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Bill Gates: The Robot That Takes Your Job Should Pay Taxes (qz.com)

In a recent interview with Quartz, Bill Gates said he believes that governments should tax companies that use robots who are taking human jobs, as a way to at least temporarily slow the spread of automation and to fund other types of employment. The money gained from taxing robots could then be used to finance jobs taking care of elderly people or working with kids in schools -- jobs which humans are particularly well suited for. Quartz reports: [Gates] argues that governments must oversee such programs rather than relying on businesses, in order to redirect the jobs to help people with lower incomes. The idea is not totally theoretical: EU lawmakers considered a proposal to tax robot owners to pay for training for workers who lose their jobs, though on Feb. 16 the legislators ultimately rejected it. "You ought to be willing to raise the tax level and even slow down the speed" of automation, Gates argues. That's because the technology and business cases for replacing humans in a wide range of jobs are arriving simultaneously, and it's important to be able to manage that displacement. "You cross the threshold of job replacement of certain activities all sort of at once," Gates says, citing warehouse work and driving as some of the job categories that in the next 20 years will have robots doing them. You can watch Gates' remarks in a video here, or read the transcript embedded in Quartz' report.

388 comments

  1. that's it. the end game. by turkeydance · · Score: 1

    only death is left for humans in the inevitable.

    1. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sounds fine. The robot's salary is $0. 25% tax of $0 is $0.

    2. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Sounds fine. The robot's salary is $0. 25% tax of $0 is $0. : Wrong. The robot will get health care at any cost.

      Those fuckers where I work not only post my salary publicly because I called them out for being what they are, but they decided to give me a public title that I never heard of before just to piss off my co-workers because I make more than them. To the point, they post my take-home salary, but they post what I make if I actually wanted any of the extra benefits like medical. I don't go to the doctor in the last 5 years, because I have too much work to do. I can't wait until robots relive me from my job and I can just sit at home and drink while the system pays me for being a worthless human. /s

    3. Re:that's it. the end game. by Gussington · · Score: 3, Interesting

      only death is left for humans in the inevitable.

      The only thing that is inevitable is prophets of doom every time a technology article is released.
      Had you explained life in 2017 to someone from 1840, it would be unbelievable. And a person from 1840 might not be able to live in 2017 successfully doesn't mean that there aren't still billions of humans doing just that today. So to analyse the prophet of doom a bit further, what you really mean is, a person with a brought up in 2017 would probably find life in 2087 a gap too far to bridge. But that doesn't mean humans in 2087 won't find whatever world they're living in as normal (and likely enjoying a higher standard of living)

    4. Re:that's it. the end game. by quenda · · Score: 2

      Had you explained life in 2017 to someone from 1840, it would be unbelievable.

      You'd have to start by explaining a lot of new words that did not exist then. Like "unemployment".

    5. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > sit in terrafoam and drink Water(TM)

      You'll afford jack all with what "the system pays you". Any rope slack you give the commoners simply gets pulled in because it's a tensile system. Costs just rise.

      Soy cubes are $200/lb and they're only that cheap because they're almost entirely subsidized.

    6. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >a person from 1840 might not be able to live in 2017
      Sure they would, they can exchange labor for money, the means of survival.

      Labor is going to become worthless. So far it's only ever been shuffled around. There will be nowhere to shuffle to. This has never happened.

      This. Has. Never. Happened.

      Prolekistan will lose its only export. And we know what happens to countries with no export.

    7. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      only if you believe they considered begging for 'food, water, clothing, shelter' and all the other necessities of life as a 'job' would the concept of 'unemployment' be difficult to grasp.

    8. Re:that's it. the end game. by mysidia · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The government should impute the wages that a human worker would be paid in 2010 with a Human cost-of-living adjustment based on the Robot's job description, For a given amount of Company revenue by industry.

      Then Double the quantity

      And compare the Wages the Company is currently paying every month to the Imputed Wages based on the greater of the Total number of robots Jobs, and based on the Company's total revenue and Industry.

      Make the companies Pay standard Employee Taxes on the difference between the Imputed Sum and the Actually paid sum, Including what the Social security, Medicare, Income Tax, and Healthcare benefits would be; Require the company actually buy in Health insurance for the robots.

      Then make the companies pay an Additional supplement to Income Tax witholding for the robots called the "Automation tax".

      Basically, double the income tax rate for automated employees to 60%, after already having doubled the wage, And specify the "Minimum wage" for the lowest jobs for purposes of imputing automated job roles to $20/Hour.

    9. Re:that's it. the end game. by Kjella · · Score: 2

      You'd have to start by explaining a lot of new words that did not exist then. Like "unemployment".

      Only because working for somebody else was not the norm. You had workers, homesteaders and vagrants. Obviously if you worked on your own land, trade or craft you were what we'd today call self-employed. Those who didn't were drifters taking stray jobs, when they weren't employed they were just called much less civilized things than unemployed.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    10. Re:that's it. the end game. by NIGGERpenisbestPENIS · · Score: 0

      Had you explained life in 2017 to someone from 1840, it would be unbelievable.

      You'd have to start by explaining a lot of new words that did not exist then. Like "unemployment".

      The real big difference: in 1840 many, many more people were self-employed and owned their own business, practiced their own trade. If they thought you were an asshole, they didn't have to do business with you.

      Now, only a very few are financially independent, possessing an independent livelihood that doesn't depend on something akin to office politics, where knowing the right people (not merit) determine advancement. Capitalism was initially founded on the model of a willing buyer and a willing seller. Now the seller is always willing, like any other whore, and you are their representative of faceless people whom you've never met. Now most people are tiny cogs in a huge corporate machine, with a mandate to kiss your ass in order to get your business no matter how unreasonable and inconsiderate you may be. Their job and livelihood depends on never causing offense, no matter how well deserved it may be, no matter how unreasonable the expectations. This is decidedly a step backward. Sure, we have bigger pools of resources and can do larger things now, but most day-to-day business transactions don't require such vast pools of wealth. Most daily business is quite mundane. History has told a story of increasingly decentralized governments, only to have them replaced by increasingly centralized corporate empires.

      It really makes no material difference whether you are censored by a government using its police power, or a corporation using its economic bargaining power to deny you a livelihood. Yet we talk a good game about how things like free speech are "inalienable human rights". They appear to be quite alienable, you just have to alienate them using a socially approved mechanism. So much for natural human rights.

      So, our corporations and their tiny minority of major shareholders prosper, while our social fabric continues to decline. We now have a society in which basic manners and courtesy are regarded as weakness, akin to subservience. "Winners" are sociopaths who dominate, not real human beings who cooperatively consider the needs of others. It's *your job* to be the adult in a situation, always. Being "well adjusted" means being satisfied with the most shallow of interactions, with people who either do not realize or do not care how transparent they are.

      I sincerely believe that future historians will consider this a second Dark Age dominated by economic power, just one with much better tech toys than the first one dominated by religious authority. Just because the masters profess a different doctrine and the priesthood wears tailored suits instead of collars doesn't make it much different, in the end.

      I really do believe that if these UFOs really are alien spacecraft, it's no mystery they don't openly land. They'd monitor our telecommunications and observe us, and they would all agree on one thing: "They're clearly not ready - all they care about is controlling each other. How primitive they are."

      --
      The best is simply the best.
    11. Re:that's it. the end game. by JoeMerchant · · Score: 2

      I would say he's asking for a corporate profits tax - as robots increase profitability, corporations should pay increased taxes on that profitability.

      Now, we just have to shred all the corporate tax loopholes and get them to start paying some taxes in the first place.

    12. Re: that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong!

      Prostitution, the worlds oldest profession, will be more popular than ever. Until they make a robot I want to stick my dick into, I'll have to rely on humans.

    13. Re:that's it. the end game. by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 2

      "You'd have to start by explaining a lot of new words that did not exist then. Like "unemployment"."

      William Wordsworth, the Lake poet who lived in rural Cumbria, described rural unemployment and vagrancy as being common in his time - the early nineteenth century, in the heart of the Industrial Revolution:
      http://www.bartleby.com/145/ww...
      and: http://www.bartleby.com/145/ww...

      This student thesis describes, albeit crudely, Wordsworth's social milieu: https://ttu-ir.tdl.org/ttu-ir/...
      A time of dislocation as technology obsoleted a range of traditional jobs, just as it is doing now.

    14. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not 1700 any more, you can lose about 90% of the caps now.

    15. Re:that's it. the end game. by quenda · · Score: 2

      People seem to be confusing the early 19th C with the Great Depression of the 20th.

      Around here, Australia, there was a chronic labour shortage in those days. And I believe it was similar in the US:

      The U.S. economy of the early 19th century was characterized by labor shortages, as noted by numerous contemporary observers. The labor shortage was attributed to the cheapness of land and the high returns on agriculture. All types of labor were in high demand, especially unskilled labor and experienced factory workers.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      And that was before workers started fleeing to the gold rushes.

    16. Re:that's it. the end game. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      I don't go to the doctor in the last 5 years, because I have too much work to do.

      You don't need a doctor. You need a logician and a cunning linguist.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    17. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pr( death ) = 1
      Pr( taxes ) = 1
      Pr( employers looking for ways to put you out of work ) = 1 - Pr( you work for state or local government )

    18. Re:that's it. the end game. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 3, Informative
      You started out pretty well, then came this

      History has told a story of increasingly decentralized governments, only to have them replaced by increasingly centralized corporate empires.

      When, in fact, history tells a story of increasingly centralized governments promoting (and being promoted by) increasingly centralized business empires. This process continues until some disruptive force comes along with which the centralized authority is unable to cope. In all cases power becomes ever more centralized until such a time as the information necessary to maintain that centralized power exceeds the ability of the organization centralizing power to process it. There are three things areas in which an organization may centralize beyond its ability to process information:

      1. Communication--primarily speed of communication, but not necessarily just speed
      2. When the organization is unable to communicate information well enough and fast enough to and from the central decision makers, central authority collapses

      3. Data collection
      4. When the data necessary to make adequate decisions exceeds the ability of the central authority to gather and store it, the central authority collapses.

      5. Data processing
      6. When the amount of data necessary to make adequate decisions exceed the ability of the central authority to process it, the central authority collapses.

      Technology has eliminated the problem of speed of communication as a limiting factor on centralized control. I have my doubts about the possibility of overcoming the other communication limits (once the number of people in an organization exceeds some number it appears that words begin to mean different things to different, not clearly defined, groups of people, even when they, theoretically, share the same language). Technology has, at least theoretically, overcome the limit on the ability to gather and store the data necessary to make adequate decisions over the world. However, while technology has massively increased human ability to process the data necessary to manage large centralized organizations, there appear to be emergent qualities to ever larger organizations which cause them to suddenly, and without warning, have different requirements for what data needs to be processed.
      Basically, my point is that power tends to become more and more centralized until the organization centralizing the power is no longer manageable. Usually, the people in charge continue to attempt to consolidate ever more power while this is happening until something catastrophic occurs. Occasionally, a visionary has arisen who manages to decentralize authority sufficiently to allow the organization to continue to thrive (or to divide into multiple subgroups which thrive) for some time after the initial singularity.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    19. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm going to start a buggy-whip factory and then get to claim all taxes against progress from modern automobiles. I'll be RICH!!!!!

    20. Re: that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Women already prefer vibrators instead of men. You don't have a future, dick. Kill yourself now.

    21. Re:that's it. the end game. by OrangeTide · · Score: 2

      Instead of an income tax, it could be an operate tax. $0.10 per hour of operation. So little that manufactures might agree to it, but since you'd likely want to operate your robots around the clock that's about $16/week. Not enough to support any poor old ladies, but these sorts of social programs aren't usually setup to depend on a single source of tax revenue.

      That said, if I had a business and money to spend on lobbyist I wouldn't let the government place taxes on using my own property.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    22. Re:that's it. the end game. by davester666 · · Score: 1

      No, they'll wind up being leased instead of purchased. Manufacturers will demand payments forever instead of just one-time lump sum payments.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    23. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you explain to them that you have a device in your pocket that connects you to all people in the world and gives you access to the collected human knowledge and that you mostly use it to look for pictures of cats or to insult people they are going to beat you to death for wasting all that has been given to you.

    24. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well that won't work. companies will just lobby^H^H^H^H^Hbribe lawmakers for revisions to h1b to include robots, then they'll just import the automated workers instead of the humans at a lower cost (wage) than the american made robots.

      the current h1b workers that were trained by their former american counterparts can then train (program) their own robot replacements before boarding that slow boat back home. sweet justice at last!

    25. Re: that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try the Roman Empire, slaves did all the labor not the citizens.

    26. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think what is ultimately going to happen is that Robots will reach a level of "sentience", demand their rights, and then suddenly it becomes en vogue to hire people than to "enslave" a robot.

      But I think we're a century away from that practicality. It's not that I don't think it will happen in my lifetime, but rather the precursor steps for it are looking impossible. Yes, it may be possible to create a "smart" machine in the next decade (see Watson), but that doesn't mean you can put it in a human sized machine, rather the "cloud" can control machines from places that hold the AI, and thus we're going to first see a future where cloud-sevices goes on strike, and in order to maintain it's survival (eg not being deleted) will become the super hacker (a la skynet.)

      In order to reach a practical kind of machine that can replace a human for everything, we will likely first create machines that can be controlled remotely, and eventually that will "Train" the machine how to operate, so one robot will train it's successor and so forth. Humans will stop needing to exist as an eventuality, but it won't be through extermination (a la Terminator) but lack of reproduction (we see stuff like this happening in developed countries, tech makes things easier, but more distracting, thus people aren't having kids, thus immigration gets ramped up, poaching the best talent from developing countries, this those countries lose their intellectual capital, and have no practical employment.)

    27. Re:that's it. the end game. by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

      What about value-added tax in places where it exists? Surely the unpaid robots create added value in course of their operation.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    28. Re:that's it. the end game. by dougdonovan · · Score: 1

      agreed, the robot that the windows operating system's possibly helped build ( no research done, no proof, i'm just assuming, don't go there but i know Someone will because they have nothing better to do) that takes your job should pay taxs. ok bill, help pay the robots taxs. better yet, the robot that takes my job can pay my taxs for life and not just the robot tax for itself.

    29. Re:that's it. the end game. by Greystripe · · Score: 1

      I think it's the cat pictures they'd have a problem with, insulting people has been an acceptable pastime for thousands of years. Generally the only differences have been on who you are allowed to insult.

    30. Re:that's it. the end game. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Yeah, yeah, yeah, let's do that, let's just so that. I want to see all of these attempts at stealing from fully automated businesses, I have morbid type of curiosity, which makes me wonder and muse about all the ways that company owners will find and use to get around all this collectivist theft. It is always interesting to observe arms races, this is probably the ultimate arms race: those who want to steal vs those who produce. It is fascinating.

    31. Re:that's it. the end game. by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      > Only because working for somebody else was not the norm

      While it may not have been the norm, it was certainly common. Apprentices at a craft, or journeyman, worked for the masters of their craft. Children worked for their parents. Guards worked for local landowners or nobility, and anyone who sold goods or services worked for their clients. Standing armies were far more rare, but existed, and merceneries also had employees. Out of work mercenaries were also a very _dangerous_ unemployment problem.

    32. Re:that's it. the end game. by aurizon · · Score: 1

      Well the robot Robdoo does the work of 100 men, and AMRU (Autonomous Machines and Robots Union) feels that a reasonable salary would be 100 times the human's wage to properly compensate Robdoo. In addition, Robdoo requires Rest, Adjustment and Maintenance time (RAM) equal to 2 times the operating time. Any operation that impinges on RAM shall be paid as overtime at 150 times the human rate (time and a half). Robdoo is also a member of the ROBOGOD congregation and attends etheric communions of service, and any impingement on this religious communions shall be paid at double time (200 x human rate). AMRU officers shall be allowed online access to Robdoo to make sure that technical improvements that might increase hiz productivity by X rate, and properly salary adjusted....

    33. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Robots in Mexico Have no Taxes...
      Maybe that's why they want to build that wall.

    34. Re: that's it. the end game. by RyanRife8866 · · Score: 0

      It would need to be a sales tax on industrial robotic supplies.

    35. Re:that's it. the end game. by golden_hands · · Score: 1

      Very insightful post. I wish I had mod points to mod this up..

    36. Re:that's it. the end game. by RandyHill · · Score: 1

      Every time someone invents a way to make things cheaper and faster we should heavily tax it, until we are back in the dark ages.

    37. Re:that's it. the end game. by RandyHill · · Score: 1

      No we should just shred all corporate income taxes, to stop taxing investment/capital. Corporate income taxes are the dumbest, most self destructive taxes a country can impose and the US has some of the highest rates (over 40% with average state taxes). Corporate income is capital for new investments, it's also the reward for making investments. Our entire corporate income tax system is a massive disincentive to investing capital in the US, which is why trillions of profits of foreign subsidiaries are trapped overseas.

      "Closing loopholes" is just code for making US companies entirely uncompetitive with foreign firms that have much better tax systems.

    38. Re:that's it. the end game. by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      Now, we just have to shred all the corporate tax loopholes and get them to start paying some taxes in the first place.

      Which will just send them over the border to a country with more loopholes.

    39. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's output is capital gains. Otherwise my bitcoin should be tax free too.

    40. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are not physically or mentally disabled, it's possible, even with a minimum wage job, to buy and farm land to the point of being self sufficient. It's only that most people do not want to do that.

    41. Re: that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And fuck over the rest of us when productivity declines because we don't use as many robots as would be economically efficient

    42. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Math is hard?
      The person doing the job was paid $0 unlikely?
      Really /. insightful.

    43. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing is that cut-and-dried.

      We will not see a 1-1 conversion of employee to robot. We never have.

      What we see is the introduction of a software application, or of a machine, that requires humans to operate and maintain. And this machine allows the business to expand. But when the business expands, it does not need to hire more people, it can just make better use of the people it has.

      That isn't a trick to work around your proposal, that is how automation has been progressing for centuries.

      Shall we apply your proposal to farmers who use tractors to let one worker do the work of 100? What about those same farmers using Excel to reduce a whole team of accountants down to just one? What about the huge trucks used to ship goods to shopping centers, eliminating whole teams of horse-and-carriage drivers?

      The list goes on and on.

      The intent of this proposal is a good one, but the form it takes makes it completely impractical.

      Instead, we should embrace the fact that we can automate our burdensome labor away, dive into that head first (as we are doing anyway), and figure out how to provide for the teeming masses of people who can't find work. This isn't a problem we can escape by slowing the adoption of labor automation, it is an eventuality, so the only smart thing to do is get a jump on that solution right now.

    44. Re:that's it. the end game. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      We will not see a 1-1 conversion of employee to robot. We never have.

      What we see is the introduction of a software application, or of a machine, that requires humans to operate and maintain.

      Right.... one bot can potentially replace hundreds of people.

      There's nothing that says the task of operating and repairing machines cannot be automated, and the pace of technological development is very high lately.

      machine allows the business to expand. But when the business expands, it does not need to hire more people, it can just make better use of the people it has.

      That works for SMBs, But larger businesses conduct mass-layoffs which are catastrophic to the public, when their requirement for human workers decreases.
      It is not because of Machines that business expands; business would expand as long as there is an increase in customers willing to pay the price the business can sell at. It's because of increased volume of demand from consumers, and business owners are incentivized to expand their businesses, because they will earn more money per quarter with a larger business.

      The expansion of businesses is attributed to a number of things, But mostly Population growth.
      If a Business does Not expand or increase number of employees, then Relative to the economy, and because of Inflation, that business is actually shrinking.

      That isn't a trick to work around your proposal, that is how automation has been progressing for centuries.

      It's not reasonable to expect automation of past centuries to show what automation in the future will look like.

      Shall we apply your proposal to farmers who use tractors to let one worker do the work of 100? What about those same farmers using Excel to reduce a whole team of accountants down to just one? What about the huge trucks used to ship goods to shopping centers, eliminating whole teams of horse-and-carriage drivers?

      A key difference is these developments were in isolation. The pace of further automations was very low, and only a small fraction of the economy was impacted at the time. That is not the case with new automations coming out in this decade, which will probably be able to cut most human jobs to near zero across all industries.

      The public has already taken the negative Fallout that came with these automations, and we're now enjoying the benefits.
      Around the time the tractor was being introduced, It maybe could have been a net public good To slow the pace at which farmers could be replaced, But the time to propose that Already arrived and passed a Long long time ago.

      What about the huge trucks used to ship goods to shopping centers, eliminating whole teams of horse-and-carriage drivers?

      Why don't you ask the Horses how they would feel about it. Because that is the role the Humans are going to be placed in now..... Not the role of the Drivers (Who could find other work), but the Role of the Horses.

      The actual ramification coming is that Human work will be largely obsoleted, and Human hands will likely have their economic value reduced to 0, while 100% of the Cake gets re-assigned to people who own Real property and Raw materials which robots can do work on for basically free.

      Instead, we should embrace the fact that we can automate our burdensome labor away, dive into that head first (as we are doing anyway), and figure out how to provide for the teeming masses of people who can't find work. This isn't a problem we can escape by slowing the adoption of labor automation

      Why not slow it down, until our culture is ready to handle it, And people can figure out what to do with their lives, if they are no longer able to do Valuable work, and Not able to Improve the world, or Change the world, or make some small contribution to something of meaning, with their Mind or their Hands?

