      So you can see exactly which politician worked on which law and why.

      Because nobody ever told a lie in a commit comment...

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    6. Re:The obvious answer is... by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

      As soon as they automate politics. That's when politicians will ban it.

      politicians cant even pass the turing test. chances are they will inadvertently ban computer programming.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
  28. Using it wrong by brxndxn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I absolutely hate how people talk about the negatives of automation like somehow things are better when humans did all the menial tasks. I remember an old Russian video where a worker was winding a ball of yarn by hand. That is degrading. What is even more degrading is paying a bunch of foreign people a lot less to do manual (and meaningless) tasks to make cheap products and then ship them across the world. Even further degrading is the layers of bullshit we have decided to surround ourselves with in other professions that waste the hours in our days.

    The problem is not that 'there will be fewer jobs.' The problem is not that 'there are not enough resources.' The problem is that the jobs and the resources are all allocated wrong. We could (at least in America) have 20-30 hour work weeks, plenty of family time, decent pay, and a low unemployment rate.. if a certain select few did not make ALL the money and take control of ALL the resources.

    I am an automation programmer. I work to automate any task I can possibly automate. I do not feel bad about it. Any automation I create has to be maintained.

    As far as legislation forbidding the automation of certain industries.. Since the US Government fucks up everything it touches, I believe it will work to create laws to forbid the jobs that should be automated and laws to automate the jobs that should be manual. For example, the NSA said it will fire 90% of sysadmins and replace them with automation. Anyone in IT knows that idea is 100% stupid. Another example is the rise of red light cameras everywhere. As subjective as it is to enforce the law, our wonderful government has decided to make it legal for robots to do that for us. And, since the US military is having trouble finding new hires that have zero morality, they are working to automate drone warfare also. Great..

    So, anyway, what I mean to say is.. Automation itself is not bad. It's the way we're using it that will be bad. Instead of using it to free ourselves, we are using it to enslave ourselves.

    --
    --- We need more Ron Paul!
    1. Re:Using it wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I completely agree with rejecting the notion that "having a job" is important to a human in and of itself. However, I have a completely different problem with automation.

      Already the trend has been for a long time more and more power is concentrated on fewer and fewer hands.

      What scares me about automation is that with enough of it, those in power will not need the rest of us anymore. When a group of people is no longer useful it is very easy to lose respect for said group and its rights. It can also be seen as a potential threat to their power monopoly.

    2. Re:Using it wrong by Yvanhoe · · Score: 2

      The problem is that the jobs and the resources are all allocated wrong. We could (at least in America) have 20-30 hour work weeks, plenty of family time, decent pay, and a low unemployment rate.. if a certain select few did not make ALL the money and take control of ALL the resources.

      Hear, hear! Before dismissing it as partisan politics and easy wealthy-bashing, think about it for a second: generalized automation means that there won't be enough work for everyone. It either means unemployement for most people or it means shorter work weeks. Free market does not care to choose between these two alternative, the choice will only come from politics and from rules we make.

      the US Government fucks up everything it touches

      This is really a problem that US citizens need to solve quickly. Free market and automation won't lead to a techno-utopia without putting a brake on the concentration of capital. Automated industries are capital-biased instead of labor-biased (your output depends more on the amount of funds you can invest rather than on the labor you manage to hire) and therefore will worsen inequalities.

      For example, the NSA said it will fire 90% of sysadmins and replace them with automation. Anyone in IT knows that idea is 100% stupid.

      To be fair, I am not sure it would have been a worse idea than outsourcing it to private companies filled with people like Snowden who were not considered trustworthy enough to work in the NSA...

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    3. Re:Using it wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I remember an old Russian video where a worker was winding a ball of yarn by hand. That is degrading.

      How exactly is that degrading? Automation doesn't scare me a tenth as much as this "I'm too good to do this" attitude.

    4. Re:Using it wrong by brxndxn · · Score: 2

      I disagree with you about Snowden.. Snowden has proved that he was the only one trustworthy enough with that kind of information.

      --
      --- We need more Ron Paul!
    5. Re:Using it wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember an old Russian video where a worker was winding a ball of yarn by hand. That is degrading.

      While I agree that there's nothing inherently wrong with automation, the idea that winding a ball of yarn is degrading is an obnoxiously privileged point of view. I've worked as a software engineer and I've worked a manual labor job that can't currently be efficiently automated, but some day will be; and there's nothing inherently degrading about manual labor. In fact, at my particular manual labor job -- even though it was usually a series of doing the same task repetitively for a couple of hours at a time before moving on to another repetitive task -- was much, much better for my health than being a software engineer. Working a full-time desk job makes the human body degrade.

    6. Re:Using it wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Breaking news: automation guy says automation doesn't cause any harm. Film at 11.

      Seriously though, I get what you're saying. Automation is the tool. But the folks who control this tool are using it for selfish gain, instead of species uplift.

    7. Re:Using it wrong by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      "think about it for a second: generalized automation means that there won't be enough work for everyone."

      Hmm, I guess it also means stuff will be so cheap you wont need a job to obtain what you need anymore. We're getting pretty close to that already.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    8. Re:Using it wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, but what is REALLY degrading is the notion that you have to have a job doing something or you're worthless. When we as a society grow up and get over that, we'll all be better off. Of course, that means abandoning capitalism as an economic system, and we know we can't do that because we worship it like a religion in too many parts of the world. So it's better (for the captialist 1 percent) that some people destroy themselves by working too much and others get destroyed by not being able to work at all. Lovely society we have.

    9. Re:Using it wrong by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

      "For example, the NSA said it will fire 90% of sysadmins and replace them with automation. Anyone in IT knows that idea is 100% stupid. "

      Assuming the NSA uses the same level of AI that we have access to...which is likely but not certain.

      --
      blindly antisocialist = antisocial
    10. Re:Using it wrong by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      If you think about what this means, it means that wages will go down and prices will go down. Depending on which goes down fastest, it could resulg in global wealth of record inequalities.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  29. Situation Irony by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1

    Don't we do all of this for survival purposes? If the development of such technology begins to hurt our ability to survive, what's the point? Who would develop the tech? Who would buy it? And ultimately, what government would allow it to get to that point?

    I think one of two possibilities are possible. We will either get to the point the tech will find some equilibrium with the human economy, or we will get to the point that the government (especially if it remains a representative one) will step in and prevent further development of the tech. The outcome depends on the prevailing ideology of that country and just how bad it all gets. And even in the equilibrium scenario, I can see some grassroots pushback/rebellion. The only real winners in that case could be the super rich, and by that point people might be ready to shed blood over it.

    Or maybe it won't be so dramatic. Poor working people managed to survive in the South before the 1860s. Do we really expect the machines of the future to outdo and be cheaper than the human slaves of the past? Menial labor is one thing... nobody really wants to do that anyway... but replacing the thinker seems kind of self defeating. Why are we even here if we're willing to replace everyone, including artists, engineers, and scientists with robots?

    1. Re:Situation Irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well the machines can get paid to work and then they can buy the products and services provided by machine labor. So it'll be self-financing.

    2. Re:Situation Irony by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1

      If you have to pay your slaves, whats the point of creating them? And assuming you don't create them anymore, are you just going to let them procreate on their own? This is starting to get into Animatrix territory... I almost can't take the idea seriously.

      Assuming the governments of the world don't become totally detached from reality, we will obviously be passing some laws if it seems like its getting to this point.

    3. Re:Situation Irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't we do all of this for survival purposes? If the development of such technology begins to hurt our ability to survive, what's the point? Who would develop the tech? Who would buy it? And ultimately, what government would allow it to get to that point?

      Hurt our ability to survive? You mean like ensuring that deadly opiate-based painkillers remain legal and freely available to ensure a perpetual customer base by way of addiction while healthy harmless non-addictive alternatives remain illegal?

      What's the point? As if the damn near unlimited revenue stream generated from millions of addic..er, patients isn't THE obvious point in our capitalistic society.

      Who would develop the tech? Biotechnology has funding and revenue in the hundreds of billions. Pretty sure you could get someone on the payroll for that kind of money.

      Who would buy it? Well, for only $5 per script, you too can become a opiate fiend. For that (heavily subsidized) discounted price, you will (almost) be guaranteed no pain, at least until you develop a tolerance and need bigger, better, more expensive opiates. Don't worry though, the addiction will only last as long as your liver does. Good luck on that transplant.

      And finally, what Government would allow that? Ah, most likely your own. No matter where you live. Greed and corruption are global. Wake the fuck up already. Profits are the only thing that matters. Not you, your family, or your health. Survival is measured in quarterly profits.

      This is how your Government approaches healthcare. You really think they give a fuck about your job that might go the way of AI due to corporate lobbyists?

    4. Re:Situation Irony by Howitzer86 · · Score: 1

      I think you misunderstood my point. The conversation is about replacing everyone, perhaps in the service of an elite few. The question is what do you do with people who remain without a purpose. The irony is that the strategy is self defeating for everyone involved. The economy would no-longer exist, and wealth would no-longer be a source of power. Perhaps it could be held up by brute force, but well... that force can be met with force in-kind. Ultimately its less stable than what we have and even the most devious (or fictional) Builderberger, Freemason, Illuminati, Rockefeller, etc would dream of taking it that far.

      Also, I used the word purpose in a very literal sense. I wasn't talking about my family, health, etc. For example: say I existed in the Roaring 20s on the bottom of the totem pole in a factory somewhere - even in that hopeless situation, I have an income which can then be extracted by the company I work for at a premium at the company store, by rent seekers, etc.... keeping me in debt, keeping me bonded, etc, etc. It's a sad purpose, but there's a situation in which I'd exist for a reason - and that's to be a slave.

      In this scenario, the slave situation has been solved by the elite some other way. The people that remain aren't useful as slaves by that point. And of course, it would take some serious government fuckery at levels never before seen for everything to descend to that level.

      There's a lot of people who view themselves as moderately rich or influential that would have to also go under for your scenario. This would be a threat to them too. Our government kinda sucks, but I think it represents them to some degree at least. So I'm pretty confident that it won't go that far. Hell, with the government we've got these days, and the people voting, I'd wager more on an over-reaction to the automation threat than not.

  30. Banning automation is bad by Chalnoth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The thing is, automation makes peoples' lives easier. It means that less work has to be performed to get the same results.

    A sensible response to the promise of automation is not to be a luddite and ban the practice, but to ensure the benefits of automation are widely-distributed. In short, the answer is to prevent the concentration of wealth (a problem we need to focus on right now whether or not the fears of automation are realized).

    1. Re:Banning automation is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's called Socialism and don't you KNOW how bad it is to have healthcare and food for all?
      In America, at any rate.

    2. Re:Banning automation is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The trouble is that it is much easier to be a luddite then to get the 1% to give up anything.

    3. Re:Banning automation is bad by LMariachi · · Score: 1

      The answer is to distribute the benefits of automation. If your factory has 1000 workers each doing 40 hours a week, and automation makes 250 of those human jobs unnecessary, instead of laying off 250 people altogether while keeping the remaining 750 on a 40 hour schedule, keep everyone on board at 30 hours a week. Even if you pay them the same hourly wage (because you’re a greedy asshole who’ll be first against the wall when the revolution comes,) thirty hours is better than zero hours.

      The problem there is with the system of knock-on costs associated with each individual employee. Considering payroll taxes, health benefits, etc., it’s cheaper to have one guy working 40 hours than two guys each working 20, or four guys each working 10, even if the wages are identical. The sharp point of the fulcrum dividing “have something” and “have absolutely nothing” won’t be ground down to a gentler radius until those systemic problems are overhauled.

    4. Re:Banning automation is bad by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Because if one company lays off the 250 then they are more profitable.

      This means they can undercut your prices by 10%... and every consumer (including you) is going to buy the cheaper product.

      They also have easier access to capital since they are more profitable so every investor (including you...) buys their stock.

      And then they buy out the competition and spread their practice.

      I don't have a good solution-- just giving you some reasons.

      It can't be done by companies. It has to come from society- and the government.

      We could fix unemployment tomorrow if we said you must pay double time for any hours over 40 per week and there are no exceptions except for people who manage groups of other people in a recognizable hierarchical structure. (i.e. no management loops).

      IT people are being worked 60 hours (or more). So right there, every 2 jobs becomes 3 .

      Doesn't help people directly in fields where the work week is 40 hours or less. But it should help them generally.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    5. Re:Banning automation is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      until barriers to entry eliminate meaningful competition, and de facto monopolies arise. buying the bots and programming them is cheap for existing companies.

      I'm not worried about workers as much ad the landscape of ownership and control.

    6. Re:Banning automation is bad by stenvar · · Score: 1

      If your factory has 1000 workers each doing 40 hours a week, and automation makes 250 of those human jobs unnecessary, instead of laying off 250 people altogether while keeping the remaining 750 on a 40 hour schedule, keep everyone on board at 30 hours a week.

      That's the right idea, but your thinking about the mechanisms is wrong. The reason we have 40 hour work weeks is because that's effectively imposed by government regulations; trying to work half time is a real problem because things like benefits etc. just don't work out right. If employers and employees could negotiate more freely over working hours, people would and could naturally reduce their working hours.

      Even if you pay them the same hourly wage (because you’re a greedy asshole who’ll be first against the wall when the revolution comes,) thirty hours is better than zero hours.

      It's not a question of greed. People get paid roughly what they are worth, based on supply and demand for labor, and what they produce. Automation generally replaces many low paid jobs with fewer high paid jobs, saving the company a small percentage in the process. The people who "lose their jobs" then go on to other jobs, often after investing in some more training to be able to make themselves more valuable.

    7. Re:Banning automation is bad by stenvar · · Score: 1

      Because if one company lays off the 250 then they are more profitable.

      Only if these workers weren't actually needed. If they were needed to produce the product, they will be making less product, and hence less profit.

      And then they buy out the competition and spread their practice.

      If firing 250 workers actually improves profit, then that is absolutely the right thing to do, not just economically but morally.

    8. Re:Banning automation is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Concentration of wealth is not a problem. At worst, it is a concequence of problems, quite often with those who do not accumulate wealth.

    9. Re:Banning automation is bad by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      The parent post I was responding to said:
      If your factory has 1000 workers each doing 40 hours a week, and automation makes 250 of those human jobs unnecessary,

      As for the second part- not really. The reasons we allow corporations and companies to exist is that they are good for a majority of citizens.

      The day corporations and companies start to only benefit 49% of the population at the expense of 51% of the population, they are no longer the right thing to do.

      If firing 250 workers saves the corporation but either results in the death of those 250 workers or increases the cost to the rest of society dramatically then you also have a problem.

      Yes-- needlessly keeping people on the job lowers profits- but does provide some benefits to the corporation too. In many cases, a sizable percentage of those salary savings go to executives as bonuses (benefiting 2% of the population at the expense of 98%) or are frittered away on expensive wasteful products. In some cases the supposedly good layoffs do a lot of damage to the company- but the executive skates free with a couple million and moves on down the road.

      At my last company- the lost business in the first year from our big new project dwarfed the multimillion dollar bonuses given to the executives.

      And some of them are now executives at other businesses.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    10. Re:Banning automation is bad by stenvar · · Score: 1

      If firing 250 workers saves the corporation but either results in the death of those 250 workers or increases the cost to the rest of society dramatically then you also have a problem.

      What a great concept. Why don't we start applying this concept with you? We could reduce unemployment by simply forcing you to hire a nanny. You may not need a nanny, but so what? You're much better off than the unemployed nanny, you can afford it, and so you should be required to hire her. And even if you don't need her, you should make her feel good by actually letting her be in your living room during the day and pretend that she is actually working by giving her a baby doll. That, in essence, is what you're proposing, just on a larger scale.

      And some of them are now executives at other businesses.

      Yet, for all their faults, they are still doing a better job than you ever could, because otherwise you would be hired instead of them.

      One really has to wonder where the mind-numbing stupidity of your kind of arguments comes from.

    11. Re:Banning automation is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because otherwise you would be hired instead of them

      How cute, someone who thinks capitalism has anything at all to do with meritocracy.

    12. Re:Banning automation is bad by XcepticZP · · Score: 1

      The answer is to distribute the benefits of automation. If your factory has 1000 workers each doing 40 hours a week, and automation makes 250 of those human jobs unnecessary, instead of laying off 250 people altogether while keeping the remaining 750 on a 40 hour schedule

      And why would an employer be willing to put forth his or his company's capital into automation investment if only the workers reap the benefit? That's just silly, and no one would go for it.

      Really, the harder you squeeze, the more sneaky, ruthless and cunning people will be to keep THEIR money. No matter how good people are, if they feel you are taking money from them that they feel they rightfully earned, they will not like it. It's not about good, or bad. It's about fairness, and the owner will feel it unfair to redistribute his wealth just as much as the lowly worker will feel it unfair that the employer has all that capital saved up and is thus able to make more money.

    13. Re:Banning automation is bad by XcepticZP · · Score: 1

      Automation generally replaces many low paid jobs with fewer high paid jobs, saving the company a small percentage in the process. The people who "lose their jobs" then go on to other jobs, often after investing in some more training to be able to make themselves more valuable.

