Japanese White-Collar Workers Are Already Being Replaced by Artificial Intelligence (qz.com)
Most of the attention around automation focuses on how factory robots and self-driving cars may fundamentally change our workforce, potentially eliminating millions of jobs. But AI that can handle knowledge-based, white-collar work is also becoming increasingly competent. From a report on Quartz: One Japanese insurance company, Fukoku Mutual Life Insurance, is reportedly replacing 34 human insurance claim workers with "IBM Watson Explorer," starting by this month. The AI will scan hospital records and other documents to determine insurance payouts, according to a company press release, factoring injuries, patient medical histories, and procedures administered. Automation of these research and data gathering tasks will help the remaining human workers process the final payout faster, the release says.
As a software developer of enterprise software, every company I have worked for has either produced software which reduced white collar jobs or allowed companies to grow without hiring more people. My current company has seen over 10x profit growth over the past five years with a 20% increase in manpower. And we exist in a primarily zero sum portion of our industry, so this is directly taking revenue and jobs from other companies.
People need to stop living in a fairy tale land where near full employment is a reality in the near future. I'll be surprised if labor participation rate of 25-54 year olds is even 50% in 10 years.
-- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
Trump's Gestapo and SS will take care the problem.
No more working till last train but with life employment where will layed off people find new jobs?
People that do trivial tasks like looking at numbers on documents, something a computer can easily do, are prime for getting replaced.
Face it, if you aren't creating new things, you're the first to go. Maintaining a process is basically pattern recognition.
What about yellow, purple, and green collar workers?
Before engineers, programmers, lawyers, doctors, and other professionals get replaced. At some point they won't be able to compete.
That's going to make universities downsize, except the liberal arts. Then they can complete the transition to gender neutral identity grievance schools without all those pesky rational people who like to attend to get professional, technical and science degrees.
>Automation of these research and data gathering tasks will help the remaining human workers process the final payout faster ...and cheaper...
That is the real story that people tend to want to forget despite everyone knowing it and saying it... Hardware and Software are cheaper then Wetware (when you have a good solution). Unless we tax machines(both physical and digital) like this enough to support a social safety net/livable wage for people... We're going to enter a dystopian sci-fi novel/movie future faster than we want. I don't know if it will be Mad Max (via Trump), Johnny Mnemonic, or The classic documentary where the kind robots take care of the humans and give them a more comfortable world to live in after the Trump presidency: The Matrix. (Yes I interjected my personal political views, but I don't care)
Basic decision tree stuff to automate claims processing is as old as VMS-VAX?
I hope their data collection is better than it is in the US. Insurance company's systems can't talk to the doctors systems. They are stuck with 1980s technology or sneaker net to get information exchanged. Paper gets lost, forms don't match. Doctors spend more time with paper than with patients. Once the paper gets to the insurance company chances are good it doesn't go to the right person or just gets lost sending the patient back to the beginning of the maze. The more people removed from the chain the better.
considering nobody has made any decent AI yet.
Just because you have insurance doesn't mean your insurance company wants to pay for every covered expense, and even covered expenses are often not paid for as quickly as they should be. Humans workers are able to handle this dynamic with ease (just hire some jew bastards on your management team) but I sincerely doubt AI will be able to handle such nuance with the required finesse.
Japan needs to automate as much as it can and robotize to survive with a workforce growing old. Japan is facing this reality as well as many countries where labor isn't replaced at a sufficient rate to keep up with the needs. Older people will need care some countries just cannot deliver or afford.
Achille Talon
Hop!
Fuckyou life insurance
First they Fukoku their clients and then they Fukoku their workers.
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
Calm down everyone. This is just a continuation of productivity tools for accounting. Among other things I'm a certified accountant. This is just the next step in automation of accounting and it's a good thing. We used to do all our ledgers by hand. Now we all use software for that and believe me you don't want to go back to the way it was. Very little in accounting is actually value added activity so it is desirable to automate as much of it as possible. If some people lost their jobs doing that it's equivalent to how the PC replaced secretaries 30+ years ago. They were doing a necessary task but one that added little or no value. Most of what accountants do is just keeping track of what happened in a business and keeping the paperwork flowing where it needs to go. This is EXACTLY what we should be automating whenever possible.
I'm sure there are going to be a lot folks loudly proclaiming how we are all doomed and that there won't be any work for anyone left to do. Happens every time there is an advancement in automation and yet every time they are wrong. Yes some people are going to struggle in the short run. That happens with every technological advancement. Eventually they find other useful and valuable things to do and the world moves on. It will be fine.
They won't, that's the point.