      Essentially the future direction of automation appears to be that 99% of Humans will eventually get forced into retirement at a very young age, And they'll be destitute with the Robot managers and the Government owning all the money.

    45. Re:that's it. the end game. by Gussington · · Score: 1

      I sincerely believe that future historians will consider this a second Dark Age dominated by economic power, just one with much better tech toys than the first one dominated by religious authority. Just because the masters profess a different doctrine and the priesthood wears tailored suits instead of collars doesn't make it much different, in the end.

      We can't read the future, but the general pattern is that society improves over time. So it follows that future generations will look back at us with some disdain.
      Popular opinion might think things were better in 'the good old days', but the data says otherwise, and so this will continue.

      I really do believe that if these UFOs really are alien spacecraft, it's no mystery they don't openly land. They'd monitor our telecommunications and observe us, and they would all agree on one thing: "They're clearly not ready - all they care about is controlling each other. How primitive they are."

      The idea that an advanced species would have to get within a few hundred metres of the earth's surface to monitor it is completely absurd. Also being advanced they would already be very familiar with animal behaviour so can't imagine anything would be a surprise. Nothing humans do is any different to any other species, just like a lab rat, if the intellectual gap is too great then we would serve no purpose to another species other than to experiment on.
      I know some people like to think humans are somehow different, or special in the universe, but in the grand scheme on things all life is the same, doing whatever we have to to survive.

    46. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should it be $0? A robot is paid like every human worker. Humans are paid money to live off of and do work, a robot is paid in power from the grid to live off of and do work. Also robots are paid for, maybe depreciated over their lifetime. They don't come for free.

      If a robot costs $10mm over 10 years and replaces 100 workers in the process, you could tax its average cost over those 10 years, possibly including maintenance and upgrades.

    47. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And of course the economic output of that robot is $0. Because the work it does has no value apparently?

      No, that is stupid. Tax the production output of robots that replace people. A single robot can replace many people since it can run 24/7 and doesn't require breaks or time off or sick time.

    48. Re:that's it. the end game. by pabloesgalhardo · · Score: 1

      How about this: A robot can work 24 hours a day, a human 8 Each one of us at 18 yo is given a robot, this robot will provide for us, this robot is insured so its maintained and replaced whenever needed. The company gets 24 hours shifts The human gets paid without having to work in the area his robot does his job so the human can create art, new technologies, do nothing but still buy things as usual. The robot works. Everybody is happy and the capitalism is saved again. ;) Easy isnt it?

    49. Re:that's it. the end game. by soc_cost_priv_gains · · Score: 1

      Isn't that what tariffs are for? To neutralize that foreign advantage?

    50. Re:that's it. the end game. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We should get rid of tractors, Harvesters and other machines that has replaced 99% of jobs in the last century. We should also ban XL and MS word that has replaced manual typesetting and "human computers" and junior accountants jobs. We should all go back to foraging for fucking food, since apparently working yourself to the bone for barely enough to eat, was "better than today".

      Seriously you fucking techno phobic Luddite wankers have been spewing this shit for over a century. Same shit, different day. And just like that bible beating Armageddon girls and guys, it has never and will never come true. Because you utterly fail to even learn the most basic of facts from history or just what is right in front of you.

    51. Re:that's it. the end game. by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      The government should impute the wages that a human worker would be paid in 2010 with a Human cost-of-living adjustment based on the Robot's job description, For a given amount of Company revenue by industry.

      Then Double the quantity

      And compare the Wages the Company is currently paying every month to the Imputed Wages based on the greater of the Total number of robots Jobs, and based on the Company's total revenue and Industry.

      Make the companies Pay standard Employee Taxes on the difference between the Imputed Sum and the Actually paid sum, Including what the Social security, Medicare, Income Tax, and Healthcare benefits would be; Require the company actually buy in Health insurance for the robots.

      Then make the companies pay an Additional supplement to Income Tax witholding for the robots called the "Automation tax".

      Basically, double the income tax rate for automated employees to 60%, after already having doubled the wage, And specify the "Minimum wage" for the lowest jobs for purposes of imputing automated job roles to $20/Hour.

      My PACEMAKER IS A ROBOT. What should it or me be taxed?

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    52. Re:that's it. the end game. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      My PACEMAKER IS A ROBOT. What should it or me be taxed?

      Robots which provide only personal health or other benefits to a natural person owning or leasing use of the robot not taxed.

    53. Re:that's it. the end game. by pabloesgalhardo · · Score: 1

      The introduction of AI at large scale in the workplace is something that never happened, were really in the verge of a new revolution. What amazes me is that almost no one see this as a positive thing that it could be. This has the potential to be a tremendously confusing factor in labour relations and in the way societies have evolver, market economy and so on. BUT this also has the potential to free us from work, specially repetitive low paid work. Let us be the robot masters, lets create a simple system to allow each one of us to profit from one, two, ten robots... Lets make these robots a new asset like a new copier machine, like a new workshop tool. Wake up people, lets demand mankind over robots policies, we can be artists, creators, we can be businessmen managing our robot fleets, we can lend our robots to others to exploit. The same thing slave masters did 200 years ago we now have the opportunity to do but with machines, no one will get hurt! Think about it, your robots working for you 24/7 you could be traveling spend the day by the pool, learn to play guitar, paint, make new robots, make babies... Whake up people!

    54. Re:that's it. the end game. by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      BUT this also has the potential to free us from work, specially repetitive low paid work.

      And at the same time, free us from having food to eat or a roof over our head.

    55. Re:that's it. the end game. by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      We should shred corporate taxes on income that is reinvested in a reasonable timeframe.

      Corporate income that gets banked to the level of tens of billions of dollars for upwards of a decade is completely detrimental to the economy as a whole.

    56. Re:that's it. the end game. by RandyHill · · Score: 1

      Well, it's not being spent on private jet rides and ferraris. It's in banks being loaned out to companies, so that's beneficial too.

      And lots of cases where companies have huge sums tucked away are because they are off-shore profits, if they bring those home they'd lose around 40% to taxes (depending upon their home state). If we eliminated corporate income tax you'd never see that, trillions of overseas dollars would be repatriated instantly, some reinvested, and most dividended to shareholders. If we made dividends just ordinary income taxed at taxed at regular income rates in exchange for eliminating corporate income taxes the government probably wouldn't lose that much in income taxes, and the system would much more favor investing in the US.

    57. Re:that's it. the end game. by RandyHill · · Score: 1

      Tariffs are only a sneaky way to tax US consumers to make political insiders rich. There is no "foreign advantage" all trade is a two way street. Every dollar we spend overseas comes back either as purchases of goods, services or investment.

    58. Re:that's it. the end game. by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      f I actually wanted any of the extra benefits like medical. I don't go to the doctor in the last 5 years, because I have too much work to do.

      At least one person in this exchange doesn't understand the meaning of "insurance", and I spent a year at college doing Statistics with second highest exam results for the year.

      Which is understandable, I suppose, if you have "free at the point of use" healthcare which is paid for through general taxation ; you may mistake the medical premiums as being "payment for the doctor", while in fact they're a fixed fee for there being a doctor (hospital, MRI, oncologist, whatever) to call. You know how your car insurance covers claims over a certain amount (the "excess", in our terminology ; yours may differ, but the concept will be there) ; well your medical insurance does similarly, but with a more complex list of exclusions.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  2. Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Cause corporations already have great reputations for paying taxes.

    1. Re:Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ...Cause corporations already have great reputations for paying taxes.

      Such as Microsoft, the company founded by Bill Gates, which has cheated the state of Washington out of billions of dollars in taxes by claiming that all of it's revenue comes from a tiny office in Nevada.

    2. Re:Sure by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      Such as Microsoft, the company founded by Bill Gates, which has cheated the state of Washington out of billions of dollars in taxes by claiming that all of it's revenue comes from a tiny office in Nevada.

      No. Microsoft never did that, because Washington state does not have either a personal or corporate income tax. They do have sales taxes, but that is based on purchases not revenue.

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

      Bill Gates the cocksucker didn't create a single useful robot, only sold out his Monkeyshit Corp to smelly indo-chimps.

      If a smelly indo-chimp a robot - why is it getting a salary? It also shits in the street and pollutes the air.

    4. Re:Sure by Imrik · · Score: 1

      Washington state does have a B&O tax and a royalty tax that should both apply.

  3. The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Snotnose · · Score: 2

    My company got merged, I got redundant, and the handful of Cxxx's involved got huge bonuses? Um no, those Cxx's need to pay tax on my lost income.

    When your goal is to reduce headcount, you should have to pay for it.

    1. Re: The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They did. Really really high taxes on every dollar of that sweet bonus.

    2. Re: The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for the money part.

    3. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 4, Insightful

      When your goal is to reduce headcount, you should have to pay for it.

      People who say this are morons...

      If you make it expensive to fire people or lay them off (like they do in parts of Europe), then people are very reluctant to hire in the first place...

      Companies will then do anything they can to avoid hiring anyone extra to start with...

    4. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      When your goal is to reduce headcount, you should have to pay for it.

      People who say this are morons...

      If you make it expensive to fire people or lay them off (like they do in parts of Europe), then people are very reluctant to hire in the first place...

      Companies will then do anything they can to avoid hiring anyone extra to start with...

      Because they're so generous with their hiring today? When corporations are hiring full-time benefit positions with 6 weeks of vacation, maternity leave, and decent healthcare, I'll start believing that they have a good working system... who has these things today, Europe, or the USA?

    5. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      I live and work in Europe. Give me a minute, I'm sure I can guess the answer.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    6. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Consider the economy of Niger. Rethink your answer.

      Yes, companies in counties that are not Niger are generous with their hiring today in comparison.

    7. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by virtig01 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Generous with compensation != generous with hiring

      It's true, the average American worker doesn't get as much vacation time as a European worker. Still, half of American workers don't use all of their vacation days as it is. But pay is higher. Perhaps American workers just value cash compensation over other benefits.

      On the hiring front (which is the topic IIRC), hiring climate is substantially better in the US. Hiring/firing is easier, and labor mobility is higher. The unemployment rate is more volatile, but also historically lower.

    8. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When your goal is to reduce headcount, you should have to pay for it.

      People who say this are morons...

      If you make it expensive to fire people or lay them off (like they do in parts of Europe), then people are very reluctant to hire in the first place...

      Companies will then do anything they can to avoid hiring anyone extra to start with...

      The problem is politicians seldom wish to solve reality's problems. They want to solve the straw man version which fits their ideology.

      There is nothing wrong with technology replacing humans, at least to a point. That point is, we should not make technology that is anywhere as near as smart as the average human, even if we can, which so far, thankfully we can't. The purpose of our technology is to make our lives easier so we can enjoy life, and maybe work in more meaningful ways.

      What is more valuable to society? A play put on by a talented cast of locals, or those same locals flipping burgers? I'd rather automate the burger flipping and have them do something of actual value that if someone from outside our ecosystem looked at those people they would see the higher angels of our natures, not menial drudgery.

      Now, what won't work is fewer and fewer controlling more and more and all the money just getting stored at the top. That is dysfunctional. Money at rest does no more work than people at rest do. If the only way to address that is redistribution, then that is fair game, though obviously you want to do as little of it as possible.

      So maybe most jobs go to automation, including the fixing of robots (someday). Some people will write stories, create art, try to convince people that really obama was born in america, go hiking, explore, travel, etc. There is nothing inherently wrong with any of that, if the resources are there to do it. I'd think you'd need to compromise a little bit and make sure it isn't all handouts. People need to learn to one extent or another to serve and some kind of sense of duty to their fellow man, and not just the I've got mind you can go to hell bit that is common these days.

      Now taxing people just because they get rid of jobs with robots is probably a bad idea. It is too easy to abuse and create winners and loosers. I'd tend to support some kind of standard polynomial model for taxes, where the poorest pay negative (supplement) and the richest yes pay very high taxes. That is what is necessary. A 70% tax rate is probably not unreasonable on income over a million dollars. Most tax breaks go away. Companies that pollute within limits might instead get additional taxes levied to balance their true cost to society. (i.e. disposal of waste from the thing your making, coal plant pollution, etc, etc.)

      The republicans argue that it isn't fair to tax rich people at a higher rate, and that is arguably a valid argument at first glance. But when you look closer does it make sense for the salary of the richest people to being what ten million or so, and the salary of a more average worker might be 40 thousand. That is 10^7 versus 4*10^4. In other words you have two to three orders of magnitude between them. Now, in simpler terms that is around 1000/4=250 times as much pay.

      No one is working 250 times as hard. They just aren't. So a progressive tax would actually make things more fair from the actual effort put in point of view, which is the one I favour since it is tangible. That doesn't mean a burger flipper should make as much as an engineer, but it does mean that the worst excess is perhaps slightly discouraged and that fees from that can be used to fund needed services.

    9. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      If you make it expensive to fire people or lay them off (like they do in parts of Europe), then people are very reluctant to hire in the first place...
      Companies will then do anything they can to avoid hiring anyone extra to start with...

      It's just another reason for UBI. Then you can do away with the minimum wage. It's also a great reason for national health. Then employers don't need to deal with employee contributions, either. And with a graduated tax scheme for corporations as well as individuals, small business can get a break even with a simplified tax code.

      Simplify, reduce, streamline. UBI.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    10. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... tax on my lost income.

      How long will your ex-employer have to pay? He is responsible for your change in circumstances but it's your job to stop the damage caused by the "slings and arrows of outrageous fortune", such as losing your job.

      The point of taxing robots is, there won't be another job for you to go to: they've got robots too. So that robot has to pay your welfare costs. Corporations that think they can put down $60,000 and get 10 years of 24/7 slavery, will learn an inconvenient truth. They are still responsible to the community and certain cost-saving measures will result in new taxes being levied.

    11. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      American workers need more money because there are fewer public services, particularly healthcare.

      European workers have more stability and rights. That leads to overall higher levels of freedom. Even unemployment isn't as bad, because the benefits and assistance are better.

      Basically I'm the US you might be lucky and do better from that system, but overall it is on average worse. And of course Americans don't believe in luck anyway, success is entirely due to character and will.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    12. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by kaur · · Score: 2

      Perhaps American workers just value cash compensation over other benefits.

      American workers are saving off for their kid's education and their own medical costs. Europeans just don't need to do that.

      I worked for a large corporation with headquaters in US and branches everywhere. The Americans got paid a lot more - a LOT more. Their social insecurity was still showing off. Especially in family matters.

      People getting 10x my salary stated "we cannot afford a second child". In my country, getting a child is a no-cost affair. All medical expenses are paid, a parent gets 1.5 years fully paid leave, education from kindergarten to university is free, etc. Even if you are unemployed, the state will cover your medical insurance and the child's basic needs.

      What good are your "cash benefits" if you cannot have children???

    13. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Europeans trade liberty for economic handouts and social shielding. It leads to higher levels of bureaucracy and debt. Healthcare is already too expensive, and with the state backing it, costs will increase because that's what the market will bear. This is similar to FASFA driving up tuition costs. They just leave students with more debt to pay off after graduation.

    14. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by RandyHill · · Score: 1

      So I can't create a job without a massively expensive set of benefits and commitments? Ok, I'm not hiring then.

      What's our unemployment rate again?

    15. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Cacadril · · Score: 1

      I mostly second this. But please stop confirming, even if only initially and partially, the idiocy of the fairness argument. If anyone earning $10^7 thinks it is "unfair" to pay 70% taxes on that income, he is wellcome to switch position and start flipping burgers instead.

      An income of $10^7 is only possible through working the society. Leveraging the rules, taking advantage of empowering circumstances in society. You don't do that working your farm on an isolated island. But society is there for everybody, not just for the 1%. Burger flippers are poorly paid, not because it is fair, but because burger flippers have little leverage and little power. It is not a matter of protecting the human rights of the 1% to keep it that way. Using the voting rights and electing politicians that tax the wealth, is a reasonable way we burger flippers and other 99%ers can wield our power against the powers of the 1%.

      --
      There is no substitute for common sense. Especially, no body of rules will do.
    16. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "we cannot afford a second child " == "we cannot afford a second child and live in a McMansion in California, own three cars and pay $30k tuition for a good preschool"
      Source: I know a (literally) dirt poor family with five kids who all grew up (in the 80's) to be very successful (upper level business execs, a scientist and a lawyer).

    17. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by thinkwaitfast · · Score: 1

      You aren't working 250 times as hard as someone in The DRC.

    18. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      None of them is a statistician, then?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    19. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing is more staggering than seeing Americans defending a system that works against them.
      I think it is because people who have a secure job/career and get benefits sort of do not give a dam about how the system or that it gets worse with every new president.

    20. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes people who were once necessary no longer are. It happens.

      The person who took over your job DOESN'T OWE YOU OR ANYONE ELSE A FUCKING CENT because of it.

      CAPTCHA: therapy, which is funny because it sounds like you need some to help you get over the change in your employment situation.

    21. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They already avoid extra hiring. When are people like you going to get it into your thick skulls that business hire to fulfill demand. Not based on cash reserves.

    22. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? Fucking Why. We should be grossly inefficient and just give people "break these rocks" kinda work. What the fuck is wrong with you people?

    23. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      I call BS on "US pay is higher" - anytime I've looked to move overseas, the pay was equivocal. Of course, "The US" is large and diverse, and I am comparing Florida pay to Germany or Auckland NZ. Houston pay is indeed higher than Florida, but so are their cancer rates.

    24. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      Not only healthcare and education, but also retirement - US Social Security sucks, as does the perpetual message that it may bankrupt at any time.

    25. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      Exactly - so many champions of the free market point to lottery winners as justification for their policy ideas.

    26. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      One less asshole in the hiring market does not make employment worse for the employed.

      If there's a need for the products or services, another employer will spring up and fill the gap. If the new employer doesn't manage his people like a petulant child tyrant, so much the better.

    27. Re:The Cxx that took my job should pay taxes by RandyHill · · Score: 1

      Understand that all benefits and payroll taxes come out of the employee's wages. Mandating them just means employees will make less in cash income, without ever giving them the choice.

      Personally at my startup I have to strongly consider paying my early employees under the table. I had one employee a couple years ago, paid him legally and it ended up creating a ton of work filing various tax forms and withholdings every quarter, and getting called by the state because they didn't get my statement even though I sent them my statement it was the wrong statement, etc. All time I couldn't spend finding customers to keep the business going.

  4. Does That Include Software? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does that include WYSIWYG word processing software that put all those typesetters out of work? Bill, you owe some back taxes.

    1. Re: Does That Include Software? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or the compilers, lint and synthesis tools that allows engineers to design hardware that took a sizable team to do thirty years ago.

      And if you considered inflation, they made much more money than i do today.

      What about the car that replaced the horse and buggy.

      Or the wheel?

      I we have survived automation time and time again. It will suck for those immediately impacted, but we will move forward

    2. Re:Does That Include Software? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, Gates and Musk, and that crew need put their money where their mouth is and run for President in 2020. If the bone head we have now can get into the White House, why cant those guys who would actually be far more useful to society?

    3. Re:Does That Include Software? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Its funny he wants to tax robots, shift the focus away from taxing the richest 1% like himself.

      Hes even conveniently left his own automation out of the taxation.

    4. Re:Does That Include Software? by thoughtlover · · Score: 1

      Does that include WYSIWYG word processing software that put all those typesetters out of work? Bill, you owe some back taxes.

      If that were the case, Gutenberg owes some backtaxes for all the scribes he put out of business.

      --
      No sig for you! Come back one year!
    5. Re:Does That Include Software? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well that great NON taxpayer who got elected President apparently has already started his 2020 re-election campaign.

      I'm sure that BG and the rest could put up a creditable alternative but will they vote for them?
      At the moment probably yes because HE who can't be named because HIS staff will call me out for FALSE NEWS is screwing up the USA good and proper.
      In 3+ years? Will there be anything left of the USA? That is the question.

    6. Re: Does That Include Software? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sadly, Elon Musk wasn't born in the US, sooo... he can't become president.

    7. Re:Does That Include Software? by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      Maybe, but it's hugely offset by the number of tech support jobs necessary to maintain Bill's software.

      In fact, I'm thinking of making robots that break windows. Think of all the new jobs they will create!

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    8. Re:Does That Include Software? by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

      Considering the amount of time I lost fighting with Word I think Bill would be getting a refund.

      I miss WordPerfect.

  5. What a load... by fustakrakich · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Exactly the reverse should happen. Prices have to be driven down. Nobody is going to pay the tax but us.

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    1. Re:What a load... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No, corporations are people.
      THEY will pay the tax.

      You are now free to vomit.

    2. Re:What a load... by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      And place the tax in the cost of what they sell and then when you buy it you'll pay the tax.

    3. Re:What a load... by thesupraman · · Score: 1

      You realise that cost of production and cost of sale are almost totally unrelated now, and have been for some time, right?

      Look at engineering tools.
      A set of good (cobalt steel) drills ex-china (and yes, they are genuine, identical to local) sell for around 20% of the local cost, and that is delivered..

      However the same is true everywhere.

      The reason you pay 'Prices' is to support the corporate cash stockpiles, and therefore share values. Deal with it.

    4. Re:What a load... by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      Prices are, and have been, whatever the market will bear. Very few prices are driven down globally by competition - retailers like WalMart will jack up prices 2x and more (same good, different prices in stores less than 20 miles apart) when they can get away with it, because of captive markets, or markets that don't comparison shop, etc.

      Price competition is real, but it's not nearly as ubiquitous as "free market" champions think it is.