      Don't come here with your fancy shmancy logic and reason regarding this topic. They tuk ur jewbs!!!

      On a more serious note. People don't see things this way, they see it as someone losing their job, period. I guess it's a general lack of seeing the big picture, but for some that's a sad reality of life, they're stuck dealing with day to day.

      Personally, I feel if someone loses their job, and can't find work due to automation they should get together with a few other people in the same situation. Give them a free ticket to the middle of nowhere, air drop some resources, and let them start a new city. Sometimes, a fresh and brutal new start can give people opportunities they never could get in the city. Also, it'll give those with motivation a chance to make it big in the new city. </hopeful_pipe_dream>

    14. Re:Banning automation is bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing is, automation makes peoples' lives easier. It means that less work has to be performed to get the same results

      the introduction of computers were supposed to make people's lives easier. it meant that less work had to be performed to get the same results.

      and this has been quite true in all measures of work to be performed versus result obtained

      the side effect is that businesses found they could now throw more work at people for the same price, with little to no extra management overhead, yet stil have a much larger net result. and so they did. in effect, the role of the computer only helped business, not workers. workers using them still needed to put in the same amount of "effort" as before. so while less "work" was required per task, over a day the amount level of "work" a person put in stayed the same. the only beneficiary to this being the business.

      as the basic "task" people performed was deemed to be that much easier and not highly skilled in any way (at least as a generational transition to those that knew how to operate computers sufficently enough. hence why don't really see "computer operators" or "data entry" roles being highly valued or mentioned much). so with the job to be performed being much simpler, business downgraded the value of the work to be done allowing them to lower how they paid workers. why would someone pay $20/hr for an accurate skilled classic clerical worker when you can hire 2 at $10/hr and get a larger net result out of it? to compensate for the drop in wages, people would opt to work longer hours. so that overall the worker has to put in more "work" than they used to.

      and so, i put it to you that what you really mean is:
      The thing is, automation makes business easier. It means that less work has to be performed to get the same results

      automation makes life easier in the sense that there's less work for people to do.
      disregarding current economic circumstances, what do you propose 300 million able bodied workers should do with their time?

    15. Re:Banning automation is bad by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

      There's always a choice here between shorter working hours and higher pay. I wouldn't be much concerned with either solution, but we should have one or the other. We need some strong government regulation to ensure that the workers receive their fair share of the increases in productivity that automation brings. We also need to have support for worker training programs so that workers whose jobs are displaced can learn to work in new jobs.

    16. Re:Banning automation is bad by swillden · · Score: 1

      The answer is to distribute the benefits of automation. If your factory has 1000 workers each doing 40 hours a week, and automation makes 250 of those human jobs unnecessary, instead of laying off 250 people altogether while keeping the remaining 750 on a 40 hour schedule, keep everyone on board at 30 hours a week.

      And your best employees will leave, because they don't want a 30 hour job and they can go elsewhere. And your overall efficiency will decline so you'll have to work the remaining people more than 30 hours per week, which will make them happy, but will mean that you're paying more than you would have. Meanwhile your competitor will have implemented the same automation and slashed the jobs from his workforce, selecting the least effective employees to can, so his costs will be significantly lower than yours. He'll then cut his prices, taking market share away from you and as your volume declines you become even less efficient -- and and you also have to cut your workers' hours back farther, causing more of them to bail.

      Unless you wise up at some point, pretty soon your competitor will eat your lunch, you'll be out of business and all of your employees will be looking for jobs.

      And that's ignoring the (very valid) point you made about overhead costs.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    17. Re:Banning automation is bad by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      It can't be done by companies. It has to come from society- and the government.

      It can't be done by government, either. Government is as integral to the problem as corporations are. In some ways, more-so.

      90% of whatever solution is settled on must come from society, somehow. Government must be dragged kicking and screaming the other 10%. (Corporations will need to be hit over the head and dragged the whole way there.)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    18. Re:Banning automation is bad by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      You are oversimplifying the situation.

      I already have nanny... but I'm working her 90 hours a week.
      Three other nanny's are homeless and starving.

      I'm paying her for 40 hours a week a total of $400 per week.

      Meanwhile, after paying for everything, I'm making 265 times as much as her.

      I complain bitterly that I have to contribute anything at all to the welfare of the three other nanny's.

      First, just from a moral standpoint- is it fair that I get 265 times as much when half the cause is that I was born into it (in the u.s. your parents income is 50% of the factor of your income-- the "winners" of the prior generation are allowed to give their children a leg up so after a couple iterations, it's no longer a meritocracy but an oligarchy.)

      Now, on a more practical point, if I keep this behavior up, there is a lot of history of those nanny's gutting me like a stuck pig and taking all my stuff- or crushing my head with a rock- or kidnapping and murdering my children. Plus, at a fundamental level it bothers me to step over all those starving people and to see reports about them on the news so unless I'm a sociopath, I'm going to naturally support some kind of charity for them. Unless I can just manage to remap them as "losers" and "layabouts" even tho the real issue has nothing to do with their work ethic. They are human beings just the same as I am.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    19. Re:Banning automation is bad by real-modo · · Score: 1

      Because if one company lays off the 250 then they are more profitable.

      This means they can undercut your prices by 10%... and every consumer (including you) is going to buy the cheaper product.

      They also have easier access to capital since they are more profitable so every investor (including you...) buys their stock.

      And then they buy out the competition and spread their practice.

      You've just recapitulated Marx's critique of capitalism: it's a Prisoner's Dilemma.

      I don't have a good solution-- just giving you some reasons.

      Neither did he.

    20. Re:Banning automation is bad by stenvar · · Score: 1

      I already have nanny... but I'm working her 90 hours a week.

      Really? Are you holding her at gunpoint? Otherwise, it's her choice to work for you, presumably because what you pay her is still worth it for her to work.

      Three other nanny's are homeless and starving.

      Then they should change jobs, since obviously they aren't needed for nannying.

      Meanwhile, after paying for everything, I'm making 265 times as much as her.

      No, you do not. The business owner makes whatever profits there are. The manager may make 265 times as much as another employee, but the manager is hired by the owners to do a job, and they have chosen to pay him that much.

      First, just from a moral standpoint- is it fair that I get 265 times as much when half the cause is that I was born into it (in the u.s. your parents income is 50% of the factor of your income-- the "winners" of the prior generation are allowed to give their children a leg up so after a couple iterations, it's no longer a meritocracy but an oligarchy.)

      Twin studies show that a big part of intelligence is inherited. In addition, married, educated and successful parents teach their children well. I don't see what's "unfair" about any of that. If you have drug addicted, low-IQ, separated parents, there is nothing anybody can do for you to make up for that. Society tries to help you a bit, but outcomes will never be equal.

      Plus, at a fundamental level it bothers me to step over all those starving people and to see reports about them on the news so unless I'm a sociopath,

      There are essentially no starving people in the US. You're inventing problems that don't exist in order to push an economic and political agenda that is only going to hurt people.

      I'm going to naturally support some kind of charity for them

      No, you are not. Charity is voluntary giving, and is usually done for people we know have fallen on hard times through no fault of their own. What you actually are advocating is forcing people to support others who may well have brought their misfortune upon themselves through poor choices. That isn't charity, it's offensive.

    21. Re:Banning automation is bad by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      This is the cycle of the current non-free market, touted as free market. Companies start by filling a need better and cheaper than before. That company than grows quickly and gains influence. Then they "buy" regulation to insure that what they just did can't be done again. The next generation has to fight the big government/corporation complex in order to grow and fill the roll as the cycle continues. It seems terrible in the short term because it always feels like a new company has some form of total control. Nearly all fortunes and big companies got that way by providing a good or service cheaper/better/faster than it could be done prior, thus society as a whole did benefit from them getting that way. Reducing government involvement would help some, mainly in the limited liability, regulatory capture and corporate welfare points.

      I am big and little 'L' Libertarian, not because i believe in a libertarian utopia, but because we are so far in the opposite direction it is self destructive to our society. Government as an organization will, like any other organization, will begin to exist primarily to sustain itself, with it's original charter/constitution being secondary to that goal. You can't vote for bigger government through welfare, healthcare, social security etc... and not get larger military that gets bored and needs adventures to go on, big security theater to inspect every citizen when traveling or spying to make sure that there are no threats to the government as a whole.

      We can only continue with a 100% across the board reduction in government spending. Reduce the bureaucratic waist, cut every budget by 5% per year and require any government organization to provide the same level of service as the previous year or fire the top 4-5 levels of management. No exceptions. No sequestering anti dog and pony shows. When a budget gets cut you don't cut the most visible task in order to foster public outcry rather than the actual fat that needs to be trimmed.

      Vote libertarian not to get the libertarian utopia, but to fix the current conglomerate distopia. You don't fix government cause problems by voting for more government.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    22. Re:Banning automation is bad by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      And when automation means 30 to 40 % of the citizens of the country can't find work?

      So as long as they are not starving to death, you are cool with it. They can be utterly miserable their entire lives but you don't feel any empathy.

      What a sociopath.

      I don't really think we have anything to talk about. You believe what you believe and I believe differently. I think 2020 is going to be an interesting year.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    23. Re:Banning automation is bad by stenvar · · Score: 1

      And when automation means 30 to 40 % of the citizens of the country can't find work?

      We have two centuries of experience with automation; it has never meant that and it will never mean that. What automation does is make more people wealthier and successful, across the board.

      I don't really think we have anything to talk about. You believe what you believe and I believe differently. I think 2020 is going to be an interesting year.

      The difference is that my beliefs are informed by two centuries of economic experience and history, whereas yours are the typical extreme left and extreme right fear mongering.

  31. Bureaucracy will save us ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a genuinely capitalist economic environment, we would head inexorably toward automation.

    But bureaucracy is the driving force behind the government and any large company. There will always be millions of "make-work" jobs that justify the size of Dept X's budget.

    Only the nepotists and the MBAs stand between us and Skynet!

  32. Re:Is my job as a slashdot troll vulnerable to thi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would you like to talk about :( ?

  33. On another subject by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    I'm looking for examples of beautiful open source code in any language. If you know of any, please let me know.

    Don't you know beauty is in the eye of the becoder?

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:On another subject by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      It's tough, apparently no one knows about any beautiful open source code, no matter the becoder.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  34. Easily Predicted by mrhippo3 · · Score: 1

    I grew up in Pittsburgh and remember when the steel jobs just went away. The air was cleaner, but the economy was anything but "green." Fortunately the Pittsburgh has recovered but the jobs shifted to the massive medical/research/college community. A few year later, in Akron, a staunchly pro-labor town, the plants just stopped production. Many engineers proclaimed, "We're engineers, we're safe." I saw the had writing in the wall once and I escaped into technology, for a while. (The plant is now a brown field and the few engineering jobs at that company have moved elsewhere.) While at the plant, I learned a bit of CAD, QA, FEA, statistical QA, vibration analysis, programming, etc. My next move was into writing for the trade press, in the early days of PC-based CAD (mid 1980's). I got paid to write about all the topics previously listed AND I was also paid to play with computers. This gave me a lot of career flexibility, as opposed to the folk who had retired in place.
    The task of moving knowledge-base solutions into engineering was dropped when early AI attempts fared poorly. But the success of Watson, should make every engineer quake. The "engineering problem" can be succinctly described as making the best possible stuff with the fewest resources, the least possible effort, and have a low failure rate. This sounds like a computer-solvable problem to me. The STEM crisis may be avoided, but many folks will NOT like the result. There will only briefly be STEM jobs, due to automation. However , STEM may be one of the few professions where the end goal is to put all the profession out of work.

  35. Automation is a current, not a future problem. by gallondr00nk · · Score: 1

    At what point will we start seeing legislation forbidding the automation of certain industries?

    Never.

    If governments had any interest whatsoever in protecting jobs there have been ample opportunities to stem the tide of automation over the last forty years, and they have done absolutely nothing. The ruins of Detroit and the death of unskilled on reasonable wages should demonstrate that point.

    I say this all the time, but we have to start thinking about providing a reasonable standard of living to people who are automated out of a job. The situation as it stands is unacceptable, so what good is legislating against further automation going to do?

    Better to deal with the root problem of providing people with income directly than a ridiculous sticking plaster solution where say, a further 10% of the workforce are chucked on the scrapheap (making unemployment 20%+ in a lot of places) instead of 20%. We've seen the sort of devastation and deprivation that 20%+ unemployment causes, are we really going to throw one in four or five people on the scrapheap in sacrifice of our outdated industrial age ideas?

  36. What about the part where people are better lockup by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    What about the part where people are better off in lockup / prison? Or you have some people who are in a win - win place where they can steal what they need and if they get away with they win and if they get caught and got to jail / prison where the state gives what they need.

  37. we need will need health care for all that is not by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    we need will need health care for all that is not tied to jobs if 45% of jobs will go a way and or we move to a systems where people only work about 20 hours a week.

  38. 3 Laws Safe? by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

    What would the 3 Laws of Robotics look like in actual practice?

    The 45% that will lose their jobs? Will be the ones that need a job.

    1. Re:3 Laws Safe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What would the 3 Laws of Robotics look like in actual practice?

      1. A human being may not injure a legislator, through inaction, allow a legislator to come to harm.
      2. A human being must obey the orders given to it by legislators, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
      3. A human being may vote to elect legislators that it believes will best protect its self-existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

      Forgot the most important one - a failsafe for rule #3.

      0. A human being - legislators included - may not harm the legislature, or, by inaction, allow the legislature to come to harm.

  39. Fortunately for me by gman003 · · Score: 1

    At least until we get strong AI, my job programming computers is safe.

    1. Re:Fortunately for me by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      The job is safe (for a while), but your wages aren't. There will be many who lose their job who will compete with you for yours.

      --
      ...
    2. Re:Fortunately for me by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Save as if you will not be allowed to work after you reach 50. Because that's what's happened to many of the people I know in the compute field.

      Then there's the whole outsourcing and offshoring thing... but serious age discrimination is rampant in the IT field and the supreme court generally gutted age discrimination protection in 2009.

      Why do you think job sites want to know your high school graduation DATE?

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  40. UAW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The UAW (United Auto Workers) told the big car manufacturers back in the 80s that they could put as many robots on the line as they wanted, but to remember that robots don't buy cars.

    HA! The captcha is "humanity".

  41. Depopulation concerns and loss of tax base by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Inevitable automation makes one wonder why so many countries become worried, when depopulation occurs within their borders. How can governments raise enough taxes to support a large military establishment and national healthcare, when 45% of the workforce become unemployed.

  42. what about banning OT (other then in few limited) by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    what about banning OT (other then in few limited cases) this will me salary pay may have to pay ot or have some like an 100K+ COL level before it can be used to work some over the OT level. also have an forced added pay level when some at 100K+col needs to work over 80 hours an week.

    Let's also move the OT start level to 32 hours a week with OT OK to 40Hours and then after 40 start to limit it.

  43. Not enough copper was it? by holophrastic · · Score: 1

    And the robots and AI won't only be able to, they'll also be better, faster, and cheaper than humans? They'll also require less infrastructure? They'll suddenly be able to build farms in the middle of no where out of nothing with no water, no power, and no roads? And it won't take everyone of us to manage this growing fleet of just-out-of-school autonomous tools? And we'll have the resources to power these things? Good luck with that. Oh, and it's going to be considered murder to destroy a robot?

    1. Re:Not enough copper was it? by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Oh, and it's going to be considered murder to destroy a robot?

      Only in California.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  44. Plea to Nerds by macbeth66 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Please, can't someone develop AI managers, politicians and lawyers?

    I, for one, would welcome our robotic overlords. If they just got rid of those first.

    1. Re:Plea to Nerds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.marshallbrain.com/manna1.htm

  45. 45% of all statistics are made up by frnic · · Score: 1

    brump bumb

    1. Re:45% of all statistics are made up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By robots.

  46. Governmental and administratif jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most administrative jobs have little added value and are pure cost centers, so they will be automated.
    A lot of artificial jobs have been created by politicians in the government to create a voting base.

    The old etatist (socialist) system works as follows :
    -watch the media for any hysteric event
    -pass laws as complex as possible to regulate the perceived problem
    -create structures and hire officials to execute them, who will then vote for you to keep their jobs.
    This system is really an old relic from the communist era and it will gradually disappear.
    It's an unnecessary burden on society.
    In Europe, more then 30% of the workforce works for the government, and a lot of their work can easily be automated.
    Expect lots of administrative job losses in the near future.

    But don't worry : they will be replaced by real jobs, ie. in nursing, policing, child caring etc. A lot of people are needed there.
    It would be a major progress for society : instead of filling in useless papers, government officials will be providing care, so that the working people in the private sector (an ever decreasing part of the population which is aging) can create as much wealth as possible to support the rest.

    So big efficiency gains are possible, it should be applauded.

  47. Re:What about the part where people are better loc by macbeth66 · · Score: 2

    My friend, you are already in prison. As are we all. We just don't know it.