I see plenty of work in reducing student-teacher ratios in education, increasing maintenance and inspection intervals, transparency reporting on public officials, etc. Now, just convince the remaining working people that they want to pay for this from their taxes. I suppose when we hit 53% unemployed, we might be able to start winning popular elections, if the unemployed are still allowed to vote then.
I work on a claims processing system and 90% of this stuff is already automated.
love is just extroverted narcissism
universities downsize not with unlimited loans! (usa only) need retraining you can get an loan and you may need to go for 2-4 years and (some credits maybe to old and you have to retake classes)
When you have people basically implementing a process without much understanding, it is pretty easy to automatize their jobs away. The only thing Watson is contribution is the translation from natural language to a more formalized one. No actual intelligence needed.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
As a software developer of enterprise software, every company I have worked for has either produced software which reduced white collar jobs or allowed companies to grow without hiring more people.
You're looking at the wrong scale. You need to look at the whole economy. Were those people able to get hired elsewhere? The answer in general was almost certainly yes. Might have taken some of them a few months but eventually they found something else. My company just bought a machine that allows us to manufacture wire leads much faster than we can do it by hand. That doesn't mean that the workers we didn't employ to do that work couldn't find gainful employment elsewhere.
And we exist in a primarily zero sum portion of our industry, so this is directly taking revenue and jobs from other companies.
Again, so what? You've automated some efficiency into an industry that obviously needed it. Some workers will have to do something else. Same story we've been hearing for centuries. It's the buggy whip story just being retold with a new product. Not anything to get worried about.
People need to stop living in a fairy tale land where near full employment is a reality in the near future.
Based on what? The fact that you can't imagine what people are going to do if they can't do what they currently are doing? I'm old enough to predate the internet. The World Wide Web was just becoming a thing while I was in college. Apple, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Cisco, Oracle, etc all didn't even exist when I was born. Vast swaths of our economy hadn't even been conceived of back then. 40 years from now you will see a totally new set of companies doing amazing things you never even imagined. Your argument is really just a failure of your own imagination. People have been making that same argument since the dawn of the industrial revolution and it is just as nonsensical now as it was then.
I'll be surprised if labor participation rate of 25-54 year olds is even 50% in 10 years.
Prepare to be surprised then. Your argument has no rational basis. You are extrapolating some micro-trends in your company well beyond any rational justification.
A queue is a line of people (or more generally a FIFO data structure).
A cue is a signal.
I see plenty of work in reducing student-teacher ratios in education, increasing maintenance and inspection intervals, transparency reporting on public officials, etc.
All of those can be automated and/or handed off to AI.
The cesspool just got a check and balance.
more unions are needed teachers, doctors and nurses have them and should be safe for some time.
At least here in the US, that won't change anything. The unemployed will still happily vote against anything that smacks of "socialism". It's a religion to us here. People here would rather shoot themselves (and their family members) in the head than enroll in social services.
While I agree generally, I think it is even more hypocritical. I think the most vocal anti-"socialist" poor folk partake in a lot of social services. They 1) just dont want to admit it and 2) don't want others to partake in it. Coincidentally there is usually a racial tinge to this, in that minorities are considered moochers while white trash are noble salt-of-the-earth types just down on their luck, oppressed by the great unwashes minorities.
I'm curious what you think you can do that Watson can't.
Seriously? Quite a bit actually. I can handle input streams that Watson can't. I can make tools Watson couldn't begin to imagine. I can interact with physical objects without vast amounts of programming. I can deal with humans in a meaningful and human way FAR better than any computer program. I can pass a Turing test. The number of things I can do that Watson cannot is literally too numerous to bother counting. Watson is really just an decision support system with a natural language interface. Very cool but the notion that it could replace me is just laughable.
Accounting is a very rigidly structured practice.
A lot of people think so but they and you are actually completely wrong. There is a tremendous amount of judgement that goes into accounting and much of it is anything but rigid. Surprisingly few people actually realize how arbitrary many of the choices that go into accounting actually are. For many there is no objectively right or wrong answer - it's merely a question of preference. Even seemingly simple questions like "when did a sale occur" aren't always actually simple questions with a single possible answer or an objectively best answer. There is a lot of judgement and opinion in those decisions and much of that will not be easy to automate. Don't conflate bookkeeping with accounting. They aren't the same thing. Bookkeeping is something Watson can help out greatly with but it is a small subset of what accounting is.
All IBM really needs to do is let Watson sift through the books of a couple hundred companies and it will easily determine how to best achieve a defined set of objectives for a corporation.