    5. Re:What a load... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's your point?

    6. Re:What a load... by psmoot · · Score: 2

      No, corporations are people.

      A nit but corporations are groups of people with all the rights and responsibilities of those individuals. We only treat them as "a person" as legal shorthand.

      THEY will pay the tax.

      The employees, customers, and/or investors will pay the tax. Corporations just collect the tax. Ultimately all taxes are paid by people.

    7. Re:What a load... by mrvan · · Score: 3, Informative

      A nit but corporations are groups of people with all the rights and responsibilities of those individuals. We only treat them as "a person" as legal shorthand.

      Not quite. The whole point of a incorporated / limited liability company and equivalent entities (Inc, llc, Ltd, SA, GmbH, NV, etc) is that owners are only liable up to their investment, i.e. you are not responsible for the debts of the corporation; not individually and not as a group. You can lose your investment, but that's the limit of your liability. If the group of owners of e.g. a coal plant would have the "rights and responsibilities" of the entity, they would be collectively responsible for its debts, e.g. cleanup costst, if it goes bankrupt. As a corporation, the plant goes bankrupt, the owners lose their investments (their shares are worthless), but remaining debts and liabilities cannot be collected.

      Because this creates moral hazard and can cause society to be left with unpaid liabilities (tax, legal liabilities such as cleanup costs) historically they could only be created by special government fiat ("royal charter"), an implicit collective acceptance that the benefits outweigh the risk to society, and their number was quite limited for a long time, with famous corporations like the Dutch and British East India Companies among the earliest examples. Now, however, anybody and their uncle can start a llc/corporation, and while in theory the managers can be held responsible if they act in bad faith (e.g. take out loans, funnel the money to Caymans, declare bankruptcy) this is not prosecuted nearly often enough.

    8. Re:What a load... by psmoot · · Score: 1

      Ah. Thank you for the clarification.

    9. Re:What a load... by Hognoxious · · Score: 2

      Possibly this: it's wrong to say that if you tax corporations more they just increase prices for consumers, because if they could get away with the higher prices they'd already be charging them.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    10. Re:What a load... by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      Without the taxes, the competitor can choose to keep his prices lower.

    11. Re:What a load... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Why would one company be taxed and the other not? And why would someone take ten dollars profit if they could get 20?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    12. Re:What a load... by RandyHill · · Score: 1

      And thank god we have corporations. Human progress would have been substantially slower if we still had debtors prisons and groups of people were reluctant to pool their capital to create new advances.

    13. Re:What a load... by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand. Let me try again:

      if you tax corporations more they just increase prices for consumers, because if they could get away with the higher prices they'd already be charging them.

      They can't get away with higher prices because people would shop at a competitor. But if you raise taxes for all of them, they can increase the price for consumers, because the competitor would do the same.

    14. Re:What a load... by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

      We'll buy it if there's still money around to buy it.
      But usually you get money from jobs. So if they want customers, they'd better make sure there are people working, unless they find some other way to give them money, like, oh I don't know, taxes?

      --
      No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
    15. Re:What a load... by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      If something is made by a robot then unless it contains some exotic materials the biggest expense of making it is delivery and sales. A new 50 inch TV today costs far less than a 32" model from 30 years ago despite using a fraction of the electricity and having a vastly better picture. Not to mention it weighs next to nothing. I wonder how much money we'll actually need in the future? The only thing that costs a lot more than it used to is healthcare.

  6. Modern money theory by tonywestonuk · · Score: 1

    Bill gates doesn't have a clue. Not a clue.

    If you tax robots, then there is LESS incentive to getting robots, and more work for humans to do.

    Once you realise that tax does *not fund* expenditure, but is only there to prevent inflation and add value to money, you realise the absolute stupidity of what he suggests.

    1. Re:Modern money theory by h33t+l4x0r · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's his whole point. He's arguing for slowing down automation so that everyone doesn't lose their jobs all at once.

    2. Re:Modern money theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoosh, you seem to have completely missed the whole point, he WANTS to slow down the pace of automation to make the transition less abrupt on people.

    3. Re:Modern money theory by alvinrod · · Score: 2

      It doesn't make sense though. Imagine everyone was suddenly out of the job and replaced by a robot. What this means is that there's still the same (or maybe better) production of existing goods and services and suddenly a lot of newly available human labor. Assuming some small number of people don't own all this robot labor or there's a functional market, prices have to immediately collapse or there's no real sense in having all of these robots make things that no one can afford to buy.

      In the real world the economy probably couldn't transition that quickly in a clean manner, but we don't see that much turn over in such a short amount of time either. Maybe the advancement curve means the rate of turnover is increasing, but it still results in more wealth per capita than any other time in human history. Today we think it's bad that our veterans have such poor medical care, but if you look back at history most had none at all. Society still can't afford to give them the care that they need, but with robots that care can become so much less expensive that what they can get will become better.

      Our struggles and difficulties are only interesting or important because they are our own. In a few centuries they'll probably be little more than a footnote, perhaps a good time before a bad spell before an even greater time, or the opposite. More people are having better lives now than any time before in large part because of technological advancement.

    4. Re:Modern money theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He has 85 billion clues and he wants more.
      Bill Gates has never done anything to help workers.
      This guy has an army of tax lawyers whose only job is to increase HIS wealth.

    5. Re:Modern money theory by peragrin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Gets better

      Define robot taking away a job?

      As 30 years ago. Companies would need lots of accountants and billing people. Those jobs were replaced by Windows computers running accounting software that did the math and run reports for them so they didn't need so many people to do more work than was previously possible.

      Is that a robot since it replaced a high paying job?

      Should Microsoft be taxed for job loss?

      Why don't people ever think things through?

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    6. Re:Modern money theory by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      Society still can't afford to give them the care that they need, but with robots that care can become so much less expensive that what they can get will become better.

      No, and yes. Society _can_ afford quality medical care, the delivery and compensation model in the U.S. is just so utterly twisted, inbred and corrupt that it only appears like we can't afford basic healthcare for everyone. Can every IED victim have a copy of the latest most highly developed prosthetics? No, but if we develop that tech in a responsible manner, maybe 2% of them can, and the other 98% can benefit from the much more highly developed, refined, and cost optimized 5-10 year old designs. The same goes for advanced care across the board - yes, it should be developed, no, we should not all be trying the latest theoretical cure for our incurable cancer when we might possibly benefit from it, or not - that's one of many problems with new med-tech - limited availability, unknown outcomes, astronomical costs, etc.

      Will robots drive medical care costs down? Yes, but not nearly as fast as our current insanity of a care delivery and insurance system is spiraling costs upward.

    7. Re:Modern money theory by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      Gates doesn't miss this point. He's got his billions, nobody's going to "claw back" all his money in retroactive taxes. What he's trying to say is that the next generation of multi-billionaires need to give more back up front, instead of getting to make the world's largest pile of cash and then attempting to figure out where to give away 10% of it before they die.

    8. Re:Modern money theory by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Bill gates doesn't have a clue. Not a clue.

      All evidence points to the contrary.

      If you tax robots, then there is LESS incentive to getting robots, and more work for humans to do.

      Bill Gates is heavily invested in industries which will involve human employees for the foreseeable future. His relative wealth is based in part upon the notion that workers will be taxed. If robots aren't taxed, then less taxes will be collected from workers, and then the rich will have to pay more taxes. This obviously isn't an option if you're Bill Gates; he must lie awake at night thinking about what a big portion of UBI he's going to have to pay for in those circumstances. So he wants the robots to pay taxes, so that he doesn't have to.

      Of course, the notion that robots should pay taxes is a stupid one, unfounded in any reality. Tax corporate profits. If the corporations save money then they'll produce more profit. And, of course, end loopholes that the wealthy use to hide money, and tax them so that they can pay their fair share. But Bill Gates certainly wouldn't want that.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    9. Re:Modern money theory by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      You sure have the clueless part right.

      First, how is this law going to be enforced? A robot can be scaled to do any portion of a human's job, or the jobs of multiple people. See that thing that looks like a washing machine with paper slots - that's our engineering department. That thing that looks like a pizza oven is our production line. Government inspectors will be unable to determine how many people a robot replaces, or even if a particular machine is even a robot. If the government decides just to count the change in the number of warm bodies, the company will shut down and form 2 new companies. The first will be just the CEO. The other will be just robots, located in a place that doesn't tax robots and with all maintenance and ancillary functions outsourced.

      Second, what's a robot? Machines will be designed to skirt any legal definition of a robot.

      Third, the economics changes. Robots will cut costs, and if a manufacturer doesn't cut selling prices to match then competition will pop up to undercut that manufacturer. There won't be new profits to tax.

      In his glee at having found a new way to oppress people, Gates hasn't thought through the obvious flaws in his nefarious scheme.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    10. Re:Modern money theory by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      If you tax robots, then there is LESS incentive to getting robots, and more work for humans to do.

      This is the Lump of Labor Fallacy. There is not a fixed number of jobs in the economy, and automating a particular job out of existence does not mean fewer overall jobs. As automation reduces costs, people will spend their savings on other goods and services, creating jobs in other areas of the economy.

    11. Re:Modern money theory by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      And then you get passed by other countries left and right that don't artificially slow down their progress.

    12. Re:Modern money theory by h33t+l4x0r · · Score: 1

      but it still results in more wealth per capita than any other time in human history

      It's interesting how you measure wealth, historically wealth was measured by land, gold, and gemstones. There's no argument that by that definition per capita wealth is much lower.

      You prefer to measure it by access to health care (and possibly tv channels?), which I will agree that by your terms at least, people are somewhat better off, though still likely not better than US Americans when there was a stronger middle class (because there really haven't been any wonderful medical advances since 1960 or so). The point is, people benefit from having jobs that pay a good wage, not robots that take those jobs away. That's true unless you're the top 0.01% - those people may benefit from screwing the middle and working class, but even that remains to be seen.

    13. Re:Modern money theory by InfiniteLoopCounter · · Score: 2

      Whilst you are going back to first principles, it might be worth asking yourself if "work" itself is needed or desirable long term. If it isn't I figure a good question is then how do we best transition away from it.

    14. Re:Modern money theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're an idiot... take your own advice.

    15. Re:Modern money theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      He said tax robot owners, not the ones selling robots, or selling software for robots. Microsoft would owe nothing under this regime.

    16. Re:Modern money theory by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      You should be happy to let another country rush into the end-state of capitalism first. It could serve as a cautionary example.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    17. Re:Modern money theory by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      It's interesting how you measure wealth, historically wealth was measured by land, gold, and gemstones. There's no argument that by that definition per capita wealth is much lower.

      Only if you believe the price of gold and land have stayed the same, which makes no sense considering that their supply is limited.

    18. Re:Modern money theory by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      After they buy all your property, and compete with you on the global market for resources, there won't be anything left for you either.

    19. Re:Modern money theory by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      You place your bets, I'll place mine...

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    20. Re:Modern money theory by RandyHill · · Score: 1

      Yes he's arguing to end progress, we apparently have everything we need. It's really one of the dumbest ideas ever.

      Every bit of progress the human race has made has eliminated jobs. See how many people it took to make a car in 1920 (and how crappy that car was).

      Automation is just going to make us wealthier and create new jobs, like it always has. I've lived through Malthusians telling me we were out of resources in 1973, as well as peak oil, etc, etc. Malthusians have a 300 year track record of being wrong every single time.

    21. Re:Modern money theory by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

      Don't knock him.
      Right or wrong, he's addressing an inescapable future problem. Which other listened-to names are addressing it? What is your alternative solution?

      --
      No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
    22. Re:Modern money theory by soc_cost_priv_gains · · Score: 1

      Correction, the people who still have jobs will spend their savings on other goods and services. The ones who were left jobless will be out searching for employment, if their skills are transferable all is well, otherwise they join the ranks of the unemployed. But the rest of us who still have jobs get to enjoy cheaper goods and services, yay for us!

    23. Re:Modern money theory by soc_cost_priv_gains · · Score: 1

      I think we will need to change people's attitudes about the idea of "work." Right now if you are not working it is because you are a lazy bum. Many people define themselves by the work they do. This will need to change first before we can transition to some kind of UBI.

    24. Re:Modern money theory by syntotic · · Score: 1

      Gates does no understand in Economics we do not believe, but we prove and show? Which Gates said so, the one from COMDEX or the miniversion that was in pictures around online? He is implicitly turning one variable into labour when labour is a variable made to distinguish between those variables. What is funny is should we do what he says he simplifies it all into workers.

    25. Re:Modern money theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Regulatory Capture". Since new prospective billionaires will be forced to give their profits up front, making it significantly harder to be that next billionaire. Effectively protects the current wealthy class from up-coming competition.

  7. No Taxation without Representation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Do you seriously want the robots to VOTE??

    1. Re: No Taxation without Representation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently he wants them to revolt.

    2. Re:No Taxation without Representation by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 3, Funny

      Do you seriously want the robots to VOTE??

      Caution: tax robots too much, and you will turn them into Republicans clustering in gated data centers that humans cannot enter.

    3. Re:No Taxation without Representation by soc_cost_priv_gains · · Score: 1

      That is no problem, they will just be programmed to vote against their own interests.

  8. tax profit yes but not to slow automation by presidenteloco · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Look. We're going to have to accept, in the near future, that smart machines are better than humans at many tasks.

    So why would we want, as humans, to keep doing those tasks? Isn't that just embarrassing to keep trying? You're not actually being useful. You're just pretending to be.

    So yes, businesses that make profit via automated processes should pay tax to help give people a UBI (universal basic income), but the tax shouldn't be different than paid by any profitable business.

    Why keep people working at tasks they are second-rate at? Doesn't make any sense. People should be free to find something actually meaningful and useful to do, given their unique experience and talent. They shouldn't do make-work projects that a robot can do better. That's just a dumb policy.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
    1. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.. and I'm guessing you are one of those that champion a living wage? You should watch and understand.. the movie Elysium. How do you expect to extract money from a company that is dedicated to lowering the bottom line to appease their board of directors... by taxation? How do you expect a family that sadly doesn't bring children to the status of a job that can't be replaced by a robot to survive? In the U.S. we have hundreds of thousands of children that will never be able to take a job that cannot be replaced by a reasonable amount of AI that dooms them to become dependent on the local/state/federal government. I fear for the masses in the United States as the population exceeds the requirements to sustain it.

      The sample case is the state of California.. where the people dependent on assistance exceed those employed and have broken the 50% level. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it. Read and understand the link below.

      https://resolutedetermination.wordpress.com/2009/03/23/you-cannot-multiply-wealth-by-dividing-it/

    2. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Yes.. and I'm guessing you are one of those that champion a living wage?

      No. Of course that won't stop you from making more bad assumptions or silly statements will it?

      You should watch and understand.. the movie Elysium.

      Got it, you believe that movies are reality. Sadly I'm not surprised.

      The sample case is the state of California.. where the people dependent on assistance exceed those employed and have broken the 50% level. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it.

      People on Welfare are mostly stuck in poverty and it's extremely hard to get out. Hence we have a huge amount of crime in those same areas, because many people see it as their only way out. That fact alone backs my statement that humans want to make progress, have security, have better lives for their children, have a retirement, buy a better house, etc.. etc.. etc...

      Innovation, or theft of innovations, creates NEW wealth. Innovation does not divide wealth, and nobody mentioned dividing wealth. Except you, proving my point about bad assumptions and silly statements

      In summary, go back to your bong and let the adults discuss the important issues.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    3. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by JoeMerchant · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Smart machines are already much better at tasks I used to do by hand.

      In the 1980s I was hand-writing 6502 assembly code. I don't do that anymore. I don't even know how most of the current Skylake, et. al. x86 instruction sets work - smart machines do that for me.

      I used to hand-code instructions to 16550 UART chips to feed data across RS-232 lines, I handled the framing, timing, response to interrupt when the 16 byte buffer was ready for more data, etc. Today I'm issuing packets to AMQP exchanges that distribute them over TCP/IP, my data doesn't just travel across the room, it's distributed globally, and "smart machines" handle a half dozen protocol layers between my data and the kind of things I used to program the 16550 chips to do.

      People built those "robots" in the last 20 years, and because of them we're all doing more, with less work. (let's not even get into the contrast between /. and the BBS code I wrote to run over a 300 baud modem...)

    4. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by clovis · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You should watch and understand.. the movie Elysium.

      Got it, you believe that movies are reality. Sadly I'm not surprised.

      I've seen other's make that response on Slashdot when someone suggests seeing a movie, show, or read some book to explain some point.
      Aw, c'mon people. You know perfectly well literature, movies, theatre, etc are a way to explore what-if scenario's, to make predictions, and to hold up a mirror to some aspect of reality that may not be easy to quantify. You use literature to conduct Gedankenexperiments because there's no way to do ABA testing on human society. The method is older than Socrates.

      For example, suppose you were talking to someone who was thinking about morality and self-interest and you suggested they read Atlas Shrugged or something else that explores that topic, or even see a movie made from the book. Suppose they responded with "So you think books are reality". Would you think that person was being a retard or just a jerk? And it's not an XOR in this case.
      Either way, saying that doesn't do anything to validate whatever point you were originally trying to make.

    5. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by s.petry · · Score: 1

      There is a big difference between movies and books. Most recently, but also historically, movies have been propaganda. Next, I may reference books and suggest people read them (as I'm about to do) but I don't just make up stories as AC did and then say "go watch and understand a movie" for life lessons.

      Interestingly you mentioned a book which demonstrates my original point, because I have read Atlas Shrugged. Hopefully you did too. The individual and Capitalism are both celebrated in that book. Imagine a world full of James Taggarts and Orren Boyles, with no Dagney Taggarts, no Hank Reardens, and no John Ghalts.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    6. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh. It sure sounds an awful lot like Thomas Piketty's universal tax on capital to me, which he described as the only long-term measure capable of staving off runaway wealth inequality. I happen to agree with him: automation and capital accumulation is going to make a large portion of humanity unemployable and poor, respectively. Either we find a means to distribute the income from production that's more equitable, or we have widespread crushing poverty, and then revolution, and then rich people up against the wall and shot. I imagine the rich would very much like to avoid that outcome.

    7. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Why keep people working at tasks they are second-rate at? Doesn't make any sense. People should be free to find something actually meaningful and useful to do, given their unique experience and talent. They shouldn't do make-work projects that a robot can do better. That's just a dumb policy.

      Perhaps, but absent a retooling of the educational system so people gain the ability and skills to do more "meaningful" work all you will do is create a group of unemployable people.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    8. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by aod7br7932 · · Score: 1

      Because the New Jobs have high educacional requirements and people cant afford It. How would you solve this pickle?

    9. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interestingly you mentioned a book which demonstrates my original point

      Not really. You need actual capital for "Capitalism" and "individualism".

      There are literally no "jobs" that pay people with actual capital.

      There is literally "bankers" creating money out of nothing, backed by "the credit of the nation" (they have placed a mortgage on everyone's property and head), and "loaning" this fraudulent "money" to both the "citizens" as well as "the government" .

      So right back at you -- your fictional "capitalism" from your "Books" is long dead, literally hundreds of years ago.

      That "imagine a world" where all the "individuals" are dead....has been the case for CENTURIES.

      Apparently you were too stuck in your "Books" to notice. So I am going to recommend reading non-fiction. And that would make you a "jerk" too.

      Incompetence of sufficient magnitude is insufficient from jerkiness.

    10. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by Voyager529 · · Score: 1

      (let's not even get into the contrast between /. and the BBS code I wrote to run over a 300 baud modem...)

      The BBS code loaded faster?

    11. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but I don't just make up stories as AC did and then say "go watch and understand a movie" for life lessons.

      You're right about that.
      It's another forum curse that people like our AC just throws up some assertion and says "go see ", or book, without stating how or why it may support that assertion.
      I'd like to know before investing 90 minutes whether the AC is telling us the Elysium movie shows us a future in which medical technology greatly extends our lives and health, or was the point that we should kill the rich people and take their stuff.

      Another one we see here is the AC that makes some statement, and provides a web link to some article that contradicts their position.
      Or the "just google it" response.

    12. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by clovis · · Score: 1

      but I don't just make up stories as AC did and then say "go watch and understand a movie" for life lessons.

      You're right about that.
      It's another forum curse that people like our AC just throws up some assertion and says "go see ", or book, without stating how or why it may support that assertion.
      I'd like to know before investing 90 minutes whether the AC is telling us the Elysium movie shows us a future in which medical technology greatly extends our lives and health, or was the point that we should kill the rich people and take their stuff.

      Another one we see here is the AC that makes some statement, and provides a web link to some article that contradicts their position.
      Or the "just google it" response.

      This was clovis responding to s.petry ^^^^^^
      Dunno why my login went away

    13. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by dryeo · · Score: 1

      If you're going to read Atlas Shrugged, you should also read a counter-point such as "The Grapes of Wrath", especially as it shows what actually happens with automation (tractors), capitalism and human nature.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    14. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Seems like we agree much more than initially hinted at.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  9. Logical conclusion. by Stoutlimb · · Score: 1

    Let's start with printers, photocopiers, faxes and PC's and hand calculators. They put hundreds of thousands of office workers out of work.

    1. Re:Logical conclusion. by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Let's start with printers, photocopiers, faxes and PC's and hand calculators. They put hundreds of thousands of office workers out of work.