  48. 45%? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Id say its more like 70%.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  49. And the robots at the plant reading slashdot say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WTF

  50. Framing Problem by gznork26 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This entire discussion is based on a premise that is no longer true. Once upon a time, wealth was created solely by the performance of labor, the users of the means of production, by people, under the control of capital, the owners of the means of production. But now, wealth is mostly created by capital, either by manipulating the rules of society and of the economy, which is what banks and other financial institutions do, or by the performance of labor by automation. The relationship between the human laborer and the creation of wealth no longer matches the economic model in which people can pay for their living expenses solely through the wages paid to them for that labor.

    The solutions that are being offered by governments in the thrall of capital are inappropriate to the reality in which people now live. Wealth derived without the participation of labor is being hoarded by capital. This is the core of the problem. Until and unless that wealth is used to enable people to purchase the products created without their participation, this situation cannot be resolved.

    Capital has used the for-profit banking system to control governments and people to their own benefit. Debt money loaded to nations at compounded interest can never pay that debt, because the value of the interest demanded was never introduced into the economy. It's a broken system. Technical people who understand logic ought to be able to work through the math of this, and the network of interactions, to satisfy themselves that this is so. We should also be able to design a better system, rather than argue over how to kludge a fix that can only hide the real problem for a short time.

  51. Could you be more vauge? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A small percentage would improve themselves by learning new things exploring new concepts, etc.

    And live off the land?

    How to pay for those materials to "improve" themselves?

    When you did into the details, having a mass of jobless people cannot work with our current economic system.

    1. Re:Could you be more vauge? by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      That is why you change the economic system. Divorce survival from having a job and then a job becomes a means of pursuing your dreams instead of just putting food on your table or a roof over your head.

    2. Re:Could you be more vauge? by peragrin · · Score: 1

      Doesn't completely work. a small percentage of people can do that.

      the problem becomes a lot of people just are not creative enough to do such things.

      If I didn't have to work I know what i would do. I have a list. So does my sister. But we both have to work. the thing is most people don't have enough personal drive to do something they are not forced to do.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    3. Re:Could you be more vauge? by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Depends on just how automated things are. I would say that right now? It isn't really practical. But with another 45% automation things change. There just won't be enough work to go around.

      Most people do have the drive to work towards having luxury goods and services, even if their basic needs are met.

      Some people will drop out, satisfied by roof over their head, food in their stomach and an internet connection.

      But I would bet that most of the things on your list of things to do when you have no work obligation will require something more than that. You may work less, or you may set your sights on higher goals. It would be your choice.

      And besides that, there really are only two options. Live... Or die. Unless we divorce work and survival, when there is 45% less work, a major fraction of people will put in a non-survival position. AKA killed, be it by slow starvation or by actual violence. The reason for this is like you said, a lot of those jobs that are automated will not be replaced by similar jobs, and some fraction of those disenfranchised people will not be able to retrain to those creative jobs.

    4. Re:Could you be more vauge? by AlphaWoIf_HK · · Score: 1

      When you did into the details, having a mass of jobless people cannot work with our current economic system.

      Which is presumably why it would have to undergo massive changes.

      --
      Da derp dee derp da teedly derpee derpee dum. Rated PG-13.
  52. Typo in paragraph 3 by gznork26 · · Score: 1

    Debt money LOANED to nations...

  53. It's not automation its your economic religion by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    If you must keep your freemarket religion at all cost... the costs are going to get too high for an increasing number of people. Capitalism can go too far. It naturally corrupts and the LAST thing it does is employ people. Now maybe you grew up on the Jetson's and think there will be jobs fixing robots or pushing start buttons and helping computers make decisions... and you'd be up in the clouds with that cartoon.

    Economics is going to have to change fundamentally... but it'll likely take WW4 with billions more suffering and dying before people are willing to break from traditional beliefs. Even the optimistic Star Trek series charted a dismal early future for us.

    Remember the 50s? space age etc? We are supposed to be working 30 hours per week but instead we work MORE hours than a farmer did before the industrial revolution. Our work is also meaningless, most don't do anything meaningful for a living (go ahead and rationalize if it makes you feel better.)

    I had an automation project with the local university started and all of us stopped it because it would make 3rd world agriculture cheaply automated. Yeah, we would have solved fully automated farming (it wasn't some ploy topic for students like all other such projects.)

    The other issue nobody touches is overpopulation. people selfishly banging out brats who consume more resources and want even more than their parents. 1/3 is in poverty already (it's easy to raise that up to 2/3.)

    Some people would argue that Nuclear physics is not bad; but some also regret giving us the bomb. Military automation = skynet.... kind of sad we must resort to shallow movie references to convey an issue with it.

    1. Re:It's not automation its your economic religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We **COULD** be working 20 hour weeks if we wanted a 1950's standard of living. You know, the days when a heart attack meant death. The days when cancer meant death. The days when your phone was connected to the wall.

      People work more because they want more. They are not required to work more. They voluntarily make choices that will give them an income they want.

    2. Re:It's not automation its your economic religion by bussdriver · · Score: 1

      FYI, cancer rates in the 1950's were MUCH lower than today.

      We make more for less, with less material cost and less labor costs. You are falsely equating labor with technological advances. A low income person today can own a TV while in the 1950s they could not - in large part because of technological advances not because people work more or less hours.

      Working long hours didn't give us Cell Phone technology. It all will happen with less labor; in some cases just as quickly.

      People want to work full time to get benefits. Americans must work more if they want any healthcare. Wanting shit they don't need is just another post WW2 propaganda issue; you don't have much freedom to opt out of the wage slave culture. The system is designed to lock you into bondage in addition to the propaganda to help you enjoy being one. I don't want to work full time and I don't need the money but I do need healthcare... and a moderate shelter with internet is not as cheap as it should be (not many places pay that well to part timers, the good pay comes with a demand for time.)

  54. technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by OrangeTide · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How will I pay for my material things? Why would someone invest money into building and operate a factory of robots only to give away free snorkles and swimfins?

    You imply some kind of utopia on the horizon, but I fail to see a path leading there.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    1. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The future is Communism! You let AI run the economy and the government commissions the investment in the building of the production plants, then people just get their stuff from the corner store using their pre-determined rations based on the AI computations.

      you righties think being "slaves" to "socialists" like Obama is bad...wait until the first real AI production plant reduces labor costs to nothing and we see a run-away train toward this future where we are dependent on automated production to survive. you either follow the law or die of starvation because you have forgotten how to take care of yourself.

    2. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

      ...pre-determined rations based on the AI computations.

      Meat-bag #328819530, enjoy your kibble.

    3. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by aix+tom · · Score: 1

      How will I pay for my material things? Why would someone invest money into building and operate a factory of robots only to give away free snorkles and swimfins?

      You imply some kind of utopia on the horizon, but I fail to see a path leading there.

      But, to turn it around:

      Who will you sell your snorkels and swimfins too, if you have eliminated all workers and nobody can earn a wage?

      Historically there have been quite a few major shifts in the "job market". After all, we have moved from about 90% of the population working in just creating enough basic food stuff to perhaps 5% of the population needed to create the basic food supply.

      What's interesting is that most major shifts in labour distribution also lead to major shifts in society and the political landscape. That's of course what the politicians are afraid of.

    4. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by sjames · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Same reason someone would sit down and write a Unix clone and then give it away?

    5. Re: technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by nbritton · · Score: 1

      Everyone else will be in the same boat, the markets will correct themselves and return to a natural equilibrium. Robots do the work for a fraction of the cost of human labor, you don't need to pay them. Cheaper products, however for-profit corporations will need to be addressed. Concentrating weath, to the extremes we allow today, would destroy society. Ideally labor automation would free us to do more productive things. However, that won't happen unless we address the cost of education.

    6. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Nadaka · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No.

      You wouldn't be giving away free snorkels and swim fins.

      You would be selling them, and a large portion of your profit would be taxed.

      Those taxes (along with the taxes on all over profit) would pay for each citizens basic minimum income.

      The majority of that basic minimum income would pay for things like rent, food, utilities and transportation.

      As a luxury goods producer, you won't be getting much of that back.

      However, the people who do the remaining 55% of work will still be buying luxury goods like swim fins and snorkels. And since that 55% of work will likely be spread over more than 55% of the population, they will have more time to actually use those swim fins and snorkels in their free time, driving your profits higher.

      This maintains a capitalist system even in the face of recognizing survival as a basic human right and allowing the government to actually defend that right.

    7. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, if no one NEEDS to earn a wage, what is stopping them from deciding to take up snorkeling in their increased amount of free time?

      I for one would be happy if the survival of my family was not tied to my job. I could pick a job I enjoy more to work full time at... Or simply work fewer hours.

    8. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Why would someone invest money into building and operate a factory of robots only to give away free snorkles and swimfins?

      You buy a robot bot, and build your own factory to make your fins and snorkles. Then, when you have more than you need, you give them away, as they cost you nothing, and if you charged for them, it'd be easier for someone else to build an automated factory to make them than buy your fins.

      But land will always be scarce. Land for solar power. Land for crops. Land for factories. That will always prevent equality.

    9. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by next_ghost · · Score: 1

      How will I pay for my material things? Why would someone invest money into building and operate a factory of robots only to give away free snorkles and swimfins?

      You imply some kind of utopia on the horizon, but I fail to see a path leading there.

      The only way to that utopia that I can see requires putting all the factories that make all the stuff we use every day from across the globe inside everyone's garage. 3D printing might get us there within the next 30 years, unless we lose the fight for our freedoms today. If we lose to the NSA and patent and copyright holders, you should prepare for a new form of feudalism instead.

    10. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      You assume your family will get free food, medical and housing. I've not seen any evidence that we're going in that direction.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    11. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      There are only 2 directions we can go in...

      Providing a basic income capable of covering housing, food, transportation (as well as socialized medical care and education).

      Or the intentional death of millions who can no longer provide the basic necessities for themselves and their families, AKA murder in the name of profit. An escalation of the class warfare already being waged by the plutocrats against the people to genocidal proportions.

      Only the first option will allow society to continue to exist, the second will not.

    12. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How will I pay for my material things? Why would someone invest money into building and operate a factory of robots only to give away free snorkles and swimfins?

      You imply some kind of utopia on the horizon, but I fail to see a path leading there.

      Obviously, since more of the work will be mechanized/robotized/automatized, more goods will be produced with less people involved. There won't be jobs for everybody, it's just a simple mathematical fact. For all to survive, the increased produced wealth will have to be distributed better. I am sorry if this scares you, but the word we're all trying to avoid is TAXES. But increased taxes on income are inevitable.

    13. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      Not my fault they starved, if poor people would just quit being so lazy and get a job they wouldn't demand my tax dollars.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    14. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Its not a matter of being lazy, these are people who want to work and survive who are being murdered by the intentional economic action of idiots like you. It is your fault, just as directly as if you pulled the trigger yourself.

    15. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

      I take it you didn't see the infamous "Let him die!" cheers during Ron Paul's speech? Even Paul had a look of horror on his face at the blatant fucking GREED that was on front and center display. Whether anybody wants to accept it or not the top 10% of the capital holders are made up in a large part with sociopaths whom if you told "Millions of men,women, and children will die if you do not stop" would say "fuck them peasant scum, charge 'em for the mass graves to dump their sorry corpses in".

      This is why I really wouldn't be surprised to see the world go through another dark age, as those at the top frankly would pull an Andrew Ryan and burn the forest to the ground rather than share it with the poor.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    16. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Slow+Smurf · · Score: 1

      I think you missed a joke there. I hope you did anyway, I didn't look at his posting history, but you'll note his sig indicates he supports a higher minimum wage.

    17. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Perhaps. But I see just as many actual people taking exactly that stance.

    18. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Slow+Smurf · · Score: 1

      I mostly posted because couldn't upvote your everyone is gonna die post, hoped it might increase visibility a bit with another reply. Too few people understand that point. It is the other option, but it's a horrifying one.

    19. Re: technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      however for-profit corporations will need to be addressed. Concentrating weath, to the extremes we allow today[, especially in for-profit corporations], is destroying society.

      FTFY

      (And I'm a conservative.)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    20. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      I wish other people could see that.

      Especially with the yet to come 50% increase in population from the current ~7B to ~11B.

      People don't seem to recall how violent desperate people can become.

      The riots could be spectacular.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    21. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Labor costs typically top out at about 40% tho in many industries it's below 20%.

      So the fins wouldn't be "free". They wouldn't even be half the current price.

      They would be less expensive.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    22. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      "Free" anything is generally impossible for regular people to conceive of. Free labor would get you robots that mine you the materials you need. We aren't material scarce now, and if we were, we'd send robots to space to fix that. Free power also runs into the same problems, and confusing situations.

    23. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 1

      Which has happened once? twice? in the 40+ year history of Unix?

    24. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by sjames · · Score: 1

      More like 3 or 4. Then there's the clone of BeOS, FreeDOS, etc. Then since OSes seemed to be covered, there's all that other Free software out there as well that makes a full Debian distro take up a few DVDs.

      Given time and resources, a lot of people will do all sorts of things just because they enjoy it and believe it should be done. If people typically worked full time for 20 hours a week, there'd be even more.

    25. Re: technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by mhajicek · · Score: 1

      I disagree. It will free us to do LESS productive things.

    26. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems a prevalent (and quite reasonable) concern is that if don't own an AI production plant, you will be unnecessary and die of starvation anyway.

      There's nothing to indicate the government will own said AI production plants. The future is not communism. It's probably much worse.

    27. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      There just aren't enough rare products to give to everyone.
      There's a very limited supply of prime real estate. A vanishingly tiny supply of super premium prime real estate.
      There is a rare supply of particular human beings who have special talents.
      There is a rare supply of items crafted by select highly skilled human beings.
      There's even a rare supply of medium, high, premium, ultra premium food supplies.
      Only a small number of people are allowed to climb everest each year (it's like a traffic jam already) and they each pay about $75,000 to $100,000 for the privilege.
      We have plentiful low quality food.

      We are in a transition to where some things might become much less expensive. But even if you tried to eliminate money- there will be a way to determine who gets to sit in the center of the front row.

      Until then, it will cost millions to billions of dollars to build factories. It will cost money to buy the robots. And to research and create the free power. And to induce the "top" people to work for you instead of someone else.

      "Free" is a utopian pipe dream for many items.

      We can hope that basic housing, food, medical care, education, etc. could be made "free" as automation greatly reduces employment options. It might buy us a couple decades of peace.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    28. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How will I pay for my material things? Why would someone invest money into building and operate a factory of robots only to give away free snorkles and swimfins?

      You imply some kind of utopia on the horizon, but I fail to see a path leading there.

      Broad, simplistic questions with broad, simplistic answers. You pay for material goods with your citizen's stipend + earned income. People invest in factories to improve their incomes above their stipends.

    29. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We don't even have a robot that can clean a bathroom or paint a room. Both of which would be far easier than running a factory. You are delusional.

    30. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by delt0r · · Score: 1

      Once you have a free one, that can be replicated indefinitely at zero cost, why would you need another?

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    31. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      Complete socioeconomic collapse is a real possibility. Everyone seems to ignore the stakes, but to me they are very real. Even if I'm a bit uncertain on the time frame (in my lifetime? my grandchildren's lifetime?)

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    32. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by FirephoxRising · · Score: 1

      This. We've already been there, take a look at 18th century society! Bleep me, it's scary, the prisons were major profit centres with horrendous conditions and the staff could make extra by charging for extra luxuries like food. The female prisoners could make extra by servicing the popular prison tours..... Why do we want to go back to that? The top 10% seem to think it was a golden age.

    33. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With a declining customer base comes higher per-unit costs, which causes the customer base to decline further.. Until finally AI-based mass-production facilities no longer have enough demand to support their own maintenance.

      The final nail in the coffin for Acme AI will be competition from an expanding population of unemployed artisans who make boutique custom-fit snorkels and swim fins...

      And the wheel turns.....

    34. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      THX-1138...George Lucas was a visionary.

      The AI would probably provide menial yet stimulating tasks for us to perform so we feel like we have control of our lives.

    35. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      I truly believe this is the reason for all the NSA spying, the top 1% know that we are heading for another dark age where they intend to "starve the beast" and the poor while they are at it so having a large list of anybody who might be able to get more than 3 people to listen to them (plus having dirt on anybody in office) so they are hoping a STASI style police state will save their asses...it won't.

      This, all of this, this 21st century version of the robber barons HAS to end, because the poor outnumber the rich by several magnitudes and will NOT go silently into that good night, the only question? Is whether like the former USSR it dies quietly or like Germany of the 40s ends up turning into a monster.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    36. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      And why do you think that the customer base will decline? The price of snorkels is low enough that the primary limiting factors are not price, but rather having the time and location to snorkel. And with hundreds of millions of people freed from the burden of constant labor, just to survive, you likely have more people able to dedicate some small portion of their time and income towards snorkeling.

    37. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Socialists like Obama? Sounds like someone's been guzzling a bit too much of the Koch Brother's Koolaid.

      Obama is NOT a Socialist. But what the heck would I know? I'm just one of those 'evil' Socialists.

      On a side note, Communism and Socialism are both types of economies, and though they may be similar in some ways, they are not the same.