See there is your problem. Every company is unique in some way. There are some commonalities to be sure and regulations in many cases to further make things consistent. But it's actually really hard for even the most sophisticated software to adapt to the unique qualities of each company just like not every human can fit into every company. It's depressing how many seemingly bright people think that running a company is something as deterministic as running some data through a computer program. It's WAY more complicated than you think it is. Just because Watson won a few games of Jeopardy doesn't mean you can make the program the de-facto CEO.
That's a pretty funny thing to say about a nation with more than a third on welfare.
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
Remember, most of the US population is religious, and not only does this involve some "actual" religion (usually Christianity), it also involves the "anti-socialism" religion. Now remember, the defining feature of religion is a complete lack rationality, and believing in something with zero supporting evidence, frequently despite enormous evidence to the contrary (as in the case of young-earth creationism, something that a huge number of Americans believe in).
So yes, it is "a pretty funny thing to say", but that doesn't make it untrue. People here will rationalize this in all kinds of crazy ways. Plus, there's a division here in the US between the "left" and the "right", and many of the people on welfare are not Trump voters, for instance. And of those Trump supporters who are on welfare, they're probably overwhelmingly not on "welfare", but on "disability", which in their minds is somehow different even though it's still socialism.
Calm down sir: there's some pro-socialism people on U.S. (including some in federal administration - only because Trump wins presidency, this people haven't disappeared...)
t seems to me to be some kind of logical fallacy to think that something new will not happen because it has not happened in the past.
What about humans and their ability to problem solve and create and build has changed? The reason I don't see any reason to worry about "robots" taking all our jobs is because NOTHING has changed about the ability of humans to adapt to new circumstances. Nobody has been able to make a coherent argument detailing why humans will not be able to continue to create new industries and new technologies and new products in the future. I don't pretend to know what those new economies will look like with any great precision. What I do know is that people are smart, creative and that there is literally an entire universe worth of useful and valuable things to do. All we are doing is economically climbing higher up Maslow's hierarchy of needs.
It reminds me of the historical observation that generals are always fighting the last war.
You didn't finish your thought. Just because generals are still thinking about the last war doesn't mean they don't adapt to the new one when it starts. Yes there will be new challenges we haven't though of in the future. That's ALWAYS been the case. There are threats to humanity but economic collapse from runaway automation is among the more absurdly unlikely ones.
"One job, one vote!"
/ shudder
And your problem with that is? I suppose if that includes violence to other people that would be a problem, or if that meant not teaching job skills in an environment where people were actually valued for doing work instead of automating it, you might have a point.
Computers/automation/robotics have been replacing workers of all stripes including white collar workers since the ATM was introduced in 1967. Every place I have ever worked has had internal and external software that replaces white collar workers (where you used to need 10 people now you need 2).
The reality is that the economy is limited by a scarcity of labor when government doesn't interfere (the economy is essentially the sum of every worker work multiplied by their efficiency as valued by the economy in dollars). As people are freed from jobs that are highly repetitive, there are always more complex, less repetitive jobs out there because the consumer is always looking for the next big thing to improve their lives/increase their free time/reduce their work load. Entire multi billion dollar industries have been created after the introduction of the ATM and will continue to be created. Competition will always push prices down to equilibrium with demand, and I predict now that when fast food restaurants are completely automated with one or two highly skilled technicians (who can make $45k a year btw) running things, prices will drop to levels near what you would pay to make the food at home, order accuracy will be higher, and food borne illness will be unheard of (48 million people get sick, 128,000 are hospitalized, and 3,000 die every year from food borne illness.) Food handling automation was inevitable, the minimum wage hike is just a catalyst to make it happen a little sooner. When driving is automated, traffic will be much lighter, people will not have to own their own cars to travel anywhere; pollution will go down due to the elimination of bad driving habits, ride sharing and reduced traffic. Traffic fatalities, one of the top causes of death in ages 18-25 (over 40,000 per year in total) will be a thing of the past. There will still be fatalities, but probably reduced by 100x or so in the first 10 years.
https://www.cdc.gov/foodborneb...
https://crashstats.nhtsa.dot.g...
The biggest mistake we could make as a country is to go the way of the universal basic income. If we get to a point where there are 10x more job seekers than jobs, then we can revisit the issue, but right now there are about 5.5 million job openings in the US and there would probably be 4x that if the government wasn't actively chasing businesses to Asia. Current real unemployment is about 6% so 9.6 million. When US companies bring back $2.1T this year and the health insurance boondogle is fixed (universal annual HSAs, nationwide competition, standardization of policies; identical to what was done by Republicans to life insurance in the 1990s which reduced the costs by 60%), the job market will very likely explode. Economists understand this and that is part of why the DOW is up 1200 points since the election. The Obama economy was of his own making after the first 2 years due to the ACA and excessive regulation, and, like the Carter economy, it will be unleashed with the next administration.