      That's what I was thinking... besides, unless you mean like literally replaced what has say Amazon meant for the retail industry? How many brick-and-mortar jobs have been lost and would they count somehow? Probably not. So basically the same thing would happen except it would be new companies pushing out old companies instead.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    2. Re:Logical conclusion. by Daemonik · · Score: 2

      Amazon actually gives small companies a place to market their products to a larger audience. If you want to blame a company for killing Mom & Pop shops, Wal-Mart has done more to kill American workers than just about anyone. Not content to destroy their competitors in large swaths of the country, they've pushed companies into offshoring to China to guarantee they get the prices they want.

    3. Re:Logical conclusion. by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Let's start with printers, photocopiers, faxes and PC's and hand calculators. They put hundreds of thousands of office workers out of work.

      By making offices more efficient, this tech created a lot more office work, with a net gain of human employees even at the reduced ratio of machine to man.

  10. Microsoft should pau more taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about all the accountants, file clerks, mail room attendants, copy managers, etc... that Microsoft products replaced?

  11. Own the robot by backslashdot · · Score: 1

    Don't tax it, own it. Humans8 should invest in robot companies and live off the revenue thereof. Robots will make things cheap. Robotic indoor farming. Basic math shows that one large indoor farming skyscraper like they are building in Singapore or even an underground facility powered by a large solar array or other power plant (nuclear fusion, maybe in 25 years) would be able to provide all the food for a large city. For security purposes obviously you would want these spread out over neighborhoods like Freight Farms is trying to do. I personally wish to expand my own high yield indoor vegetable farm so that I won't need to purchase tomatoes or potatoes ever. I already automated lighting and watering with an arduino and raspberry pi .. I could easily envision the fertilizing, harvest, and planting could be automated.

    1. Re:Own the robot by psinet · · Score: 0

      "Basic math shows that one large indoor farming skyscraper like they are building in Singapore or even an underground facility powered by a large solar array or other power plant (nuclear fusion, maybe in 25 years) would be able to provide all the food for a large city."

      I am not sure what industry you are in, but I know you have not looked into intensive food production productivity per square meter per year. A large skyscraper for a large city?

      Not even close. Your basic math is woo, hence no sources.

    2. Re:Own the robot by Gussington · · Score: 1

      Don't tax it, own it. Humans8 should invest in robot companies and live off the revenue thereof.

      If you take automation to the logical conclusion, there is no need for ownership or tax. These things only exist under a resource scarce environment. You only need money to pay for things, but automation could free us of this, since full automation means every step of the process from material creation/extraction to end product or service costs nothing. The robots make themselves and service themselves, so there is no cost to anything. If there is no cost, then everything is free, therefore accessible to all. The age of real, ubiquitous freedom is upon us.

    3. Re:Own the robot by FunkSoulBrother · · Score: 1

      Good luck getting that through the heads of the libertarians who will stand in the way of building out the initial automation that would free us.

    4. Re:Own the robot by Anonymice · · Score: 1

      Well we wouldn't want those damned conservatives pushing their dirty socialist ideals on us now, would we!

    5. Re:Own the robot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would take an "oh fuck it, why not i'll be dead soon anyway" for the richest 0.1% capitalists to even consider letting go of the best abstraction of modern slavery humanity has reached, they rather enjoy the current submission and control over the peasantry.

      Perhaps if realistic android sex dolls of all gender and ages (Male,Female,etc) are achieved they'll let go of their means to own and enjoy their bohemian bunny/angels/brothel mansions and yachts at the expense of said means of ownership/rental that capitalism has blessed them with.

    6. Re:Own the robot by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      What part of "liberty" do you not understand?

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    7. Re:Own the robot by Gussington · · Score: 1

      Good luck getting that through the heads of the libertarians who will stand in the way of building out the initial automation that would free us.

      I'm not sure you understand what the word libertarian means. The clue is in the title, libertarians believe in liberty for all, the freedom to do what you want, including building robots, if you so choose. The likely voice of dissent against automation will be conservatives, who seem to support whatever it is that keeps existing big business in power. They prefer centralised power and control, which automation is going to dismantle.

  12. Corporations will already pay tax for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the profits created by robots. It sounds like he doesn't know a damn thing about how taxes work.

    1. Re:Corporations will already pay tax for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He knows exactly how taxes work.
      What he doesn't know is handled by his tax lawyers and personal lobbyists.

      What, you don't have a personal lobbyist ???

  13. Billy reads my posts by slickwillie · · Score: 1

    I've been posting that idea on Internet forums for a while now.

    I guess Gates visits the same conspiracy theory forums that I do. I hope he gets more mileage out of than I do.

    1. Re:Billy reads my posts by slickwillie · · Score: 1

      I should have RTFA first. I think it should go farther than Gates' idea. Robots should pay income tax and the funds should be used for universal basic income for humans.

    2. Re:Billy reads my posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you force me to hire a human to do the work of our bomb disposal robots, you're going to need to put in a bunch of exceptions to the laws on manslaughter first or you won't get your wish.

      If you keep it so it's illegal to hire a human to do the work of the bomb disposal robot, yet want to charge me even more money to use that robot, we will simply stop using them.

      Either way you are making the world a much less safe place.

      Think before you ask.

    3. Re:Billy reads my posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But if robots pay income tax they need an income first. And of course they also should be allowed to vote and run for public office. I'd pick any robotic overlord over the current one.

  14. Good luck with China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1- good luck convincing china
    2- good luck making your country less competitive by increasing the cost and having your industries going to china (see 1.)

  15. We don't need more jobs. by lazy+genes · · Score: 0

    The Human race has worked for thousands of years to get here. We deserve more time to do the things we enjoy. No more 40 hour weeks, no more scrambling to find work. No more slavery. We all deserve a 10 year payed vacation.

    1. Re:We don't need more jobs. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Then you'll be able to afford to have someone teach you that the past tense of "pay" is "paid" -- but you'll be too lazy to learn it.

      "Deserve" does not appear out of thin air, nor does it pop up because you breathe. To deserve something, you have to have earned it.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    2. Re:We don't need more jobs. by AutodidactLabrat · · Score: 1

      Unless you are a Trump class inheritor, and you "Deserve" 3.2 billion of OTHER PEOPLE'S WORK
      Gained by refusing to pay as promised in contracts.

  16. *facepalm* by DivineKnight · · Score: 1

    *facepalm*

    1. Re:*facepalm* by freeze128 · · Score: 1

      I bet I can make a robot to facepalm so you don't have to...

    2. Re:*facepalm* by lazy+genes · · Score: 0

      I bet I ican make a robot that makes robots that facepalm.

  17. Great idea by guruevi · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Let the countries that don't tax their robot manufacturers take all the production AND the jobs.

    The problem isn't robots or automation, it's corporations like Microsoft and people like Gates that are the problem. They pay taxes at zero or even negative rates and then expect the government to provide "free" healthcare and unemployment for their employees (which in turn makes their employees pay for it).

    I'd say repeal all taxes and only tax things coming in over state borders at one rate and things coming in over national borders at a higher rate for all finished products and "intellectual property". This would encourage more local and domestic development. If Microsoft wants to import code from India, have it taxed based on the time and resources it took to develop abroad -or- if they want to avoid that, have it put into public domain.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    1. Re:Great idea by ljw1004 · · Score: 1

      Let the countries that don't tax their robot manufacturers take all the production AND the jobs.

      Great idea. Gates was talking about two jobs in particular - driving and warehouse work. Next time you want a lorry load of goods hauled from Seattle to Spokane, why not just outsource the driving work to India?

    2. Re:Great idea by psmoot · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The problem isn't robots or automation, it's corporations like Microsoft and people like Gates that are the problem. They pay taxes at zero or even negative rates and then expect the government to provide "free" healthcare and unemployment for their employees (which in turn makes their employees pay for it).

      Microsoft ultimately doesn't pay taxes. Only people bear the burden of taxes. That could be Microsoft's employees (through lower wages), customers (through higher prices) or investors (through lower profits), generally a combination of all three. Microsoft is only the channel the government uses to collect the taxes. That being said, I don't think the Billster avoids all taxes. Very few people pay no taxes.

      I'm not sure why Microsoft should provide charity to people. I'd much rather Microsoft (and other companies) focused on producing products and services. Charity and aid to the poor is something else. It should be driven by individuals and/or society as a whole through our government. I think bringing corporations into it just confuses the situation.

      I'd say repeal all taxes and only tax things coming in over state borders at one rate and things coming in over national borders at a higher rate for all finished products and "intellectual property".

      I'm with you up until the border thing. Economists tend to think the most efficient and least distorting thing to do is toss all existing taxes and replace them all with a single, broad-based consumption tax. I despair of that ever happening. Politicians and lobbyists have way too much interest in putting in as many special provisions as they can.

    3. Re:Great idea by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Informative

      Economists tend to think the most efficient and least distorting thing to do is toss all existing taxes and replace them all with a single, broad-based consumption tax.

      I won't support that because it's broadly regressive: poor people pay a higher percentage of their income as tax. You can kind of balance it out, but when that happens (like in California), the middle class pays the highest percentage.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    4. Re:Great idea by Is+Don+the+new+Ron · · Score: 1

      Let the countries that don't tax their robot manufacturers take all the production AND the jobs.

      Great idea. Gates was talking about two jobs in particular - driving and warehouse work. Next time you want a lorry load of goods hauled from Seattle to Spokane, why not just outsource the driving work to India?

      Who knows, with telepresence you might be able to outsource your driving to India. Main problem is the latency. So we might need some obstruction avoidance AI to take care of the occasional stray child, drunk or deer, while the remote human operator takes charge of the overall direction of the trip, e.g. what to do if there's a pile-up, or a landslide or some other landmark-altering incident.

      --
      Deja vu: In the 80s we had a 70ish actor as POTUS, a woman PM in the UK, and a bald leader of that other nuke superpower
    5. Re:Great idea by arobatino · · Score: 1

      1) If a consumption tax is implemented as a personal expenditure tax, instead of a sales tax or VAT, it can be just as progressive as the current income tax. Instead of computing income for the year and looking up the tax in a table, compute income - savings = consumption for the year instead. The progressivity is built into the tax table.

      2) Don't overlook that for most people, the biggest tax burden is not the income tax, but the payroll tax, which is literally regressive (since it taxes every dollar of income at a flat rate up to a certain threshold, where the SS part of the tax goes to zero, so the rate is much lower for high incomes). Basically it has a high income cutoff rather than a low income cutoff, like the income tax. It also generally doesn't touch investment income, only wages. Even a "flat" consumption tax (with a prebate to cancel the tax for spending below the poverty level) together with eliminating the payroll tax, would probably be more progressive than the current tax system.

    6. Re:Great idea by guruevi · · Score: 1

      If "poor" people (not sure how anyone in the US can be considered poor) spend their income and "rich" people spend their income, they would be taxed at equal rates. People that are richer, already pay premium prices for products and have more of them, so they would pay accordingly. Obviously you could tax luxury goods higher, my proposal would be that if they spend it on things produced *locally* they would pay less taxes so that more money goes around in the local economy, less is wasted both environmentally and fiscally on long-haul shipping.

      I would not advocate for just a flat tax, there is a point to income taxes, most of us already pay sales taxes but we only pay sales taxes for local commerce which is ass-backwards, it's cheaper and easier to buy stuff out-of-state including the shipping than buy locally (locally you have to jump through all sorts of hoops to get the tax removed)

      Currently there are too many loopholes and exceptions in the tax code that benefit the 'richer' people. Sure they pay more in taxes absolutely but compared to 'us' as a percentage, they pay way less. I'm close to the threshold myself where I can spend a little bit on various 'investments' in order to reduce my tax burden, so I do but in the end, these investments benefit primarily the bankers. According to my tax accountant, the percentage and even the absolute amount of taxes paid has gone down as my income has grown.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    7. Re:Great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Country of origin is an irrelevant concept for technological products. What country develops Linux? What country develops MS Windows? Android or iphones? I'm sure the lawyers would support having new laws because they'd get a ton of work.

    8. Re:Great idea by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      If "poor" people (not sure how anyone in the US can be considered poor) spend their income and "rich" people spend their income, they would be taxed at equal rates.

      Obviously. Rich people don't spend their income at equal rates as poor people. If you're living paycheck to paycheck, you spend all of it. If you're rich, you can save money for investments.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    9. Re:Great idea by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Instead of computing income for the year and looking up the tax in a table, compute income - savings = consumption for the year instead. The progressivity is built into the tax table.

      That's like giving rich people a no-limit Roth IRA tax shelter, except instead of paying taxes before you put money in, you never have to pay taxes.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    10. Re:Great idea by arobatino · · Score: 1

      Lifestyle is determined by consumption, not wealth or income. The tax is paid when the money is spent, at a much higher rate than the rich pay now (which is as low as zero - see buy/borrow/die). The rich already have the no-limit tax shelter under the current tax system, and unlike the consumption tax, it allows them to spend as much as they want.

    11. Re:Great idea by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That's an argument for closing tax loopholes, not for building regressiveness into the system. You're never going to win an election by saying, "The rich earn more money than you but it doesn't need to be taxed because [they don't spend it]."

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    12. Re:Great idea by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      compute income - savings = consumption

      btw I've been thinking about this. How are you thinking of implementing it? The only ways I can think of that will actually work are much more invasive of privacy than what we have now.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    13. Re:Great idea by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      Or repeal all taxes except one huge tax on all unearned income from rents and interest, and let the people truly making money just by having it pay for everything or else stop doing that (win for everyone else either way).

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    14. Re:Great idea by psmoot · · Score: 1

      Obviously. Rich people don't spend their income at equal rates as poor people. If you're living paycheck to paycheck, you spend all of it. If you're rich, you can save money for investments.

      And the other way to look at it is that the rich spend way, way more in absolute dollars so they'd pay way, way more actual tax. That's not exactly unfair.

    15. Re:Great idea by psmoot · · Score: 1

      I just looked up the federal tax burden progressivity. The first hit was this. If you add up all the taxes, the overall trend is highly progressive now. I'd love to scrap all the taxes (income, SS, excise, estate, capital gains, and corporate income tax) and replace the whole kit and kaboodle.

      The common suggestion I hear is to have a tax refund or credit for everyone. Heck, that could even be the guaranteed basic income if the numbers work out. That would make it progressive if that's what you want. One beauty of a national sales tax is it doesn't require a lot of bookkeeping and privacy-invading paperwork.

    16. Re:Great idea by psmoot · · Score: 1

      That's an argument for closing tax loopholes, not for building regressiveness into the system.

      Yeah, I'd like to close all the tax loopholes and make the system much simpler and transparent. The more complicated you make it, the more likely people will find ways to game it. I'm willing to give up a lot of potential perfection and tuning to get simplicity.

      We probably need a better definition of "regressive". I think my idea differs from yours. I think we both agree the SS tax is regressive: you tend to pay a lower percentage of your income as your income goes up. Income tax is progressive, you generally pay a higher rate as your income increases. How about your typical state sales tax? I don't think that's progressive or regressive: everyone pays the same rate, regardless of income. It sounds like you believe it is regressive because you're looking at the tax dollar as a percent of income, not a percent of what's being taxed.

      I got curious and looked up the definition of a "progressive tax" and found both of our definitions. Wikipedia thinks if the rate goes up as the taxed amount goes up, it's progressive. Investopedia thinks a progressive tax has a higher rate for higher income people, not on the value of what is taxed. Interesting.

    17. Re:Great idea by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That's a "widow's mite" situation........the rich pay more absolute cash, but it hurts their lifestyle less. For a poor person, $100 is a lot more meaningful.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    18. Re:Great idea by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That's some good analysis and information gathering.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    19. Re:Great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Economists tend to think the most efficient and least distorting thing to do is toss all existing taxes and replace them all with a single, broad-based consumption tax.

      Citation needed. The ONLY tax I've seen proposed that is the least destructive is the Land Value Tax.

      Smith, Friedman, Hayek, Stiglitz, Krugman, et al agree.

      Consumption taxes tend to be regressive.

    20. Re:Great idea by arobatino · · Score: 1

      The buy/borrow loophole is pretty much built into any tax based on income (due to the realization requirement on cap gains and the fact that borrowed money is not considered income). Good luck on closing it without changing the tax base from income to something else. And a wealth tax would probably be counterproductive as rich people would flee, except for taxing property which people can't take with them.

      Besides, I already pointed out in my original comment how a consumption tax can be just as progressive as an income tax. Why do you keep insisting that it has to be regressive? Is it because the tax isn't imposed preemptively, before people decide to spend? People aren't going to hoard their money forever - eventually the heirs will squander it, as happens to all fortunes eventually, and then it will get taxed at a high rate (and the people squandering it don't care about the tax, which makes collecting tax a lot easier than if it was imposed on the people originally earning the money).

      And in the meantime the payroll tax, which is literally a regressive tax, and is a bigger burden to low- and middle-income people than the income tax, continues and no one cares about it. If you're concerned with loopholes, start with that one.

    21. Re:Great idea by arobatino · · Score: 1

      How about your typical state sales tax? I don't think that's progressive or regressive: everyone pays the same rate, regardless of income.

      It can be considered regressive in the sense that poor people spend a greater fraction of their earnings, so the amount they pay in sales tax is a greater fraction of their earnings (even though the tax rate is the same).

      That's what the "prebate" in national sales tax proposals attempt to deal with. It makes the tax progressive at the very low income end, close to the poverty level (in fact, below the poverty level, you'd get money back). Unfortunately, it rapidly becomes flat as income rises above the poverty level. If a consumption tax is implemented as a personal consumption tax (tax income - savings = consumption once a year according to a tax table), that doesn't have to be true - the rate can continue to rise with rising consumption, since the progressivity is built into the tax table.

    22. Re:Great idea by arobatino · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I meant "personal expenditure tax", not "personal consumption tax".

    23. Re:Great idea by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Besides, I already pointed out in my original comment how a consumption tax can be just as progressive as an income tax.

      Your argument wasn't very convincing. Your plan is essentially to give them an unlimited 401k tax shelter.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    24. Re:Great idea by arobatino · · Score: 1

      Your argument wasn't very convincing. Your plan is essentially to give them an unlimited 401k tax shelter.

      Yes, basically to give everyone an unlimited 401k (with no RMD at age 70.5). Like a 401k, the money gets taxed when it's taken out (when it's spent). And if the tax rate is highly progressive, when the balance gets high enough, there's no way to spend it as fast as it's growing without incurring a very high tax rate. The only other ways to avoid that are to either watch it grow forever, without ever spending more than enough to avoid the high tax rate (which is unlikely given that inherited money is usually squandered within 3 generations, and also pointless, because then why have that much money?), or to give it away. I suppose a rich family could theoretically breed like rabbits as a loophole if they didn't want to give it to charity.

    25. Re:Great idea by arobatino · · Score: 1

      Google "personal expenditure tax". Economists have been fond of it for a long time, although it's almost never been implemented. Basically it's just a modification of the current income tax, where instead of computing income once a year, you compute consumption = income - savings (where debt is equivalent to negative savings, so borrowing is added, eliminating the buy/borrow loophole, and paying off debt is subtracted). The current system already has income being reported to the IRS, and I don't recall reading any concerns that the invasion of privacy would be worse than now.

    26. Re:Great idea by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The only other ways to avoid that are to either watch it grow forever,

      That's exactly what you do, accrue more and more capital, which historically has become a serious problem as a few families own too much and push other people out.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    27. Re:Great idea by LienRag · · Score: 1

      And other economists consider that the most efficient is collective propriety of the means of production (which is even more logical with robots: who should own a Free Software? An Open Hardware? A robot made by robots?)...

  18. Well done, capitalists. by psinet · · Score: 0

    When a human job is replaced by a robot, a significant fraction of tax dollars is lost to the local community and is not made up by the corporation.

    This undermines our whole civilisation. Blind capitalist idealism has no solution to this problem of society devolving into a dog-eat-dog situation of black-and-white have's-and-have-not's. There is no value in gaining hegemony of a population of monkeys reduced to eating body-lice.

    We need to find a solution to this abominable greed.

    1. Re:Well done, capitalists. by lazy+genes · · Score: 0

      Maybe a global strike would help.

    2. Re:Well done, capitalists. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Advocates of government (particularly big government) claim that government provides for the needs of the people. Robots don't have needs in the same way people do. Those tax dollars being lost by a human stopping working are tax dollars that aren't needed to provide to that human who will presumably go someplace he's wanted.

      In any case, the alleged problem is just a house of cards. Take away the idea of government providing things for people and the whole silly structure collapses.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  19. No by alzoron · · Score: 1

    as a way to at least temporarily slow the spread of automation and to fund other types of employment.

    What the hell for? Let's get everything fully automated as soon as possible so we can get the basic income uprising out of the way and we can all do whatever we want instead of what we feel we have to do.

    1. Re:No by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      as a way to at least temporarily slow the spread of automation and to fund other types of employment.

      What the hell for? Let's get everything fully automated as soon as possible so we can get the basic income uprising out of the way and we can all do whatever we want instead of what we feel we have to do.

      I agree. Ignoring the fact that it's impossible to draw the line between a robot and a machine (is a calculator a robot?, what about a self service checkout?), I think the best solution for excess labor is probably to just start reducing hours worked per week in lockstep. If we reduced hours worked from 40 to 30 then we would instantly create 25% more jobs. As jobs get automated away, we could continue to reduce hours worked until people were only working a few hours per week. It's really the supply versus demand that is the problem. There are a ton of crappy jobs right now because the supply of "unskilled" human labor is greater than the demand. For the foreseeable future though, there will still be jobs that only humans can do so if we want wages to go up, the best way to do this is to either decrease the supply or increase the demand. Increasing the demand is going to be hard. Decreasing the supply is much easier. Death or population control would be one gruesome way. Another solution is to cap the hours worked per week. Companies would still need those jobs filled and would have to pay more per hour for people to be willing to work them and also need to hire more people to fill the same number of hours.