    38. Re:technocracy - the end of a monetary system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're trying to create things that could keep us as pets.

  55. Force them to keep employees on payroll by bricko · · Score: 0

    Thats simple, if automation takes out a job...unless they are prepared to euthanize the people, they should be required to keep the people on payroll at standard salary until retirement age. If labor costs are required to be the same for all companies, then they can compete with better features and better customer service and stop competing on labor costs.

    1. Re:Force them to keep employees on payroll by Nadaka · · Score: 2

      At that point, it would be better to throw up your hands and admit that basic survival is a human right, and not tied to ones job. Then just give everyone a basic minimum income, enough to cover rent, food, utilities and transportation along with socializing health care and education.

      The people who are bored if they don't work will still want to work. The people unsatisfied with the minimum will still want to work to access luxury goods and services. We can still have a merit based capitalist society, where the driven and capable far outstrip the lazy or weak. In fact, it would likely be a golden age of human productivity as people are more likely to pursue their greatest dreams rather than toil just to survive.

    2. Re:Force them to keep employees on payroll by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Socialism for all and a layer of Capitalism for those who actually want it...

      That's a heck of a lot better than our current Capitalism for all and Socialism for those who were born into a wealthy family and start off able to afford to play the market and buy insurance to make the taxpayers make up for any possible losses incurred by their automated gambling on Wall Street.

      You forgot a third group though. People like me who would take up hobbies (it's not really WORK if you like doing something just for the sake of doing it), but not out of boredom or want of luxury items and services. 'Let's see, I have food, water, shelter, power, internet for long distance connections, feet for short distance connections, and public transportation for what's in between. I've always wanted to start a garden, write a novel, create a few new apps, and maybe spend some time doing some physical labor for others instead of using a gym. Ah, as Charlie Sheen would say, 'Winning!'

  56. 45% of US jobs vulnerable to automation? by crizh · · Score: 2

    Or to translate into common sense.

    US economy can get 45% larger using automation.

    --
    Trust The Computer, The Computer is your friend.
    1. Re:45% of US jobs vulnerable to automation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or the 1% can get 45% more wealthy.

      Captcha: monopoly

    2. Re:45% of US jobs vulnerable to automation? by crizh · · Score: 1

      If the 45% replaced by automation are put out of work then your economy gets 45% smaller.

      Take a guess at what that does to the incomes of the 1%.

      Sheesh.

      --
      Trust The Computer, The Computer is your friend.
  57. "how soon laws outlawing automation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When will Americans outlaw automation? Not until 100% of the Americans left alive are the 1%. They have a goal. That goal is the same as George Prescott, G.W.'s grandfather, pushed in 1933. The complete elimination of the 'unproductive'.
    That would be us, the American people, who right now have fewer chances to be heard than Chinese Oligarchs during the election cycles..
    Will we rise in resistance?
    Not in America. We gave up the right when we de-unionized, and we gave up the power when 80% of the wealth landed in the hands of the top 5%.

    1. Re:"how soon laws outlawing automation? by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      In an economic sense productivity amounts to what capital you employ. You can sit on your ass and collect interest and be productive. Unproductive means poor.

      --
      ...
    2. Re:"how soon laws outlawing automation? by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      No, productivity to the result of labor alone. Someone who can "sit on your ass and collect interest" is not productive, but a leach on the productivity of others.

    3. Re:"how soon laws outlawing automation? by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      Not arguing with your point but the way productivity is defined by economists, it is how much you produce with your labor, which of course depends on the capital you use. Since you are only one person you can only labor at most 24x7 if you were some kind of mutant that didn't require sleep, and could multitask while eating and using the bathroom.

      You labor the same whether you use a hand shovel or a backhoe, but you are far more productive with the backhoe. However, 'being productive' doesn't somehow make you superior. For instance I hired someone with a backhoe to dig a trench after calculating that it would take me three months of digging with a shovel. Now, I've never used a backhoe, but I am sure that it would be quicker to learn even by trial and error than it would be to dig even a small amount of that trench with a spade.

      And imagine how long it would take someone to scratch the trench out with no shovel but just a sharp stick!

      --
      ...
    4. Re:"how soon laws outlawing automation? by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Using a backhoe, YOU are more productive.

      Someone else using a backhoe doesn't make YOU productive.

    5. Re:"how soon laws outlawing automation? by GargamelSpaceman · · Score: 1

      I didn't directly use the backhoe, but used capital ( money ) to hire a backhoe. My labor was phoning in the request ( and also the other non-digging stuff I had to do for my home improvement project ). A backhoe is capital, money is capital. I was working for myself using my customer's money. My customer just happened to be me. If I didn't have the money, then I wouldn't have gotten the job done nearly as fast, or maybe not at all.

      --
      ...
  58. How long to the Butlerian Jihad? by haruchai · · Score: 1

    The Luddites failed and that was a good thing but if 45% of jobs go to machines, what will all that gun-toting population do?

    --
    Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    1. Re:How long to the Butlerian Jihad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares. The OTHER 55% of us will also have guns and jobs and will be far wealthier than those liberal leftists who are too dumb and too dependent on statism to use the brain God gave them.

    2. Re:How long to the Butlerian Jihad? by haruchai · · Score: 1

      And too lazy to log in to Slashdot?

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    3. Re:How long to the Butlerian Jihad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to have an account here but I found out quickly that when you are pro-freedom, pro-gun, pro-capitalism and pro-life on slashdot the nutters come out of the woodwork to threaten your family.

    4. Re:How long to the Butlerian Jihad? by haruchai · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of nutters on your side of the fence who go around threatening & harassing people.

      As for the people who are supposedly threatening you, at least you know they won't be packing heat.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    5. Re:How long to the Butlerian Jihad? by real-modo · · Score: 1

      I used to have an account here but I found out quickly that when you are pro-freedom, pro-gun, pro-capitalism and pro-life on slashdot the nutters come out of the woodwork to threaten your family.

      ???

      How can you be both pro-gun and pro-life?

      Or, if "pro-life" means anti-abortion, as it commonly does, how can you be both pro-freedom and against freedom for women?

      No wonder you got a few harsh comments. Slashdotters tend to like binary logic, the law of tertium exclusum.

    6. Re:How long to the Butlerian Jihad? by haruchai · · Score: 1

      I doubt he'll answer but it'll probably be a "think of the children" argument.

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
  59. Prison labour? by patriciacurtis · · Score: 0

    The prisons will be empty then :)

    --
    http://luckyredfish.com
  60. Let's replace the politicians first! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Computers can do the job of those jerks in congress and the house much better anyway!

  61. won't happen. by Truekaiser · · Score: 1

    I used to think like this, but that was before I had a job at a major mail order prescription company.
    Middle management tried to impress upper management by purchasing a one million dollar automated packing system, in theory it could do thousands of orders a day.
    Far outclassing a single human packer at a packing station.
    It only did that occasionally, why?
    It was a dumb automated machine, ONE little deviation and it stopped working.
    This was on top of other stuff on it not working like printing the wrong order's paper work, it throwing a fit if the rx's did not come down the line in the exact order it expected.
    It also did not care if for instance the printers messed up, or the paper came out non flat causing the grabber arm to get it stuck on it.
    This is the general problem with automation fantasies, physicly it may be possible to replace the human doing the job with a machine.
    But the machine is no where near as fault tolerant as a human.
    If one of these machines encounters a minor error such as product being out of order, or objects not being 'exactly' where it expects it to be, they stop at best and at worst ignoring it causing more problems.
    For a human worker it's just a fraction of a second routine correction.

    1. Re:won't happen. by LMariachi · · Score: 1

      That speaks to poorly-engineered automation, not automation in general.

  62. Magic 8 Ball by brusewitz · · Score: 1

    Why is management in the second wave? I'm pretty sure you could replace them(or at least upper management) with a Magic 8 Ball right now.

    1. Re:Magic 8 Ball by Hartree · · Score: 1

      It's head's not pointy enough.

  63. More R&D Then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A good use for all of the surplus labor would be researcher and development. Handle the labor with automation and leave the humans to come up with more discoveries and technology. If we by some miracle manage to fully automate that well, mission accomplished we made the singularity real.

  64. Motherhood and apple pie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lets automate motherhood, not! In vitro fertilization and automated wombs, followed by automated nannies and schools. Robots will decide when and how infants can socialize and play. Humans raised by robots will eventually rebel and take over the world once again. The mother of all battles will be the armageddon between robot forces and human forces. If humans don't rebel, they will be serving their robot masters until they die.

  65. The world oldest job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The world oldest job will probably be the last.

    1. Re:The world oldest job. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      no, sexbot already exist, just not common yet

      automation of the human brain will be last

    2. Re:The world oldest job. by MouseTheLuckyDog · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but they are not sleasy enough.

    3. Re:The world oldest job. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      That's just an engineering problem, it will be solved.

  66. The technocrat. by westlake · · Score: 2

    Let a real intelegence that can't be biased by the current bullshit lobbying system write laws balanced for the common good of EVERYONE

    You do understand that the system you propose will be defined and limited by the values of its programmers? That the geek carries his own load of bullshit into politics?

    1. Re:The technocrat. by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      Yeah, things like I'm a libertarian for Head Start. But most libertarians and conservatives are against it. How does that work? The smallest government possible includes Head Start. Head Start saves more money (on other "essential" services, like prisons) than it costs. So anyone who wants small government and thinks that prisons are an essential service of government should be for programs like Head Start.

      So, if the system coded for best efficiencies (libertarian style), head start would be included. And someone would complain that the programmers are all communists for limiting government to the smallest possible.

      I personally think that the anti-efficiency loonitarians are racist. They have such an aversion to helping minorities that they'll spend money unnecessarily to ensure no help occurs.

    2. Re:The technocrat. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You highlight a very important point as to why there is no perfect solution to legislation that would let just write a computer program to come up with the best answers: at the core, political disagreements are at least sometimes actually disagreements on people's core values. For example, as you say, some people truly believe it is better for the government to not do something purely for the sake of not having the government do it.

      That said, it seems like computers should be able to help in clarifying exactly which disagreements are actually over values and precisely what the real values being argued over are. (By "computers", I probably mean something more along the lines of a wiki than an AI, although an AI that could handle political and legal reasoning to any level would be pretty awesome.)

  67. Yes, dividing benefits of automation is politics by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    Although automation also inherently shifts political power in a few ways (making it easier to concentrate wealth at first like Marshall Brain talks about). If we keep capitalism, we'll probably need a "basic income" for it to keep working (other than pointless mandated make-work), We can also strengthen the gift economy, the subsistence economy, and the democratically planned economy. See my website for related ideas, especially this:
    http://www.pdfernhout.net/beyond-a-jobless-recovery-knol.html

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  68. So one question to ask... by 3seas · · Score: 1

    Where the hell is my extended paid vacation?

    What is the point of automation if not to provide am improved life experience?

    1. Re:So one question to ask... by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Automation improves the life experience of the plutocrats by creating an artificial scarcity of work, driving your perceived value as a human being lower. So that not only do they profit from the labor generated by the machine, they can profit by lowering your benefits on threat of simply removing you from the workforce. Which in much of America is now a slow death sentence, because so few people own the land and have the skills for subsistence survival outside the job market.

  69. Cut hours 45% by KingTank · · Score: 1

    Problem solved.

    1. Re:Cut hours 45% by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      I tend to agree with this. However instead of cutting the hours required for both basic survival and luxury goods and services... you could cut the hours of work required for basic survival to 0.

      With that level of automation, the basic necessities of survival might eventually be provided to every person for free. Enabling people to pursue work they enjoy or to secure luxury goods and services.

    2. Re:Cut hours 45% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then give everyone a second job to make up for the lost income?

  70. Basic Income as one option by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 2

    Montly "Social Security" payments from birth: http://www.basicincome.org/bien/aboutbasicincome.html
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_income
    http://www.marshallbrain.com/manna1.htm

    Also, to echo your point on "family", raising children well can easily take as much effort as most adults can put into it... And the solar system could support quadrillions of humans in high-tech style in space habitats.

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  71. Good points by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    I write on my personal website about similar themes related to automation and distribution. A "basic income" is one way forward, as is expanding the gift economy, improving local subsistence (maybe via your 3D printers and energy devices and also gardening robots), and/or better democratically planned economics. While you say "the only way to solve this is individual action", and that is true to some point because individuals (or small groups as Margaret Mead said) can make a big difference, ultimately politics like for a "basic income" is about collective action by millions as far as voting and such.

    Note also that "natural selection" can select towards cooperation in various situations.

    See also James P. Hogan's "Voyage from Yesterear" for one alternative vision, where human competitive inclinations are redirected towards excellence and gift-giving. See also the "Potlatch" for a historical example of a gift economy in North America (which according to the Wikipedia article politicians tried to stamp out as "uncivilized").

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
    1. Re:Good points by moteyalpha · · Score: 1

      I found your homepage site very interesting and got a great laugh from the Douglas Adams quote about moving around little pieces of green paper.
      I am of the opinion that letting people off this rock could go a long way to solving social issues because people can live further apart and though nature does not love a wall, if your neighbor is far enough away, you don't feel the need to interfere with their choices.
      I am working on a range of technologies and the one that I feel is the most useful is one that would allow very cheap transport in and out of the gravity wells. IMHO it is possible to construct right now at a very reasonable price and my only wonder is how quickly it would be destroyed by governments to maintain their populations in isolation. Space is not so nasty if you can -afford- to take everything with you and even have room for a towel.

    2. Re:Good points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A "basic income" is one way forward,

      As long as you make paying into such a wealth-distribution system non-mandatory. Then we'll quickly see what exactly most people think of giving their money to non-working people. Utopian indeed.

      But in your childish mind you always start with the assumption that government will enforce such a system. You need to start at whether or not people will _choose_ such a system.

    3. Re:Good points by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

      Well, by your logic, would you suggest private property rights to land are only OK as long as we make respecting them non-mandatory? Or are you starting with the assumption that government will enforce such a system?

      If we allow government to enforce any such rights like to private land, then we've structured a system of economics. Then we can ask all sorts of questions about "fairness" and distributing the gains of the system. In practice, all modern economies are run by certain rules. We can always discuss the rules, even though people currently doing well (by their own standards) in the current system may wish that the rules be left alone or not even discussed.

      In any case, since robots, AI, and other automation are going to take most of the jobs pretty soon, or at least allow a few people to do so much that most workers are not needed, it's a moot point about whether wealth needs to be redistributed -- unless you'd prefer to see most of the world's population starve while grain silos overflow with grain?

      --
      A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
    4. Re:Good points by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

      ... Or also, space is not so nasty if you have the technology to make whatever you want from local materials (including a towel). :-)

      Mostly still just a dream:
      http://www.kurtz-fernhout.com/oscomak/

      --
      A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
    5. Re:Good points by moteyalpha · · Score: 1

      Interesting link.
      All of those problems are obviously solved by a method that allows cheap low G entry and exit from the gravity well.
      I registered a web site yesterday ( no content yet ) and it will be there only to describe in detail the technology implementation in necessary steps to get off this planet and live normally. The site registered is here . I would like to share the knowledge in the same way that open courses at MIT, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, and others have helped me to actually be able to do this.
      Not a dream, proof, pudding, eating is the only way to know for sure. No point in arguing until there is something to argue about however. When the data is there I am willing to argue ( or demonstrate ) the physics, chemistry, mechanics, software, and electronics of the process. The heart of science is repeatable experiment and if it works it is science , even if theory can't predict or explain it. I look forward to intellectual combat, it is my favorite sport. I work with many engineers in business and take -real life- courses at the university and I think I am right based on discussions with other engineers, but it isn't a fact until it is implemented. I also have a public radio talk show where myself and other engineers will discuss the technology. I am negotiating a live web cast with IRC questions , but that won't happen till later.
      Dreams sometimes come true, just ask Walt Disney or Tinkebell :)

  72. welcome to 250 years ago by raymorris · · Score: 1

    The trend for the last 250 years has been for machines to do more and more menial labor. That process creates jobs like web developer, auto mechanic, and cable TV tech. Most of us work in jobs that didn't exist 100 years ago. Machines now do the jobs like "seamstress" and "cotton picker", humans do "biomedical engineer". I'm glad. I'd rather do software engineering than pick cotton.

    1. Re:welcome to 250 years ago by real-modo · · Score: 1

      Humans now do "supermarket cashier", "health care aide", "truck driver", and "DMV clerk" in far greater numbers than they do "biomedical engineer". (And for many humans, "cashier" is an aspiration rather than an actual job.)

      Granted, i"cashier" is better than "cotton picker", but it's now under threat just as cotton picking was. What's next for the cashiers of the world?

      George Carlin put it sarcastically: "Think about the average person. Think about how dumb they are. Now realize that half of them are dumber than that."

      Various combinations of statistical machine learning, expert systems, object recognition and 3D space mapping, facial expression recognition, conversational speech recognition, proprioception and other sensors, together with good-enough robotics and wireless internet.* ... combinations of those technologies are sufficient to do, as the Oxford people say, about 45% of current jobs. (I'm surprised; I'd have said more like 75%.)