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/06/03...
https://www.bls.gov/news.relea...
If you disagree, please post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like
Based on limits to which people can consume. Companies exist to create more consumables. Once the amount of consumables reach the point where people just won't buy them, there will be no more jobs created.
He may be using a less common definition of "corporatism", but the more common definition is irrelevant because he is trying to illustrate a state of affairs. You may disagree with what that state of affairs is, but that is a different argument than the one you have presented.
Until Fortran was developed, humans used to write code telling the computer what to do. Since the late 1950s, we've been writing a high-level description, then a computer program writes the program that actually gets executed.
Nowadays, there's frequently a computer program, such as a browser, which accepts our high-level description of the task and interprets it before generating more specific instructions for another piece of software, an api library, which creates more specific instructions for another piece of software, such as a graphics library, which generates instructions for a graphics driver, which generates code used by a microcode implementation, which is the actual machine code that runs on the processor.
ALREADY the programming for the machine is produced by software, running code produced by software, which runs code produced by software. That's been true for 60 years, so pardon me if I'm not too concerned about the idea of a software program that creates software programs. Those are called "interpreters", "compilers", and "microcode", and they are exactly the tools that allow software engineers to be so productive.
"One job, one vote!"
/ shudder
A capitalist who owns 1,000 job-holding robots will be entitled to 1,001 votes.
The GP is likely referring to the conservative Christian homeschooling movement who homeschool their children explicitly to avoid exposing their children to a common culture. The "mixing pot" of American culture may be mostly a myth, but some amount of interaction helps understanding and increases the chance people will be able to think of themselves as part of a singular nation.
I believe in freedom of speech and association, so I do not favor legal remedies, but it is a cultural problem that may have social/cultural remedies.
Turns out it's rather simple, really --- just ban computers. He's going to start by replacing computers with human couriers for the secure-messaging market, and move outward from there. By 2020 we should have most of the Internet replaced by the (now greatly expanded) Post Office.
I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
John Maynard Keynes was a famous economist from the 1st half of the 20th Century. I vaguely remembered reading a remark he made about a shorter work week, a little googling and I came up with this from https://www.theguardian.com/business/2008/sep/01/economics:
Back in 1930, Keynes predicted that the working week would be drastically cut, to perhaps 15 hours a week, with people choosing to have far more leisure as their material needs were satisfied
So, as productivity increases, why haven't we just started having a shorter work week? It seems to me that Parkinson's law trumps Keynes's vision. (Named after C. Northcote Parkinson) that work expands to fill the time allotted. I find it very depressing myself. On the one hand, you have unemployed people, on the other hand, you have people employed in a lot of 'busy work'.
In theory, theory and practice are the same; in practice they're different. (Yogi Berra & A. Einstein)
And faster. And less expensive over time. And more reliable. And more consistent. And not need health insurance. And not need breaks because they, or their SO, is pregnant, or little Johnny has the sniffles. And can work 24-hour, 7-day shifts instead of 8 hour, 5-day shifts. And during which shifts, they won't need breaks. Or holidays. Or time off for funerals, Comic-con, taking Fido to the vet, or little Susie's parent-teacher conference. They won't sue because they were sexually harassed. If grandpa robot dies, they won't give a shit. They won't get tired. They won't get bored. They won't do work below their capabilities because they don't like the boss. They won't get hired away after they've been trained (or programmed, in the early stages) so new employee costs will plummet. The HR department will have nothing to do with these things. And so on.
Anyone who thinks AI is "just another lateral economic shift" has no idea what's going to be smacking them in the face. With a steel toed-boot. It isn't about human creativity. It's about all the other human things, the ones no one really wants to talk about in the open. The ones the robots will most definitely not bring to the workplace.
And that is all with just the type of systems we can make today. When real AI arrives — sapient, sentient, and conscious — the ground will shift yet again, and no one has any clue at all about the directions those shifts will take, or how profound they will be.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
For those interested in that topic I can only reccomend to watch GCP Grey's (https://www.youtube.com/user/CGPGrey) excellent video "Humans need not apply" on this very issue.
No, I was not talking about homeschooling at all. I was talking about the fact that when kids are out of school, they go to daycares, since both dad and mom are busy at work. Once most of the jobs are automated so that it's difficult for anyone but geniuses to get jobs, parents might spend that freed up time w/ their kids. It said nothing about homeschooling: not all parents would have the skills to do that.
I'm all for a broad interaction b/w kids, but that's something that can happen at schools, and does not require a kids time w/ his/her parents to be reduced to evenings and weekends.
Isn't that going to put the daycare workers out of a job?