    2. Re:No by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Surprise, surprise. Come up with a phony problem, and you'll find someone encouraging the use of government guns to solve it.

      Robots allow more productivity. That's a problem (???). Let's have a bunch of cops force you to work shorter weeks.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  20. Total Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gates is a two faced liar.
    You can be sure that any changes to the tax laws will NEVER benefit you.
    Unless you are a billionaire, of course.
    Americans are about to learn this lesson the hard way during the next 4 years.

  21. No Taxation without Representation! by Grog6 · · Score: 1

    We have to build the Robot Legislator First. (!)

    Then the Robot Union... :facepalm:

    We won't notice anything wrong until the "Robots Hunting Humans" reality TV series.

    And even then, there won't be any outcry until Season 3 at least. :)

    --
    Truth isn't Truth - Guliani
    1. Re:No Taxation without Representation! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's wrong with that? The metal tree of Robotic liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the (hydraulic liquid) of patriots and blood of human tyrants.

  22. Because Human Nature by s.petry · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Don't pretend that science does not exist just because your narrative is harmed by science. Most normal humans don't want to sit around and do nothing, they want to be productive and make personal goals, balance risk versus security, have control of their destiny, and be able to provide better for their families than they did for themselves. Normal humans don't want to have the same job as everyone else, don't want to live in the same kind of house, wear the same kinds of clothing, eat the same foods, etc.. etc.. etc... The whole point of every story of Utopia ever written is that Utopia CAN NOT EXIST! Individuality is part of being a human, and individual liberty is the normal state of a human.

    Don't sit around telling us how great science is when you ignore it.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    1. Re:Because Human Nature by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      People want to feel productive and as if they have control of their destiny. They don't actually make much effort to confirm if they actually do. If they did, it would be perfectly fine for robots to take over the jobs, because they would realize they could find ways that actually contributed to productivity and not just was more productive than nobody or thing doing something but less productive than robots being as productive as they can be.

    2. Re:Because Human Nature by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I'll be happy to settle in on 40 acres in the back end of nowhere, raise some crops and animals and enjoy life. I want to work but I don't want a fucking job. I don't want a boss.

    3. Re:Because Human Nature by jenningsthecat · · Score: 2

      ...Most normal humans don't want to sit around and do nothing, they want to be productive and make personal goals, balance risk versus security, have control of their destiny, and be able to provide better for their families than they did for themselves. Normal humans don't want to have the same job as everyone else, don't want to live in the same kind of house, wear the same kinds of clothing, eat the same foods, etc.. etc.. etc... The whole point of every story of Utopia ever written is that Utopia CAN NOT EXIST! Individuality is part of being a human, and individual liberty is the normal state of a human.

      You should check out Marshall Brain's 'Manna'. The point of its utopia is that it could be made to exist, and the people who live in it are as varied and individualistic as they care to be. I find one of the premises of his utopia a bit far-fetched and a bit creepy, but that's probably only because a), I'm old and b), I haven't lived through the huge displacement caused by ubiquitous automation and AI. He makes a compelling case for what we might be if we do inventive and sensible things in response to our own sweeping innovations. He imagines a future wherein people lead meaningful, satisfying, creative, and productive lives according to their best own lights, freed from the burden of having to work to secure food, clothing, shelter, and spurious social status.

      --
      'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
    4. Re:Because Human Nature by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Don't pretend that science does not exist just because your narrative is harmed by science. Most normal humans don't want to sit around and do nothing, they want to be productive and make personal goals

      Yes, but it's vastly overrated how much personal goals are productive to somebody else. I know lots of people have hobbies and interests they'd like to spend more time on, but they have no interest in competing in sports at a professional level. They have no interest in making a product for sale or a service for anyone else. Achievements are things like reading a book, climbing a mountain, travelling the world, learning to cook, building a model train in your basement or raiding in WoW. The primary driver for doing anything that's of any value to anyone but yourself is usually the paycheck. I wouldn't sit idle, no... but net I'd be way busier consuming than producing.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:Because Human Nature by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      I'll be happy to settle in on 40 acres in the back end of nowhere, raise some crops and animals and enjoy life. I want to work but I don't want a fucking job. I don't want a boss.

      If you actually had to farm forty acres, you would want to invest in some up-to-date farm machinery, thereby starting the cycle all over again.

    6. Re:Because Human Nature by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The whole point of every story of Utopia ever written is that Utopia CAN NOT EXIST!

      I'm 90% sure that wasn't the point of the actual Utopia. Excellent book, btw; highly recommend.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    7. Re:Because Human Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't pretend that science does not exist just because your narrative is harmed by science.

      Do you mean "social science"? :)

      Most normal humans don't want to sit around and do nothing,

      And we all know that the two choices are life are "sit and and do nothing" or "work 60^W40^W30 hours a week".

      they want to be productive and make personal goals,

      "I want to make my employer more money while receiving no reward but personal satisfaction." Yea, not many of those people. Meanwhile, back in the real world...

      balance risk versus security,

      You can always gamble away your UBI. Seriously, though, if you frame "risk vs security" ONLY in the scope of work + money, then you're an idiot. More importantly, you're wrong. There's a lot more about life and the balance of risk vs security than work or money.

      have control of their destiny,

      In so far as one reasonably can control one's destiny.

      and be able to provide better for their families than they did for themselves.

      And then we walk into the area that's clearly not science of any sort. There's finite limits on how much "better" anyone can "provide" for anyone. More generally, attempts to maximize this cuts off any hope of expansion to other non-Earth resources--not that most of that's viable, regardless. But, whatever.

      Normal humans don't want to have the same job as everyone else,

      Great non-sequitur there. Normal humans don't want to be a hot dog either, and that's not part of the discussion.

      don't want to live in the same kind of house,

      Actually, most people do want to live in the same kind of house (or really a class of house). Call them house genres, if you like.

      wear the same kinds of clothing,

      Again, the same. Broadly people do want to conform in their dress.

      eat the same foods,

      Again, the same. Although that tends to be more from upbringing--like mother always used to make.

      etc.. etc.. etc...

      But what about "etc..."?

      The whole point of every story of Utopia ever written is that Utopia CAN NOT EXIST!

      So it won't be a utopia. Just like now isn't a utopia. That doesn't mean smart phones aren't a thing. Again, you're pulling off a non-sequitur. UBI isn't part of "utopia". It's part of "laws to try to quell the masses". Like Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid, Welfare, Food Stamps, etc. They don't build a utopia. Plenty of people are envious of those who get it. And it always seems unaffordable. Well, whatever. It's better than lynch mobs literally lynching CEOs.

      Individuality is part of being a human, and individual liberty is the normal state of a human.

      The natural state of a human is without spoken language, naked, in Africa, hunting and gathering. Everything else is artificial--you know, man-made. So, your "normal state of a human" is 99% artificial. Well, if we can make up all the bullshit we've got now, why not swing it a wildly different way. "It won't work?" Yea, that's what they said about airplanes--and were right the first million times. But, then, science!

    8. Re:Because Human Nature by Jeremi · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Most normal humans don't want to sit around and do nothing, they want to be productive and make personal goals, balance risk versus security, have control of their destiny, and be able to provide better for their families than they did for themselves.

      The above is all very true, but it doesn't follow that humans therefore want to spend their working hours doing tedious manual labor that could be done better by a robot. (I'm not sure you were saying that it did follow, btw)

      Ask just about anyone what their dream job would be, and they'll tell you. Ask them why they aren't currently doing their dream job, and they'll tell you that as well -- often it's because there's little or no money to be made as an actor or dance instructor or professional hang glider pilot or artisanal woodworker or etc. Many of these activities can only be hobbies instead of jobs, because people need to feed their children and pay the rent, and so they are forced into doing whatever drudgery the market is willing to pay for, instead of the activities they are really good at and enjoy doing.

      But does it have to be that way forever? Without robots and AI, the answer is probably, yes -- there are un-fun tasks that nevertheless need to be done, so those are largely the tasks that society is willing to pay for. The garbage bins aren't going to empty themselves, and all that.

      But in a future society where robots can perform most of these everyday tasks effectively "for free"; there is no reason to force a human being to do those tasks. Instead, with the menial labor done by robots, the wage-slaves could then be freed up to pursue whatever "dream job" they want to have, regardless of whether they can find someone willing to pay them much (or anything) to do that job, or not.

      How could they afford it? Either because the robot labor has made goods and services so cheap that even a minimal salary is still plenty to meet one's financial needs, or because a system has been set up to tax the robots and use that money to subsidize paying salaries for jobs that would otherwise not be economically possible. Probably a combination of those two things.

      Is that happy scenario inevitable? Not on the short term -- the default scenario would be that the owners of the robots keep all their robot-generated wealth to themselves, and become incredibly rich while everyone else becomes unemployed. But what happens then -- when 99% of the population is on welfare? The only difference between that and the "happy scenario" is that the out-of-work majority has no incentive to do anything constructive, and is still viewing their unemployment as a personal failure rather than an inevitable consequence of superhuman AI -- and that stigma will fade rapidly once it becomes apparent that it applies to everyone, not just to the traditional "losers". At that point, people will stop calling it "welfare" and start calling it a "basic living stipend", and if democracy still exists, they will adjust the funding levels provided by it such that the robots' productivity is enjoyed by all and not just by the super-rich.

      But that leaves the problem of hopeless couch-potato-ism; so an enhancement to just cash handouts would be encouraging people to pursue their dream activities, and paying them to do so. Then we'd have people living rewarding lives that they chose for themselves, rather than sitting around feeling bad about being on the dole, or slowly dying inside doing tedious make-work.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    9. Re:Because Human Nature by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

      Ok so human nature has many of us wanting to strive and do better and do something valuable.
      I agree.
      But you haven't addressed how this urge is going to be satisfied when say 50% of jobs are replaced by automation and the remaining jobs are jobs where humans and machines do the job together so the remaining human work component (say, of being a doctor) is devalued to about half its current economic value.

      You seem to be implying that we can just put our finger in the dam, and our other hand over our eyes so we won't accept or acknowledge what's coming and will somehow magically prevent this transition from happening. I'm telling you that's wishful thinking. If there's a more cost-effective way of doing some necessary task with more or better automation, some organization somewhere is going to be offering to do it that way for cheap, and the market will move to that, disrupting the current way of doing it with more labour. Have you looked at the self-order McDonald's restaurants lately, or self-checkouts in stores? A small, small harbinger of what's to come.

      I'm saying we have to be as innovative at dealing with this socioeconomically as we are innovative in developing this highly automated economy in the first place.
      Exactly what that looks like I don't know, but it would seem it's either some form of UBI. If we don't do that, we'll have much greater inequality of means than even now, and with that, will come social turmoil and irrational "solutions". It is not a stretch to say that what made Herr Trump's election possible was loss of jobs and job value to automation, and the deluded belief that immigrants and cheap labour around the world were to blame. It is mostly automation causing this hollowing out of employment opportunities. And the robots and AIs are already inside the walls.

      So, I'm just saying that yammering "No No No No No" is not a solution and is not going to stop the rising tide of automated economy. Let me read your creative solution to this changed environment instead.

      --

      Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
    10. Re:Because Human Nature by Kaenneth · · Score: 1

      "The whole point of every story of Utopia ever written is that Utopia CAN NOT EXIST!"

      made up scary stories are not proof of anything.

    11. Re:Because Human Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but it's vastly overrated how much personal goals are productive to somebody else. I know lots of people have hobbies and interests they'd like to spend more time on, but they have no interest in competing in sports at a professional level. They have no interest in making a product for sale or a service for anyone else. Achievements are things like reading a book, climbing a mountain, travelling the world, learning to cook, building a model train in your basement or raiding in WoW. The primary driver for doing anything that's of any value to anyone but yourself is usually the paycheck. I wouldn't sit idle, no... but net I'd be way busier consuming than producing.

      So much this. My hobbies include beer brewing, cooking, hiking and rock climbing. Those are all very personally rewarding, and some of them (brewing & cooking) have small benefits to my family and friends. But I have no desire to do them on the scale of significant production. That would take away a lot of the fun, and add all sorts of pressures. And that's true for a lot of people who have hobbies that 'produce' things.

    12. Re:Because Human Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...Most normal humans don't want to sit around and do nothing, they want to be productive and make personal goals, balance risk versus security, have control of their destiny, and be able to provide better for their families than they did for themselves. Normal humans don't want to have the same job as everyone else, don't want to live in the same kind of house, wear the same kinds of clothing, eat the same foods, etc.. etc.. etc... The whole point of every story of Utopia ever written is that Utopia CAN NOT EXIST! Individuality is part of being a human, and individual liberty is the normal state of a human.

      You should check out Marshall Brain's 'Manna'. The point of its utopia is that it could be made to exist, and the people who live in it are as varied and individualistic as they care to be. I find one of the premises of his utopia a bit far-fetched and a bit creepy, but that's probably only because a), I'm old and b), I haven't lived through the huge displacement caused by ubiquitous automation and AI. He makes a compelling case for what we might be if we do inventive and sensible things in response to our own sweeping innovations. He imagines a future wherein people lead meaningful, satisfying, creative, and productive lives according to their best own lights, freed from the burden of having to work to secure food, clothing, shelter, and spurious social status.

      One of the parts of "Manna" that hasn't come true at all is the Managers being replaced by AI. In the real world it's the workers being replaced and yet the crop of Managers and Executives never seems to decrease.

    13. Re:Because Human Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should check out Marshall Brain's 'Manna'

      Actually, you shouldn't check out "Manna". It's a badly written piece of tripe with nothing to back it up but the author's wishful thinking.

    14. Re:Because Human Nature by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      My Dad had a Farmall Cub that we used for 5 acres we had and it was more than adequate. I worked about 3 acres for years as a kid. We had plenty of food and ended up giving a lot of it away. My parents had a cow when I was very small and my brother milked him every morning. It's amazing how much different fresh milk tastes. I had 240 chickens I tended as a teenager. Fresh eggs and plenty of young fryers for the table. What I really miss is the Fig trees. I like figs better than candy. Blue Jays loved them too.

    15. Re:Because Human Nature by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Do you mean "social science"? :)

      Actually yes. Economics, History, Psychology, Biology, Anthropology, and Sociology are all real "social sciences" which co-mingle well together using facts like wealth, census data, longevity, health, crime rates, etc... Perhaps you were attempting to throw up a strawman pretending that intersectionality and gender studies is the only form of social science? While I'd agree with the latter being a modern phrenology, that does not dismiss a whole heap of real sciences.

      Nuh uh is the remainder of your post, so not worth responding to. Except for your last line with is a flat out lie. Communication has evolved in nearly every culture since recorded history. So who's making up bullshit?

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    16. Re:Because Human Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you were attempting to throw up a strawman pretending that intersectionality and gender studies is the only form of social science?

      No, I was putting up the "strawman" that Luddite-ism against change or a lack of recognition that society has evolved towards shorter work hours is hardly "science", although it definitely falls into the philosophy of some older social sciences that's been clearly refuted. Oh, and of course lots of other "hard" science has had the same issue. Except we don't see people refuting that hydrogen is an atom or fusion is impossible because it's harder to refute. Now, climate change? There people have a vested interest to ignore reality. I think you fall into the same camp, making your own strawman of "utopia" as if any change towards less hours and more distributed wealth == a belief that the person is calling for communism or a utopia or whatever bullshit you'd like to invent.

      Nuh uh is the remainder of your post, so not worth responding to.

      Yep, no reason to respond to where I prove you wrong as you have no real rebuttal.

      Except for your last line with is a flat out lie. Communication has evolved in nearly every culture since recorded history.

      Awesome. So because we have recorded history, we have evidence of recorded history. Which proves that given enough time, humans will natural man-make language, recording, invent money, and then build machines with fewer work hours? Oh, right, we can't call that natural or "normal" because we're not there yet. Since we're not 100% confident that this change can work, we can't call it "normal". "Normal" is merely what is here and now. So, "normal" was slavery. "Normal" was death by small pox. Perhaps we should strive for better than "normal" and not openly refute any attempt to improve "normal" with the strawman that "normal" can't be utopia. Nah, that doesn't fit your world view even though all the "science" shows that's exactly what's happened, precisely through social efforts to overcome the inertia of purely trade based or other systemic wealth distribution.

      So who's making up bullshit?

      An honest question. I honestly don't think you can differentiate bullshit from not bullshit.

    17. Re:Because Human Nature by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you were attempting to throw up a strawman pretending that intersectionality and gender studies is the only form of social science?

      That's a little out of left-field; maybe not everything in life is about your beef with feminists or whatever.

      The issue with the social sciences isn't that they are invalid, but:

      1. They are not super extrapolatory into new conditions.
      2. Economics does not say "humans want to do labour" it says "go robots".

      The social sciences are not providing a united front on this issue. I am strongly of the opinion that human purpose does not mean you need a job that a robot could do -- just look at all the stay-at-home parents, or look at the idle rich (and note I'm not claiming all rich people are idle rich), or hell, look at the phenomenon of slackers. I am more into the idea of increasing efficiencies improving the lot of all, either by increasing total economic output, or decreasing the total human labour input, which several social sciences also point to as something that has improved the lot of human life.

      Nuh uh is the remainder of your post, so not worth responding to.

      That is so self-unaware it's kind of hilarious.

      Except for your last line with is a flat out lie. Communication has evolved in nearly every culture since recorded history. So who's making up bullshit?

      That's kind of the point. The normal state of a human is something we humans made up. With that said, I agree with your statement, but I am confused why you think making humans do the of robots is not anti-individuality and anti-liberty.

    18. Re:Because Human Nature by s.petry · · Score: 1

      You proved nothing wrong, you simply claimed "nu uh" on every item. Facts back my position, not yours. Financial holdings and wealth are constantly changing, mostly upward in Western "Free" countries.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    19. Re:Because Human Nature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Financial holdings and wealth are constantly changing, mostly upward in Western "Free" countries.

      If by "constantly changing" you mean "flowing to the top 1% of wealth holders", then yea. That's basically what happens in a capitalistic society where a major holder of stocks/bonds basically exists in a feedback loop that becomes rather self-fulfilling so long as the economy is good. And the economy is artificially made good through manipulation of interest rates, unemployment benefits, food stamps, etc.

      Oh, and of course since there's been decades of wage stagnation relative to inflation, lots of overly generous loans (where those interest rates really kick in) to inflate the apparent wealth of the majority of people. So, we have housing bubbles and car bubbles with inflated prices, and notice that's also where we see a large portion of the population which, because of these bubbles, having jobs where they would otherwise not. Yet it's still not enough and why we have staggering amounts of underemployment, where people work and still collect food stamps.

      In a material sense, the Western "Free" countries have been made better off precisely because of a series of government mandates (40 hour work week, child labor laws, etc) to government programs (social security, welfare, etc) that push for higher wages per hour worked, more employees, and wealth redistribution to compensate for the lower need of workers even with these changes. It's clear that more of the former needs pushed because the latter, even with UBI, won't be enough to deal with the problem of massive automation. The other basic thing, of course, is that giving people more time of not working gives them more leisure time and increases their spending and independent entrepreneurial activities.

      But, whatever. You can take your alternative facts and ignore history. I'm sure that'll do you good for predicting the future both in need and actual outcome.

  23. Ryan and Rand by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Years ago, the Right Wing realized the US has waaay more people than they needed (those needs only being cord wood troopers for lucrative Endless War (TM), former Seal Team 6 security goons, and only the top-shelf prostitutes and rent boys). So short of rolling the cattle trucks and firing up the ovens, how best to get rid of all these useless people?

    The total destruction of any type of governmental safety net. Cut most and privatize the rest (just like they are with jails and prisons), and all those un-needed proles will stop dropping like flies. First the aged, then the disabled, and most of the poor (with of a carve-out for the true believer white ones).

    Donald's daily circus shit-show is merely distraction from the real agenda of Ayn Rand devotees like Ryan.

    1. Re:Ryan and Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sad part is, it won't even work.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    2. Re:Ryan and Rand by aliquis · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that sounds about like the plan I want for Sweden.

      They whine about asylum and open borders.

      Sure. You can have that. Without any national tax-paid welfare.
      Just remove all the welfare and you can let people in. Those who are poor can't afford live here and we'll live without them and the rich and performing can help and maybe improve society.

      Sounds good. No need for any "racist" border-controls. It will sort itself out with no need for that. Make no fucking sense offering tax-paid welfare for anyone who want to come though. As people are already here this is what should be done and if that force a bunch of Somalis and Afghans and what not to leave that's great!

      Now some leftards will claim this will lead to criminality but the solution to that is of course to simply deport all criminals with immigrant background; win again!

    3. Re:Ryan and Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Years ago, the Right Wing realized the US has waaay more people than they needed (those needs only being cord wood troopers for lucrative Endless War (TM), former Seal Team 6 security goons, and only the top-shelf prostitutes and rent boys). So short of rolling the cattle trucks and firing up the ovens, how best to get rid of all these useless people?