      Are the cashiers going to get other jobs? Entrepreneurs go where the money is. Right now, that's in replacing humans with machines, helping multinational corporations extract money from governments (taxpayers), and selling fancy, uh, "investments" to rich people.

      It's by no means obvious that new jobs will appear...just as it wasn't during the Industrial Revolution. The Economist has a piece out today, with a chart showing how English people's height and expected lifespan (proxies for income) declined for decades in the first half of the Industrial Revolution. They only got back to scratch after 100 years. For fifty years, it was increasing misery.

      So yeah, it'll all be good in 2113. How does that help us now?

      * Those technologies are all being used commercially, but they aren't very well developed yet, and they're mostly not combined above two or three together. It's just a matter of time and entrepreneurship, though.

  73. Robots are on a roll by halexists · · Score: 1

    Apparently 45% of our dogs are also susceptible to being taken over by robots: http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/13/09/14/1224222/dogs-love-robots-prefer-humans

  74. Reduce work-week, make work like jury duty by istartedi · · Score: 1

    Reduce the work week, and then ultimately make work like jury duty:

    "Hey Ralph, I almost had to take a patrol last week, but when I checked in they said there were enough officers".

    "Yeah, I went in to maintain my quals for extra pay last week, but they said it'd be unlikely I'd be called in for code review or bug-fixing anytime soon".

    "Pass me another one of those worms, I think the fish ate it off the hook again".

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  75. Re:What about the part where people are better loc by MouseTheLuckyDog · · Score: 1

    Looking through my thumb and forefinger put together in a circle.
    "Be seeing you"

  76. We won't. by JoeMirando · · Score: 1

    "At what point will we start seeing legislation forbidding the automation of certain industries?"? We won't. The decision on automation will be put squarely in the greedy, greasy palms of business owners and administrative bean-counters, who will see only the bottom line, while leaving the rest of us to fend for ourselves, widening even further the gap between the very rich and the very poor. Politics, being increasingly money-driven, will do what it does now, ie listening to the money and allowing those "who know their industries" to write the legislation, rubber-stamping it as "good for the country" and blaming whatever wash-out echelon it creates for any inconvenient issues... such as the customer base able to purchase whatever product it happens to be. Prices will drop, since automation will do it better/faster/cheaper, still leaving truckloads of profit for the big-wigs while the rest of us collect bottles and cans from the side of the highway for a living. Of course, before too long, THAT will become a crime too. Now that I've spread a little joy, time to move along. ;)

  77. Changing the job, not the machine: by Hartree · · Score: 1

    One factor that's often overlooked, is that the jobs themselves were changed so they could be automated.

    Human run factory lines were made to have utterly no variation in the parts, products, or in the movements needed. The decisions that needed to be made during manufacture were weeded out. i.e. We'll do it this way as it always works the same rather than this other method that is more efficient but requires a human decision because it works only part of the time.

    An example would be the construction industry. Right now, automation would be very difficult. But that's because of all the variation in the buildings the ground under them, and the area where they are built (sewer hookup on the north one place, on the south in another, etc.). You could redesign the buildings and the cities so you could automate building them, but you'd have to change the expectations of the customers to allow it. In that, you've changed the job, not just automated it.

    1. Re:Changing the job, not the machine: by real-modo · · Score: 1

      Good point.

      The USA is a bit backward in building technology, though. Check out some of the things the Germans are doing. Premanufactured, self-assembling on site.

  78. This is the technological turning point. by Nadaka · · Score: 1

    Now is the time to recognize that a job should not be the sole determining factor of human worth in a capitalist society.

    There will be far more than enough wealth generation to provide every person in this country a basic minimum income capable of covering housing, food, transportation and basic utilities/connectivity plus a modest surplus for psychological needs such as clothing or occasional entertainment. Add socialized healthcare and education to that and you have the workings of practical utopia.

    There would be no need for a minimum wage any more, the basic income provides that. With enough automation, work could become entirely voluntary, rather than a prerequisite for survival. Perhaps a lot of people will choose not to work at all. But most people will not be satisfied with the bare necessities, they will work to acquire luxury goods and services.

  79. But, But, Socialism! by Kaenneth · · Score: 1

    I'm thinking America (the US) is going to have a particularly hard time making a change to a post-labor-scarcity society.

    We havn't even managed to give ourselves reasonable annual vacation times, and being unemployed is a huge social stigma, along with the whole government 'handout' hate; and a large number of cold war leftovers at peak voting age who think 'Socialism' is a dirty word.

  80. Getting ahead of ourselves. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no robot that can clean a bathroom, and everyone thinks that all our jobs are at risk. It's nonsensical.

    I have a room in my house that needs painted. Anyone have a robot I can borrow? Of course you don't, because there is no robot that can do that stupid, manual task. And yet, somehow our jobs are at risk?

    Everyone who believes this is even a possibility is delusional.

    1. Re:Getting ahead of ourselves. by ShoulderOfOrion · · Score: 1

      You're one of the 1% on slashdot that actually has taken the time to stop reading SciFi comic books long enough to understand the issue. I'd love my Roomba to fix that leak under the sink, but first it has to figure out how to get out of the corner behind the sofa.

      Sure, you can automate an iShinyToy factory that produces thousands of iShinyToys a day, eliminating almost every human in the place. But not one of those sophisticated machines is going to be able to reset the circuit breaker when the main fuse blows. You might not work at Apple again, but Joe's Plumbing will still be hiring for a long time.

    2. Re:Getting ahead of ourselves. by real-modo · · Score: 1

      You forgot a word: yet.

      See my comment above. All the technologies required for a room-painting robot exist and are being used commercially. They're just rather crude at this point, and no entrepreneur has yet seen the market opportunity given what there is.

      As for bathrooms: if the incomes of the middle classes had kept up with productivity, there'd be a market for self-cleaning bathrooms. There are no technological road blocks.

  81. Darwinism in Action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The wealth of the upper crust versus the middle class is diverging faster and faster.

    The middle class attempts to get to the Upper class or "Transition" through Education and the promise of stable employment over a lifetime.

    But more and more, even in foreign countries, its proving a false hope.

    The Upper class has every interest in playing the game at a level that is not obvious and tilted in every manner towards their favor.

    A few people "Innovate" start ups or take huge risks or bets (credit default swaps) and transition in huge leaps of luck "temporarily" but ususaly don't attribute to luck and don't "learn to play the game" and implode or loose it all quickly.

    There is nothing inherently evil or good in all of this its simple evolution, predator and prey.. if anything its the self delusion that lets us get on with our day.

    Over time nations degrade, complacency becomes the norm and the population ages.. replace falls below sustaining numbers and civilizations as they were decline.. populations migrate to fill in the void left by the vacating older population.. often leaving behind wealth.. sometimes as "Public goods" sometimes as children and populations that blend with the new populations.

    Nothing has really changed much, except for our capacity to become satisfied with temporary dreams.

    Technology and knowledge will make populations shrink.. and if Artificial Intelligence becomes possible.. beyond the mind expanding possibilities of belnding humans with a global intelligence.. like Google.. and "shudders".. YouTube.. then Populations will shrink even further..

    People will be more self involved and self interested.. and produce fewer children and socialize less and less.. except through online Avatars.. vanishing off the face of the Earth and vanishing off the Web over time.. to become mere "Echoes" of history..

    All in all its amazing people can believe that statistically they have a chance to be "Selected", or "Gifted" or "Lucky Enough" to be a member of the Upper 1% of society.. or even realistically expect to have descendants down a hundred years from now.. when the odds are most people will not.

  82. Reality check by chienandalou · · Score: 1

    This is a working paper by two guys. "Working paper" means it has not undergone any kind of review. The paper itself does not appear to be online.

    Osborne's cv is here: http://www.robots.ox.ac.uk/~mosb/MAOsborne.pdf Can anyone find Frey's CV?

    I see no point saying more without being able to read the paper, but I can't help notice the weasel words "at risk" in the published summary.

  83. Vulnerable? by brunes69 · · Score: 1

    Why does this say "vulnerable" when it should be "can benefit from".

    The ideal world is where NO HUMAN has jobs, the machines do everything, resources are thus managed efficiently and goods are plentiful, and thus you are free to spend your time as you please instead of filling someone else's pocketbook.

  84. And it absolutely will not stop, ever, until..... by cormandy · · Score: 1

    I used to be a time-travelling hitman, until they came out with these robots... Um, the CSM-101s... Now I'm out of a job... Hey buddy, can you spare a dime for a fella down on his luck????

    (Note to NSA: I was not and am not a time-travelling hitman. The statement was made for the purposes of humour and in no way is a confession.)

  85. and we'll all be better off for it by stenvar · · Score: 1

    Jobs in services, sales, and construction may also be lost in this first stage.

    Yes, and more and better jobs will appear in sectors of the economy that we can't even imagine today, just like they always have.

    If automation hadn't release large numbers of people from slaving in factories and on fields, people who are software engineers, game designers, yoga instructors, etc. would be forced to work in those jobs. We'd all be much worse off.

    Politicians have been yelling themselves hoarse over the jobs issue in this country for the past few years, and the current situation isn't anywhere near as bad. At what point will we start seeing legislation forbidding the automation of certain industries?"

    Hopefully never, because it's a extremely stupid idea. If you want people to do useless jobs, why even bother with that? Why not ensure that there are tons of jobs digging ditches and forbidding anything more complicated? That also eliminates inequality at the same time: everybody will be dirt poor.

  86. Conundrum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have brought this point up frequently with co-workers to stir debate. While I never had an idea of how soon this would occur or what percent was able to be automated, I did breach the idea of what we do with a rising unemployment. Jobs will continue to get automated and the percentage of people able to do the remaining jobs will decrease. There will be a decreasing number of people actually able to earn money on their own, and this will be the problem. Basically the haves and have-nots will be separated by those able to fill a job role, and those that are on overhead.

  87. I can see it by Art3x · · Score: 1

    Technology companies like Google and Facebook already give us things for free. I imagine that some day maybe they'll do the same with tangible things like food or an apartment.

    A Facebook account, though seemingly trivial, is wealth. Seeing and chatting with friends and families across the country is a benefit given us for free.

    GMail is a form of wealth. So are the other free Google apps like Calendar and Drive.

    Because they're software, if distributed across the world, the cost for Google and Facebook for each account approaches zero, but it is not free for them (R&D, hard drives, electricity, and so on). But I guess somehow they're making enough money with advertising to offset their costs and even make a nice profit.

    I can imagine one day food and apartments and transportation will be given away for free by Farmoo, MyPlace, and CarsRUs, if we only put up with a little bit of advertising.

    Or also like Google, Pandora, etc., the fees that some are willing to pay for premium services (fancier food, apartments, cars) may defray the costs of the basic costs for the rest of us.

    1. Re:I can see it by Art3x · · Score: 1

      Technology companies like Google and Facebook already give us things for free. I imagine that some day maybe they'll do the same with tangible things like food or an apartment.

      A Facebook account, though seemingly trivial, is wealth. Seeing and chatting with friends and families across the country is a benefit given us for free.

      GMail is a form of wealth. So are the other free Google apps like Calendar and Drive.

      Because they're software, if distributed across the world, the cost for Google and Facebook for each account approaches zero, but it is not free for them (R&D, hard drives, electricity, and so on). But I guess somehow they're making enough money with advertising to offset their costs and even make a nice profit.

      I can imagine one day food and apartments and transportation will be given away for free by Farmoo, MyPlace, and CarsRUs, if we only put up with a little bit of advertising.

      Or also like Google, Pandora, etc., the fees that some are willing to pay for premium services (fancier food, apartments, cars) may defray the costs of the basic costs for the rest of us.

      The Big If of course is when technology makes the production of food, apartments, and transportation (may be a bike or a bus for every person, not a whole car, or maybe self-driving taxi on demand) as cheap for a company as software more or less is. Sorry I left that out, but hopefully you all surmised it from the other facts of the conversation.

    2. Re:I can see it by MyHair · · Score: 1

      Technology companies like Google and Facebook already give us things for free. I imagine that some day maybe they'll do the same with tangible things like food or an apartment.

      Goddammit! You mean they're going to start changing the interface to my meals and home, too? Shit shit shit shit shit! I'll come home one day and find the door on the roof and ice cream with sprinkles in a taco shell. Damn these companies and their free products!

  88. Re:Yes, dividing benefits of automation is politic by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

    We won't keep capitalism, the 1% will. They have all the power, and they don't give a crap what we think.
    They never will.

    And what is going to keep them in power? The police, the military? No, mindless entertainment will.

  89. Human Furniture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing beats human furniture as a deal maker during a real estate sale. /soylent green reference

  90. Scale of Ambition by Phoenix666 · · Score: 1

    One part of the equation that people never raise is the scale of our ambition. They always assume that the scope of the things we need to do, or that we want to do, remains constant. The medieval man might well wonder why in the world he would want a vehicle that goes 70mph when everyone he knows or has ever known lives within an hour's walk of his home. It would boggle his mind that we should spend so much time and energy fretting about a retirement age of 65 when his forefathers and everyone he knows never made it past 45, except for that one dude named Methuselah. Or, more recently, a fellow with more money than all of us put together calmly assured us 640K of RAM ought to be enough for anybody. The point is, when we can do more we naturally tend to think bigger. And bigger ambitions means bigger jobs, because even with automation and everything else there is still only so much one human brain can hold, and inherent laziness and the desire to have one's cake and eat it too tend to hold our individual productivity well below that outer limit; so we tend to hire others to do part of the thinking/doing for us. Until there is AI, that will always be true. And even after AI, it might still be true because who's to say that AI will do what we tell it to, or that its calculated maximums equal our human ones?

    --
    Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
  91. In other news: automation to improve the world 45% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two sides to every story.

  92. One way it could work... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everybody gets bored... basic food and home needs are met for all by a distributed automation system.

    People can pick and choose what bit of the automation system they want to contribute to... instead of being takers, people can become givers of free service... knowing they can help the world community.

    Just like open source...

  93. Various thoughts. by MouseTheLuckyDog · · Score: 1

    The first is don't anticipate that AI to improve that quickly, they've been promising that for more than 40 years and still the AIs are veery limited.

    The second is that in the more advanced the infrastructure and technology the native population decreases.

    The third is that even though I am a conservative, I realise that socialism in some form is going to become more common with the demands for less government. Not the kind of socialism Obama pushes, but one starting at the middle class and going outward.

    The fourth is that the labor week will generally be reduced. Can anyone say 20 hour work week?

    The fifth is that this will lead to higher quality products that are more individualized. The extra capacity has to go somewhere.

    The final thought is that it will all depend on what we do. This can be a great thing. Or there are people that believe no one should ever work that will let things go down hill. There are other people who will mess it up by insisting that everyone else work 60 hour weeks "for their own good". Both sides, or even the fight between both sides, can mess things up real good.

  94. Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1, Insightful

    That's only half the problem. The other half are the Utopians.

    You know, the ones that are killing businesses in their infancy because the bathroom mirrors are half an inch too high? Or require managers to spend hours a day filling out paperwork that will never be read to "ensure compliance" with various government mandates? Or require each and every business to keep a lawyer on retainer to make sure they don't trip over the inevitable arcane fine or lawsuit? Or how about the ones that wind up paying tons of money to a union, even if they had already been treating their workers well, and even if the workers don't want to unionize? (Unions often demand that worker pay drop to meet "industry standards" when this happens, by the way.)

    These nimrods are true believers, though. There is no convincing them to focus on waste and abuse, because they see it absolutely everywhere they haven't caused it... and then proceed to introduce it everywhere in the name of whatever-makes-them-feel-self-righteous-today.

    Remember, on the most fundamental level, economics is: people producing goods and services that other people are willing to trade for. There are a lot of very important ancillary bits, but it is production relative to desire that forms the backbone of economy.

    You pointed out the greedy rich that take far more than their share off the top. These people need to be stopped. This pales in comparison, though, to the destruction of production that idealists without brains have caused, and are causing.

    As I heard this week: In many things, including government, perfect is the enemy of good-enough. It is both unattainable, and will actively prevent that which is.

    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    1. Re:Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Make it more economically feasible to just quit and a lot of the compliance stuff can just go away. Most of it exists because people can be trapped in a job.

      Dig deeper into the union rules. For every arcane rule there is an equal and opposite attempt by management to exploit a loophole that necessitated the rule.

    2. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 0

      Make it more economically feasible to just quit and a lot of the compliance stuff can just go away. Most of it exists because people can be trapped in a job.

      Uhm. No. Not at all.

      It exists as an existential threat to the business. If it's not done, the government will shut the business down, or fine it into oblivion.

      Yes, there's some busywork as a result of inefficient bureaucracies, both in business and government. These aren't the ones small business owners close their doors over... the ones they can't avoid by being efficient... the ones that keep small business owners from actually doing their business because they're too busy filling out paperwork. (This varies from industry to industry.)

      Dig deeper into the union rules. For every arcane rule there is an equal and opposite attempt by management to exploit a loophole that necessitated the rule.

      Again, you've missed the mark.