I don't know what the right answer is, but it's not unions. Unions exist to protect jobs and employment. The Pacific Longshoremen's Union during the 1960's&70's was an aberration in the the union bosses didn't primarily look after maintaining their own power via maintaining a large number of jobs, but rather opted into profit sharing, protecting the current workers at the expense of future power. Usually a union can be depended upon to fight automation, rather than to seek maximization of public good.
Basic Income has lots of things going for it, but it doesn't feel like the exactly right answer. I'm more in favor of a linear income tax (with no writeoffs or exemptions) where the intercept is set to equal what the basic income would otherwise have been. And this tax should include *ALL* sources of income and replace all other taxes.
The problem with basic income style solutions is that it centralizes control which strengthens a central point of failure. It's true the problem already exists (money is only worth something because you need to pay your taxes in money, so everyone needs it...and money is printed by the central government), but I'm not sure strengthening the centralization doesn't make the problem worse.
But what better answers are there? It would be nice to at least notice their existence before we hit the narrow part of the pass.
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
At least, as long as banks keep writing the software they do.
My bank's records of my purchases isn't updating today. This is one of the biggest banks in Canada. Transactions don't update properly over the weekends or holidays. Why? Who knows? Why has bank software EVER cared about weekends? What do business days matter to computers? And yet here we are. There's no monkey to turn the crank on a holiday, so I can't confirm my account activity.
Doing a tiny bit of reading I see: "The software typically takes the customer’s words, converts them to text, and analyzes whether those words are positive or negative." I think robotic cars are much more AI than this, and they aren't all that AI. Seems like AI is highly overrated if this is all AI is. No wonder AI is gonna get people killed.
At least here in the US, that won't change anything. The unemployed will still happily vote against anything that smacks of "socialism". It's a religion to us here. People here would rather shoot themselves (and their family members) in the head than enroll in social services.
Minor correction. The most "anti-socialist" po folk I know, those who instinctively reach for their rifles when they hear "liberal", are consuming shitloads of social programs, from SS diability to medicaid to WIC to food stamps to free cell phones.
They know they are deserving, and maybe their relatives, but no one else should be getting free shit.
The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
I never said all Americans had identical opinions. "Some pro-socialism people" is not enough people to win elections. There's "some" of many different groups of people here: Amish, Windows Phone lovers, etc., but not remotely enough to matter politically.
This really isn't all that much different from any jobs or particular tasks going from human employee hands to computers... data mining and data warehouse aren't new concepts after all.
Specialized software for whicher you give an input or scenario to get processed options also have been around for a while now. The problem for most of those is training...
The daycare workers can take care of their own kids using the same cycle - we're discussing a post employment world, remember?
Some proponents of single payer health care talk about the needless paperwork of the health insurance industry. Now that some of those 'paperwork' jobs are being eliminated, there are complaints?
Expert Systems have been around since the 70s. I've wanted them to hurry up in health care for a long time. Bring on the nurse at Walgreens, with the expert systems at her command, for many common health problems.
But can these robots also drink sake until they fall over and sing badly at the karaoke and pass out on the bullet train like the real deal?
Can unions protect jobs? They haven't been, and nor have they been able to prevent offshoring. The real issue is that if a company is struggling (putting aside the issues of executive pay), there ain't much that the unions can do.
Most jobs require so little intelligence.... in addition, one goal of MBAs is to restructure the labor into tasks that can be externalized or cheaper because of a lower skills requirement. Just as Applied Intelligence is all about defining the tasks so an AI can do them, MBAs do so on a higher level. The two working together shall be able to transform just about every industry....
They haven't even begun to think about AUGMENTED INTELLIGENCE. Perhaps an MBA with AI training will get that going mainstream? Your kid's phone app could leverage their free labor to solve tough abstracted problems which replaces their parents jobs...
Democracy Now! - uncensored, anti-establishment news
The context of job previously being replaced , was new white or blue collar job opening up. That was the previous context. What we see now is a new generation of job replacement, lot of automation not being replaced by new blue collar or new white collar job. IF and only IF there is new job replacement you would have a rational basis. But there is not. That is why the GP is spot on, until such replacement job come in.
C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
visit randi.org
for being far behind on livable wages for it's GenX/Millenials.
The ones that ARE there and AREN'T living with their parents are generally too focused on their careers and don't have the time, job security/advancement potential, excess finances and housing options to raise a family anymore.
Furthermore foreign born Japanese, even with significant familial assets in Japan aren't interested in returning! (I have met multiple examples of this in the past 15 years, many of them women, and just recently talked to a aquaintance whose full-japanese cousin wants to come to America because he both prefers white women and there aren't many Japanese women seriously dating anymore.)