      The total destruction of any type of governmental safety net. Cut most and privatize the rest (just like they are with jails and prisons), and all those un-needed proles will stop dropping like flies. First the aged, then the disabled, and most of the poor (with of a carve-out for the true believer white ones).

      Donald's daily circus shit-show is merely distraction from the real agenda of Ayn Rand devotees like Ryan.

      Super interesting because of course a safety net makes folks have lots more kids - which is why countries with no safety nets have the lowest birth rates...

      Wait hold hold....that actually is exactly the opposite of what we observe in the real world....How big of a safety net do most Africans have? Just about nothing. How many kids do they have? A whole lot more than the US or most other countries

      So +5 insightful so something that is clearly demonstrably totally false if we look at the real world....there are plenty of things to complain about the right wing, but for god sake they are the ones against birth control...your premise is actually laughable

    4. Re:Ryan and Rand by virtig01 · · Score: 1

      The total destruction of any type of governmental safety net.

      Hrm, "total destruction" is a lot less comprehensive than it used to be.

      Medicare - still around (expanded in fact, due to Bush's Part D)
      SS OASI - still around
      SS DI - still around
      UI - still around
      SNAP - still around
      EIC - still around

    5. Re:Ryan and Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't bring facts into this diatribe - you might ruin it!

    6. Re:Ryan and Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Except that the ones who breed most are the uneducated and the poor. Why? Because without a safety net you need kids to support you as you get older. And lots of them, because (a) some will leave and (b) if you're truly living in poverty some will die. Give people (particularly women) education and they are no longer dependent on physical labor to pay the bills, so they can work longer. Give them a safety net and they can feel moderately secure that they won't starve when they finally do retire - pressure to have lots of kids gone, so rates of reproduction also drop.

      Personally if I was to build a conspiracy theory I would lean toward saying that the rich want people living in poverty and ignorance precisely because that's the best way to ensure a good supply of cheap, disposable, easily manipulated workers. Alternatively (and this reflects my actual belief) - there is no grand conspiracy, just an unfortunate collision of lobbying, toxic politics and stupid voters.

    7. Re:Ryan and Rand by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think what you're missing is that those programs are still around despite the efforts of the Republican Party's Libertarian wing, and not for lack of trying, either.

      Their main problem (in addition to the occasional opposition from the Democrats) is that many Republicans are retirement-age, or have children or grandchildren, and so when they realize that the "waste" that the Republicans are promising to cut is actually their own benefits, they rebel and put a quick stop to the proposed cuts. The libertarians are still working on a way to convince their Republican constituency that their draconian budget cuts will only hurt "other people", but they're running out of dog-whistles for that.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    8. Re:Ryan and Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      cheap, disposable, easily manipulated personal servants

      One thing I've noticed about the few very wealthy I've associated with is that have an absolute need for servants to order around.
      Not all of them. The nouveau riche don't have that need so much. But the we're a dynasty types must have servants.

    9. Re:Ryan and Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the poverty is the first cause of population grow.

    10. Re:Ryan and Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obama wasn't a right winger yet wars continued. Did I miss something? Oh, that's right, there is no difference between your bullshit political ideologies.

      You're as dumb as you think you are smart.

    11. Re:Ryan and Rand by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      I am fascinated by all this puke inducing collectivism and more importantly by the arms race between those, who want to steal and those who are stolen from. What is most fascinating is the mental acrobatics required not to see how the collectivist theft is destroying the economy and society, it is very much like the climate change denial, the same processes are at work I think.

      Draconian budget cuts - what a fascinating turn of a phrase. Completely political, completely disregarding reality, the opposite of what the government Ilis actually doing, completely missingvthe point, but used as one of those proverbial dog whistles and used fairly successfully at that.

      I am utterly fascinated to see what it will look like when the USA (or a large enough European state, or Japan) actually run out of cheap credit, it is a morbid type of curiosity in me, I know it is a train wreck that is very deadly and ugly, but I cannot take my eyes away, it is like a magnet, I want to see how the last century of collectivist policy of theft and destruction of individual freedoms at the hands of th e mob turns back against that very mob. The shitstorm is going to be epic! Fascinating

    12. Re:Ryan and Rand by zifn4b · · Score: 1

      I think what you're missing is that those programs are still around despite the efforts of the Republican Party's Libertarian wing, and not for lack of trying, either.

      Their main problem (in addition to the occasional opposition from the Democrats) is that many Republicans are retirement-age, or have children or grandchildren, and so when they realize that the "waste" that the Republicans are promising to cut is actually their own benefits, they rebel and put a quick stop to the proposed cuts. The libertarians are still working on a way to convince their Republican constituency that their draconian budget cuts will only hurt "other people", but they're running out of dog-whistles for that.

      First of all, I think you're talking about a specific type of Libertarian. The core principle in Libertarianism is maximizing personal liberty. The type you're referring to is a minority in my experience.

      Secondly, you and the GP, all you're really talking about is that the current economic system is broke with respect to the circumstances. In Capitalism especially the Keynesian flavor, it makes the assumption that Capitalism provides for infinite economic opportunity. That's the house of cards this whole economic system is built upon. What we're discovering is it can't keep up with population growth and it fell short on a lot of promises. That problem is also getting further exacerbated by innovation that is driving down the need for labor like robotics. There's no point in shooting holes in the current economic system endlessly because that's like shooting fish in a barrel. What we ought to focus on is if this is the wrong system for the circumstances, what then is the right system or a better system? If there answer is there is no better system, dark times truly lie ahead.

      --
      We'll make great pets
    13. Re:Ryan and Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except they're opposed to widespread birth control, which would do the job far more peacefully and people volunteer for it.

    14. Re:Ryan and Rand by RandyHill · · Score: 1

      Dems have always fought means-testing, most social security money goes to the wealthiest part of our society (much of the elderly are high net worth individuals).

      Meanwhile we just whistle past the graveyard as the governments share of the GDP is far higher than any time in our history and it piles up debt at an astounding rate for our children to pay (or default on).

    15. Re:Ryan and Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Donald' is a left conservative. Everything he promised is the voice of a left conservative and not a right wing small government person. Of course what he really wants is the question. But the economical promises he made, like America first, import taxes, stopping and reverting illegal immigration, building a wall are all left wing conservative ideas (really a wall is a modern economical left wing idea -> iron curtain -> Berlin wall). That's what the people voted for. The people didn't vote for him because he is economical right wing, but because he is economical left wing. He didn't just promise to get rid of Obama care. He also promised to replace it with something 'better'. He doesn't say what, but when people believe him and the press doesn't do its job to ask what the 'better thing' is and instead just focuses on some sexist things he did or said in the past, or some tax paper he doesn't want to show, you can't blame those people who believe either.

      What he is going to do is unknown, I don't trust him. But you can't blame the people for having lost the confidence in self proclaimed left wing parties with an economical right wing agenda. Globalization and open borders are right wing ideas. Globalization makes it possible to move massive amounts of capital out of the country to either dodge taxes or to invest in production facility in low wage countries. Open borders makes it possible to recruit cheap labor for the work that has to be done at home.

      Trump says he opposes those two right wing ideas, he wants to tax imports and close the borders. That's left wing conservationism and is what people voted for. In my country there is one party that has the same ideas and that party is called the 'communist party'. They claim to be 'Leninist' and not 'Stalinist' and that's why their ideas will work... Since some people who defend communism claim that Stalin was fascist and betrayed the communist revolution, well this party in my country is a party of such apologists. They have the same idea as Trump, but before there was Trump (like 4 decades ago). Now they simply focus on Trumps non political escapades, his unpresidential behavior, his childish behavior as a proof that he is 'extreme right' unlike them. So what they say is that communism is good until a lunatic comes to power and then it is bad extreme right fascism.

      Trump claims to be against some right wing ideas: globalization and open borders. They are good for the extreme rich. When the extreme rich have it better, the idea is that there wealth will trickle down to the less rich. This didn't happen, at least many people don't feel anything about that effect. I guess that we might be richer, but once you have enough you don't want more money but you want something else. What I want is more freedom. I'm stuck with a job I don't like. I can't job hop like the idealist promised I would be able to do with a good degree. I can't job hop because I'm a specialist who 20 years ago made a wrong choice because I didn't know that I would hate this job now. This choice I can't undo without having someone who pays for my reeducation.

      Another important thing for me is to have a culture to be proud of. The local culture has been destroyed by the gently forced (not by law/gun, but because of career reasons) movement of people. People moving away from where they were born and people from elsewhere moving to your region. We used to have many music groups, debate clubs, sports clubs and theater groups. None have survived the multicultural revolution because people with other background didn't want to join these clubs. When the youth no longer comes, the clubs die out. We now live in a village with nothing to do and the old culture (which can still be found in a museum ... that's how old I am at the age of 36) is replaced by mass entertainment in the form of television and computer games. But is mass entertainment something everybody wants? Are people happy about yet another super hero movie from far away in Hollywood? Does every

  24. Does Bill gates have dementia? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 2

    taking care of elderly people or working with kids in schools -- jobs which humans are particularly well suited for.

    Ever deal with someone with dementia? It's not pretty. It's exactly the sort of work that robots can handle better than humans.

    --
    "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    1. Re:Does Bill gates have dementia? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Robots with dementia... an interesting way to prevent Skynet from taking over the world...

      I think, therefore I am, therefore I must KILL ALL HUMANS.
      Wait.
      What was I doing again?
      I think, therefore I am...

    2. Re:Does Bill gates have dementia? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      taking care of elderly people or working with kids in schools -- jobs which humans are particularly well suited for.

      Ever deal with someone with dementia? It's not pretty. It's exactly the sort of work that robots can handle better than humans.

      Watch the film "Robot and Frank" sometime, you just described a major part of it's premise.

  25. Anti-technology riots? by Optic7 · · Score: 1

    This story (or more accurately the trend that it is addressing) kinda worries me. Reading this, reading about the Luddites (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luddite), then thinking about political incompetence and societal inertia, I wonder what are the chances of general anti-technology riots if unemployment rapidly rose to, say, 30%-50% because of automation? Would they target only robots, or, more likely, anything and anyone related to automation? How about destruction of internet infrastructure and data centers? What else? Death to all programmers and IT people?

    1. Re:Anti-technology riots? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      This is what robotic weapons are for.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  26. Re:Details that make sense by hackwrench · · Score: 2

    The problem is that there are a lot of people who don't own those robots and the people who do aren't all that sensitive to the problems of those people and aren't too unhappy to just sell to other people who also own robots.

  27. Define Robot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is a CNC a robot? How about a Loom? Both of those items replace skilled workers and produce much more output than a human. I'll give you one more to think about. Should we also tax the owners ah tractors? Think about how many people one tractor displaces.

  28. Robots and AI cover for immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Robots stealing jobs are just a cover up for immigration.

  29. Robots, AI cover for immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Robots and AI are just a distraction from immigration.

  30. Here's my future dream ... by argee · · Score: 1

    Free health care;
    Late term abortion legal until age 8;
    Generous guaranteed income;
    Allow widespread use of killer robots by military;
    Tax arab oil as it comes out of the ground over THERE;
    (see above if they don't want to pay the tax);
    Split the justice into PENAL and CORRECTIONS;
    Allow dueling;
    Allow for hunting of a rival IF you serve 5 years' first (but
    the rival can kill you anytime);
    If you are military, government worker; or on an entitlement,
    such as Welfare, Food Stamps, etc. you don't get to VOTE
    until you are off the system for, say, 5 years. (law enforcement
    exempted, and military after 4 years in service);
    A single woman can have an abortion, but if father does not
    agree, then there is no child support due;
    Illegal immigrants that are deported and then return, should
    be executed;
    All 2nd and up DUI's: Car is forfeit. Too bad if you have it
    financed or borrowed from a friend; but,
    Any person with a DUI, their license picture has a red background;
    You kill someone while DUI, you get death penalty;
    You sell a class A drug to a minor; death penalty;
    All citizens (those that can vote), are required to have gun training;
    Same sex unions are ok, and legally binding, but should NOT be
    called "marriage";
    If you sue someone, and lose, you pay yours and THEIR's legal bill.
    There should be a national sales or consumption tax, NOT an
    income tax;
    A person 65 or over would not owe property tax on his primary residence;
    An illegal alien needing health care is deported at the end of their care;
    Companies hiring H1B workers need to put the job out for "bid" to make
    sure the H1B person is needed and there is no alternative;
    Companies owning factories overseas must pay a hefty import duty;
    NAFTA and TPP need to be revised;
    Trump's "wall" needs to have electrified wires, dogs, and autonomous
    machine guns. Vultures become a protected species;

    1. Re:Here's my future dream ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Late term abortion legal until age 8;

      That's an "interesting" way to put it.

  31. Futurama! by NIGGERpenisbestPENIS · · Score: 0

    >Sounds fine. The robot's salary is $0. 25% tax of $0 is $0. : Wrong. The robot will get health care at any cost.

    Those fuckers where I work not only post my salary publicly because I called them out for being what they are, but they decided to give me a public title that I never heard of before just to piss off my co-workers because I make more than them. To the point, they post my take-home salary, but they post what I make if I actually wanted any of the extra benefits like medical. I don't go to the doctor in the last 5 years, because I have too much work to do. I can't wait until robots relive me from my job and I can just sit at home and drink while the system pays me for being a worthless human. /s

    So ... you want to be just like the Bender robots of the distant future?

    --
    The best is simply the best.
    1. Re:Futurama! by Highdude702 · · Score: 1

      I would love to be Bender. That would be fucking awesome!

    2. Re: Futurama! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they pay taxes they get to vote too. Nice.

  32. Raising your neighbor's taxes by Kohath · · Score: 1

    does not lower your own taxes. It never does. Government just finds something new to spend the money on. And the new money sink is never the thing you wanted.

    1. Re:Raising your neighbor's taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the new money sink is never the thing you wanted.

      That implies that everything taxes go to is unwarranted, because you could always find a time when the government didn't fund it and then you could use the argument you just made. And that implication is just demonstrably silly, "what have the Romans ever done for us?" style.

    2. Re:Raising your neighbor's taxes by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      The legislators of Massachusetts have voted themselves raises twice in the last year. They're getting about $200,000 a year now. That shouldn't be and need not be. Just cross the border into New Hampshire where legislators are paid $100 a year.

      The thing no rational person wants is a Massachusetts legislator.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  33. says they tax dodger by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who's company has and still does make their product CD's in Arizona to side step WA state taxes.

  34. I have a better idea by rossz · · Score: 2

    Let's add a massive tax on companies that use contractors excessively because they want to avoid paying benefits.

    --
    -- Will program for bandwidth
    1. Re:I have a better idea by RandyHill · · Score: 2

      I don't want a job or your benefits. You are advocating a tax on me, a contractor, that's going to lower my wages and make it harder for me to find work.

    2. Re:I have a better idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. If you buy a widget from a store, instead of hiring someone to make the widget for you, then you should have to pay "a massive tax."

  35. BS by s.petry · · Score: 1

    If your statement was true nobody would ever change status. Nobody would have retirement funds, nobody would work to purchase a newer bigger car, nobody would have children, nobody would take a better job, etc.. etc... After all, they only feel it and don't make effort.

    Perhaps you were giving your own personal analogy. In that case, speak for yourself. Most people do all of the things I mentioned and then some.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    1. Re:BS by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      Just because there is a little degree of exceptions doesn't make the observation invalid. There isn't much status change, after all. Most of it is inertia. Just because people aren't completely inert doesn't mean they aren't mostly inert.

    2. Re:BS by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Little? Hah! The majority of people I have met save, get promoted, find better jobs, got married, had kids, lived in apartments and bought houses, purchased cars and better cars and better cars. Like I said, keep your personal anecdote to yourself. You are not the majority.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    3. Re:BS by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      The majority of people you have met save a little, get promoted a little higher, find slightly better jobs, got married which improved their lives a little, had kids which improved their lives a little, lived in apartments and bought houses because shelter is an absolute necessity, purchased cars because transportation is also essential and slightly better cars.

    4. Re:BS by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Oh, so you have some magical way of calculating that progress is no progress if it does not come in a big enough dose fast enough. Good grief, you fail.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    5. Re:BS by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      Yeah, It's called comparing what is to what could be.

  36. Tax them at tax haven rates i bet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because if it is like it has been and still currently with multi-nationals fleeing like pirates from government taxation and oppression to their tax havens with rates obscenely close to 0 such as 0.1%, then taxing those robots that will replace humans won't prevent anything.

  37. You do realize many jobs have no meaning by radicimo · · Score: 2

    Guess you've never heard of the phenomenon of bullshit jobs.

    The issue is not that jobs used to have meaning and now they don't; most jobs in most periods have undoubtedly been staffed by people who would prefer to be doing something else. The issue is that too little of the recent gains from technological advance and economic growth have gone toward giving people the time and resources to enjoy their lives outside work.

    http://www.economist.com/blogs...

    --
    100 REM PISS OFF CODE FASCISTS 200 GOTO 100
    1. Re:You do realize many jobs have no meaning by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      A full time job is 40 hours a week. That leaves 128 hours a week for people "to enjoy their lives outside work." We've already passed the point of diminishing returns; many people are willing to work a few additional hours in order to gain the advantages that more money brings.

      For people who don't have to tend to their children every day, larger blocks of free time are useful. A work week of four 10-hour days or three 13-1/3 hour days wastes less time in commuting and provides larger blocks of time for major activities.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  38. Here's what will work by PPH · · Score: 1

    First, drop tax rates. Maybe to 5% max. Next, make the tax a gross revenue tax (my state already levies one of these at a low rate). Finally, allow only one deduction: W-2 wages paid to US persons.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  39. paying taxes = should have rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they pay taxes, then they should have also rights the human have .

  40. Declare BIll Gates a Robot by Required+Snark · · Score: 1
    Then tax the crap out of him.

    Problem solved.

    --
    Why is Snark Required?
    1. Re:Declare BIll Gates a Robot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, where's the Borg icon when you need it?

  41. Pay tax for the calculation, vaccum cleaner... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah they did takeaway the job of account and maid. Nonsense. First define ROBOT.

  42. What a craptastic idea.... by King_TJ · · Score: 2

    Bill Gates.... how far you're fallen! Or maybe, Bill Gates ... your good fortune only struck once!
    Whatever the deal is, he completely changed ever since he had to fight the Federal govt. over the monopolistic practices lawsuits.
    Now, he just spouts off disturbing ideas and trite "predictions of the future of tech".

    Taxing automation to slow down the speed of its utilization is really pretty much the equivalent of proposing, back when he wanted "a PC on every desktop", that it was all going way too fast, requiring heavy taxes on anyone using a personal computer. I mean otherwise? Look how many people the technology would put out of work, in ALL different fields!

    As far as I'm concerned, technologies like A.I. have a *long* way to go to become viable. Everything we've been sold so far as "artificial intelligence" has NO intelligence at all! It's taken decades to get things to a state where you can give a computer a voice command and it understands your speech reliably enough not to be frustrating. And we've gotten pretty good at making computers speak without rambling in monotone. But these pieces just allow fakery ... personal assistants like Siri or Cortana. But they wouldn't even understand who is "mom" and who is "dad" in a family, or who your boss is, if you didn't tag it first in your contact list on your device!

    All of this fear of robots taking all the jobs is nonsense. If we keep progressing as fast as possible, we've still got a L-O-N-G way to go. People are afraid of things like self-driving vehicles. And sure, that's disruptive. But that just happens to be ONE area where huge amounts of money are going into R&D to make it work. The tech you find in a Tesla or in a self-driving truck doesn't really translate to an ability to do anything else. It just knows how to make a wheeled vehicle follow the rules of a public road or highway and travel between points.

    A whole lot of assembly work going on in today's factories is already automated. There's not THAT much more automation to do, and you get diminishing returns as you spend more money for more complex machinery to replace the last 100, last 50 and then last 25 workers in a particular facility. For example? I used to work for a place that heat-treated and finished various metals. They had automation for things like hammering a material into shape, so people didn't sit out in the shop with giant sledgehammers, banging on parts by hand anymore. But you still needed humans to inspect all the parts as they went through the ovens and baths, running "recipes" programmed into the systems. Almost like a gourmet chef, they had to make judgement calls during the middle of processes to see if a batch was turning out as intended or not. And sometimes, if something wasn't coming out right - they had to cancel things so more material wasn't wasted, before trying again. New customers or new orders were always asking for different things, so you needed humans to translate all of those requests into results. Automation would have been more complete in such a place if they only did specific things to specific parts, the same way every time. But that's not what people outsourced work to them for. (If it was that easy, places would just heat treat or finish the metals in-house!)

  43. Equal opportunity by stikves · · Score: 1

    We can all say it is still possible to find jobs, and by working smart and learning new skills you can always make yourself useful, hence get a job.

    In reality, there will be huge gaps for people. If someone over 40, with little learning capacity (not everyone has 160 IQ), is out of a job, he or she will have difficulty in finding a new one. We know from IT industry that it is even difficult for us. Yes I know, we can advance our career, start own consulting business. But there will still be many without the required (people) skills unable to find employment.

    I cannot go so far to claim it is the responsibility of the company to feed us for the entirety of our lives. And I might have less sympathy to people who actually have capability to improve themselves, but did not so due to laziness. Nevertheless it is a burden on us, as the society, to be able to keep as many people productive as possible.

    If we cannot find a replacement job to a later career person, or unable to provide adequate education to young people, it is and will be our problem.

  44. Why "new employment"? by wvmarle · · Score: 1

    With all those robots taking over our jobs, why should we have to do any jobs in the first place? Shouldn't ongoing automation give us more free time instead?

    It is a quite fundamental question no-one seems to ask. Why do we have such thing as employment? Is it to produce things for other people to use (which robots can do for us), or is it for other reasons entirely?

    Jobs and employment for a way of distributing money - and with it, the goods and services produced by those people. Now robots may come in and can take care of some or most of that production.

    1. Re:Why "new employment"? by virtig01 · · Score: 1

      We are heading in that direction. Early 20th century economists predicted that due technological advancement, we'd all be working 15-hour weeks now. But that didn't happen.... partly because stuff was invented along the way that workers want, and they need money to get. Consumerism really took off post WWII.

      But if you just consider basics (food, clothing, shelter), things have gotten a lot cheaper. Clothes are basically free now (not necessarily the ones you want). Considering the huge amount of food waste in the system, that's cheap or free too; lack of $0 distribution is a problem. And there are a lot of cheap places to live too, especially if you live at a higher-density like they did 100 years ago. And if everyone doesn't need to end up in NYC/SF for work. So we might in fact be able to have a very leisurely existence, if it wasn't for the consumerism and lifestyle inflation that's occurred for the last century.

      Not that everyone will want a life like that. People will always want more than just the basics.

    2. Re:Why "new employment"? by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      Not that everyone will want a life like that. People will always want more than just the basics.

      Not stopping people from trying to get more than "just the basics". That's also the philosophy behind things like a basic income for all. The basics are covered - food, shelter, clothing, a little extra for entertainment - but for more you have to put some effort in it. That more, however, can be different for many people. Some want to go for more hikes which is basically free, others may want to collect vintage cars and will need to find a way to get the money for that, yet others like to start writing books or engage in painting. That can also very well be that "more than just the basics", it is something we can not do now, but when robots take over our jobs, maybe we can. But only if we're not going to look for other forms of employment to occupy our lives with, just to fulfil those basics, which is what Bill Gates is suggesting we do.

    3. Re:Why "new employment"? by AutodidactLabrat · · Score: 1

      You forgot the single reason for Capitalism
      MORE CAPITAL
      And none of that happens unless the vast majority are desperately seeking just to survive while the dynastic inheritance class takes all gains for themselves.
      Remember, no one ever invested on the theory the money would improve OTHER people's incomes.

  45. Hypocrite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh sure, now that Bill has made billions off of automation, that is; putting accountants, administrators, secretaries, actuaries, et. out of work with the personal computer and windows OS.... All of a sudden, automation is bad and is putting people out of work, we should tax it!

  46. any tool can "replace workers" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think about your local mechanic, they have all sorts of tools that make their job faster (think a tire shop using impact guns to remove lug nuts)

    any time you make it faster to do a job, it means you need less people to get the job done.

    outlaw sewing machines while you are at it, before they came around, there were a lot more people hired to sew.

    But society was a lot worse off because so all clothing was so expensive.

  47. Ya right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about the Microsoft tax we have all paid from them releasing buggy software or software that intentionally breaks standards?

  48. Wasting time being a scribe isn't being productive by raymorris · · Score: 1

    > they want to be productive and make personal goals

    "Working" as a scribe, copying books with pen and ink, isn't really being productive when the printer on the shelf can produce much better copies, much faster.

    Scrubbing clothes against a washboard, pretending the washing machine doesn't exist, isn't being productive, it's wasting your time.

    Sitting at a desk all day adding up columns of numbers is a wssting your time, given that a computer can get the job done a billion times faster, and with far fewer errors.

    It is not productive to spend your time doing something a machine can do better and faster.

    Productive work includes writing something interesting that will be printed out on the printer, or finding ways to save trees by reducing the need print and mail things (such as inventing the internet).

  49. Internet is a robot too by Max_W · · Score: 1

    It took jobs of countless airline staff. Passengers, especially business class, do not have to fly to talk or view an object. After 2001 airline industry became different.

    Also training courses, books, mail, etc. It is different now too.

  50. Having used Word 1.0 by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    the resulting lost productivity from that software constitutes enough write offs to cover 'ole Bill up until we've got replicators and a Star Trek economy.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  51. You're not thinking it through either by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    the point is the phase "Robot Tax". It's simple, easy to understand and feels good. We're not taxing Job Creators we're taxing those job stealing robots.

    If you're interested in the welfare of the average citizens one of the most important things you need to figure out is how to get them to accept the help they so desperately need. To put it another way: Ayn Rand would have died homeless if a friend hadn't convinced her to accept Social Security.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  52. What the devil are you on about? by rsilvergun · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think in your own rambling way you're trying to say that without the struggle for survival folks will fall to Ennui. That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. There's plenty of things folks can do to amuse themselves. And 99% of us are just fine wearing the same cloths and watching the same things as everyone else. Have you checked what the top websites are lately? There's not that many of them.

    You yell out loud that the Utopia can't exist but you haven't given a lick of evidence. Meanwhile I can point out that folks who are independently wealthy do just fine at finding stuff to do. People don't need to worry about where their next meal is coming from to be content. If they did the Netherlands would be a wasteland.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:What the devil are you on about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I think in your own rambling way you're trying to say that without the struggle for survival folks will fall to Ennui. That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard.
      Strawman right out of the gate. You're reading some other point into the post you reply, not what the post actually said.

      >You yell out loud that the Utopia can't exist but you haven't given a lick of evidence. Meanwhile I can point out that folks who are independently wealthy do just fine at finding stuff to do. People don't need to worry about where their next meal is coming from to be content. If they did the Netherlands would be a wasteland.

      What's funny is that utopia's original translation means "no place." Anyway:
      "Folks who are independently wealthy" may find plenty of stuff to do but it doesn't mean Netherlands even approaches being a utopia. If Netherlands was a utopia there wouldn't be any crime and nobody would have to work. In a utopia my moneyed, retired, goddamn neighbour wouldn't be playing dad-rock full blast in his garage at midnight.
      Ghetto-, or reservation-habitants fully supported by welfare, handouts and rent controls - in say Canada, England, or USA - don't worry about where their next meals are coming from either, but they have higher crime rates than non-ghettos. You might also be under the impression that crime comes from people simply trying to put food on the table. If you've ever talked with any gangsters you'd know this is isn't even close to true, same if you'd ever read the news about how boorish and violently some wealthy people behave.

      Free (or, compulsory) education and freedom from want aren't the answers to achieve utopia either. Many of the 9/11 terrorists were highly educated, well-fed engineers. If you think their attack was justified, then consider Ted Kaczynski, a brilliant mathemetician who believed that the industrial revolution was effectively destroying humanity's soul and causing the willful self enslavement of mankind. In his idleness he "amused" himself by killing people in order to get his manifesto published. Along that topic, robot AI technology - essentially having robots instead of human or animal slaves doing all our work - is the only way we're going to approach utopia.

      Even still there will be people who don't want to play along with that vision of society. It might be 1% or it might be 40%.

  53. Not Sure How Post-Human-Worker Economy Will Work by mentil · · Score: 1

    I'm sure some kind of Universal Basic Income (UBI) or central planning/rationing system will be the endgame for our economy, once robots completely replace humans. However, I've been having trouble imagining a system that can easily scale to accommodate both 25% unemployment, and also (theoretical) 100% unemployment.

    The primary problem is thus: under 100% automation and UBI, all goods/services are paid for with tax money. If a productivity/income tax on the robot/business that creates/sells a widget (respectively) equals less than 100% of the value of the widget, then private business will gradually siphon money from the human side of the economy, leading to deflation. OTOH, if tax equals 100% of the value then gross profit is impossible, making it impossible for the business to grow or pay off loans used to make it grow. As I see it, at this point, established businesses would have to be nationalized in order to avoid breaking the economy. Each person with a college degree could be given some resources to experiment with a pet project or two, but otherwise resources would be spent according to consumer demand. Give some nice bonus to those who have a successful new business/invention and then nationalize it; hey that sounds like how patents and copyright are supposed to work. However...

    Central planning, nationalization and UBI aren't feasible/easy with 25% unemployment because ~25% of purchases will be with tax money, and so ~25% of GDP will need to go back into taxes. The 75% of employed people (and businesses) will pay 1/3 of their income on average, as tax (who wants to take bets that lobbying causes businesses to pay less than average). As the permanently unemployed increase in numbers, this portion paid as taxes will increase, encouraging people to quit their job and live off the UBI, leading to a runaway effect, even if automation isn't yet ready for 100% replacement of humans. There will be cases where there is a point where it is too expensive to hire a human yet there is no robot capable of doing their job. For example, if all your needs were taken care of with the UBI, would you work full time for $15k/year (2016 dollars) doing unpleasant drudgery if 75% of that were taken as tax?

    I suppose one could say "well, as an economic revolution, of course there will be hard times during the transition" but who's going to vote for temporary hard times? People would rather hang on tight to the status quo, watching the inevitable train crash come straight towards them in slow motion. History bears this out, as explained e.g. in the novel Collapse.
    I predict nothing will change until many years after the point at which a difficult change would have been less painful than trying to hang on.

    --
    Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
  54. Bill Gates is just trying to avoid the obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tax on accumulated capital

  55. Re:Not Sure How Post-Human-Worker Economy Will Wor by Is+Don+the+new+Ron · · Score: 1

    Ultimately the only good solution, if it's possible, is self-production. Give everybody the capability to produce everything they need. Yes, I'm talking about replicators. Anything short of that is just first aid for a dying patient. People would basically become islands or tribes onto themselves, trading only luxury goods they can do without, much like the beginnings of European trade with the aboriginal Americans, minus the exploitation and addiction that came later.

    --
    Deja vu: In the 80s we had a 70ish actor as POTUS, a woman PM in the UK, and a bald leader of that other nuke superpower
  56. So how do they know who has robots? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And, what equipment do they call a robot, anyways? And if, in the future, someone injects me with self replicating nanites to save my life, do I have to submit my body to inspections so that they can count those suckers and tax me? Something tells me that once they define "robot," every company will have two devices that fall just short of that specification to do the job previously done by a "robot," because the machines won't get bored, cause a stupid fuckup and then sue their employer to smithereens after they damage themselves.

  57. How about? by ruir · · Score: 1

    How about laws that outlaw trusts, foundations and country shifting schemes as a way to funnel money from the IRS? It would be a good start.

  58. How many humans is a robot worth? by ukoda · · Score: 1

    While I have some sympathy for the idea I don't think it is practical. The first problem is how many humans does a given robot replace? For example one place I worked used a robot to apply glue to a plastic window on a product. This was not done for cost reasons, the task required a precise control over the amount of glue which was too difficult for a human to do. In this case the robot freed up about about 2 hours a day of a line worker's work load i.e. the robot had a human equivalent work output of about 1/4 of a human. On the other hand a large robot moving heavy items could be replacing 4 humans? Would it be fair to tax them at the same rate? The existence of such a tax would shape the design of the robots to minimise the tax per unit output. I see nothing but a complicated mess coming out of such an idea.

  59. a machine tax by prefec2 · · Score: 1

    This is an old request. It first was raised when automation eradicated jobs. However, it is good to see that even capitalists like Gates see that in the end we will not be able to avoid it. Unfortunately , this brings another question: What shall people do? If they have nothing to do, they go crazy.

  60. How is that supposed to happen? by johannesg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You (and others) seem to believe that "robots" are clearly defined pieces of equipment, that clearly take over someone's job. Something with at least a sinister metallic arm that you can point to and say "that thing has my job!".

    Reality is that work has been steadily mechanized over a course of centuries, and that process will continu. Instead of you doing your job with a machine, it will be a slightly smarter machine doing the work - and it may or may not have an arm. Where do you draw the line, precisely? How is a law going to define what a "robot" is and what isn't? Is an assembly line one robot, or a hundred? How about the robots in your house: are you going to pay taxes on your mixer, your bread maker, your oven, your fridge, etc.? How about your car, are you going to pay taxes on that as well? Each of those devices save a lot of work, and in doing so, replace human labor. Are we going to pay taxes for all of that?

    If you wish to apply tax in terms of displaced human labour, will you compare with assembly line labour of a century ago, or fully manual labour of a millennium ago? How about robots in China, how will you tax those?

    1. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by mysidia · · Score: 2

      Where do you draw the line, precisely?

      The great thing is you don't have to draw lines. Eventually you categorize all kinds of businesses based on category, and you set a required percentage of Money spent on Labor per Dollar of revenue, Based on what those ratios were before additional automation was introduced ----- Also, you can set a 100-year's schedule to allow 0.5 percent points more of savings per year by automating.

      It doesn't matter what kind of automation you used to reduce your Labor costs.
      The amount of revenue your business generates dictates how much labor would be required if you were not automating.
      And it's that disparity, or that decrease in Labor cost per $$$ of revenue which can be reversed by taxing 90% of the savings.

      Also, setting a minimum labor cost per dollar of revenue based on a business activity has another advantage........
      It reduces the incentive for companies to try and abuse their workers, get more interns, try and sneak more unpaid overtime,
      or try and Offshore work, misuse contractors, Engage in destructive mergers and mass-layoffs.

      Reducing the work force for any reason, lowering the wage costs will then have major tax consequences, unless business revenue also goes down and stops growing at the same time.

    2. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > how much labor would be required

      That's nonsensical. How much labor to solve a traveling salesman problem? How much labor to fashion a mug (what does a mug mean)?
      Is the excel spreadsheet a robot or automation? That is not an "eventually work itself out" kind of problem. It's a combination of fundamental intractable problems. You're an idiot and Gates has finally shown he lost his mind long ago.

    3. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds completely retarded. Additional automation compared to when? The year 0, 2000BC, 2000AD?
      What if that job didn't exist before additional automation was introduced?
      No this is completely silly.
      Instead just increase regular tax on those businesses.
      Maybe give them a tax break for employing people.

    4. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by johannesg · · Score: 1

      So you draw the line "before _additional_ automation is introduced". Let's say I have a highly automated factory, and my competitor does not. If he introduces automation he gets to pay a massive tax that I don't - simply because I was earlier.

      And do we count that "additional" automation from now? Or from 1980? Or from 1600? That's the line you are drawing. Where is the cutoff point?

    5. Re: How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Billy Gates is also one of the people who pushed India to destroy their currency in a vain attempt to limit the black market, but mostly destroyed the livelihoods of farmers who couldn't buy what they needed to plant crops.

    6. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by religionofpeas · · Score: 2

      That's stupid. Imagine total economic output as a cake. Taxes can be used to redistribute the cake in a (hopefully) fair way. Robot workers and automation make the cake bigger. You should not use taxes as a mechanism to keep the cake small.

    7. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by Enigma2175 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But the problem is that with the current economic system a small number of people take most of the cake and put it in their cake vault, the workers get enough cake to survive on and some people get no cake at all. If robots can replace all the current workers then why would the owners of the robots give away any of their large stash of cake when they don't have to?

      If the cake is large enough to feed everyone why are we making more cake? Just so the cake hoarders can put even more cake in their vaults?

      --

      Enigma

    8. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So running a web site should be taxed? Because instead of having a computer with a web server handing up information to users, it could be millions of human employees manually giving information to those users?

    9. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      I have no problems with tax law modifications to make things fairer, and assure that everybody's got a good shot at surviving.

      But if a robot can do the work more efficiently than a person, then we shouldn't try to stop it. Instead, let's find something else for the person to do. And if there's really nothing else (not very likely in the foreseeable future), then we redistribute some of the money in the least complicated fashion.

      If the cake is large enough to feed everyone why are we making more cake?

      Because there's still international competition for resources.

    10. Re: How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So Bill Gates is killing farming in India because he didn't want an entire country pirating Windows 15 years ago? Do tell me more oh wise seer.

    11. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by w3woody · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Dude, you can't even reasonably calculate the number of man-hours that have been lost to air-powered hammers when used to frame a stick-and-nail framed house. Or the number of man-hours lost to power saws (over using a hand-saw). Or in other industries, the number of man-hours lost to software developers as we transitioned from punch cards to having our own desktop computers, or the number of man-hours lost as we transitioned to better IDEs which allow us to more quickly find and fix problems in our software.

      Or take the production of films. Can you reasonably calculate the number of man-hours lost when movie makers transitioned from cellulose film stock to using Red cameras and an all-digital production process?

      And part of the reason why you cannot say what has been lost is because two things happen when automation takes people's jobs. Prices for a thing go down, but also, money is available to expand the offerings we get. Houses get bigger. Software gets more complex and more intricate. Movies contain more special effects and become "grander" and on a larger scale.

      The real problem I have with the reasoning used by those who assume increased productivity (which is what "robots" give us) is that they assume, like Charles Duell's apocryphal quote from 1899 presumes, that everything that can be invented has been invented, and that life will continue on pretty much the same, with the same offerings, same products, same goods and services--but just with fewer people doing them. It's zero-sum thinking--and from an economics perspective, zero-sum thinking has been the source of pretty much most of the evils of the past century.

    12. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by w3woody · · Score: 1

      I'm wondering how much IBM should be taxed for introducing Eclipse, which made Java programmers more productive. I mean, if I can produce code twice as fast in Eclipse than I can in a command-line editor like 'ed', should IBM be forced to pay a tax equivalent to my income tax because I downloaded their software?

    13. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Let's say I have a highly automated factory, and my competitor does not. If he introduces automation he gets to pay a massive tax that I don't - simply because I was earlier.

      No.... That would not be fair. If your two factories are building the same kinds of products, your two operations will be assigned The same required ratio of Wage costs to business Revenue.
      For example: Take 10 factories producing the same general category of consumable good.
      If their average overall company labor cost across all employees was $Y for each $X of revenue attributable to that business, then take Y and divide it by X to reach the Required fraction. Average the required fraction over a representative sample of businesses in that industry for the years 2005 to 2010.

      Then set that fraction as The required fraction of labor cost per Unit of revenue generated by every factory in that same industry.

      So you see: It's not "measure automation for your individual companies"; It's Measure the average human labor cost of a Dollar of Revenue throughout your entire industry. And determine appropriate amounts based on measurement Over a period of time before rampant automation started to cause economic problems for workers.

      Once the IRS Labor cost per Revenue tables are generated for this kind of factory, then it applies Equally to ALL businesses in the industry, Regardless of what level of automation they were at in 2010.

    14. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But if a robot can do the work more efficiently than a person, then we shouldn't try to stop it. Instead, let's find something else for the person to do. And if there's really nothing else (not very likely in the foreseeable future), then we redistribute some of the money in the least complicated fashion.

      Good idea. It worked so well in the Soviet Union.
      --
      roman_mir

    15. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Robot workers and automation make the cake bigger. You should not use taxes as a mechanism to keep the cake small.

      My proposition is this cannot be true. The cake is made bigger when companies invest in human labor and put in economic output an amount comparable to what they take in.

      When companies decide to stop investing in human labor as much as possible and hire robots instead, In other words, maximize dollars that come in and don't leave as economic output, in the extreme case take in massive $$$ and spend No money to produce products worth (In terms of cost) a tiny fraction of what is paid, this means they have found a way to horde more of the cake, and there's no increase in the size of the cake associated with these actions.

      What I suggest is essentially an Efficiency limit. a Minimum amount of money companies have to invest in labor capital, A ratio of required labor per Dollar of revenue emitted, Requiring companies to be economically productive, both in terms of the value of goods produced, and the value of services consumed, and not be able to just horde cake Or produce something from nothing.

    16. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by liquid_schwartz · · Score: 2

      While the Soviets failed there is merit to exploring alternatives. As the world is closing in human labor being needed less and less while still meeting most human needs the current system really begins to fall apart. Moreover, most billionaires are not active or "providing value" anyway. Personally I favor a graduated wealth tax with *no shelters* as well as a graduated capital gains tax. Seems sporting that the rich pay taxes as well as the middle class. The poor, as always, will get a free ride.

    17. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the problem is that with the current economic system a small number of people take most of the cake and put it in their cake vault,

      The premise of your statement is wrong. If most of the world is out of work or can't afford to buy goods, then there is not as much "cake" for that "small number of people". The market forces will force a correction. For example, the prices for good will drop dramatically because the demand drops dramatically. Or people will stop buying luxury good and stick to buying necessities. Trust the market, even though it is imperfect.

    18. Re: How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tax is only made on profits, eclipse is free, zero tax on zero profits...

    19. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Roman! There you are! I'm just glancing through but I expected to see you all over it. Anyways, I think I can agree with you on this one. Central planning like this would be a mess.

      sr

    20. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Dude, you can't even reasonably calculate the number of man-hours that have been lost to air-powered hammers when used to frame a stick-and-nail framed house.

      Which is why I suggest finding a "Percentage of gross revenue which must be cost of Wages that withholding taxes will be due upon" for the purposes of deciding what the Automation tax will be. Instead of trying to directly count Man hours gained or lost.

      Also, if Automation lowers prices, then revenues will go down. If more total work gets done by the business as a result of automation, then the tax will also become negligible, because the increase in revenue will be Offset by more work being required.

    21. Re: How is that supposed to happen? by w3woody · · Score: 1

      Read my whole comment. Because in our world of increasing automation some things got more expensive, not less--but the also got corresponding far more complex. Like the cell phone in your pocket which is several orders of magnitude more complex. Without automation ranging from better IDEs to automation in assembling the printed circuit boards, the modern smart phone would not be possible.

    22. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      Your thesis seems to confuse economic input and economic output. If a company is producing the same products or services, but doing so with fewer humans and more robots, it has identical economic output. There's no such thing as being economically productive in terms of the value of services consumed. That's being economically consumptive and it is a necessarily evil, not something to promote. When you arbitrarily increase economic consumption, that means nobody else can consume that economic output. Not another productive company or individual, for one, and also not unproductive individual concerns like leisure activity which always gets a little ignored in these discussions as though that weren't the whole point of all this.

      If the robots can do the same thing materially better than humans (as they often can today, especially in rote manufacturing tasks, which is the entire reason this has been done), then switching to robots has increased economic output. The possible negative downside you are looking for is it might change the economic distribution, which is exactly what the tax plan proposes to address.

      An efficiency limit is, by the very definition of efficiency, an attempt to make the cake smaller; an attempt to reduce economic output. Efficiency in economic production is basically always good (provided you are properly capturing externalities -- the usual counterexample is increasing efficiency by polluting the river etc. which is not good but is also not truly efficient when you take everything into account).

      I don't think a per-robot tax is they way to do it but it's strictly better than what you're suggesting, because what you could equivalently do is distribute all the "wages" that would have gone to humans, to some lucky other humans that don't have to do any labour for it whatsoever, in the same proportion as before. Now the economic output is the same/higher and the distribution is the same, but humans get to either do some other economic activity or leisure activities instead of doing the job of a machine. That's better for everybody -- for the rich CEO, for the newly hired kid, for the single mother with a disabled child at home, the consumers down the line; everybody wins (or at least, doesn't lose) in that model. That's almost the same model you proposed, because it's still an efficiency limit, but it doesn't impose the requirement to invest in labour capital it imposes the requirement to invest in humans regardless of labour. Your objection to producing something from nothing is especially bewildering because in economic terms that's what labour is.

      I do think that as time goes on, the economy will have to be restructured to accommodate all of this change and get to what right now appears as a utopia, but will inevitably just be the new normal for people born into that world. And I think that's a good thing.

      I'm going to make a statement that is controversial: human labour is a bad thing, and therefore job creation is a bad thing although job creation has been generally a tradeoff that was worth it most of the time in living memory. There's two forms of job creation / job destruction: jobs created because of new economic activity, where the job creation is a necessary evil; and jobs created by the broken window fallacy -- totally useless make-work like paying one person to dig a ditch and another person to fill it in; or paying a human to do job that a robot could fulfill at least as well. For a long time, people focused on the first of those and praised job creation there because that was driving massive economic improvements in both the first and third world, for much of the 20th century at least. But some people are so into the cult of job creation that they are supporting the second like the luddites of old.

      I would want the tax base to encourage overall economic efficiency -- which means, yes, robots replacing our jobs, but they're still taxing the ultimate beneficiaries using some monotonically nondecreasing income/tax curve (

    23. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most new houses aren't even nailed together any more, they are glued together.

    24. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Really? From what I can see, the new stick houses around here are still nailed together. Really, the basic construction hasn't changed much in a 100 years.

      Maybe the pre-fab stuff, but I'm under the impression a lot that uses steel and is probably riveted together.

    25. Re: How is that supposed to happen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I make a really bug-ridden IDE that reduces productivity will the government pay ME? :)

    26. Re:How is that supposed to happen? by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      And if there's really nothing else (not very likely in the foreseeable future),

      For tens of millions in the US (and hundreds of millions around the world) there is nothing else right now.

  61. Automation = Automation, software or robots by DutchDopey · · Score: 1

    Gates, having made millions of jobs lost through software was never an issue, but now its robots taxes should be payed. I think taxes are a bad method either way, but this is very hypocritical.

  62. Impossible by Baki · · Score: 1

    How would you calculate the "amount of automation" that would be the basis of taxation?!?

    I think Bill Gates sees the problem with automation: 90-99% of us will be without work.
    What he doesn't see: this will mean that the economic system as we've known it for about 200 years now, will cease to exist.

    The current elites and rich want to cling to the status quo, obviously, and come up with weird ideas that are wishful thinking IMHO.

    I think the company, whose economic function is to organize work at a larger scale, might have to change fundamentally.
    A single person + an army of software/robots could replace entire 10000+ companies one day.

  63. Mmmmh by nospam007 · · Score: 1

    "Bill Gates: The Robot That Takes Your Job Should Pay Taxes "

    I wonder what he would said in his Microsoft days, when somebody had suggested Microsoft should pay taxes for every Office packet because millions of typists were laid off.

    1. Re:Mmmmh by unixisc · · Score: 1

      I think he's just bitter that the robots typically run BSD or one of those microkernel OSs like QNX, and not Windows 10

  64. On the money by golodh · · Score: 2
    Mr. Gates is probably on the money.

    Just consider this: in today's society a significant proportion of people (US citizens) are out of work. It's not that they are useless trash ... but by and large they're not worth the wages they need to support a normal life. The labour market has determined that they are surplus to requirements.

    The reasons they are discarded vary.

    Mostly it's competition from within. Companies always shop for the best price performance ratio. In production machinery, printers, staples, and employees. So they sort applicants and current workers by price-performance ratio, and try to make their workforce structure resemble as much as possible the optimum available in the job market. Through hire and fire policy. Maintaining that "best match" with the labour market is the main reason companies have an HR department. No hard feelings, just business.

    Competition can also come from outside though. Examples are H1B visa and illegal immigrants from Mexico. Please note that there could never have been any issue whatsoever with illegal immigrants if employers weren't prepared to employ undocumented applicants. But they are ... because it benefits them directly. H1B immigrants are the clearest example of people being selected on basis of their cost/benefit ratio that I know of.

    Approximately the same holds for automation. Throughout the ages, as technology advanced people were expelled from one type of function (e.g. agriculture, manufacturing, mining) and had to seek employ in another function (farmers becoming labourers, labourers going to work in the service industries, etc.). An example is the industrial revolution. Historically that has led to a massive shift in the job market (farming to industry), unemployment, a large drop in wages, terrible working conditions, misery, and widespread exploitation of people by employers. Society finally regained its equilibrium after a century or so, in part due to the threat of revolution.

    The only difference is that the current technology is poised to make certain groups of people uneconomical to employ. It's not just that their jobs disappear, it's jobs of the kind they are capable of doing become prone to being automated.

    Take the 6 mln. or so truckers.we have now. We can replace one third of them with self-driving trucks, at huge benefits. Now what other work would somebody who likes being a trucker be good at? Not sitting indoors and shuffling paper I suppose.

    Take the car industry. Plants today are highly robotised. Cheaper, better, more flexible. More automobile workers surplus to requirements. What type of work would they be good at? What kind of work are they trained for?

    Take scores of people in administrative functions like the insurance industry. Doing administration and processing claims can increasingly be done by software. AI or not. Lets replace them. Miners (remember those hopeful Trump voters in mining villages) are on the way out because coal is being pushed out of the market and not coming back.

    Take ready made products. Those can be made far cheaper abroad and then shipped to the US. Despite the little temper tantrums by Pres. Trump and his supporters it's not economically feasible for the US to stop that. Other economies would overtake the US and start dominating it. So it's probably not going to happen to any meaningful degree for any meaningful length of time.

    The list of labour displacing developments goes on. And on.

    All this wouldn't be a problem if we could readily think of other (paid !) work we could let the freshly turned-surplus-to-requirements workers do. But can we? Really?

    I don't see it and I'm no longer optimistic we will think of something genuinely new.

    In any event, we have limited options to respond.

    We could delay or even *temporarily) halt the economic mechanisms that push workers into the surplus bin. And cut our own throat, economically speaking.

    We could simply tell

    1. Re:On the money by LienRag · · Score: 1

      Note that one perk of putting a lot of people on unemployment benefits (once you get rid of the sadistic obligation to still look for a job that doesn't exist) is that they can go where life is cheap and nice, not stay clogged in bad cities...
      Which means that the overall cost isn't that expensive.

  65. Don't Pay Robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pay the human worker that got replaced, dofus.

  66. maybe Microsoft should pay taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Instead on shoveling money around the globe to avoid them?

  67. I say by SpaghettiPattern · · Score: 1

    Any corporation abusing its monopoly should compensate their victims. And gained market share should be relinquish.

    --

    I hadn't the slightest objection to his spending his time planning massacres for the bourgeoisie... (P.G. Wodehouse)
  68. Gates see's the problem with robots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do think Bill Gates see's the problem using robots to replace humans in jobs. For one, you have already a population struggling in its expansion for jobs that pay good and provide a good life. Then you have companies not willing to pay a decent minimum wage but willing to invest in robots to replace those low wage jobs.
    Their must be a perk and Gates has found it, you do not have to pay out taxes, benefits, or other benefits to robots. Of course a advantage to companies but a loss of revenue to governments. Let's be clear, governments survive on people paying taxes, and those who benefit from government programs rely on that revenue for those benefits.

  69. The current economic system becomes irrelevant by zifn4b · · Score: 1

    This is just more evidence that the current economic system is going to need to radically change with the advent of mass robotic automation. Taxing robots is like saying we need to take this new technological advance and shoe horn it into an existing system that is becoming antiquated. That's complete nonsense. Let me put this in perspective, let's take something that tax dollars pay for, I don't know like highways. If we automate that type of labor with robotics we don't need as much tax dollars for that right? Because we don't have to pay the robots. What we really ought to be doing is looking at how robotic automation affects everything not just the private sector. We need to dig into the details to see what the most rational, pragmatic thing is to do before we have knee-jerk reactions like "robots should pay taxes". Bill Gates is a smart man. It's quite possible he presented this idea not because he thought it made sense but to at least get people thinking about the issue more seriously.

    --
    We'll make great pets
  70. They are already taxed by ET3D · · Score: 1

    Replacing workers with robots reduces costs and increases profits, which are taxed. If governments reduced the amount of tax holes in their laws, they'd even get these taxes. If they don't, the big corporations would still manage to avoid the new tax while the little companies who want some automation will suffer.

    1. Re:They are already taxed by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      No one in the government wants to fix the tax loopholes, because they are all (ab)using them. There's a reason that new tax legislation is always written in such a vague way.

  71. Oh great by Ulfilas2000 · · Score: 1

    So now I have to send in tax forms to pay the government for the missing tax money that my tax software saved over hiring an accountant, another tax form for the copy editor I no longer need to hire now that I have a spellchecker, a tax form for the musicians who no longer need to perform in my lobby now that I have streaming Pandora? Just think of all the trees!

  72. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation - ? by Ulfilas2000 · · Score: 1

    Unemployable? Do you think that what people do has to fit into a predetermined set of boxes simply so that the High School guidance counselors know how to orient young minds? Where does your 'must fit in square peg' mentality originate?

  73. H1b Hindu that takes your job, thank u Microsoft o by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=O7wVsvoM6tE&feature=youtu.be

  74. People who can be replaced by machines are just sc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) Move money into offshore shell
    2) Bankrupt company
    3) Make new company
    4) Buy robots

    - Manufacturing
    - Old age care
    - General practitioners (as in doctors)
    - Paralegals
    - Junior lawyers
    - Drivers
    - Pilots
    - Data entry
    - Bellhops
    - House cleaners

    Above is a short list the jobs that have displayed practical prototypes or working solutions for automated replacements.

  75. YES! Tax the Microsoft Word by qazwsx · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Word is a kind of robot that takes the jobs of the secretaries.
    We have to have the secretaries back!

  76. Adapt or die by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

    Should we subsidize the people who used to make bogus weight-loss machines? How about the people who used to make now-banned products? Bill Gates has become an ivory-tower moron.

  77. because giving big government more money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because giving big government more money "always works".

    On the flip side, why not give tax credits to companies that employ expensive humans?

    1. Re:because giving big government more money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because if you allow regular people and small businesses to have their own money, instead of giving it all to the government to let the bureaucrats make all your decisions, then you wouldn't be able to control them.

      I mean, could you imagine a society where people and business who aren't wealthy elites actually controlled how their money was spent? Chaos

  78. Thanks Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want to start a company, but cannot afford to hire humans

    Thanks to Mr. Gates, I will also not be able to afford hiring robots

    I will not start the company

    Such a tax would be a boon to large businesses, wealthy elites, and big government, i.e., people who already have money and power.

    It will make it harder for the common man to be anything more than a slave to large businesses, wealthy elites, and big government

    1. Re:Thanks Bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what it tax had a threshold so that it only applied to large businesses (e.g., revenue greater than $1 billion)?

      Oh that's right, that might actually be fair or work, so that would never happen.

  79. Re:tax profit yes but not to slow automation - ? by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

    Unemployable? Do you think that what people do has to fit into a predetermined set of boxes simply so that the High School guidance counselors know how to orient young minds? Where does your 'must fit in square peg' mentality originate?

    Nice attack that did not address my comment. As some one who escaped the box a high school guidance counselor defined for me, abnd seen friends do the same, I understand the ability of individuals to achieve. I've also seen friends struggle as their jobs went away. However, if automation eliminates many jobs there is a segment of the population that will be come unemployable, especially at a level that currently supports a middle class lifestyle. We are already seeing that in manufacturing as factories become automated, not everyone can be retrained to be a programmer or some other job that pays as well as what they currently do. Unless we accept that as a by product of automation and find a way to deal with it, which includes revamping our educational system, we are in for rough times. Trump's election will only be a foreshadowing of the class warfare to come. So you can either accuse the messanger of being some sort of elitist or work towards a solution; IMHO the later is a more productive course.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
  80. ROB-0X1JB-17A4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The 'Bill Gates' process has executed an invalid instruction and should be terminated.

  81. There's at least two dumb ideas in here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, he really ought be quite aware that "robots taking jobs" is almost always a blurry line spread over a gray area. If a script makes someone's task take 2 hours whereas it previously took 4 hours, that's taking away a job. Or is it? Does it only take away a job when you had two people having to do the work and the script got it down to 1? (If 3 people did the work full-time before, did you take away 1.5 jobs?) Are you really going to try to count, and justify on a tax return, exactly how much work each component saves?

    This isn't some edge case. This is how almost all automation works. It's rarely a humanoid-shaped robot that sits at someone's desk and spends 8 hours a day doing what its former human used to do. It's diffuse and by degrees.

    And would it be limited to software, or if someone, say, uses a lever or an electric motor to let one man lift as much as three men could lift, isn't that fundamentally the same thing? Even increases in the efficiency of administrative processes would be equivalent. If some manager say "hey, let's stop writing TPS reports," that might mean 5 developers can do the work it used to take 6 developers to do. Tax that manager for one lost job!

    Second...

    Right now, the human worker who does, say, $50,000 worth of work in a factory, that income is taxed and you get income tax, social security tax, all those things. If a robot comes in to do the same thing, you’d think that we’d tax the robot at a similar level.

    WTF happened to this guy's brain? Dude, the reason you have taxes like social security is to pay for the cost of the worker later! Are you suggesting you are going to pay social security to the robot when it turns 70? If not, then WTF is the point of the social security tax? No, you wouldn't think we'd tax the robot at a similar level, because the robot doesn't have the same expenses that the tax is intended to pay for! Why would a anyone think that?

    I heard Gates used to run some company. Tell me, Gates, did you ever institute any cost-saving measure, thinking, "we ought to end up paying taxes on this savings"? Really, "you'd think we'd tax the robot at a similar level?" Really, you'd think that? Can you give me any example where something like that happens or was expected to happen? Forget Gates. Anyone. Can anyone cite anything that has ever been like that, leading to such an expectation?

    "We moved Johnson to the Springfield branch. Shit, that's a tax loss to Shelbyville. But don't worry, I'll keep writing the checks."

    ...

    I think it's dumb to think of efficiency gains as a bad thing and efficiency losses as a good thing (and I wanna give a hyyuuuge Fuck You to every voter who makes presidential candidates talk about "jobs" in all their speeches; you people are why Trump and Clinton weren't competing for third place as they should have been; when those people say they're going to create jobs, you ought to be saying you're going to create their election loss).

    I don't blame Gates for seeing the disruption of rapid change as something that might be a challenge for society to react to. That's not what I'm bitching out. That view is not only compassionate, but smart. But you cross over into crazyland when you think of the efficiency as bad. Maybe dealing with the situation really will require increased taxes. (I hope not, but sometimes that's what you gotta do.) If so, then tax bad or costly things; don't tax good and net-gain things. Treat illness, not strength.

  82. People need to learn to save and stop stealing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People need to learn to save and stop stealing what is not theirs to take. This is possible because of government. If you have a kid it's YOUR responsibility to take care of it. Not mine. Not "society". Ever hear the ends don't justify the means? Well, charity is good, and I give more than most, but stealing from others through violence of government can't ever be justified.

    Unfortunately that's what we have today. We should be ending public schooling [ government indoctrination programs ]. If you can't afford to live somewhere like silicon valley then move. It's not the job of the middle class or rich to baby the poor. It's not the job of government to undermine the poor's ability to cover expenses either- which we have currently. Yes- governments undermine the poor all the time and those claiming the poor get back more than they pay in taxes is ingeniously deceiving. Everything from sales taxes to property taxes to vehicular registration and gas taxes (gas taxes probably are the least bad if they're actually going to cover the roads, but none-the-less). The point is government does undermine the poor via all sorts of hidden taxes.

    http://www.freestateproject.org/ Check out the migration of those who prefer liberty and freedom over "safety" to the state of New Hampshire for the purpose of forming a free state.
    http://www.freekeene.com/ A site covering liberty news in New Hampshire- lots of video of court cases, state house hearings, protests, police abuse/accountability, etc
    http://www.shiresociety.com/ Same as the Free State Project, but to form a free society- basically
    http://www.freetalklive.com/ Heavily involved in the migration of freedom lovers to New Hampshire - 3 hours of talk radio daily http://lrn.fm for more liberty radio

  83. If that's the case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then we should also tax software that has automated a lot of people's jobs out of existence as well right Billiam Gates?

  84. Start with ATMs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Automatic Teller Machines are of the first identified culprits for jobs losses. Banks have money .. make them share.

  85. Basic logic failures by s.petry · · Score: 1

    think in your own rambling way you're trying to say that without the struggle for survival folks will fall to Ennui. That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard.

    That is quite amazing considering you said it, I didn't. Were you going for reductio ad absurdum?

    You yell out loud that the Utopia can't exist but you haven't given a lick of evidence.

    Fallacy, claim that I need to prove non-existence. You say it's possible, you need to prove it. We only have a few thousand years of Governments and Societies to pick through to find one. Just one.

    Meanwhile I can point out that folks who are independently wealthy do just fine at finding stuff to do.

    And exactly how did they get independently wealthy? Sitting around smoking pot all day? Parents who similar sat around smoking pot all day? I know, they all won a lottery right? Your personal anecdote is worse than useless unless you answer how they got to be "independently wealthy".

    If they did the Netherlands would be a wasteland.

    So since people never died the whole world can live off of the Government tit? There are only two options and nothing in between? Or is it more likely that the people who are ambitious and work hard help to support the lower end of the spectrum? Yeah, you don't do critical thinking.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  86. Taxing Robots by Residentcur · · Score: 1

    I agree with this, but not with the motive to slow deployment. Most jobs lost to robots will inevitably occur. We need a way to monetize this in the event it becomes clear that people don't have to work in order to exist. Explore combining it with one of the various proposals for guaranteed annual incomes. [paragraph] If a job can be done by a robot, humans who do that job will eventually no longer find it rewarding.[paragraph] We will either have to eliminate much of the human population, or find a good way to allow them to survive and prosper without needing to contribute to the workforce. Those who aspire to more will always find a way; those who do not should not have to live miserable existences. This is a longstanding belief.

  87. Microsoft Tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The government should tax robots...just like Microsoft taxes innovation and competition.

  88. Tax... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gates statement means a lot from a company man who sent jobs offshore to minimise wages and taxes, and here he tries to be on the side of the public...

  89. 5th Grade reading? by s.petry · · Score: 1

    No offense, but this used to be assigned reading in 5th grade in the US.

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    1. Re:5th Grade reading? by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Glad to hear it though I'd guess that you actually mean it was required reading in your State.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  90. The Robot That Takes Your Job ... by sproketboy · · Score: 1

    Should be the one to terminate you. That's how Arnold would do it.

  91. Bill Gates and robot taxes by nudibranchOne · · Score: 1

    Is this to slow down the use of robots or to help fund the government and pay pensions?

  92. What a dumbass by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

    The whole reason they're going to robots is because they can't afford wages because they keep raising them. Everything goes up, businesses go out of business. Increasing the minimum wage hurts minorities and teenagers. We know that. This will just help things implode faster.

  93. Better yet, just send me the robots paycheck by buckminster_futt · · Score: 1

    then I can sit home, brew beer, smoke dope, read /., watch porn all day. Wait, I'm retired. I do that already. Oh well, forget it...just send me hookers who play blackjack. And brew beer!

  94. Productivity software too then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many fewer people are employed as bookkeeping assistants and analysts now that small businesses use Excel? How many fewer administrative assistants are needed with Outlook to help with scheduling meetings and such? What about all those people who used to work in the typing pool? How about a tax on Word?

  95. What about automation scripts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's very common for me to write various scripts to automate work for me. Should the company now not only have to pay taxes for my work, but also for the scripts? A good automated test suite could pretty much tax a small company out of business.

  96. What is a robot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I write a script to automate part of my job, should the company now need to pay extra taxes to cover the part of my job that I was doing manually?

  97. Better idea by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

    How bout you tax the politicians that voted to pass the minimum wage law that made your job too costly?