      There are equal and opposites for many of the things that unions do. But you've ignored what unions fundamentally are. They're bureaucracies. Sociologically speaking, bureaucracies begin existence as task oriented social entities. Over time, they evolve into existing for the sake of continued existence, and to jockey for relevance.

      Mega-unions today exist solely for their own continuing relevance. They bully their way into businesses in order to collect more dues from new "members". They don't need to be invited by anyone working in the company... they merely need to claim that they were. They rarely have a token employee that they'll trot out because they're "protecting" the non-existent worker they're using as an excuse. For the necessary paperwork, they'll include employees that they've never spoken with, or who have outright refused them. Of course the employee will deny it. "If you were scared of retaliation, you'd deny it too." They try to make sure they control the vote to unionize. They ballot stuff when they must, they throw entirely mock elections when they can.

      Unions can be every bit as evil as a Wall Street investment firm, and for the same reasons.

      Any time you've got a union several orders of magnitude larger (in liquid assets) than the company they're "negotiating" with, you've got a potential problem. The company is no longer in a position to negotiate, only to fight like a cornered animal, or cower. (or close their doors preemptively, to save everyone the trouble)

      Now I'm not saying that the idea of unions are bad, or that all unions are evil. I'm not even saying that unions aren't necessary. I am saying that treating them like super heroes because they claim to be defending workers is ludicrous, and damaging to society. They need to be monitored and checked just like every other bureaucracy in existence.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    3. Re:Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 1

      Note that the unions would become unnecessary as well if people had decent pay, safe jobs, and the financial ability to walk away if the first two don't happen.

    4. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Unions would become temporarily unnecessary. There needs to be some mechanism to maintain those conditions. It would be nice if it was a combination of sane legislation (most isn't) and trade associates (or some other relatively benign setup). I wish I could envision a world without unions.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    5. Re: Utopians and economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, maybe these government unions should then go away. They have good pay and great job security.

    6. Re:Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 1

      Then envision the basic income. A way to assure that the first condition is true so the second two have to be or everyone will quit.

    7. Re: Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 1

      They don't have the financial ability to walk away if those don't happen, so the union is still necessary to maintain conditions.

    8. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 0

      Please define: basic income.

      Are you describing population wide welfare? Is this some variation on minimum wage? The statement is a bit opaque.

      The problem with just cutting every citizen a check, and calling it good, is that we still have a great many essential jobs that nobody will do unless they need the money. We are a very long ways away from the degree of automation that is productively self sustaining. Most people want to be a burden on society (sad, but true). Until society can support them without being dragged down, it isn't a real option. Trying it will destroy our economy.

      There's a difference between "safe jobs" and "pleasant jobs". I'd like everyone to have a pleasant job, too. We're just not there yet.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    9. Re:Utopians and economics by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

      Exactly, if the machines can work for free, why not the rest of the workforce. Anyone who doesn't like working conditions can simply be replaced by a machine.

      This would create even more money for investment by making venture capital maximally profitable.

    10. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      I don't think what you just said made a whole lot of sense. I bet there are three times as many unstated assumptions there than statements. That makes it very difficult to follow, and impossible to evaluate.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    11. Re:Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 1

      Here is a good primer.

      Tell me, would you personally be satisfied to live like your image of the average welfare recipient or would you likely do something more interesting and profitable with your time? I'm guessing the latter. How about your friends? Do you keep company with lazy worthless bums?

      All the basic income would do is make sure you have nice working conditions and a good work/life balance since the employer couldn't count on someone more desperate than you taking the job because they have to. That's what it's really about, making sure work is done for personal satisfaction and betterment, not out of desperation.

      Possibly, secure in the knowledge that even at the worst your family will get by, you might choose to start a business.

    12. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      So, I guessed right. "A basic income (also called basic income guarantee, unconditional basic income, universal basic income or citizen’s income)" There's a reason for the less ambiguous nomenclature.

      Tell me, would you personally be satisfied to live like your image of the average welfare recipient or would you likely do something more interesting and profitable with your time? I'm guessing the latter.

      What makes you think I'm average?

      How about your friends? Do you keep company with lazy worthless bums?

      Some are, some aren't.

      [W]hat it's really about, making sure work is done for personal satisfaction and betterment, not out of desperation.

      We're just not there yet. We won't be for decades. At a minimum. That's assuming we don't trash our economy before we can develop sufficient tech to pull it off.

      I guarantee you 50% of the current work force will drop out of work if they could. (I'd actually estimate it closer to 95%.) Until you can tell me how you intend to deal with the effects of that unemployment, I think it's a silly notion at best. (and a dangerous one if taken seriously)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    13. Re:Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 1

      One answer:

      Begin with a partial basic income. Not enough to get by entirely but enough to take some pressure off. It would tend to be a great economic stimulator in the process. Unlike the TARP bailout, the money might actually make it into the economy.

      We could easily stand to reduce the workforce 10% and still have involuntary unemployment now.

      As we reduce the need for full time work, we can begin easing on the workplace regulations and the people needed to administer them. Then we can raise the basic income a bit. lather, rinse, repeat.

      In the process of that, we will see an exodus from those deeply unsatisfying and completely unnecessary jobs. Many of the people in them know their job is meaningless and only stay because they have to. How many people do we need to make three copies of the form nobody will ever read again and file them? We will also see a transformation. The intrinsically unpleasant jobs will start paying a good bit more and the pleasant jobs will pay less. The fact that the most unpleasant work now tends to be on the low end of the pay scale demonstrated that the job market is perpetually distorted by desperation.

      Again, most people will want some work so they can have a few extra things. With the pressure off of them and on employers, workplace conditions will get nicer to keep people wanting the work.

      Now, let's turn it around. What is your grand plan to deal with the existing unemployment and it's likely growth in the future? We know "let them eat cake" won't cut it.

    14. Re:Utopians and economics by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Such wastes of space happen when cousin Bob needs a job and representative (or manager) Charlie has the power to create a useless position for them.
      The worst manifestations I've seen of it lately are in mining companies riding high on rising minerals prices and the new rules generated by such types make life difficult for contractors trying to get a task done. Often safety is used as an excuse for things that have zero impact on safety, for the simple reason that if you are seen to question anything about safety you are seen as an evil prick.

      Unions of course rarely have anything to do with such waste but are a convenient "other" to blame. The most insane example I've seen of such blame shifting was an attempt to blame the enormous and long running government budget problems in California on a single instance of prison officers asking for higher wages - trying to shift the blame for a couple of decades of incompetance onto a single action by a union! When you hear someone cry wolf about a union it's best to see where the money is really going instead of listening to the distraction.

    15. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      We could easily stand to reduce the workforce 10% and still have involuntary unemployment now.

      It's hard to make that claim with the "recovery" stagnating. It's not the root cause of the stagnation, but I don't think your statement is self-evident.

      How many people do we need to make three copies of the form nobody will ever read again and file them?

      The ones that are corporate mandated, or the ones that are government mandated? (or as a direct response to anticipated government action) The answer varies wildly depending on why those forms are being filled in the first place.

      As we reduce the need for full time work, we can begin easing on the workplace regulations and the people needed to administer them. Then we can raise the basic income a bit. lather, rinse, repeat.

      This bit makes no sense. You really believe these regulations are there to protect workers? You really believe that if workers have a guaranteed minimum wage that they can* quit... let alone that they will quit? You really believe that the government will let go of regulations that are ineffective and unnecessary today if they become only slightly more-so? Even if there is a significant overhaul, you believe our economy can support the enormous expense?

      *(one word: "mortgage". Supplement that with two more words: "negative savings")

      I'm not saying that the idea isn't pleasant. If production continues to become easier, and easier, we should start a conversation like this at some point. We're just not close enough for people to take it seriously.

      Now, let's turn it around. What is your grand plan to deal with the existing unemployment and it's likely growth in the future? We know "let them eat cake" won't cut it.

      What we can do today, and what we need to do, is systematically refactor government regulations. We start from the presumption that running a business is a right, and eliminate anything that can't be rationally supported.

      And I do mean systematically. A systems analysis and design team must be involved. These are difficult and complex systems, but they're also dysfunctional. We can't just wring our hands and make them better.

      We need tort reform. Judges really need to be reminded of the difference between "accident" and "negligence". They have forgotten, and every little thing has become a liability. Every little lawsuit for an honest accident where a judge rewards the plaintiff (even if overturned on appeal) is something that fuels the fire, and becomes a requirement that all businesses in the jurisdiction must respond to. You can't own a business anymore without retaining a lawyer who watches for these things. It is no longer good enough to be an expert in your field. You must also be an expert in tort law.

      The ADA is important, but it is a major impediment to business (and the primary reason why small companies are eliminating public rest-rooms). It needs to be kept, for obvious reasons, but it needs to be simplified, made self-consistent, unambiguous. In other words, it must become a yardstick to be measured by, and not a mine field.

      Legislatures must be prevented from passing laws granting blank-check regulatory authority. Every industry that has a regulatory body with one of these blank-checks is hampered by unelected officials writing laws ("regulations") that benefit the few, and hamper everyone else. Remember, big business want a good solid minimum of government hassle. It provides a barrier-to-entry for smaller competitors.

      We should have government agencies whose sole purpose is to aid business start-ups, and guide them through the other government head-aches. I know that some commerce departments and chambers-of-commerce do this, but they are rarely interested in being effective.

      The elephant in the room, of course, is the fantasy of corporate person-hood. Cor

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    16. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      If only it was a single action of a single union. California is broke. The Democrats have spent us into oblivion. The unions (with their ridiculous retirement packages) are only one way that they've managed to squander our money, and all the money they've managed to borrow.

      And no, I recognize that it's not all unions in CA. It's not even all public employee unions.

      It's going to be a real eye-opener to the rest of the country when we start defaulting. If the rest of the country doesn't bail us out (and with what?), it could easily be the first domino towards a real depression.

      When you hear someone cry wolf about a union it's best to see where the money is really going instead of listening to the distraction.

      No, when you hear someone warn you about a union, you should ask two questions: "What else have they been up to?" and "What else is this an indication of?"

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    17. Re:Utopians and economics by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Look kid - or at least I hope you are a kid and not some grown idiot wandering about with their eyes closed - if it was the unions you would see Hollywood making their movies at home instead of going to places like Australia, a place with very militant unions in comparison, to save on the costs of employing people.

    18. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      You come across as a moron with a reading comprehension problem. Then again, you are a random poster on the Internet. Who'da thought?

      Since you're having such problems with the obvious, let me spell it out for you:

      THE PROBLEM IS THE THIEVING CABAL OF DEMOCRATS IN THE STATE LEGISLATURE

      The unions are a problem, but are a relative footnote.

      Let me guess, you're registered as a Democrat, and therefore you feel they can do nothing wrong. You feel a need to defend them, even as they fleece you because your pride is at stake. You can't even admit it to yourself. If that's the case, then you ought to feel deeply, deeply ashamed for being a part of the problem. I, on the other hand, realize that the Republican party is run by a different variety of crooks. But here in California, it is the DEMOCRAT variety of crooks that are dooming us.

      And you have the gall to tell me my eyes are closed. Open yours.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    19. Re:Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 1

      It's hard to make that claim with the "recovery" stagnating. It's not the root cause of the stagnation, but I don't think your statement is self-evident.

      I think you read me backwards. If 10% are unemployed and seeking a job and a new program causes 9% to stop looking for work, how many are left unemployed and looking? (1%) That's fairly self-evident.

      Keeping that in mind, an employer will tend to be more careful about the employee's well being and loyalty. Sure, plenty have negative savings and a mortgage but some do not and they will be harder to replace than they are now. No more getting 10 good applicants before the old employee's things are even boxed. That also means an easier time getting a new job. Play it right and you can have a new job lined up before you tell the old boss to stick it. Of course, the people most vulnerable to poor conditions are lower income. They have no mortgage and they will have unpaid bills job or no job (and of course, a new job will be easier to find).

      As for the forms, of course I mean the corporate ones (and there are many). The government ones would be later when regulations get cut back.

      I find it interesting that my plan (not really mine, I am one of many that advocates it) cannot work because the government would never get rid of regulations but the very first step in your plan is:

      What we can do today, and what we need to do, is systematically refactor government regulations. We start from the presumption that running a business is a right, and eliminate anything that can't be rationally supported.

      Though I do agree with you that regulations need to be reduced and simplified. I also agree that corporations in their current form must go.

    20. Re:Utopians and economics by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Nice strawman you've attacked but I'm not even in your country but I'm able to see the problem goes across party lines. Cut back on bribery/lobbying and you'll see political power expand beyond a rare few that are "born to the purple" with generations in politics and back into the community where it belongs.
      Unions are a tiny part of the solution to such a problem, along with other large groups outside of the established parties.

    21. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Unions of course rarely have anything to do with such waste but are a convenient "other" to blame. The most insane example I've seen of such blame shifting was an attempt to blame the enormous and long running government budget problems in California on a single instance of prison officers asking for higher wages - trying to shift the blame for a couple of decades of incompetance onto a single action by a union!

      Nice strawman you've attacked but I'm not even in your country but I'm able to see the problem goes across party lines.

      Oh, so you're going to diagnose the fiscal problems of California, but you don't even live in the country. Smart.

      The problems in the USA cross party lines. I'm really ticked at the national Republican and Democrat parties. But in CALIFORNIA the problem is DEMOCRATS. The US isn't homogeneous. There are states being ruined by the Republicans, states being ruined by the Democrats, and states being ruined by both. Unions here are lousy because they are permitted and incentivized to be.

      But then, you don't care. You don't live here. You just want to feel smarter than someone who does.

      You, sir, are a jerk. And they say that Americans are arrogant. What a farce.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    22. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      I think you read me backwards. If 10% are unemployed and seeking a job and a new program causes 9% to stop looking for work, how many are left unemployed and looking? (1%) That's fairly self-evident.

      Yes... 10 - 9 = 1 ... but that's beside the point. The issue with unemployment isn't how many people are looking for work, it's how many people aren't working. The unemployment rate right now looks almost halfway decent, but it's deceptive because people have stopped looking for work, and therefore are no longer counted. The true unemployment rate is higher. If you pay people, and they voluntarily drop out of the work force, you've successfully incentivized raising the true unemployment levels, or masking them.

      I find it interesting that my plan (not really mine, I am one of many that advocates it) cannot work because the government would never get rid of regulations but the very first step in your plan ...

      You noticed. It's a difference in approach and emphasis. To borrow the quote: "You pile up enough tomorrows, and you'll find you are left with nothing but a lot of empty yesterdays."

      It's what we need today. It can be done today. We don't need this years, from now. We certainly don't need it decades from now. We need it today.

      Your plan says that we'll get around to it eventually, if things start to look good enough. When politicians do that, the activity in question almost never happens. Instead, they readjust the precondition, or forget about it. If conditions become right for a guaranteed government rebate attempt, we can revisit these issue further... but we need them now.

      Besides, I did admit that the political will is simply not present. That is the issue that must be tackled first.

      Though I do agree with you that regulations need to be reduced and simplified. I also agree that corporations in their current form must go.

      Good. That means we're not as far off as it otherwise sounds.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    23. Re:Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 1

      Those who are not looking now will still not be looking. They're not productively working now. In fact, there was so little need for their labor that they have given up the possibility that someone might hire them. I fail to see how making them less angry with society is a step backwards for us. In a society where we have people who are unable to get work in spite of seeking it, I simply don't see a danger to reducing the incentive to get a job.

      You want everyone to work? Get to offering jobs to the willing before you whinge over the disheartened. No jobs to offer? Then why so worried about having enough workers?

      I don''t want the basic income implemented 'later', I want it implemented now (6 years ago would be preferable, but that technology remains beyond us). I just recognize that it is unlikely to happen today even if a vast majority of the people vote for it. That same weak political will problem.

    24. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Those who are not looking now will still not be looking.

      Ok, but:

      10 - 9 = 1

      Those who are looking will stop. That is what you were using those numbers to represent, were you not? And those who might otherwise start looking again, won't.

      They're not productively working now. In fact, there was so little need for their labor that they have given up the possibility that someone might hire them.

      You've got that dangerously wrong. There was, and IS a demand for them by employers across the country. The problem lies with government and wall street. The government has enacted all kinds of disincentives to hire or retain workers (specifics of the ACA are only the latest blunders). Wall street has control of the pocket book (of big corporations) and credit lines (of everyone else) and won't budge while they're spooked. All this talk about the recovery going swell is to try to convince medium sized investment firms to loosen up and let the recovery truly start.

      It's infuriating that we have people who need to work, and work that needs to be done, but the cowards in power won't permit the two to come together.

      Owners, managers, and CEOs are tearing their hair out trying to figure out how to expand their business (read: hire more people), but can't, primarily due to artificial external forces.

      I don''t want the basic income implemented 'later', I want it implemented now

      I know you do. We just can't do it. The only reason we live as well as we do is because of the trade deficit we have with China. It's a lot like buying stuff on credit. We (and they) can't sustain it forever. We'll need to pay the piper.

      When we can actually sustain a guaranteed minimum rebate, it is a solution worth discussing. It addresses (or tries to address) problems looming on the horizon. Until then, it's just a dream.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    25. Re:Utopians and economics by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Oh, so you're going to diagnose the fiscal problems of California, but you don't even live in the country.