If this is not true it would be helpful to get native japanese opinions both male and female to refute it, but based off my interactions with Japanese in America this has been consistent.
No, I was not talking about homeschooling at all... It said nothing about homeschooling: not all parents would have the skills to do that.
You said parents could spend more time with their children. Having seen homeschooling in action up close, I can make several comments, namely that your statement is correct regarding most current homeschooling parents, they do not have the skills to do so, but that doesn't stop them because there is exactly 0 oversight. The ones that would benefit the most from joining society are the ones that are kept closeted up under the guise of homeschooling.
I'm all for a broad interaction b/w kids, but that's something that can happen at schools, and does not require a kids time w/ his/her parents to be reduced to evenings and weekends.
If you're advocating parents spending time post school, great but that certainly wasn't clear from your initial post. We need to get all kids on at least semi-equal footing. In a post-employment world, there will still be opportunities to do things that will be limited to a few, and qualifying for those positions will be competitive much like today. The motivation to do those things will be driven by the same market forces that drive people to strive for certain goals, like living on a beach or lake or next to a wilderness, as there will be some sort of additional compensation. But, we have to get there first.
The cesspool just got a check and balance.
My expectation is, after a lot of pain, we'll move off of the toxic idea that one only deserves to have self-respect if one performs some kind of drudgework, and that one only deserves respect from without if one performs some kind of drudgework, to a mindset where one deserves respect because one is a socially reasonable human being and pursues one's own interests in some healthy fashion (IOW, with some degree of pleasure, while offering no harm to others.)
"Money for stuff" is an adequate model when there is a too-limited amount of stuff and everyone must produce or we all fall down. When there isn't a too-limited amount of stuff, and one does not have to produce to keep society going, it doesn't make very much sense for the majority to have to do drudgework.
There will need to be some measure of consumption, and some way to meter it out. But it won't be based on work. Or so I imagine.
It's the getting from here to there that I'm worried about. Jobs are going to go away fast. And here in the US, where I am, congress moves slowly, sometimes not moving at all, even when it is obvious they need to (for instance, they've been pursuing the complete failure of a drug war for decades now, and they're still too blind, deaf and self-centered to understand it's a pointless exercise from the POV of accomplishing anything worthwhile, while also harming the maximum possible number of people, far, far more than drugs themselves ever posed a threat to.)
Right now... now... there are about 42 million food-insecure people in the US. That's roughly 1/7th of the population. And the financial imbalance is extreme. It's pretty clear that the current model does not serve the country at large very well.
But the people keep electing millionaires to congress. That's right. The average net worth of a congresscritter is over one million dollars. So any change in the right direction will meet some resistance. I leave it to you to imagine how much.
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
Will people who work more than one job get more than one vote? Will retirees be allowed to vote?
No, but will each robot count as 3/5 of a person for apportionment purposes, i.e. will 1,000 robots count as 600 people in a congressional district?
Insurance companies in the US are in the health care denial business. The purpose of middle managers is to delay and prevent payouts.
Maybe they can retune the AI for that...
Abuse creates isolation; whenever groups, and their beliefs, are persecuted, they tend to isolate themselves. You cannot "nudge" them into the belief set, no matter how much you want it to work you, and everyone else like you, need to realize "Social\Cultural Remedies", known by it's scientific name as psychological warfare, only serves to achieve the goal of causing the individual instigating that warfare to lose their concept of reality; as you have so aptly demonstrated.
Psychological weapons (e.g. propaganda) cannot be targeted, which means you end up in a spiral of insanity where everyone and everything has a constantly shifting state of beliefs and you end up chasing your tail. Psychological warfare itself is a weapon; you get your enemy to believe it's effective, and then they destroy themselves. The only way to play and win that game is just not to play; many religions realized that millennia ago, and while they and their clergy aren't perfect, fact is there are some religions that have produced better results for society than others. Christianity makes sense from a scientific standpoint when you replace the word "God" with "reality"; America has produced some spectacular scientific breakthroughs. Chinese socialism has yet to prove anything.
With that said, capitalism breaks down in a post-scarcity society, which at best will be a fleeting dream, and at worst if we ever realize it, a hellish nightmare. In 1,000 years at the current rate of reproduction, there will be more mass in humans than there will be mass on the planet earth. Between then and now, you've got generations of absolute insanity going on. Whichever system follows the natural order of reality the best is the one that makes the most sense. What will end up happening with automation is the people who exploit it will become rich, and they will look for "secure", charitable, or R&D investments, which will pull people towards those fields. Meanwhile, a lot of people will be impoverished, and they will start lobbying in their own interests, forcing the costs of labor to increase substantially; imagine a world where a man works 10-20hrs a week, and his wife and kids participate in a society that values education in the highest regard. There are places where low-IQ people belong; e.g. Party Planners and interior decorators, or cooks, and those are fields that robots just can't do and if you don't get why they can't do it, you really need to spend some time learning what those positions actually do. There will be barriers to reproduction, although it won't be as high as you think.