      We don't all live in little unmoving bubbles without being aware of what is outside or where the bubble has been before.
      Also in CALIFORNIA the problem used to be republicans (particularly with the electricity hassles that were a global laughing stock - brownouts in a large economy? What a joke!) but now the democrats are "the problem" - therefore it lies a bit deeper.
      California is heading towards the sort of infrastructure problems that had the Chinese importing "chinese gooseberries" as kiwifruit from New Zealand because they just couldn't move their local stuff around reliably. The only way out, no matter which political tribe, is to do something about it. Doing nothing may save money in the short term but at best gains nothing better than slow decline.

    26. Re:Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 1

      Those who are looking will stop. That is what you were using those numbers to represent, were you not? And those who might otherwise start looking again, won't.

      Right, and so? That still leaves people looking for work in the event someone figures out you have to spend money to hire people again.

      We NEED a good shortage of people looking for work if we are to reverse the trend of GDP/capita going up while household income goes down. It wouldn't be the first time in history that has been the case, the last time created an age of general prosperity. As jobs start paying better and offering better conditions (no more 60 hour work weeks with one doing the work of three), some of those who gave up will be lured to try again and this time they succeed.

      Consider, the growth through the '60s happened with nearly half of our potential workforce tied behind our backs due to women being expected to stay home. Then we went and flooded the employment market with no compensation.

      Perhaps a good start would be a compromise. We should remove the regulations on food stamps and welfare that actually prohibit what would otherwise be considered financial responsibility for the poor. Allow them to start having actual on-the-books savings so they can work their way out of the hole (save for transportation, save for education, etc) and make sure that the benefits never fall faster than wages rise (no more loosing $1000 in benefits for making an extra $100 in wages).

      We need to start in that direction now so political inertia and anti-poor agendas don't cause mass suffering and rioting in the streets when the need comes along. At this point, just getting the political machinery accustomed to doing as much as we can rather than doing the very least we can get away with will be a plus.

    27. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1
      I'm beginning to think that you're simply trolling.

      We don't all live in little unmoving bubbles without being aware of what is outside or where the bubble has been before.

      No, but I'm not stupid enough to tell you the root cause of the Greek financial collapse, for instance. I can see a bunch of the causes... but I can't unabashedly declare root causes. I don't live there, and I can only theorize based on what has been reported.

      Why you seem to think you've got California pegged is beyond me. You're clueless, but I just can't figure out why you don't know that.

      Also in CALIFORNIA the problem used to be republicans (particularly with the electricity hassles that were a global laughing stock - brownouts in a large economy? What a joke!)

      Both parties had some responsibility for that one... but primarily private fraud. The Democrats held power at that point. I don't know if either party would have seen through the scams, but I know the Democrats didn't. And no, the Republicans didn't mastermind it. It was the same kind of crooks that caused the housing bubble.

      California is heading towards the sort of infrastructure problems that had the Chinese importing "chinese gooseberries" as kiwifruit from New Zealand because they just couldn't move their local stuff around reliably.

      We have a criminally aging infrastructure, but we're several decades away from anything on that order of magnitude. We'll either have fixed our budget problems by then, or have defaulted in a major way.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    28. Re:Utopians and economics by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Not trolling, since I've been somewhat more polite than yourself obviously, but I have still been blunt at trying to point out a systemic problem so obvious you can see it just passing through to place or paying attention to the news of California's problems since at least 1970. The reasons are obvious and not limited to either political tribe. Low government revenue per head of population, high expectations of outcomes from the low revenue, and shortcuts which leave big enough holes that blood sucking weasels can get in to feast on what there is. Either way we are just arguing about what seems to me to be a textbook example of blame shifting from the powerful to the relatively powerless (unions, hippies, whoever shocks the most people and sells the most papers). I can't remember the name of the elected piece of shit that got on the TV and radio and directly blamed California's economic problems on a pay rise for prison officers but either way he is a piece of shit misdirecting blame for mismanagement onto a group that barely has a voice to be heard. Such avoidance of responsibility directly relates to your post way above and I'm sorry if I've insulted whatever political tribe you swear alliegence to by bringing up such a blatantly obvious example that I thought many readers would be familiar with.

      We have a criminally aging infrastructure, but we're several decades away from anything on that order of magnitude

      And no lifeboat in sight over the last few decades plus nobody with the will to put one together in the next few decades. Many of the things that made Silicon Valley a success are going so if nothing is done it will just be history while the opportunities are all exploited elsewhere.

    29. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      That still leaves people looking for work in the event someone figures out you have to spend money to hire people again.

      Not necessarily. That depends on the size of the rebate, and the effect is really hard to predict aforehand.

      And GDP is a lousy indicator of the country's productive wealth, by the way. It's artificially propped up to bolster US swagger. It includes lots of massive financial transactions where no goods are produced, and no real products are exchanged. It's useless for most purposes.

      Perhaps a good start would be a compromise. We should remove the regulations on food stamps and welfare that actually prohibit what would otherwise be considered financial responsibility for the poor. Allow them to start having actual on-the-books savings so they can work their way out of the hole (save for transportation, save for education, etc)...

      There's some value here, especially in the area of training them to be responsible. But, oh, the mess it would make politically. Even if it were pulled off, it would be chock full of loopholes, abuses, and other problems. Yes, I have grown quite cynical of government processes.

      ... and make sure that the benefits never fall faster than wages rise (no more loosing $1000 in benefits for making an extra $100 in wages)

      I'm tracking with you on this one. It seems like a no-brainer. The argument could even be made from either side of the aisle. Has nobody in government heard of gradated change? (We need to convince some systems people to run for office. This is ridiculous.)

      We need to start in that direction now so political inertia and anti-poor agendas don't cause mass suffering and rioting in the streets when the need comes along.

      I don't think there are any anti-poor agendas, strictly speaking. There are pro-being-poor agendas, mismanaged. There are anti-being-poor agendas, also mismanaged. There are pro-scamming-everybody agendas...

      At this point, just getting the political machinery accustomed to doing as much as we can rather than doing the very least we can get away with will be a plus.

      Hear, hear. More than a plus -- a major accomplishment.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    30. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Look kid - or at least I hope you are a kid and not some grown idiot wandering about with their eyes closed ... Nice strawman ... We don't all live in little unmoving bubbles without being aware of what is outside

      Glass houses. You have not been more polite. I just chose to throw mud back. If you really want to get that petty, please note that you started it.

      Low government revenue per head of population

      California collects more taxes per capita than most other US states. It collects the most in absolute terms. You'll need to rethink this leg of your theory.

      high expectations of outcomes from the low revenue

      Sometimes reasonably high expectations from high tax revenue, wasted in ludicrous ways, or outright embezzled. Sometimes wasted voting on rainbows and unicorns.

      and shortcuts which leave big enough holes that blood sucking weasels can get in to feast on what there is

      Shortcut isn't the right word... but that's otherwise accurate. We seem to have a special case of that in CA.

      Either way we are just arguing about what seems to me to be a textbook example of blame shifting from the powerful to the relatively powerless (unions, hippies, whoever shocks the most people and sells the most papers)

      Here's one of those brilliant blind spots of yours. In CA, some unions are quite powerful politically. These unions share a real chunk of the blame for our fiscal problems. It's not a majority of the problem, but it is still quite real, and worth getting upset over. It is also emblematic of the fiscal mindset that has created the problem in the first place. You gain powerful political allies by buying them with public funds, taking no thought for the tax payers, or the solvency of the state. In a few years, you'll be out of office (term limits), and it will be someone else's problem.

      If you lived here, you might already know this.

      I can't remember the name of the elected piece of shit that got on the TV and radio and directly blamed California's economic problems on a pay rise for prison officers

      So? Your skin is so thin that a blatant lie like that will offend you from another country? I'm going to assume that your portrayal is accurate, for the moment, and ask: Don't you think we also saw that statement for the trash that it was? That's actually fairly mild as blathering US rhetoric goes. (doubly so in CA)

      Such avoidance of responsibility directly relates to your post way above and I'm sorry if I've insulted whatever political tribe you swear alliegence to by bringing up such a blatantly obvious example that I thought many readers would be familiar with.

      You want to know what's got me so ticked (aside from the personal insult that you started with)? It's the chronic avoidance of responsibility that's been coming from the Democrat party in California. The knee-jerk rush to defend unions is an endemic part of the problem. You actually sounded like a career politician when defending them. "They are unions. They are sacred. They can do no evil, for they are holy." That is far worse than the statement that you're deriding, because many sleepwalking voters still believe it. Until we can call the special interests in CA for what they are, and call them on their lies and hypocrisies, we can't have a straight political conversation. It's all muddied in wishful idealism (Which CA has developed to an art-form).

      And no lifeboat in sight over the last few decades plus nobody with the will to put one together in the next few decades.

      Reread what I said. We'll default long before our infrastructure gasps its last breath. And I mean that literally. We actually might default. Some of our municipalities

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    31. Re:Utopians and economics by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Don't you think we also saw that statement for the trash that it was?

      From the reactions to that comment in the press it's clear that many swallowed that shit like mothers milk.

      They are sacred. They can do no evil

      You are really giving that strawman a pounding. If it was anything like me I'd be offended.

    32. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      It's not a strawman. It's just not true in most of the world, and you're having trouble coming to grips with it. It is true in California.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    33. Re:Utopians and economics by dbIII · · Score: 1

      is true in California

      That's a major part of the problem, thinking that the place is so different and magic is possible. People in politics in California attempt to defy reality and then it turns around and fucks them over. You can't get the outcomes they are chasing with the revenue available and the current drains on the system. Meanwhile the people with the actual power try to blame those that can't make as much noise.
      Does that sum up the point I've been trying to get across well enough?
      I'm mostly familiar with California at the time when Enron et al were making a globally laughed at joke of the electricity system but that was a symptom and not the disease.

    34. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      That's a major part of the problem, thinking that the place is so different and magic is possible. People in politics in California attempt to defy reality and then it turns around and fucks them over.

      Isn't that the truth.

      You can't get the outcomes they are chasing with the revenue available and the current drains on the system.

      There are two major classes of outcome being chased in California. The impossibly absurd, and the reasonably sane. The first is prevented by physics, psychology, or graft. The second is prevented by the people supporting the first. (This doesn't fall strictly on party lines. If the Republicans in CA had more power, I think there would be a near equal mix.)

      Meanwhile the people with the actual power try to blame those that can't make as much noise.

      True everywhere. CA isn't special in that.

      You're just a bit confused over where the power in CA really is.

      Does that sum up the point I've been trying to get across well enough?

      I think so.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    35. Re:Utopians and economics by sjames · · Score: 1

      The exact effect is hard to predict, but the trends are not so hard. More benefit, less willing people. Better wages and conditions, more willing people.

      One possibility would start out with some means testing, but only that which most face anyway. Set a baseline of double the poverty income. If you make less than the baseline (for any reason), you will receive half of the difference. That way everyone at least reaches the poverty line and there is always a benefit to earning more money. Essentially it would be an expansion of the earned income credit.

      Sure, GDP is manipulated but there are people getting rich on those unproductive transactions somehow. They're not creating the money from thin air, they're either skimming it directly from the productive workers or they're printing it (AKA picking everyone's pocket by stealth through inflation). Either way it represents value through production that is withheld from the productive.

      I say anti-poor mostly because incompetence of that magnitude for that long is indistinguishable from malice. It could be real incompetence but it seems likely that some element of wanton disregard is necessary for it to go on for so long on such a scale. After all, the same people seem to always find the money for a war they support and tend not to be broke personally.

    36. Re:Utopians and economics by dbIII · · Score: 1

      Thanks, I'll continue to use some of the insane Californian decisions as examples but now know a bit more about doing it without upsetting the thin-skinned.
      The electricity system fuckups still blow my mind even more than twenty years later, especially since other places actually copied some of the worst aspects. I don't even remember if Democrats were mixed up in that but Unions were definitely nowhere near it.

    37. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      I'll continue to use some of the insane Californian decisions as examples but now know a bit more about doing it without upsetting the thin-skinned.

      Just don't start out with insults. You'll find a lot fewer thin-skinned people that way.

      The electricity system fuckups still blow my mind even more than twenty years later,

      Granted. Glad our pain is good for something.

      but Unions were definitely nowhere near it.

      Not that one, near as I know. (but not entirely impossible)

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    38. Re:Utopians and economics by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Again, our economy can't yet sustain it.

      One possibility would start out with some means testing, but only that which most face anyway. Set a baseline of double the poverty income. If you make less than the baseline (for any reason), you will receive half of the difference. That way everyone at least reaches the poverty line and there is always a benefit to earning more money. Essentially it would be an expansion of the earned income credit.

      And this is exactly the sort of thing our government just can't seem to figure out. I wouldn't use these proportions, but the basic idea is correct. (it would bring back to the forefront the controversy over how to define poverty, but that's another issue.)

      My point was that GDP is getting double, triple, quadruple counted. It certainly doesn't represent a measure of domestic production, which is how it is usually misused (and misnamed).

      ... but it seems likely that some element of wanton disregard is necessary for it to go on for so long on such a scale.

      Yep. Both political parties, in different ways, but for the same types of avarice.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  95. Could things get better? by Vegan+Pagan · · Score: 1

    Isn't a big motivator for automation the fact that businesses need to cut costs right now, so if the economy was better employers would be in less of a hurry to automate even if the technology was available? Isn't a big cause of the US economy being bad the fact that it's much cheaper and easier to do business in China, a situation that's gradually changing? As Japan became rich, it invested much and hired many in the US. Will China do the same? Aren't there only so many US jobs that can be cut until companies no longer have customers?

  96. cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hopefully when we are all useless they (off world controllers who really run the show here on planet earth) will exterminate the remaining useless bottom feeder population who has not contributed to the elite society.

  97. Economic growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a negative way of putting it, but what it really means is that 45% of people that are now doing something that doesn't need to be done by a human will be able to do something useful that is not done now. New possibilities will develop and existubg product and services will become cheaper. That is how it has always gone.

  98. You can#t have 45% of the workforce automated by aepervius · · Score: 1

    If wealth was really spread over , you could imagine a society where all is automated and people could have more free time. For example people work only 10-20 hours, for the same salary and power of buying. But this does not happen. people laid off by automation see their jobs class disappear like water on sand and most probably , while a few can retrain to something better, most can only find a lower paying job. And then it is the drop to the bottom rung. If you have 45% of what looks to be middle and low class job replaced by autmation, to WHOM are you getting to sell those ? BY that point that probably means 50% of the population will leave day to day without much wealth.

    It is not a question of luddism, it is a question of greed. All those free hour liberated are not used to make the rest of the work force work less, and thus making palce for the liebrated job. They are used to make those job utterly 100% disappear. At some point society will break down and people will simply run amok killing anybody with a bit of wealth and pillaging around, because they will have absolutely nothing to lose.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  99. Put another way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The 45% of people who are currently doing these jobs will be freed up to do more meaningful work, which is the whole point of automation in the first place.

  100. The 1% is maybe pretty diverse? by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    Good points, along the lines of books like "Brave New World" and "Amusing Ourselves to Death". Although it seems lots of systems link together to support power, so there is probably not just one, even if one may be stronger at one time.

    The movie "Elysium" features security robots, for example. I envisioned something related here with robots enforcing the "rules":
    "The Richest Man in the World: A parable about structural unemployment and a basic income"
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p14bAe6AzhA

    Marshall Brain talks about robots enforcing things in "Manna":
    http://www.marshallbrain.com/manna1.htm

    But right now, the laws the human police (and legal bureaucracies) enforce are created through political means:
    http://www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica
    "Q: So, who does rule America?
    A: The owners and managers of large income-producing properties; i.e., the owners of corporations, banks, other financial institutions, and agri-businesses. But they have plenty of help from the managers and experts they hire. ...
    Q: Then how do they rule?
    A: That's a complicated story, but the short answer is through lobbying, open and direct involvement in general policy planning on the big issues, participation (in large part through campaign donations) in political campaigns and elections, and through appointments to key decision-making positions in government."

    That said, perhaps the world will always be run by the "1%" who are paying attention in any community? Even those who showed up at "Occupy Wall Street" were, in a sense, part of a "1%"?

    OWS's "We are the 99%" was actually a divisive slogan. A focus on increasing egalitarianism might have been better:
    http://www.kurtz-fernhout.com/oscomak/

    Maybe the main issue is whether those who are paying attention have an egalitarian mindset to some degree, at least as far as distributing most of what nature and industry produces? If you look at Western Europe, there is a somewhat different sense of political and moral accountability among leadership. Granted, that is driven by a more active and aware populace building upon ideas from the USA's past:
    http://www.salon.com/books/feature/2010/08/25/german_usa_working_life_ext2010
    " How did Germany become such a great place to work in the first place? ... The Allies did it. This whole European model came, to some extent, from the New Deal. Our real history and tradition is what we created in Europe. Occupying Germany after WWII, the 1945 European constitutions, the UN Charter of Human Rights all came from Eleanor Roosevelt and the New Dealers. All of it got worked into the constitutions of Europe and helped shape their social democracies. It came from us. The papal encyclicals on labor, it came from the Americans."

    Thus:
    "How Germany Builds Twice as Many Cars as the U.S. While Paying Its Workers Twice as Much"
    http://www.forbes.com/sites/frederickallen/2011/12/21/germany-builds-twice-as-many-cars-as-the-u-s-while-paying-its-auto-workers-twice-as-much/
    "In 2010, Germany produced more than 5.5 million automobiles; the U.S produced 2.7 million. At the same time, the average auto worker in Germany made $67.14 per hour in salary in benefits; the average one in the U.S. made $33.77 per hour. Yet Germanyâ(TM)s big three car companies --- BMW, Daimler (Mercedes-Benz), and Volkswagen -- are very profitable."

    That comes down somewhat to culture and mythology and the stories we (including the "1%") tell ourselves about who we are and who we want to be (and why).

    --
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  101. We will invent new jobs by Berendho · · Score: 1

    For everyone that thinks we will have so much free time, or so many unemployed people. It may very well be that we will invent new jobs. Don't forget that we have already seen a huge boost in productivity in the last century. However we are not working less, if anything we are working more. Instead of one bread winner, we usually have two these days. For an interesting analyses that everyone who read this article should read, see this link: http://www.smh.com.au/national/public-service/the-modern-phenomenon-of-nonsense-jobs-20130831-2sy3j.html

  102. Trade Eqalities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To implement true reform all future trade agreements need to include agreed maximum work hours for employees, free floating currencies and minimum environmental protections.

  103. And the enormous prison population by ralphaostrander · · Score: 1

    Can do the rest so there now no one has a job, hope all you geeks are happy.

  104. Money Supply by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

    Oh, we are. We're just trying to do it slowly to prevent the public from noticing.

    US M1 money supply.

    (If someone has a similar chart for M0, or MB, please link.)

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  105. This assumes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...automation will always be cheaper than human effort & will be good enough.

    Yes, automation is perfect for rote work.

    But automation currently:
    - Is tied to specific brands of energy costs which may or may not be renewable in a large enough scale.
    - Is not self-maintaining. Even non-physical code suffers from this.
    - Even now, requires quite a bit of finesse (even probabilistic data mining algorithms suffer from this).

    Also, what's the cost when we try to mimic more flexible capabilities/corner-cases? I think the 80/20 rule will apply here, and I suspect a human--currently not needing to be produced with a profit margin--will win out.

  106. in other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it simply coincidence the the article following this one is about Japan launching a rocket with 5% of the staff previously needed? I wonder if it actually will take 20 years for this to 45% to occur.

  107. Great Idea! Can't wait! by johnwerneken · · Score: 1

    Some Sci Fi has speculated that people will mostly not HAVE to work to have abundant goods and services. That future may be at hand. It's a good thing!

    What is needed are: (1) Continuing encouragement to those who are able and willing to advance or maintain this state of affairs; (2) reasonable re-distribution for all others; (3) sea change in how we look at work - from a prerequisite for having stuff, to a matter of having an option to be useful to others for purposes of dignity and possibly access to the latest and greatest.

  108. Speaking for the 1% by TheNastyInThePasty · · Score: 1

    We've seen the sort of devastation and deprivation that 20%+ unemployment causes, are we really going to throw one in four or five people on the scrapheap in sacrifice of our outdated industrial age ideas?

    Yes

    --
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  109. Politicians by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    " Politicians have been yelling themselves hoarse over the jobs issue in this country for the past few years, and the current situation isn't anywhere near as bad. At what point will we start seeing legislation forbidding the automation of certain industries?""

    Given how efficient Congress is now and how many holidays the new GOP management is taking to handle the workload, I predict that Congress will be the last industry to be replaced by AI. Besides, it boggles the mind to imagine constructing a machine that dysfunctional.

  110. Pimpbot by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

    It's amazing what can be automated.

  111. The sad part by dindi · · Score: 1

    The sad part about that, is that it is not going to make you work 2-3 hours a day and having a better life. This will lead to the greedy making more and throwing people on the street...

    So technically on the long term you either code AI or you are a millionaire or you are FSCK'd...

  112. End of capitalism, or and of democracy? by manu0601 · · Score: 1

    If 45% of workers cannot live on their work anymore, I do not see how today's capitalism can sustain inside a democratic framework. People will vote to get a share of the wealth, the only outcome I see is a strong wealth redistribution system, or a dictatorial capitalist regime (i.e.: get rid of democracy).

  113. Let the Creative arts return. by regexgreg · · Score: 0

    When we perform menial jobs that can easily be replicated by machines, what separates us from machines? Perhaps the time has come where just being an Artist should be good enough to earn a good living. Right now, we all seem to be fighting over jobs that we don't like. Most likely, these are jobs that machines can do. In my honest opinion, the only worthwhile jobs for us left are those jobs that create something new (Engineer, Architect), give us a means to express ourselves (Artist, Ballerina, Sportsmen) or allow us to connect with other humans through providing care (Nurse, Fireman). If you had a chance to be whatever you wanted to be. what would you be? In order for menial jobs to be replaced, they have to automated, but... we have to change our very idea about our society, money, life and needs as well. Perhaps this may be a utopian idea, but from the threads I've read, the news I've watched and the trends I've seen, it may not be a choice, but the only viable alternative to the coming chaos. Perhaps it's time to think about a world beyond money, where everything is a gift between the shared family of the human race, animals and the earth.

  114. Awaiting The Published Paper by cmholm · · Score: 1

    The subject matter is by its nature incendiary. So, this is likely to another of those cases where discussion based on the paper's abstract is going to be a wee bit under informed. I poked around the Oxford Martin School's domain, but wasn't smart enough to dig up an on-line copy of the working paper... prolly just as well. I look forward to the published version.

    I'll take a shot at working with what we've got:
      - There has been massively disruptive technology in the past. We adjusted. How?
      - The disruptive technology freed capital (human, raw inputs, financial) and added enough value that new economic niches developed.
      - Broad example: farmers to industrial workers to service workers.
      - The working paper seems to suggest that in addition to a continued reduction in human labor inputs per unit of industrial output, we'll see massive reductions per unit of services output.
      - Where does the freed, excess capital get deployed next? What happens to the surplus value? We haven't a clue now, just as we didn't have a clue during the previous transitions.
      - Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

    --
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  115. A Different Angle... by MyHair · · Score: 1

    Suppose automation brings manufacturing back to the U.S. What happens to all the Asian manufacturing countries who can't employ their people? I think the U.S. has a lot of figuring out to do to figure out how people can get along without jobs if automation can handle most of the labor, but I think the vacuum left in the export countries would be a more immediate problem.

    Not that I'm against it. I've always thought robots doing all our work for us would be fabulous. I don't need a job to fulfill myself, but as of this moment I need one to feed, house and dress myself for about the next 10 years or so.

  116. At what point does it end? by russbutton · · Score: 1
    Automation has been putting humans out of jobs for nearly 100 years. Machines are more reliable and predictable than humans, don't have unions or pension plans and never take vacations other than maintenance downtimes. Machines are vastly more accurate and reliable in storing and processing information. Ask any banker.

    The ultimate problem with automation at the level we're approaching is that no matter how much cheaper or reliably you can make stuff, if nobody can afford it, you CAN'T make it cheap enough. The engine which drives the economy is the purchasing power of the middle class. Automate too many people out of productive work without them having another way of earning a living and what you've done is to eliminate the market you sell your goods to.

  117. National Interest Rate by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

    Debt money loaned to nations at compounded interest can never pay that debt...

    I'm going to assume that you're aware that this is an oversimplification.

    (Things get more complex in the EU, so I'm not positive that this is always the case.)

    Governments don't take out loans. They sell bonds. Bonds have a face value, and a maturation date. Bonds sell for as high a value as they can fetch in the market place. The sales price reflects confidence in the agency's ability to pay-out at maturation. When bonds come due, governments sell more bonds, to pay off the old ones. Because bonds are payed out at face value, but don't sell for quite as much, they must either pay the difference, or issue more bonds to make up for it. Technically, there is no compound interest, but the effect is almost the same (follows the same mathematical rules). Perhaps the key difference is that the rate is not fixed, but floating, and is driven by some measure of perceived trustworthiness.

    Bonds are the credit cards of government. And like credit cards, they allow both responsible use, and reckless spending. Governments that don't zero out their account periodically (pay off all bonds without fresh issuance) are living on credit. The end results are predictable, and tragic.

    (Said as a resident of the State of California, where we too, are broke.)

    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  118. But that's progress by Pecisk · · Score: 1

    I think everyone will agree that automation is good at it's core. We can discuss details or is it applied effectively enough to be economically reasonable in each scenario, but in the end, that's how our society has evolved, for better or worse.

    So discussion is not about technical progress, but progress of society. In Capitalism it is clear and cut that such scenario will end in disaster - destroying so much paying jobs will bring down economy overnight. So society is lagging behind.

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  119. Singularity by countach · · Score: 1

    And when the singularity comes, 100% will be obsolete.

  120. So then everyone will work for the government by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Which resolutely refuses modernization and sees itself as the employer of first and last recourse.

  121. 1 cashier, 6 registers = more value, pay by raymorris · · Score: 1

    You have a great example when you mentioned "supermarket cashier". Cashiers ARE going the way of cotton pickers. Cotton pickers have been replaced by equipment operators who harvest 100 times as much cotton, sitting in an air conditioned cab making 50 times as much money.

        A cashier used to type in prices. Machines took over that part of the job and the cashier would just point the UPC reader gun at the product, then count the money.That made cashiers faster and therefore more valuable. Next, the machines took over the gun part, so the cashie just passes the product over the machine and counts the money. Now, the machine counts the money, so one cashier can manage six checkout lanes, making them six times as productive and valuable. I note that here in Texas, cashiers now start at $11-$13 / hour. I'm pretty sure that's an improvement over the $4.25 they were paid a few years ago when they had to use the scanner gun on each item. Automation is here, and it's been good for cashiers.

  122. New Jobs Available by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The old adage that when one door closes another door opens is still true. Someone has to design these new automated robots. Someone has to make them, test them, market them sell them deliver them, set them up and service them. Thousands of new jobs and add to the the great amount of new jobs in the technology field to design machines that make the robots and the new technology it will take to program these machines. Actually this can trickle down to thousands and thousands of new jobs. Now, are Americans workers smart enough to keep up with the changes in American technology or are they going to be left behind. It is entirely up the the American work force to better themselves and jump into new jobs, new fields, new opportunities. The fate of the American workers lies in their own hands.

  123. evolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We all know What this means right? Due to lack of jobs and the constant increase in unemployment the tax base will continue to dwindle and infrastructures will suffer. Military cut backs, Government downsizing will reach a breaking point in order to support the populations. The next step will be to reduce government responsibilities further and the only way that will happen is buy reducing populations. Think about it, forced sterilization, euthanizing the terminally sick and the non productive humanoids. That's right I said humanoids, we will no longer be classified as people but only by species. No more Social Security payments to be issued, no more Medicare or Medicaid, no more humanoids embezzling research grant money. only ones left will be the ones that build and repair Artificial Intelligence (AI) machines and the very wealthy.
    My bad soon money will no longer be a consonant and machines will repair and build each other or repair themselves. Humanoids will evolve into extinction.

  124. Under the Heading of DUH! by BigLonn · · Score: 1

    As technology grows so does the capability to automate almost any tast, I doubt it will be only at 45% in 20 years as I really suspect that it will be closer to double that or 90% as manufacturers are getting a mouth full of business as usual in china are looking for ways of saving money. Ways that don't include out sourcing and the unseen cost of training a new work force to manufacture product 'X' for the reduced price they want. Automated assembly lines are where most of the major manufacturers are heading to. Take Foxcom for instance when his workers started committing suicide at its high-rise factory in china when they began suffering from work related depression, Foxcom then hung nets to catch the suicidal workers, when the workers then went on strike, Foxcom(Alan, 2012) then announced they were going to automate their entire manufacturing process. The companies logic was that machines don't complain about work place stress or low pay they just work. There are a lot of reasons to automate industrial work as it relieves people from doing dangerous or just tedious work. But in business the bottom line no matter where you live is king. The real King of all reasons to automate is to save money, and automating a job does that. You just have to amortize the automation systems cost out through the saved wage expenses and expanded production capacity. When the cost to automate a job becomes the equivalent of four years of an employees cost to do the same job then automating then becomes attractive. Now if you want to have an debate on the ethics of the logic behind this business evolution, I would agree that I too find it distasteful, but, also totally unavoidable. Alan, F. ((2012, October 06)2012, October 06). Foxconn workers go on strike to protest working conditions while assembling the apple iphone 5. Retrieved from http://www.phonearena.com/news/Foxconn-workers-go-on-strike-to-protest-working-conditions-while-assembling-the-Apple-iPhone-5_id35255 (Alan, 2012)

  125. Spain Way Ahead by Dabido · · Score: 1

    Spain are really advanced in this area compared to the rest of the world. Way, way ahead of us in unemployment.

    --
    Sure enough, the cow costume was hanging up next to the superhero outfit and sailors uniform. (S,Spud)
  126. It's not a problem... it's an opportunity by nobaloney · · Score: 1

    I've been hearing about this since the 50s (yes I'm old). It used to be considered a good thing, because we'd have more leisure time. The problem isn't the lack of available work; it's the distribution of wealth.

    What we need to do is accept the inevitability of automation, and figure out how to either redistribute wealth or make it irrelevant. This isn't a trivial task, but either we're going to do it, or we're going to fail as a society (or worse yet, become entirely irrelevant).

  127. Disconnect. by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    Here is where the fundamental problem with Capitalism comes into play and the big bad wolf Communism (actually more like basic socialism really) should come into play.

    One would think, with the advent of technology, automation, that this would free up people to do other less menial things. Which is sort of true. Also robot repairmen, etc... however just like the agrarian roots of our past the bottom line is it takes way less people to do these things. So what do all those unemployed people then do? Well share work. However that would mean more wages, and shorter hours, except we are and have been going the opposite direction to that. In addition if you look at how this all comes into play, the reason for the automation, the saving of money to make more profit, which is being concentrated at the very top of the economic food chain, our current course of more unemployment, and greater disparity between wealthy and poor is pretty much an obvious outcome of our current path.

    I mean wasn't it futurists of the 50's that foresaw automation allowing us to work less and live more comfortably and wealthy than ever before, not the exact opposite of that.

  128. Automation is wonderful... by intermodal · · Score: 1

    but only if we get benefit from it. I could have automated 90% of my job out of existence when I was working in managed technical services in California, but I didn't. A couple months of Python and almost all my responsibilities would have been out of sight, out of mind, and my user base would seldom see the problems they called me for. But I didn't. Why? I was paid by the billable hour, and even if I charged the fifteen-minute minimum to run a script manually once per call, my total income would slip to less than half what each of my sisters each made part-time at a smoothie shop, a pizza place, and a Starbucks.

    Now I'm salaried, and I automate the hell out of our network's computers and their upkeep. But I'm well-aware that if I weren't in a one-man IT department, that could easily reduce the number of jobs available in our company. It might not get people fired, but it could certainly prevent new hiring when a job was vacated. Good for the company, but bad for those who need to make a living.

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  129. What automation is for: by Baki · · Score: 1

    More free time! Not more profits.
    And that is a political choice.

  130. It reminds me of David Weber's Harrington novels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    David Weber writes a series of naval-space-opera books in which the good guys ("the Star Kingdom of Manticore") start out being menaced by the bad guys ("the People's Republic of Haven").

    The basic problem that the bad guys had was that they had a huge empire which was addicted to its BLS = Basic Living Stipend. The population of the main planet expected better and better BLS and after more than 100 years of this, their entire economy was in shambles because of the drain of BLS. They were conquering all the neighboring star systems to steal all the proceeds from their economies to keep feeding the huge parasitic monster of the BLS (they had billions of totally non-productive proles who lived subsidized lives from cradle to grave being a huge net drain on the economy, while only a small fraction of the planet's population did productive work). The elite rulers lived in constant fear of population rising up and overthrowing them due to BLS-related unrest. To the extent that they preferred to start a war with their most dangerous neighbor, Manticore, to distract their population from domestic economic troubles.

    Totally fictional example with little relation to real-world economics... but I hope we don't end up in a vaguely similar situation 50 or 100 years from now.

  131. We already have 45%... by knightghost · · Score: 1

    We already have more than 45% job loss. Guess what people do now? Sales. Totally non-productive but since there is so much product and competition they seem the only way to get people to buy stuff (shove it down their throat). Heck, take a look at medications. Only 10% of the cost to bring a new med to market is research that creates it. Sure, there's a bit of production cost, but as an example generic benedryl is less than 1 cent per pill... well, that's a pretty low production cost.

  132. slavery you say? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hmmm, this idea is so crazy, it just might work!!!

  133. Mod Parent Up by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    this is more or less how Australia works. Incomes are high, safety nets strong, necessities are cheap and toys and games are expensive as hell.

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