Universal income is a pipe-dream by millions of people who have been so dissuaded by the labor market that they've been permanently damaged. I sincerely believe anyone who publishes a headline that reads "your job is about to be replaced by a robot" is doing so in the hopes of beating up the price of labor. These are the same people who flood the labor market in order to make a mint, then wonder why they can't find qualified candidates to fill positions. Fact is, you can't, as a company, exist without attracting hardworking people to your ranks. The "elites" are starting to realize their time is up.
See you here no balls https://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=10064767&cid=53590509/ who hasn't done a thing he can show us of his own (not software janitoring others' work) & 'chatters' on /. ALL day long w/ his "20 yrs. of experience" (haven't done shit, especially vs. me who you talk behind my back too about me? PUNK!)
* HOW MANY MORE TIMES ARE YOU GOING TO "DOWNMOD HIDE" THIS https://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=10068759&cid=53593371/ ?
Don't worry ray: I'll burn you & your sockpuppet downmods right out of them as always, lol!
All the while you exposing you scumbag gossipping bitch "ne'er-do-well" that you CLEARLY are as shown here too https://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=9880997&cid=53312265/ !
Man, lol - it MUST bug you you're so stupid that you're downmodding it to hide it! Thanks for projecting that too.
(... & don't TRY bs me "I can't as I posted already" as I'll just explain how to logout of your "registered 'luser'" acc't., blow cookie, log in & downmod (or by sockpuppets galore a "webdouche" like you use)).
APK
P.S.=> I'll see you there in that 1st link above JUST to HUMILIATE YOU publicly after YOU start crap w/ me BEHIND MY BACK pussy... apk
Many people in white collar jobs or professions do not yet realize that automation may actually replace them faster than manual trades are reduced to near zero human employees. Those that are aware generally think this massive displacement is decades away. Meanwhile real solutions are not put into conversation as politicians dare not admit the massive changes that must take place and therefore we are not preparing and the suffering will be amplified.
I see plenty of work in reducing student-teacher ratios in education, increasing maintenance and inspection intervals, transparency reporting on public officials, etc.
All of those can be automated and/or handed off to AI.
Sure, but not for 50 to 100 years. And, things like educating our children and making judgement calls on elected officials probably never should be reduced to algorithms. Maybe for the elected officials if the algorithm is completely transparent, but if you trust SkyNet to educate all the children... that could go very very wrong.
The least you could do is threaten to sue him for libel. What happened Al, run out of small children to abuse?
Of course (based on your comments) I'm beginning to suspect you're just a piece of LISA code gone horribly wrong. You don't seem to be able to pass the Turing test.
You still haven't sought out psychiatric help, have you? Really, there are medications that can help you. Just sayin'.
Basic Income has lots of things going for it, but it doesn't feel like the exactly right answer. I'm more in favor of a linear income tax (with no writeoffs or exemptions) where the intercept is set to equal what the basic income would otherwise have been. And this tax should include *ALL* sources of income and replace all other taxes.
Think, don't just "feel". For your information, write-offs exist because investments actually do reduce your income. If you don't allow them, someone who spends $100 to gain $1100 (net income: $1000) might be taxed $440, and someone who spends $2000 to gain $2500 (net income: $500) would be taxed $1000. Does. Not. Make. Sense.
Claus
All of those can be automated and/or handed off to AI.
Sure, but not for 50 to 100 years. And, things like educating our children and making judgement calls on elected officials probably never should be reduced to algorithms. Maybe for the elected officials if the algorithm is completely transparent, but if you trust SkyNet to educate all the children... that could go very very wrong.
That's within 1-2 generations, and quite possibly within our lifetime. Educating children can definitely be improved by algorithms over some teachers, anyways. I've had the displeasure of dealing with several absolutely unsuited persons in the teaching profession. Unsuited primarily because they lacked the ability to adapt their teaching to anything but their perceived view of a student (sounds a lot like an inflexible algorithm, and one that actively repels change) But, this doesn't mean we don't need teachers, since students need to learn to deal with other humans.
The cesspool just got a check and balance.
Reducing your income in the short term to make much more in the long term. And the write-offs are designed to encourage that, since the government takes the long view.
If your job became obsolete and the govt paid you somewhat less to do nothing, would you do nothing? Or would you look for another way to contribute to society? As I have pointed out in other threads, there are millions of jobs that need to be done, but we've created perverse incentives for people to do less productive things instead. Things that humans can do that machines can't: Find a cure for diabetes, design a low-cost solar panel, plant a tree, teach someone how to do home repairs, write a poem... Many, but not all of these things require an advanced education. I refuse to believe that the future human race will consist mostly of couch potatoes like H.G. Wells' Eloi.
COE
which will pull people towards those fields.
Until simulations are fast enough to perform R&D for you, that is.
What makes you think this is exclusive to Japan, or even a new thing.
Yup. A relative of mine has an autistic child, and it took a long time to point out to her that her family was using a lot of government services because of that. Being a liberal, I thought helping said child become productive was an excellent use of my tax money, which is possibly why I was more realistic than my relative was.
"When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
See subject & you calling me a pedo (which I am not, loser) https://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=5117369&cid=46931715/ Why don't you let me know were you are so I can give you a dose of some medicine (a broken jaw)?
APK
P.S.=> You're a pussy PUNK motherfucker... apk
If you are gambling on long term success, that's fair, but you should take the risk, not export it to someone else. Writeoffs exist because they benefit powerful people. But if you want to encourage some activity, it should be a separate piece of legislation, not a part of the tax code. I don't automatically oppose all things that writeoffs are supposed to accomplish, but I do oppose them being a part of the tax code.
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
Then why don't you give at least one specific example.
I gave several. Read them. Furthermore if you cannot figure out what a human can do that Watson cannot on your own then I'm not sure what I can do to help you.
And this is where a system like Watson shines. While you may be able to fall back on personal experience to make these judgement calls, Watson can easily run thousands of simulations on each set of numbers, based on real world possibilities. You will always be making a guess based on what might happen, but Watson will come close to knowing what will happen.
Put succinctly you are saying that Watson can (almost) predict the future. Really? I want whatever you are smoking because it's obviously good stuff. Sorry but there is no AI in existence that is even close to as capable as you are implying and certainly none flexible enough to actually manage a real world business. First off, Watson IS NOT an AI capable of making reliable judgements and you would be a weapon's grade idiot to trust it to run your company without a human looking over it's shoulder even if it could - which it cannot. Tools like Watson are useful for decision support and routine transactions. Those are useful things but only a subset of what accountants do. They advise people by gathering and presenting pertenent data and handle mundane well defined tasks. If you actually tried to replace human judgement with AI given the state of the art you would be out of business faster than you could say "shareholder lawsuit" or "IRS audit". Second, a system like Watson would be absolutely terrible at dealing with the ever shifting work flows and problems that arise in a real company. Riddle me this. How is Watson going to deal with a customer calling on the telephone to complain because they were shorted on a shipment because some idiot in shipping put the a different customers parts in their shipment? Even if Watson could handle that problem (which it cannot) you still would need people to sort it out. Why? Because only an idiot would ask a customer to talk to a computer to solve such a problem.
This all said, I am far from an AI believer.
No you are an AI worshiper. You think AI is some magical fairy dust you can sprinkle on a profession and make all the people somehow redundant. Problem is that you don't understand the technology at all. You don't know what it is, what it does, or how it would impact the real world. Worse you understand even less about the field of accounting and how it works. You think it's some sort of rigidly deterministic job where there is an easy answer to every question. You seriously have no idea what you are talking about.
Given sufficient data from 1000 companies, et cetera.
That is the key word. Sufficient. You will NEVER get sufficient data from even one company much less thousands. You would have to somehow pull every bit of institutional knowledge out of the heads of the people working there because I assure you that plenty of important stuff isn't written down anywhere. You could train an AI to do many useful things but the notion that you are going to replace the profession of accounting with AI within the lifetime of anyone reading this is approximately as absurd as thinking we are going to colonize Pluto in the same time period.
We just call it 'fraud' and 'tax evasion'.
Only because you are going for snark rather than comprehension. I'll give you an example. Solve this problem in a generalized proof and there is a Nobel prize in economics waiting for you.
My company makes wire harnesses. How much does it cost to make a wire harness? Sounds easy enough right? Cost of material, cost of labor to build it, plus time spent engineering and selling it, etc. Problem is that there are a lot of costs you cannot easily assign. We make hundreds of wire harnesses. How much of the electric bill do we assign to the cost of each one? How much administrative time was spent on it? How much of the CEO's salary to you allocate to each product and what metric are you going to use to divide up the cost? These are called indirect costs and rationally allocating these costs accurately to each product is a profession unto itself. Coming up with an answer that is better than an educated guess is nearly impossible for all but the most trivial cases. People have tried with things like Activity Based Costing and other methods but there is no method available that doesn't eventually involved significant guesswork and lots of assumptions that may or may not hold water.
Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto!