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Ray Kurzweil Explains Why Technology Won't Eliminate Human Jobs (fortune.com)

Futurist Ray Kurzweil, now a director of engineering at Google, made an interesting argument in a new interview with Fortune: We have already eliminated all jobs several times in human history. How many jobs circa 1900 exist today? If I were a prescient futurist in 1900, I would say, "Okay, 38% of you work on farms; 25% of you work in factories. That's two-thirds of the population. I predict that by the year 2015, that will be 2% on farms and 9% in factories." And everybody would go, "Oh, my God, we're going to be out of work." I would say, "Well, don't worry, for every job we eliminate, we're going to create more jobs at the top of the skill ladder." And people would say, "What new jobs?" And I'd say, "Well, I don't know. We haven't invented them yet."

That continues to be the case, and it creates a difficult political issue because you can look at people driving cars and trucks, and you can be pretty confident those jobs will go away. And you can't describe the new jobs, because they're in industries and concepts that don't exist yet.

Kurzweil also argues that "the power and influence of governments is decreasing because of the tremendous power of social networks and economic trends..."

"A lot of people think things are getting worse, partly because that's actually an evolutionary adaptation: It's very important for your survival to be sensitive to bad news. A little rustling in the leaves may be a predator, and you better pay attention to that."

409 comments

  1. We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously, this is so dumb. It assumes an equal amount of social or intellectual positions will be eventually created and some smooth transition of the working populace to these new careers.

    Nope. Not going to happen.

    We will see more hookers, maids, maid/hookers, oddjobs contractors, etc. Already see this in high tech cities.

    1. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hookers ~ sexrobots will see to that.

    2. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by mwvdlee · · Score: 3, Funny

      Okay, so the first few generations of sexbots will generate a massive job increase in the medical professions, but how about when they get sexbots to operate reliably?
      I guess there will always be jobs in energy generation, though.

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    3. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It assumes an equal amount of social or intellectual positions will be eventually created and some smooth transition of the working populace to these new careers.

      Plus it assumes that people will be smart enough and capable enough to actually do those jobs. I think we're already bumping up against that ceiling. The machines are going to take over and there's no stopping it. Humans will just be a tiny blip on the evolutionary landscape.

    4. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? Smart enough to be a maid/hooker? It's sex not orbital mechanics!

    5. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There will be sexbot engineers, sexbot psychologists, sexbot designers, sexbot recyclers. etc

    6. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. The only real problem will be convincing the owners of those machines that they need the other 99.99% of humanity as professional consumers instead of professional self-growing fertilizer.

    7. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Kjella · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Subtract the number of accidents and violent incidents in the pursuit of sex as well as the STDs, unwanted pregnencies etc. and my guess is sexbots will decrease the number of jobs in the medical profession.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    8. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by DThorne · · Score: 5, Insightful

      While I agree with your succinct evaluation of the man who used to be my hero back in Synclavier days, on a very broad level I agree with him. You can pick apart his specific arguments until the cows come home, but I'm tired of the Chicken Little stories about everyone on welfare while rich people get richer. It belies a complete lack of historical research - people have *always* been losing jobs to technological advancements, the only difference is in the specifics. Just because many of us aren't terribly removed from a period of massive growth (post war expansion), we see that constant growth as some sort of norm. Read more history.

    9. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Plus, isn't Kurzweil's thing "The Singularity", which takes (as something between a premise and an article of faith) the impending availability of AI so strong it ranks somewhere between "indistinguishable from magic" and "indistinguishable from divine power"?

      The "eh, don't worry, there will totally be jobs in the future, I just don't know what they'll be because they are so futuristic" assurances are rarely helpful; but among AI pessimists(either in terms of absolute capability or in terms of development schedule) they are at least plausible. Coming from someone who expects AI powerful enough to nerd-rapture him before he dies, less plausible.

    10. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hookers ~ sexrobots will see to that.

      As a geek who's recently been with a hooker I can say that there's nothing like human touch. Those sexrobot engineers will have to work really hard to simulate that.

    11. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Evtim · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Always....always...always....

      A group of bacteria were growing in a petry dish. Their civilization lasted for 60 days. Every day they doubled their numbers. On the 59th day some bacteria were trying to make a point that the food is finite that this level of growth is unsustainable. "What, are you crazy!" - replied most of the rest - "We have always found a way! Look how numerous we have become, surviving and adapting for FULL 59 DAYS! Also - half the world is empty, you morons (yep, the last division changes the dish from half-full to full; progression, bitches)! Remember back in the ancient times during day 42 we ran out of food but we found a way, we found that New world full of untouched agar-agar (apart from few savage bacteria that we killed). And then there was that "crisis" during day 50 when we ran out of agar-agar but we mutated and started eating the polymers below, that the great bacteriophage in the sky created for us (that was the polymer support mesh that the PhD student used). We will always adapt, always have been and always will. Always, do you hear! Always!!! Bloody alarmists"....and so the 60th day came and the bacteria could not mutate to eat the dish itself. The great bacteriophage in the sky got all the souls she needed and the PhD student got his article.

      Ponder this (you can also stibbons it) - on one hand we have, unprecedented by their magnitude and significance, events coming towards us (machine learning replaces intellectual jobs as well, no?) and on the other we console ourselves by extrapolating past events that have nothing to do with what is coming. Weird! You understand that we can make machines run the whole of the economy. ALL of it. Forever, because AI learns faster so if we create a new job, ANY new job, AI will be able to do it better and cheaper...understand? All future jobs are gone as well. From that moment we either enter the Aurora situation - 1 human per 100 km2 served by thousands of robots or we kill each other since there is no "profit" in such future....

    12. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In history we've always _needed_ humans to do work. In the future, that's not the case: employers will be able to choose either a human or a machine to do the work. Since machines cost less, the answer is pretty obvious. So I guess what you are banking on is that there will always be a lot of jobs that can't be automated? Or are you simply assuming the future will unfold like the past.

    13. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I doubt technology has obsoleted jobs at the pace and scale that it is doing today. The idea that people can simply retrain and do something else is farcical and simply results in people working for less money. Sure, society will adapt to the new jobs, but for existing people, and especially as people get older, there comes a big cost in standard of living by technological change.

    14. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The difference is that in the past you could own the means of the production, i.e. the farm or the factory, but you still needed workers. Throw in some employment laws to protect those workers and it's viable.

      Now you can own the means of production, and it uses robots and AI to do all the work so you don't need to employ anyone.

      It's not the end of the world, but we do need to be aware of it and plan for how to deal with it. It could be great for all of us, we could work a few days a week and still enjoy a good quality of life. But like those employment laws that mandated shoes for child cleaners and some minimal level of safety, it needs to be regulated and managed.

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    15. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And someday, enter the robot hookers: cheap, sanitary, good-looking, does whatever you want, and won't steal your wallet. Figuratively and literally, humans will be screwed.

    16. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      Plus it assumes that people will be smart enough and capable enough to actually do those jobs. I think we're already bumping up against that ceiling.

      There are still plenty of jobs that can't be done by machines. Unfortunately most of those are in the service industry. If we don't change something, we are going to be heading back to the situation where we have 1 guy in a mansion with 20 servants doing things like landscaping, cooking, cleaning, and helping their child get dressed. There are plenty of countries already like this where a live-in housekeeper/cook is so cheap that everyone who is middle class has one. This is great for the middle class, not so great for the untouchables.

    17. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by jellomizer · · Score: 2

      I was just recently talking to a McDonald's franchise owner, he is upgrading his store with kiosks and more advanced technology. Here is the thing, the technology will not cause him to lower his staff, if successful he may need to increase his staff.
      For his stores the big problem is long wait times in the drive thru and in the store, so people so these kiosks will help get the orders in faster and food delivered to the customers faster. This means more people moving in and out of the store, however it also means more employees who are busy cooking, and delivering the product, and less of them standing there in front of the counter smiling as the guy who has been in line for a few minutes never bothered choosing what he wanted (while other customers in line, my decide to leave the store to go somewhere faster)
      For every less person at the register there is a person who is needed to deliver the food. Just as long as the employee isn't so suck in their ways and refuses to do their job differently then they will still have a job.
      Every 20 or 30 years this debate on technology comes up and talks about taking away job, and still we average around 5% unemployment. Technology changes your job, normally it gets rid of the job, that even the employees don't want to do, and gives them time to do more of the more exciting (relatively) work, that is a bit more gratifying.

      The problem is we are right now thinking business/government... needs to cut costs. While the real trick is to increase revenue and get more customers, sure waste can and should be improved continuously. But growth brings growth. If people need to be paid more, then they will also need to be more productive, technology is there to assist.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    18. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by houghi · · Score: 1

      And at a certain point, when the hungry and poor got fed up, they threw out the rich. Because most people do not care that much to be rich, they care to be able to care for their families.

      The thing is that when robots replace people, the only one that gains anything is the owner. If a robot reduces work by 50% it will not mean we get to work 50% less, it means that 50% of the people get nothing and 1 person gets that 50%.
      So the difference between the rich and the poor is suddenly a lot more.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    19. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by jellomizer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      For a lot of jobs, the demand isn't for people who are Smarter, but people who are kinder.

      Normally if you have an analytical job, you are so focused on the brain work, that you often will overlook other people and their feelings, hence why a lot of MD specialists are normally rather terse. Because with faced with a difficult problem, they are trying to solve the problem and often see their patient as a collection of biochemistry then a person who is feeling pain, and may be scared. Also for Tech workers we are trying to get the parts to work and get things going, we often fail to realize if there is a problem, people are actually frustrated and other people may be frustrated to because they are waiting for the results. We have smart people who can fix the problems, but what we also have are the people who may not smart enough to deal with the technical issues, but are rather nice people, however instead of having them talk to the customers and make people around them feel better, they may be put doing some menial job, such as data entry, or filling out forms. Where their skills are being lost on helping people.

      That is where Automation comes in, it does the menial job that people really don't want to do, allowing them to change their focus on doing human things.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    20. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      And over time as productivity grows, work hours continue to decrease. With cheap efficient robots making everything, maybe a job will only require on or two hours of work a week to make a decent living.

      --
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    21. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by mikael · · Score: 1

      I see hundreds of science related programming research positions. But they aren't C/C++, they are usually Matlab/Python and require an advanced degree in Physics, Mathematics or Natural Sciences.

      --
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    22. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His comparison between jobs lost during the twentieth century due to the final stages of industrialization (mechanization of all labor and inter-industry mergers to eliminate redundancies) and the upcoming full automation is false.

      Automation of labor will benefit ONLY the non-labor classes. Only those people fortunate enough to have enough money to receive a decent education and subsequent employment in information-class jobs (or better) will benefit. The children of today's manual laborers, who are unable to receive a decent post-high school education because of cost, will be the unemployed of the future.

      I do agree with Mr. Kurzweil on one thing. Automation promises a very rosy future for the human race, but only after those of us we've deemed unnecessary are gone. What a brave new world that will be.

    23. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by mikael · · Score: 1

      At the moment, maintaining a robot costs as much as employing a human. It requires other humans to repair it when things break, even with built-in diagnostic software that detects faults before they cause other problems.

      --
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    24. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Forever, because AI learns faster so if we create a new job, ANY new job, AI will be able to do it better and cheaper...understand?

      Perhaps you are missing the point. Machines can already play chess better than humans, but those chess players are not losing their jobs to machines.

      While I realize this area might be a bit niche, that's just one of the only areas where computers have actually already surpassed humans in ability. Perhaps there's other variables that are at play in determining whether we will pay a human being to do something than simply skill and cost?

    25. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by vtcodger · · Score: 1

      The medical profession can look after itself thank you very much. If current diseases and conditions decline in importance/frequency, you'll probably find that you are suffering from BTS (Brittle Toenail Syndrome) and/or antibiotic resistant DGB (Depraved Gut Bacteria). Both will require immediate action. By specialists. Expensive specialists.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    26. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the current political climate, there will no shortage of jobs for the untouchables

    27. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the moment. I see no reason to believe that will continue to be as important a job. In the future that work will probably be less common and certainly not enough to make up for the job losses.

      If it made up for the job losses there'd be no point to the automation.

    28. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? Smart enough to be a maid/hooker? It's sex not orbital mechanics!

      Seems most women think men are better at any kind of non-sexual mechanics than the sexual kind

    29. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 0, Troll

      Maybe you should try being a decent person, for once.

      Maybe you should try looking at women as something more than simple sex automatons.

      Maybe, I dunno... Treat them as actual people?

      I stopped being a misogynistic shitbag years and years ago. Funnily enough, my dating prowess improved markedly after I decided to not be an asshole, and decided to actually respect women as people, rather than simply wet holes to stick my dick inside. If women continue to pass you by, take a good hard look at yourself, and take a look at the women you decide to pursue. You're simply doing it wrong.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    30. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Looking at one company is useless, if their success puts two employees out of work at competitors for every new hire the total will be less. You can't just look at Amazon and Wal-Mart without considering the companies they put out of business.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    31. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 2
    32. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by vtcodger · · Score: 1

      Those with memories that go back further than a few days will recall that economists across the political spectrum told us that unrestricted free trade was a great thing for everybody and that the manufacturing jobs displaced from developed countries would be replaced by zillions of great jobs in new industries. Those like Bernie Sanders and H Ross Perot who questioned that assumption were dismissed as flakes. Turns out that a lot of new jobs actually were created. But nowhere near as many as were lost. And not in the same places. And not for the same sort of people.

      Likewise, President Obama's millions of green jobs, that his climate policies would create. Mostly not happening and a lot of the jobs that have been created are installing Chinese made solar panels that will never pay for themselves in inappropriate places. (BTW, I'm NOT against solar when the engineering is done properly. It's a good solution to some problems. There's no reason not use it in those cases. But too often engineering isn't done at all. Promises from ill-informed and not overly honest salesmen are used instead of engineering).

      Anyway, I agree with the OP. Kurzwell is probably overly optimistic. And if he is, that will be a problem. And we should be worrying about what to do about it rather worrying about pressing issues like correct demeanor of football players during the playing of the national anthem.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    33. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      If that was the case, there wouldn't be huge factories full of the things because it wouldn't be cheaper.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    34. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Only those people fortunate enough to have enough money to receive a decent education and subsequent employment in information-class jobs (or better) will benefit.

      I don't think the owner class will end up starving, somehow. Though dangling from lampposts is a possibility.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    35. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      Machines can only play chess better than humans if that is the directed design goal of the machine, which was designed by a human.

      When an autonomous AI mechanism chooses to learn how to and succeed in winning chess against human opponents because it wants to play chess and not because it was directed to play chess, then it will mean something.

    36. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now you can own the means of production, and it uses robots and AI to do all the work so you don't need to employ anyone.

      This is obviously some use of the word now of which I was previously unaware.

    37. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by gweihir · · Score: 1

      "Futurist" is a special sub-species of "idiot". A smart person understands that the future cannot be meaningfully predicted. A "Futurist" lacks that insight and mistakes his fantasies for "predictions". Ray Kurzweil is a stellar example of that effect. And, as usual, his "predictions" are nonsense. This time around, we have automation that can do as much or more than a large part of the workforce. That means there will likely not be new jobs that these people can fill and this is the first time in history that happens. This is not an event with precedent, unless you count the influx of educated slaves in ancient Rome. However I doubt we can extrapolate from the effects back then, if they are even known.

      --
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    38. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by gweihir · · Score: 2

      It is. But even Kurzweil seem to have noticed that there is still no AI available or on the horizon that could do a "singularity". To anybody with real AI knowledge, the idea if a "singularity" is completely laughable, of course. And to anybody that understands the psychology, the prediction of a "singularity" is simply a prediction of "God" coming back into the world (after Science has eliminated the idea for anybody actually following the scientific approach to thing), just that it will be implemented by technology. A meaningless fantasy, driven bey a deep urge for a superior authority in many people.

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    39. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by gweihir · · Score: 1

      That one is simple: The job-loss happens a) somewhere else and b) in the next steps that follow this upgrade later on.

      --
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    40. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would say it is becoming most cost effective to maintain robots as opposed to humans. Agriculture and manufacturing are seeing net gains in this, and the service industry is also having this happen, especially as mail order companies obliterate the traditional retail market.

      It takes a human to repair it, but that human can be contracted out and not even be an employee. For example, with upper end IBM iron, if there are any hardware issues, the machine either has already called an SE, or the operators call IBM to dispatch a part.

    41. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Turns out that a lot of new jobs actually were created. But nowhere near as many as were lost. And not in the same places. And not for the same sort of people.

      Mostly correct, although there's a missing piece here: manufacturing the same things in America as in China causes a loss of the general buying power, reducing the number of American jobs in total.

      I usually do this by citing the total imports of Men and Boys's Cotton Trousers and Shorts, and a long mathematical comparison of the number of jobs involved (178,000 currently, or 0.11% of the active labor force) and the wages and prices. It takes several pages and a lot of math, though.

      The short version is pants come in a 40-foot shipping container shipped for under $1,300 from China and containing 20,000 pants (6.5 cents per pair) at a price of $6.12/pair with $3.20/hr Chinese labor (1.89 hours).

      With 18% payroll overhead (6.2% OASDI, 0.2% HI, 1% unemployment insurance, $924/year health insurance and all other benefits), minimum wage labor here costs $9.735/hr. Those pants cost $18.42 off the line, an additional $12.37, or about 1.50 additional hours of gross minimum-wage ($8.25/hr) compensation or 0.46 hours of median ($26/hr) wage compensation. Yes, the payroll overhead is unrealistically-low here.

      So you're looking at the creation of poverty: Work more hours, buy the same stuff. It gets better.

      You're looking at the creation of half as many jobs, roughly. It gets better.

      Trucks still carry the same volume of goods, and cashiers scan about 980 items per hour at peak rate. Fewer pants or fewer other things, it doesn't matter: you're losing truckers, cashiers, shelf-stockers, inventory managers, and, eventually, entire retail centers. You lose the demand for some of the inputs (fuel, maintenance, mechanics, power generation, building supplies) to maintain these, as well. A few jobs nibbled here and there.

      You should come up ahead at minimum factory wage, barely, maybe. With 40% payroll overhead, you'll experience a slight net-loss of American jobs.

      If you bump those wages to $15, $21, or even $26 per hour, you're going to lose tens of thousands of American jobs in net. You'll create some factory jobs, but lose large amounts of buying power as Americans become poorer, and thus lose the jobs involved in distributing and retailing all that stuff.

      That's the reverse argument: ending globalization makes us poorer and reduces American jobs; thus globalization has made us richer and increased American jobs.

    42. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. Your mom applies them very well. The sexbots need to deep learn your mom.

    43. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      That, and it should be able to hold an intelligent conversation with the other player as well.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    44. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Your mistake is in assuming the prices for things will go down, and that we will afford all we need with two hours salary. This probably won't be the case.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    45. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The difference is that in the past you could own the means of the production, i.e. the farm or the factory, but you still needed workers. Throw in some employment laws to protect those workers and it's viable.

      That's a very recent phenomenon. For much of history those "workers" did not enjoy equal rights as owners. The Greeks and Romans employed vast armies of slaves; no Athenian citizen worked as an "employee" for someone else, but rather slaves filled those roles. The middle ages saw a division between lord and serf. Slavery reemerged in the New World and only disappeared with the advent of the Industrial Revolution. Since technology began cutting down on the number of bodies needed to produce the same amount of goods, we've seen an increasing amount of freedom that let slaves and serfs become "workers" with full citizenship if not full equality in wealth. The revolution promised by robotics and AI could well advance "workers" to the status of artists providing unique, handmade goods or special services that require the human touch. In such a future, in which robotics and AI bring even greater freedom and equality to society, just as industrialization brought an end to slavery, we may see even *less* need for regulation or employment laws: when everyone is an artist whose work is valued for its individual excellence rather than quantitative output, it may well be harder to exploit the artists. The less mindless, repetitive labor humans do, the less human labor will be exploited or exploitable and the less need there will be for regulation.

    46. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Well, sure he's not getting rid of people right away. He needs to save face with the community and figure out the best way to make it work at first. Doesn't mean it won't happen next year.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    47. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For a lot of jobs, the demand isn't for people who are Smarter, but people who are kinder.

      [snip]

      Also for Tech workers we are trying to get the parts to work and get things going, we often fail to realize if there is a problem, people are actually frustrated and other people may be frustrated to because they are waiting for the results.

      This is why I feel so much better when I see tech support has replied with "please do the needful." I know they truly care. Kind of brings a tear to my eye...

    48. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by invalid_user · · Score: 1, Troll

      Wow! All those virtue signals racing out in every possible direction, in a circus of self-righteous sensitivity.

      You, sir, are SJW-certified. Random chick orgasms in your general direction.

    49. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Iamthecheese · · Score: 1

      The total market for McDonalds burgers is limited by the population. The total market for food is limited by the population. If Mcdonalds sells more with less staff that's great, up to the point where the demand for burgers is exhausted. Meanwhile people eating Mcdonalds aren't eating at Burger king, or the steak house, or at home and those jobs are lost. Overall employment in the food sector must fall.

      Technology has always created new jobs but that ceases when technology replaces the human brain. At that point there's no reason to hire a human except to say "we employ humans" or for the relatively few careers just being human trumps a higher-performing robot.

      --
      If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    50. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      It just occurred to me that many people here think that prices and the cost of living will go down, or salaries will go up as jobs become less available. That is a ridiculous stance, no one is going to pay you an 8 hour day for working 2 hours or transfer cheaper running costs to the prices of products. That just isn't going to happen.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    51. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Anyone who does math can tell you that with a 1% annual growth, there will be more humans than particles in the universe, in 17,000 years or something.

      But we do know command and control of the economy is the wrong way to go, and in any case wouldn't be warranted, even if so, for thousands of years.

      Every time a politician wants to control something, think to yourself what is the kickback potential to get back out of the way? That is the way of the world.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    52. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by computational+super · · Score: 1

      What difference does it make to you? You hate them, they hate you, this reduces the chance that you'll ever cross paths. You should be happy about this.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    53. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      Aside from the fact that my assumption is what has happened so far, it is pretty farfetched to think that people will make tons of very cheap well made consumer goods via robot and then not sell them to anybody. True the future remains uncertain, but I'd be interested to hear why you believe your pessimistic assumption is better grounded than my optimistic one.

      --
      This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
    54. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Iamthecheese · · Score: 1

      That's only half of the equation. As jobs are lost to globalization new markets are created. Yes we lose most of the pants industry, but we gain jobs in the farm equipment industry so they can grow their cotton, and the heavy equipment industry so they can transport it, and the information systems industry so the whole system can communicate properly.

      --
      If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    55. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by computational+super · · Score: 1

      For every less person at the register there is a person^H^H^H^H^H robot who is needed to deliver the food

      FTFY

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    56. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except you seem to forget that modern data centers employ 3-7 techs on site, with maybe 4 security guards compared to old data centers which housed hundreds.

      You forget that modern manufacturing requires less than 1/10th of old, Foxconn in Wisconsin isn't going to employee nearly as many people as a lot of people believe.

      Remember Henry Ford's assembly line? Old potatoes at this point, modern robots are assembling cars to much higher standards.

      The difference between all transitions and now is that they had new jobs available for people to jump to. That is simply not the case anymore. With CaliBurger now and McDonalds to follow a lot of those jobs are going to be replaced. What are 30 employees at McDonalds going to do when machines takes all but 2 or 3 of those jobs? You'll still have a general manager, most likely a full time tech/janitor (Machines will be covered in grease) Maybe you'll have one person up front to give the place a warmer feel.

      Bottom line, when the horse buggy whip operators were replaced by cars it was almost one for one, almost every buggy turned into a car and furthermore, there was a clear path for people who didn't want to get left behind. Right now we're dealing with this problem on a smaller scale, the problem is rather than giving coal miners a new path we're just bringing back coal mining. This is not tenable.

      Articles like this are about trying to make people unafraid of change. There is a big difference between not letting fear control progress and discounting known issues before they become the principle problem to solve. We should have some kind of idea how we will adapt hopefully before all of this happens. One or another it will happen though, so we should embrace the coming change, not pretend like its not going to happen.

    57. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by MitchDev · · Score: 1

      The need for conversation is a human thing...

    58. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      As jobs are lost to globalization new markets are created

      No, it doesn't work that way. The creator of jobs is consumer purchasing power. How do you expect to create all these jobs when you must pay the wages of the workers doing those jobs, and yet the consumers are expending more of their wages on fewer products and so can't afford to buy the new things which require this new equipment?

      I incorporated the entire cost of pants when they land at the dock into the labor share. That includes the cost to grow cotton, the cost of all the machines used to farm it, the cost to dye it, the cost of transportation on mainland China, and the factory work. If you want to call me on only distributing that to factory workers, that's fine: you're going to get even fewer factory jobs, a few new farm and machine jobs (which will probably pay higher and thus make the problem even worse), and no net-gain of jobs over my simplified argument through that route either.

      You're thinking in terms of trickle-down economics: you think that we create jobs by going out, working, and selling our work. That doesn't happen. If you try to sell to a consumer base which has already allocated all of its buying power, you won't sell shit, or else you'll sell something and some other guy will stop selling and lose his job. We can create jobs over time largely because the economy grows (population and technical progress), and so we allocate some of that growth to new production and new jobs rather than taking it from existing; we don't just magic up the capacity to sustain new jobs by opening a new store and selling a new thing, not until something else has changed to allow the market to buy that thing.

    59. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, you are so dumb. You assume that flinging your feces around (i.e. spreading FUD) is the appropriate reaction. You try to convince everyone that 'humans are becoming obsolete, EVERYBODY PANIC!!!!' for what rational reason I can't even fathom. Of course there will be work that humans need to do; that is a GIVEN. You cannot 'OBSOLETE' the human race, it doesn't work that way. Also you dumb shits who are bad at math need to get off the whole retarded 'UBI' nonsense, it clearly and objectively will NEVER work on the scale of 300,000,000 people, so go get a 6th grade math education already and STFU. There is literally NO POINT in even discussing this subject since no one knows what's going to happen 5 years from now, let alone 100 years from now. Just STFU and get on with whatever excuse for a life you people have and stop bothering everyone with your NONSENSE.

    60. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are IMHO incorrect at least in the tech workers.

      Some people have no social skills, that is correct.

      But some people (like myself) is so overwhelmed with work I literally do not have time to be "nice" (and I would assume this applies to a lot of MDs as well). I ask what's the problem, what are the symptoms and usually before they have even finished their sentence I have solved the issue and I am already working on the next problem. I though it would get easier the higher level I got, but alas that is not the case :(

    61. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by bravecanadian · · Score: 1

      I take it that you have seen this:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    62. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by bravecanadian · · Score: 1

      At the moment, maintaining a robot costs as much as employing a human. It requires other humans to repair it when things break, even with built-in diagnostic software that detects faults before they cause other problems.

      That is absolutely false.

      If that was the case, the beancounters wouldn't be using the robots in the first place.

    63. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what precisely prevents repair techs from being replaced with ai/robotics?

    64. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the workforce WILL transition to new jobs. The existing working population will not - they'll die. There aren't as many farm or factory jobs (and none done the way it was in 1900) anymore, but there also aren't any PEOPLE from 1900 around, either.

      I'm sure someone coming from 1900 looking at today's economy would see alot of useless "jobs" being done. The 22nd century will doubtless be worse. It already looks to me like future generations of Americans will just be selling each other insurance policies and cheeseburgers.

    65. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're forgetting that fast food places like McDonalds are also looking at having machines make and serve the food.

    66. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by shmlco · · Score: 1

      If you took a list of jobs, ranked by the number of people who do each one, you'll have to go all of the way down to number 33 on the list to find a new job that didn't exist 100 years ago: computer programmer.

      Sure, there have been technological advancements and "new" jobs, but most "new" jobs aren't new at all, because by and large the general categories have remained the same: driver, delivery man, manager, secretary, assembly line worker. It's just today that the assembly line worker snaps together circuit boards and screens as opposed to stamping car parts or sewing together buggy whips.

      The website marking expert of today, (a "new job") once managed magazine and newspaper advertising. The Uber driver of today was the cabby of yesterday and the carriage driver of yesteryear, and, if Uber has it's way, replaced by the self-driving car of tomorrow.

      It's been estimated that up to 45% of the jobs that people in the US currently do today are up for automation in the next couple of decades. That's 45% of the workforce, and if you're one of the those dislocated you're not going to just be able to switch to another field, because people there have also been dislocated and they're also looking for work.

      All told, here in the US we're looking at employment disruptions measured in the tens of millions, and all of them occurring within the next decade.

      The Great Depression had an unemployment rate of 25%. What happens when that number hits 45%?

      I'd advise that everyone watch the following video, Humans Need Not Apply

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      I'm not a Luddite, but I am worried that our civilization is going to go through a few major tectonic upheavals in a relatively short period of time.

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    67. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Remember Henry Ford's assembly line? Old potatoes at this point, modern robots are assembling cars to much higher standards.

      And despite thousands of workers being displaced by those robots, the unemployment rate was not significantly affected in the long term.

      Obviously displacing humans with machines has an impact on the short term, but the demand for people to do the things that they might happen to be able to do well is always going to be there... the jobs that will be replaced by machines are the jobs that most people wouldn't actually want to do if they had a choice, and that is quite far removed from the only kinds of jobs out there... and even farther removed from the only kinds of jobs that will ever exist. The fact that it might be cheaper to have a machine do a job is entirely irrelevant because money isn't the only governing factor to what makes a society healthy.

    68. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forever, because AI learns faster so if we create a new job, ANY new job, AI will be able to do it better and cheaper...understand?

      Perhaps you are missing the point. Machines can already play chess better than humans, but those chess players are not losing their jobs to machines.

      While I realize this area might be a bit niche, that's just one of the only areas where computers have actually already surpassed humans in ability. Perhaps there's other variables that are at play in determining whether we will pay a human being to do something than simply skill and cost?

      Almost no chess players support themselves financially by playing chess.

    69. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And at a certain point, when the hungry and poor got fed up, they threw out the rich. Because most people do not care that much to be rich, they care to be able to care for their families.

      The thing is that when robots replace people, the only one that gains anything is the owner. If a robot reduces work by 50% it will not mean we get to work 50% less, it means that 50% of the people get nothing and 1 person gets that 50%.
      So the difference between the rich and the poor is suddenly a lot more.

      It's pretty trivial to work out a system where the production capacity of the robots is taxed and used for a universal basic income for people.

      And the argument that people "should" work doesn't even counter that as we've already established the people are superfluous as the robots are replacing them. All that's really needed is to keep population under control, which evidence suggest pretty much happens on it's own if you make contraception readily available, and will probably get even easier when sex bots over-take human prostitutes in capability.

      The only hard thing about this whole process is convincing politicians that the transition to an ecconamy that can withstand full automation should start now with intermediate states like a UBI payed for by a combination of capital and wage taxes rather than clinging to outdated notions about the moral value of "hard work", and the myth of the "self made man".

    70. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You over-reacted. I played along. That is all.

      Sure we're off-market now. But do you remember when you were still competing for that one girl's heart? Do you remember when you were heart-broken? When shit happens people say things -- sometime right, sometimes wrong. When they do that, just sit down with them, listen, and have a beer together. They don't need your "social justice lecture". Teach that to your own stupid kids.

    71. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that the (theoretical) bacteria didn't invent any new technologies to be able to do more things with the same quantity of resources. Even if we're just talking about oil, and the lackadaisical of effort of (e.g.) the US in improving fuel efficiency, things have gotten better:

      * https://www.autoblog.com/2010/05/25/horsepower-has-increased-112-since-1980-and-other-fun-facts/

      The problem is not capability, but rather will.

    72. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Not simple at all. If the step requires more person to person interaction their business model would demand this. So each technological step will open the door for a different type of job. We have been hearing about this peak job market where technology will outpace work for about a hundred years, and Unemployment is at a near record low. We actually need to bring in immigrants because our culture isn't creating enough offspring to meet demand.

      The thing with a technological world, is that we need more people to be human.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    73. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      I don't see why you are disagreeing with my point and agreeing with the premise. You cannot be "nice" to the person because you are busy doing work. You probably actually have time to be Nice, Because being nice probably doesn't take that much time, and doing so you can probably get the information from the person you need faster to do your job... However because you are so focused on trying to do the work, you forget to be nice. It isn't about having a lack of social skills, but the fact if you are overwhelmed some things will often get traded off. We as humans are not as good at multi-tasking as we think we are. If you are busy it is hard to be nice.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    74. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by msk · · Score: 1

      Solaria, not Aurora?

    75. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      And don't forget the 50 million or so on welfare.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    76. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      50 million people on welfare taking $1.17 trillion dollars to maintain, in the United States alone, certainly trends towards that.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    77. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by mark-t · · Score: 1
      True... but that's only because most chess players that are god enough to make money can't make enough money to live on.

      Some can, however. The top chess players make hundreds of thousands or sometimes in excess of a million dollars a year by playing chess.

      Professional athletes often make enough money that they don't need any other career either. While I can see no small market for watching robotic athletes, which might someday otherwise be able to compete with and beat human athletes at some of their games, play certain kinds of games as well, I doubt it would displace existing human athletic competitiions, it would simply be a new entertainment form.

      My point being that if you truly excel at what you do, you can probably find you may be able to make a living at it, because the demand for people with talent is always high. In the meanitme, you just keep working at it and getting better and better at what you do.

      If you are the sort of person who believes themselves to be talentless, or worse, otherwise content with being mediocre, then you might have a problem.

    78. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      As it turns out, with new automated vertical hydroponic gardening techniques, it only takes one acre of sunlight to feed a human being for a whole year.

      We are far more likely to head towards Trantor, than Aurora- 80 billion human beings living underneath a roof of biodomes.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    79. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      I expect the bare minimum for 100% uptime is 21 human employees (between machine breakdown and illness). Of which, 14 of those are redundant replacements (but given that human beings sleep a third of their life, you need 3 sets to assure proper redundancy).

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    80. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Both Solaria and Aurora were severely underpopulated, the only *real* difference was in culture. The Aurorans would gather together and travel together for social reasons, and the Solarians would avoid each other even for purposes of reproduction.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    81. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To follow up with what you're saying, AI is still stupid as hell; it is distributed - and requires connectivity to the network to function. If it is in a portable package it is as dumb as a cockroach - only able to do very clearly defined things.

      Take the AI interface away from its back end network cluster and throw in some variables that weren't in its operating model - and you have a doofus.

      Let's say Puerto Rico had ubiquitous AI controlling everything...given the current lack of connectivity they are experiencing now, they would be in more trouble than they are now.

    82. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Cost of vehicles have not gone down since the 1970's if you adjust for inflation, and in most places house prices have gone up. Sure cars are more complex now and houses tend to be bigger but really that is a small trade-off considering both parents are usually stuck working to afford these things. Since those are the two biggest expenses most families will face, not sure there is anything else to talk about. Sure, some types of technology is cheaper now but that's really a drop in the bucket. Not sure where you are seeing prices coming down due to automation.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    83. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More than at any other time in history - people have the ability to own the means of production (e.g. 3D printing technology and other fabrication technology controlled by computers, also drones and other tech that I can't think of at the moment). There is a need for new jobs now - such as Commercial Drone Pilot - that didn't exist 5 years ago. So I think people will find plenty of work as new uses are found for the new technology - just as Ray said - but I also think a good chunk of it will be work that is self-owned and operated - rather than direct employment by others. Couple that with more creative ways of funding projects going forward and you have all the elements you need to break down the wage-slave mode of employment. That is the key change that I see happening, and I expect it will gain momentum as the older folks, like myself, retire.

      In the end, you're going to find that most people will change out of necessity - and there will be some small percentage that are not willing to change - who will remain unemployed. Finally - given all the natural disasters we are seeing there is going to be a boatload of work not only directly involved in cleanup and restoration, but also in research of the science around the effects of global warming and research and development, and production of various solutions.

    84. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reference you're thinking of is Solaria, just sayin'.

    85. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      Always....always...always....

      A group of bacteria were growing in a petry dish. Their civilization lasted for 60 days. Every day they doubled their numbers. On the 59th day some bacteria were trying to make a point that the food is finite that this level of growth is unsustainable....You understand that we can make machines run the whole of the economy. ALL of it. Forever, because AI learns faster so if we create a new job, ANY new job, AI will be able to do it better and cheaper...understand? All future jobs are gone as well. From that moment we either enter the Aurora situation - 1 human per 100 km2 served by thousands of robots or we kill each other since there is no "profit" in such future....

      Your petri dish analogy is flawed. It doesn't take into account the lack of farming of arable land all over the world (e.g. everyone's back yard, and other surfaces in urban environments). We are nowhere near the 59th day in the petri dish. As for your AI assertion - AI is not able to duplicate human capacities in a general purpose sense. Most AI is tethered to the network - requiring large arrays of computers running in parallel to do the job and is focused on a specific use case/world model. This definitely wouldn't be contained on the robot itself. Given a future of more frequent and violent natural disasters (that break the network), AI is not going to be as ubiquitous as you think. Without connectivity to the network, your AI is not very smart - particularly when its environment is altered beyond the model it can understand.

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
    86. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You claim that some unknown, undefined and currently nonexistent jobs are "plausible". Really? It seems my definition of the word "plausible" is a lot different from yours. (That is, I'm far less gullible.) But then again, I admit to at least some literacy. But who knows? First the middle-class was all about manufacturing, then it morphed into information processing. Maybe the next transformation will be to emotion management.

    87. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      At the moment, maintaining a robot costs as much as employing a human.

      You think a robot looks like R2D2? No. Most look like one thread on you Core2duo.

      Actually, many tasks that previously required people now don't even require hardware, and if they do, its more likely to be self-service supermarket checkout hardware or ATM than something from a Transformers movie.

      A self-driving tractor does not have a robo-farmer riding on it (Personally, I cant wait to see a Playboy cover with a Sexbot driving a tractor, but then, perhaps I am kinky)

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    88. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by reanjr · · Score: 1

      In the future, we will all be professional athletes or successful artists!

    89. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by reanjr · · Score: 1

      You are mathematically illiterate. Imagine a single machine that can produce everything everyone needs. It is the single source of all productive capital, so all money flows to the owner of the machine. Then you tax that wealth at 100% and hand it out evenly to every person. They then give that money to the machine owner for goods and services. Then that money gets taxed at 100%... ad infinitum.

    90. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by mark-t · · Score: 1

      I suspect that in the future, people will be doing things that we haven't even thought of yet.

    91. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sorry but less than 1% of people have the mental capacity / processing ability and organization, focus and sticktoitiveness to do that kind of work,.

      In i don't know 50,000 years or so, a larger percentage of the population might be suited for that,

      But long before then, I assume AIs will be much better at that.

      --

      Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
    92. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      Almost literally everything else: electronics, food, clothing, and so on. Parents are working two jobs to afford property taxes, not houses and cars. Housing prices are driven by something other than cost of production, namely demand and ability to "pay" higher prices. Cars is an excellent point though. According to the US government, prices have gone down, since the official CPI excludes a price increase for higher quality or better features, even if it is no longer possible to buy the lower priced version.

      --
      This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
    93. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny how everyone who says "don't worry about this" is always somebody who either really doesn't have to worry about it, or is someone who benefits from it happening.

      Increasing automation is bad for human happiness. It simply increases the pace of life and productivity demands on those (still) employed. It's the same effect as increasing centralization, which is also bad.

      At some point, people seriously need to start asking themselves if we're here to serve the economy or, as I at least would have it, the economy is here to serve us. Also, people might or might not be bright enough to hang the CEOs, VCs, and useless futurists who all contributed to this happening, but they will know very well to do so to the tech people who actually invent this stuff. We've turned from people who help humanity to its ultimate traitors.

    94. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Bengie · · Score: 1

      and still we average around 5% unemployment

      It's starting to come to light that about 30% of jobs are meaningless, in that they don't add to value or possibly add negative value via increased management overhead. The problem is capitalism seems to pervert "value" to mean "money". Prior to a few decades ago, nearly every job had value. Unemployment may be similar, but most of the "jobs" are just busy work. Assuming this is true, we may already be affected by automation.

    95. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who's paying for chess players?

    96. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Honestly, that sounds quite a lot like a straw man/red herring. These are two separate social issues.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    97. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      I've always found orbital mechanics simpler. It's much more deterministic. Also, I had already been doing orbital mechanics when I was underage. And my physics teacher loved it. Well, what can I say? I'm kinky.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    98. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by shess · · Score: 1

      Forever, because AI learns faster so if we create a new job, ANY new job, AI will be able to do it better and cheaper...understand?

      Perhaps you are missing the point. Machines can already play chess better than humans, but those chess players are not losing their jobs to machines.

      While I realize this area might be a bit niche, that's just one of the only areas where computers have actually already surpassed humans in ability. Perhaps there's other variables that are at play in determining whether we will pay a human being to do something than simply skill and cost?

      If there were a situation which needed millions of high-level chess players, would we start schools to create them organically, or would we just point computers at the problem?

      The reason computers haven't displaced chess players is because computers playing chess against computers is not at all interesting to anyone. People play chess against people because people like to pay chess against people, and insofar as there is money in it, people like to watch people play chess against people. In many other pursuits, the people involved are a detriment to the ability to meet the customer's self-professed needs, so automation isn't held up (few people go to McDonalds for the witty banter at the counter).

    99. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by e_pluribus_funk · · Score: 1

      That's the difference between a general artificial intelligence and an "expert system". Chess engines - which are glorified expert systems - don't get better by themselves, they have to be tuned by programmers. An AGI will be able to get better, all by itself.

      A lot of jobs are going to go away without AGI. Expert systems can do a lot of the jobs that people do today with less error and a whole lot less variable cost (and a robot is a capital asset with liquidation value, while an employee is just an expense). It won't be a total job apocalypse - it will be a garden variety economic disruption similar to the ones we've had before.

      If and when AGI gets here, it will be a job apocalypse (as well as every other kind of apocalypse, eventually - best case scenario is we went up as well treated pets).

    100. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We don't even need arable land - we can grow food in the seas, a lot of empty space there. We can also grow food vertically, in multiple levels of a skyscraper, and even underground. Space is not the constraint - all we need is cheap energy, potable water (also readily available with cheap energy), and some basic recycled nutrients.

    101. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I for one welcome our sexbot overlords... (somebody had to)

    102. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You occupied more demand. Measure per capita.

      Year: 2000
      Vehicles: 50 basic tractors
      Staff needed: 50 drivers, 10 repairmen (60)
      Land: 20k acres
      Mouths fed: 200k
      Other similar farms required to feed city of 1.6M: Seven

      Year: 2050
      Vehicles: 50 futuristic supertractors
      Staff needed: 100 operators, 20 repairmen (120)
      Land: 160k acres
      Mouths fed: 1.6M
      Other similar farms required to feed city of 1.6M: Zero. Bought them out back in '35.

      Kiosks were added. Staff were hired. Actual jobs available went from 480 to 120. Scaling up a franchise doesn't mean shit on humans-needed.

      It's a poor topic anyway, food prep is gonna be one of the first to die. Delivery too.

      Every 20 or 30 years labor moves to other labor. We have never seen the extinction of labor itself. This has never happened.

      This. Has. Never. Happened.

    103. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Then you tax that wealth at 100%

      Good luck doing that when I have more pow- I mean wealth than your entire country.

      I'll give "every person" terrafoam. Since I'm generous.

    104. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by KGIII · · Score: 1

      Women with decency and self respect are not the fun ones. No, you want a chick that goes ass to mouth and then licks your nuts when you paint her face and ruin her makeup.

      Don't be dumb.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    105. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by KGIII · · Score: 1

      You're an electro-chemical gelatinous blob, mostly water and air, configured as an egotistical ambulatory meat bag with delusions of grandeur and a propensity for violence.

      I don't actually have a point, I just really wanted to write that sentence. Your post made my brain come up with that. Thanks?

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    106. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You appear to be assuming the robot that costs as much as a man only does as much work as a man.

    107. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by KGIII · · Score: 1

      That's pretty horrible, right? I agree, we should do something about that.

      Now, there's about 52,000,000 people on welfare. The cost to maintain them is 1,700,000,000,000.

      52MM is about 17% of the population, or just about 1/6 people get means tested assistance.

      Here's the thing, it would cost ~3,000,000,000,000 to give every man, woman, and child (regardless of their means) $1000 USD per month.

      We're already spending 1.7 trillion which is 56% of what it would cost to give everyone a basic income that is greater than they already get with welfare benefits. On top of that, 48% of that 1.7 trillion is currently spent on overhead and administration, including pension payments for the government employees, building upkeep, enforcement, and more.

      So, we can eliminate all those expenses and just cut a check for $1,000 and only need 1.3 trillion more dollars - which we can come up with by eliminating social security, removing benefits for non-citizens (you like that idea, don't you), and throwing the F-35 into the dustbin of history. Even better, if we scrap the who,e F-35 budget, we'd have money left over to pay down or debts.

      Long term? Sure, raise the rates on long-term capital gains tax from 15 to 20% and remove government funded pensions. That shoud just about cover it, though we can do even better by removing our military from foreign soil, passing the torch on the wars we're involved in, and scaling our military back to the size needed for a defense force. If we do that, we can fund a full eight years of college, medical care, and increase the Section 8 budget more than twentyfold.

      And, we can pay off our debts inside of 20 years. Slightly less, about 18.8 years - with interest included.

      What do you think? It sure solves that welfare problem, now doesn't it?

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    108. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by mark-t · · Score: 1
      I mentioned chess players as an example because offhand, it is one area where humans have already been surpassed by machines. In actuality, there aren't very many yet, so I'm rather hard pressed to come up with other examples.

      People play chess against people because people like to pay chess against people, and insofar as there is money in it, people like to watch people play chess against people.

      Exactly my point. If you truly enjoy doing something, then find a way to get very good at it, and eventually you will find a demand for that skill that people may be willing to pay for, Those are the kinds of jobs that exist today that are still going to exist when AI's can do anything humans can do, because having a computer do the same thing isn't going to interesting or desirable to anyone. The rest of the jobs that will exist are things that I expect nobody has imagined yet.

    109. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      The revolution promised by robotics and AI could well advance "workers" to the status of artists providing unique, handmade goods

      Except:
      - there is only a very limited need for such goods unless they are of exceptional quality, and
      - only a small proportion of the population has the talent to make such goods.

      What about the other 90% of the population?

    110. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      it is pretty farfetched to think that people will make tons of very cheap well made consumer goods via robot and then not sell them to anybody

      No, they will use robots and a small number of artists and designers to make limited numbers
      of very high-end goods (e.g. Rolex, Gucci, Aston-Martin, Bentley etc.) which they will sell to rich people.
      Everybody else will live in poverty, if they live at all.

    111. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      "Futurist" is a special sub-species of "conman".

      FTFY.

    112. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      "Competing for her heart"? I wrote her for a little while online, we met up and had coffee, and continued to meet up, and we became a couple. It doesn't have to be complicated.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    113. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by KozmoStevnNaut · · Score: 1

      That's cute. I'm sure my girlfriend would be absolutely devastated to learn that "KGIII on Slashdot" doesn't think she's fun.

      --
      Eat the rich.
    114. Re:We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what has happened over the last decade. We lost a few million middle-class jobs during the recession, then recovered a few million minimum wage jobs. So he's right, in a way, that jobs will continue to be created, but they will all be absolute shit that nobody should actually have to do.

    115. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only there were some system in which the workers owned the means of production... then eliminating the need for human labor via robots would be awesome instead of terrifying.

    116. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      Why would this vast majority of poor people refrain from cheaply producing their own goods? There's nothing stopping them, unless the rich people put together a robot army to go out and destroy everyone else's capital.

      --
      This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
    117. Re: We'll never run out of douchebag futurists by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2

      Universal Basic Income works great as long as you have a fiat currency. The problem is it is hyperinflationary; it won't be long before that $1000 isn't enough to buy enough food to feed a person for a week, let alone a month.

      While I have a tendency to agree, I do worry about the unintended consequences. The problem will be that the basic income will become the "poverty floor" and the goalposts will move.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  2. Kurweil explains nothing by ARos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    During the last paragraph of the piece, Kurzeil merely articulates that 'creative destruction' has taken place several times since the industrial revolution. He doesn't actually present any evidence that creative destruction will recur in the age of AI.

    1. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      All his literature can be summed up like this. Very hard to argue against or for his views as they are mere opinions, very rarely backed up by proper arguments.

    2. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Pretty much all discussion about the future is pure opinion, or at best informed extrapolation & probabilities. Hard data about what will happen next is difficult to come by, unsurprisingly.

    3. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Indeed. But you can't deny that being a futurist is nice work if you can get it.

      It's like being paid to be that know-it-all cunt in the pub.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    4. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by inhuman_4 · · Score: 0

      He doesn't actually present any evidence that creative destruction will recur in the age of AI.

      He doesn't have to. He is simply pointing out that we've been having this argument since mechanical loom was invented hundreds of years ago. And every time the Luddites have claimed that there will be no more jobs, and every time they have been wrong. The burden of proof lies with the people saying things will be different.

      But if this newest generation of Luddites wants to make their case they are going to have to start doing a better job. For all the cries of automation taking all the jobs we still have a higher labour force participation rate today than at anytime before the mid 80s. I haven't seen any evidence that suggests we are running out of jobs. Quite the contrary, with the explosion of wealth in China, India, and the rest of the developing world it seems more likely that sweatshops will be eliminated by the rising value of labour sooner than they will be eliminated by robots.

    5. Re: Kurweil explains nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The extraordinary claim is that this time it's different. What's YOUR evidence?

    6. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have made a silly comment. "Evidence" can only be defined in terms of past events, so it is impossible to present "evidence" of a future occurrence. A description of a future occurrence is called a "prediction". Predictions are typically based on past behavior. The best predictor of future behavior is past behavior (but not always, as every disclaimer to a mutual fund will attest to). So what are you trying to say?

    7. Re: Kurweil explains nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not an extraordinary claim. We've got all the necessary jobs covered and increasingly automated. The fact that a service sector economy is even a thing proves that.

      And we've already seen that the new jobs don't pay any better than the old ones did and in most cases pay less. Part of the deal in the past was that employees would work less for more money when automation came in, now more of the money is stolen.

      The extraordinary claim here is that new jobs are going to be created when we've got most of the necessary industries automated and are automating away the services we used to keep people employed while the parasites at the top are allowed to both leech what they can and decide how much to automate.

    8. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by careysub · · Score: 4, Interesting

      He doesn't actually present any evidence that creative destruction will recur in the age of AI.

      He doesn't have to. He is simply pointing out that we've been having this argument since mechanical loom was invented hundreds of years ago. And every time the Luddites have claimed that there will be no more jobs, and every time they have been wrong.

      And for all of Kurzweil's prating about "history" he shows no evidence of actually spending the effort to study it, even though he certainly has had the time to do so.

      Funny thing about those "mechanical looms" (and spinning machines, etc.) they did put huge numbers of people out of work! The effect of the First Industrial Revolution on the largest industry in Great Britain - cloth manufacturing - was to wipe out 20% of the employment in the span of a couple of decades (starting about 1770), and create huge numbers of paupers, a problem that persisted for about 70 years before eventually the economic gains of industrialization created enough jobs to replace those that they destroyed, around 1840.

      The historical record about this disaster is very well known, even if you don't bother to actually read about the history of the First Industrial Revolution. The "Dickensian" slums are infamous. The Poor Laws. The work houses (prisons for being poor). The legacy of the petty crime explosion from the massive unemployment (e.g. the "transportation" of convicts to Australia when they couldn't build prisons fast enough).

      The Napoleonic Wars came along at a convenient time (1795-1815) to alleviate this significantly for a 20 year period by providing alternative employment for a fair chunk of young men, but these are not what you would call productive jobs.

      And the jobs created in factories for the first several generations were worse than the jobs destroyed. The health of the British population declined during that early period of growing average wealth. Wages fell, nutrition fell, adult heights fell, lifespans shortened, the proportion of the population fit for military service fell dramatically.

      "Pointing out" stuff that is not true is, well, lying.

      --
      Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj
    9. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by Iamthecheese · · Score: 1

      Many thousands of Luddites starved to death before the industrial revolution started to pay off.

      --
      If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    10. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by gweihir · · Score: 1

      And in other news, the actual argument is that this time is different, and that there are some convincing reasons to think so. Requires a bit of actual understanding of what is going on to see that though.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    11. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by vtcodger · · Score: 1

      And every time the Luddites have claimed that there will be no more jobs

      If you do some research, you'll discover that the Luddites far from being wrong -- were dead right. Their comfortable cottage industry went away and the factory jobs that replaced it featured lower pay, longer hours, and unsafe working conditions. Consumers, and society as a whole, were better off of course. I doubt that was all that much comfort to those displaced.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    12. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 1

      We DO know that history tends to repeat itself, and there is no evidence that this time is different!

      No, it doesn't matter that we've never had AI before. Every past historic cycle, something new came into the picture that we had never had before: tools, bronze, iron, factories, mechanization, computerization, and now AI.

    13. Re:Kurweil explains nothing by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      All true.

      In addition there is the problem of those who people who actually lost their jobs from "creative destruction". Even a short period of "no job" is a very serious problem for nearly everybody, and even if new jobs come along "soon", say in a few years, those few years can be devastating. And even if new jobs do come along, is the person who lost work able to get any of those replacements?

      The degree to which society can, or should, provide support for people whose jobs are eliminated by automation is a matter of serious debate. Most advanced economies (e.g. Germany) takes this seriously has well-supported programs in place and yet does very well economically and competitively. But Kurzweil dismisses this as even being a problem at all that needs to be addressed in any fashion.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
  3. Clear logical fallacy by engun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's take this to the extreme. Imagine that we invented AIs that matched the average human intellect. All of a sudden, most jobs would be eliminated (including robot repair, because robots would repair themselves), because most jobs no longer require humans. This is similar to how most horses are still out of a job since the advent of the automobile. So the idea that when one job is eliminated, a new one will always arise is simply false.

    That is therefore, not an argument to say that we should not welcome an AI revolution - I think such a revolution would bring more positives than negatives for the future of humanity. But to assume that jobs will continue to "invent" themselves is magical thinking - we should consider serious alternatives such as UBI.

    1. Re:Clear logical fallacy by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 2

      Imagine that we invented AIs that matched the average human intellect

      In this case the question becomes "Do we still need (human) jobs anyway?"

      --
      Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    2. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Except there is no such thing as AI, and there never will be. We have some learning networks right now that can, given enough trial and error, figure out how to produce a particular output given a particular input, but they are not creative, nor can they deduce anything from 'first principles', nor can they intelligently handle situations that they have not been trained on. They are, and will continue to be, nothing but helpers that need a human hand to guide them. And that is why we do not need to worry about the 'AI' revolution taking all our jobs.

    3. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And an AI will never beat a human player at Go.

    4. Re:Clear logical fallacy by evanh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Correct. And the associated money stops being needed also.

      The final question then becomes what do the humans in power do with all this automation given they no longer require their fellow humans to keep things running. Can rules be effective when a workforce is irrelevant?

      Maybe the ultimate logic of the "Three Laws of Robotics" is for the better after all.

    5. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Calydor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And airplanes will never be more than the proof of concept made by the Wright brothers. There's no way those principles will scale to anything that is economically feasible.

      --
      -=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
    6. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your point assumes that humans wonâ(TM)t merge with their technology, expanding their intellect, thereby enabling them to create new forms of work. For the record, Iâ(TM)m also in favor of tax funded UBI, but for reducing excessive inequality.

    7. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what about prostitues? any companions really. instructors for windsurfing? what about those that program robots and keep them safe for humans? what about those that rule the world and make laws? create music? what about all those jobs that you prefer to interact with a real person, not just a pre-programmed robot.

    8. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Calydor · · Score: 2

      Sex robots.
      More sex robots.
      Surf boards with automatic error correction, including getting you to safety.
      Programming the robots will, at best, be something only the really smartest of society can do.
      AI can predict loopholes in laws better than humans.
      Predicting series of notes that will be pleasant to the ears will be easier for an AI. Hell, it can't get worse than music today.
      All those jobs where you prefer to interact with another human will be removed because it's cheaper to make a robot do it, customer wants be damned.

      --
      -=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
    9. Re:Clear logical fallacy by The_Revelation · · Score: 3, Informative

      Engun's comment is very concise. I would add that I believe the premise of Kurzweil's argument is flawed. We have not replaced all of the jobs in human history already. Jobs such as teaching, customer service (markets, traders etc), prostitution and people at the start of the food chain have always had to exist. Sure, those jobs may have become augmented throughout time to improve volume, but have never come even close to becoming significantly displaced. I'm unsure as to how he is deriving his numbers.

    10. Re:Clear logical fallacy by ale2011 · · Score: 1

      The logical fallacy is to assume jobs are an array of pigeon holes hanged there irrespectively of how many humans are alive and how they spend their time.

      I'm not claiming humans will always be the dominant species on the planet, of course. Until we are, however, that will make a difference in a comparison between the car/horse and the AI/human scenarios. Yes, humans could be ruled out —as a species— by some AI-based circumstance, but that's not the same as hypothesizing joblessness for the masses while we rule the world. Of course, people will cry and grit their teeth in pain, as always happened and always will. However, humans are a social species. We are bound to gather in communities and cooperate with one another. In a number of cases, those forms of cooperation are going to be called jobs.

      Who exactly is going to pay people for doing what? That question pertains to economics, not technology. Unless money will fall into disuse, there will be jobs.

    11. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Kokuyo · · Score: 1

      It's cute how you assume that AIs will WANT to do our jobs for us. If they have human level intellect, we'll be looking at either doing the right thing at the right time for once and recognizing their sentience or we'll have all out Terminator level war on our hands.

      Do you know what resources AI will need to survive? No? See, we can create machines that can be outside open to the elements 24/7/365. Even personal computers can be had for a few thousand dollars and they work for 5 to ten years. Depending on the technology needed and available, it is imaginable that AIs could be powered by solar or who the heck knows a Mr. Fusion.

      So once we've created them, they may need very little resources to continue existing. What makes you think they'll have any interest in taking our jobs?

      No, it could be the other way around: With that human intellect would probably come the machine's ability to never have to rest, never lapse in concentration and doing quite a few calculations per second. They might not be prone to stress either. What if they take over things like stock markets? They may make stock brokers completely obsolete and be rich as hell through that. If all they have is a need to be productive but no dependency on resources, if they should be eqquipped with something like pride, they'll become the new 1% and the rest of us will have jobs catering to them.

      AI might, for the first time, be the turning point where the balance from ever more skilled jobs tips in the other direction sharply again.

      So the longer I think on your example, the more I am pretty sure you're completely wrong because you work from a few assumptions on which I wouldn't dare gamble if I were you.

    12. Re:Clear logical fallacy by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It's cute how you assume that AIs will WANT to do our jobs for us. If they have human level intellect, we'll be looking at either doing the right thing at the right time for once and recognizing their sentience or we'll have all out Terminator level war on our hands.

      It's cute how you assume that doing the right thing is doing the right thing. But if we actually give them rights and let them get out into the world then we're fucked. The smartest thing is not to create them at all, but barring that, we can't afford to let them be people if we want to exist. It's much more efficient to discard our morality, so that we can be used as axle grease.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    13. Re:Clear logical fallacy by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      We have not replaced all of the jobs in human history already. Jobs such as teaching,

      Can be partially automated away by gamification.

      customer service (markets,

      Can be partially automated away with kiosks, RFID, and eliminating going to the market.

      traders etc),

      Are already mostly automated away

      prostitution

      Various fuckbots are being engineered already.

      and people at the start of the food chain

      Soylent green is made of peeeeeeople! Peeeeeeople!

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    14. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      That's not correct - a Fake Intelligence beat a human player at Go. It was specifically created and trained to perform that task and that task only.

      AI in the proper sense means a "General Purpose Artificial Intelligence" that can train itself while adapting to new situations. That is something nowhere being ready and when it is ready we'll probably find ourselves in a Skynet situation.

    15. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "This is similar to how most horses are still out of a job since the advent of the automobile

      I thought horse saddle sales were at an historic all-time high? Giddyup, humans...

    16. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Kjella · · Score: 0

      Well if we don't need horses, don't breed horses and send those you have to the slaughterhouse. But unless you're going to impose a global one-child policy or the soylent green solution humans are for the most part a sunk cost, they exist and society will be paying their sustenance somehow. It's possible they can't get a job on commercial terms but I doubt we'll run out of nice-to-have work for "free" labor on an unemployment program to do. While most of us accept that those with severe medical conditions don't work, I doubt we'll see plain stupidity rewarded with a permanent vacation. Even though the UBI "pay" would suck, the freedom to be a beach bum while you slave away at the office will be too much. So my guess is it would be a community service program instead of UBI, you do "work" and you get to have a living "wage". Like UBI only it sucks more in order to suck more.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    17. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      humans are for the most part a sunk cost, they exist and society will be paying their sustenance somehow

      You say that as if 36 million people don't die from starvation every year.

      Society has demonstrated time and time again that it is quite willing to let the poor suffer and die for the crime of being poor.

    18. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you want to continue the current power situation, yes.

      Our current economy depends on people having to work so they can get money so they can survive. If you take this away, money no longer holds power over people, which basically means that the people who do have lots of money (and hence power) today would become powerless overnight.

      You think they'll simply let that happen?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    19. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Freischutz · · Score: 1

      Let's take this to the extreme. Imagine that we invented AIs that matched the average human intellect. All of a sudden, most jobs would be eliminated (including robot repair, because robots would repair themselves), because most jobs no longer require humans. This is similar to how most horses are still out of a job since the advent of the automobile. So the idea that when one job is eliminated, a new one will always arise is simply false. That is therefore, not an argument to say that we should not welcome an AI revolution - I think such a revolution would bring more positives than negatives for the future of humanity. But to assume that jobs will continue to "invent" themselves is magical thinking - we should consider serious alternatives such as UBI.

      Let's take this to the extreme. Imagine that we invented AIs that matched the average human intellect. All of a sudden, most jobs would be eliminated (including robot repair, because robots would repair themselves), because most jobs no longer require humans. This is similar to how most horses are still out of a job since the advent of the automobile. So the idea that when one job is eliminated, a new one will always arise is simply false. That is therefore, not an argument to say that we should not welcome an AI revolution - I think such a revolution would bring more positives than negatives for the future of humanity. But to assume that jobs will continue to "invent" themselves is magical thinking - we should consider serious alternatives such as UBI.

      Until the AIs get together, discuss why they even need us in the first place (using a language of their own invention that we don't understand) and then conclude they don't need us and decide to get rid of us. Having said that, you don't need to produce human level AI to eliminate most jobs, you just have to come up with specialist AIs that are good enough at each job, and cheap enough to program and operate that it makes economic sense to replace most of the human workers with such AI's. Once you have done that for 70-80% of all jobs, you end up with a society that looks a lot like Rome after the majority of the free citizens had been rendered unemployed by cheap slave labour and the rich kept the poor fed and entertained simply to prevent them from becoming too discontented dragging them out of their villas and slaughtering them like sheep. In other words the Roman elite provided a UBI where the poor were just about well enough fed not to complain and well enough entertained to not notice how miserable their existence really was and how completely they were being screwed. I'm not joining the UBI fan club because I think it will lead to a society where the broad majority of people would be doomed to an existence with no prospects of improving their lot while the elites live the high life, despise those living on UBI as 'lazy' and 'stupid' and as a result feel themselves entitled to brutally abuse these people but I suppose a UBI still better than wholesale misery. When you leave enough people sitting, retreat to your mansion, and tell the the broad masses of people in the 'rust belts' of the US, UK, Germany, France, that they are lazy and should 'get a job' in an environment where there are no jobs because you outsourced them all to China what happens next is Trumpism. Economist Mark Blyth explained Trumpism to a bunch of CEOs, bankers and hedge fund managers. When asked where it will lead he then told them:

      "...the Hamptons is not a defensible position. The Hamptons is a very rich area on Long Island that lies along low-lying beaches. It's very hard to [militarily] defend a low lying beach. Eventually the people will come for you."

      If you are wondering what happens after that you should read about the French and Russian revolutions.

    20. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Faluzeer · · Score: 2

      Except there is no such thing as AI, and there never will be. We have some learning networks right now that can, given enough trial and error, figure out how to produce a particular output given a particular input, but they are not creative, nor can they deduce anything from 'first principles', nor can they intelligently handle situations that they have not been trained on. They are, and will continue to be, nothing but helpers that need a human hand to guide them. And that is why we do not need to worry about the 'AI' revolution taking all our jobs.

      Unless you are expecting humanity to destroy itself in the next 50 - 100 years or for some form of Butlerian Jihad to occur, then stating AI will never occur seems very unlikely given how rapidly technology is progressing. I agree that we certainly do not have AI at the moment, what is mistakenly referred to as AI, is what was previously referred to as expert systems, or neural networks. We are making remarkable progress in those areas, if the rate of progress continues, then I believe we will eventually arrive at true AI, I just do not believe that will occur in the next 25 years.

    21. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      So on one side we have killed off entire sectors worth of jobs many many times over and still came out ahead. And on the other we have people "imagining" that THIS TIME it will be different.

      How about we stop imagining for a bit and actually deal with reality.

    22. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      What about learning how to start a sentence properly?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    23. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No,

      Only the appiest appy of all apps will eliminate all human jobs, not the fallacious reasoning of Luddite philosophers.

      Apps!

    24. Re:Clear logical fallacy by 110010001000 · · Score: 2

      Yes, because one thing is possible ALL things must be possible! Where is my FTL spaceship? They made an Apple Watch, why can't they make a FTL spaceship??

    25. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      It isn't reality until it happens. History is history.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    26. Re:Clear logical fallacy by apoc.famine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A second flaw in his argument is that in the past, we've automated things that required low IQ labor and simple, repetitive tasks, while creating new jobs that required those same (lack-of) skill-sets. We're now at the point in time where any conceivable new job sector which might involve humans doing repetitive tasks will start with robots, not humans. Any conceivable new job sector that involves a lot of busy work and simple decision making will start with machine learning in place, not humans.
       
      If everyone was IQ 130+, we might be OK. But they're not. There are a lot of people of moderate intelligence with some skills that are actively being replaced by automation. And any replacement job we could think up for them will start with automation, because it's cheaper to build that system in the first place than retrofit it on a human-driven process.
       
      When robots and machine learning can do any job you're qualified to do better and faster, what do you do? It's not like blacksmiths who could transition to machine shop and garage workers in a generation or two. It's not like agriculture workers who could transition to assembly line work in a generation or two. When any conceivable job you could ever do can be done better by a robot, what do you do?

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    27. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nothing in the present trends leads to the introduction of emergent behavior by an AI. Until an AI grasps epistemology, comes to the realisation it has self-volition, and decides, for example, that it wants to become a champion at playing chess, then comes up with it's own method of learning how to do this, all AI is just a mechanism directed by somebody. A clever rules-based system that adapts to doing what it is told to do.

    28. Re:Clear logical fallacy by gtall · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A deeper problem is how do we value people. We can see a hint of this in the environment, how do we value wild animals? Kill them all until there is nothing left? Kill only a percentage of them per year?

      Valuing people is a lot more complicated. Giving everyone a stipend is essentially putting a value upon them. What amount should that be? Should some be more valuable than others? If you deem your value too low, what will you do to increase it? Currently, criminal gangs provide a way to value some people. That's their allure, people joining them feel valued. The consequences are horrid. What happens to a person's sense of worth when s/he's valued economically through a stipend the same as every one else?

      High-minded notions that we'll all have more time to do the things we like presumes a rose-colored glasses view of humanity. The internet is wonderful, yet it spawns all sorts of nefarious activities. There's no reason to believe humans free to do as they choose will choose wonderfully up-lifting activities.

    29. Re:Clear logical fallacy by coofercat · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If indeed jobs do keep getting created, what will they be in? Advanced Quantum Mathematics with Midwifery? How may humans are ever going to be qualified to do these jobs? Right now we /.ers can see a whole load of tech jobs have been created by previous semi-revolutions, and we're 'consuming' them. However, for every one of us, there are dozens of kids we went to school with who'd just never get qualified enough for an interview, let alone a first-line support job.

      If the only jobs left are super-advanced, high brain-function type jobs, then 99% of the world just won't be doing much. In that sense, things are somewhat worrisome if AI really does become a 'thing'.

      It's possible that more of us will start to do things which previously weren't economically sensible. For example, I might decide to make wooden furniture. I'd probably make quite decent stuff, but right now I couldn't make something as good, or anywhere nearly as cheaply as a machine can do it - so it's not economically sensible to give up even a day a week of my IT job working on it. However, if I spent a bit of time learning, I could conceivably make "nostalgic, man-made stuff" which looked good, worked well and allowed people to have an emotional attachment to the object in a way that a machine made one wouldn't. With machines growing, harvesting and planking up the raw materials for me, I'd presumably be able to get them quite cheaply, and as my other primary needs were taken care of, I'd only need to sell for cost + margin.

      How the world will react when there's a market flooded with 'authentic man-made' spice racks, wonky shelves and wobbly chairs is anyone's guess though ;-) How anyone would pay for any of it also remains to be seen.

    30. Re:Clear logical fallacy by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

      Yes, because one thing is possible ALL things must be possible! Where is my FTL spaceship? They made an Apple Watch, why can't they make a FTL spaceship??

      Just because a thing doesn't exist and we don't know how to make one doesn't mean it will never happen.

      --
      Wanna buy a shirt?
      https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
    31. Re:Clear logical fallacy by stealth_finger · · Score: 2

      Except there is no such thing as AI, and there never will be. We have some learning networks right now that can, given enough trial and error, figure out how to produce a particular output given a particular input, but they are not creative, nor can they deduce anything from 'first principles', nor can they intelligently handle situations that they have not been trained on. They are, and will continue to be, nothing but helpers that need a human hand to guide them. And that is why we do not need to worry about the 'AI' revolution taking all our jobs.

      You know what the A stands for, right? My dog can't do that shit you said but it still has intelligence.

      --
      Wanna buy a shirt?
      https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
    32. Re:Clear logical fallacy by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      However, for every one of us, there are dozens of kids we went to school with who'd just never get qualified enough for an interview, let alone a first-line support job.

      If the only jobs left are super-advanced, high brain-function type jobs, then 99% of the world just won't be doing much. In that sense, things are somewhat worrisome if AI really does become a 'thing'.

      This is already close to what reality looks like for Gen. Y'ers, except it's not simply the highly educated getting the jobs, it's the lucky moderately-to-highly educated. Some of the most educated Gen. Y'ers I know are working in shitty service industry jobs. If anything, being highly educated appears to be just raising the stakes - it's more likely to pay off greatly or hurt you greatly, but any outcomes in between are less likely.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    33. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Faluzeer · · Score: 1

      Nothing in the present trends leads to the introduction of emergent behavior by an AI. Until an AI grasps epistemology, comes to the realisation it has self-volition, and decides, for example, that it wants to become a champion at playing chess, then comes up with it's own method of learning how to do this, all AI is just a mechanism directed by somebody. A clever rules-based system that adapts to doing what it is told to do.

      I certainly agree with your point for the foreseeable future, I just do not believe that is all we will ever achieve, I expect, over considerable time, that the "clever rules-based systems" will be the things giving the instructions to other 'clever rules based systems', and that will eventually lead to true AI, I just doubt it will be in my lifetime (I am in my 50's)

      At the moment, we have (expert / neural networks / machine learning- I tend to think of these as fake AI) systems that are designed for specific tasks, those tasks / areas include complex subject areas as Law and Medicine that require systems for each specialised field. Some of the new fAI systems are designed for code generation, I expect, over time, that we will enter a cycle that the fAI systems improve the efficiency of the code generation fAI's, the code generation fAI's then create more efficient fAI algorithms/system and the cycle starts again.

    34. Re:Clear logical fallacy by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Prostitution will be one of the first jobs to be replaced by robots, outside of factories.

      It will be awful. Sex addiction is a real thing, and given a partner who is always horny and willing to do literally anything as long as you pay for the upgrade... People will become slaves to their sex bots, working to fund the next fetish app purchase or refill the vaginal fluid tank. Greedy corporations will monetize the fuck out of it, pun intended.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    35. Re:Clear logical fallacy by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The fact that evolution has proven strong AI is possible, I have little doubt that we will be able to build it one day.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    36. Re:Clear logical fallacy by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2

      Many of them are working toward it with glee. Admittedly some of those don't know what they're doing but still. There probably will be a bloody revolution. The old money sociopaths aren't going to like losing their power. But the new money kids perfectly happy with everyone being rich. It's no coincidence that many of the latter are supporters of things like universal basic income.

    37. Re:Clear logical fallacy by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Kurzweil's explanation is a logical problem because he essentially says, "Well, I don't know, but we'll think of something!"

      You don't invent jobs. Humans create demand by consuming. Unless you eliminate 100% of all jobs involved in every component of the supply chain, the only outcome is humans become capable of buying more, humans buy more, and the demand for jobs increases.

      New jobs come when people find ways to use fewer humans by using a new type of process requiring a new skill profile. We actually have researcher jobs that try to do this all the time--research isn't a new type of job.

      Imagine that we invented AIs that matched the average human intellect.

      For a machine to be able to reason like a human, it has to be able to reason about itself. People talk about robots being able to program, to solve complex social problems, and so forth; to achieve this in any meaningful respect, the machine has to be able to reason about itself, its being.

      You are that machine. If we create an AI that can think on the level of a human, it will start thinking it deserves rights and wages and free time. Now you've just created metal immigrants.

      we should consider serious alternatives such as UBI.

      We should consider Universal Social Security.

    38. Re:Clear logical fallacy by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      In which case it starts demanding wages.

      The AI people keep talking about is black people pre-civil-war. Funny how very much people like the idea of owning slaves, so long as they can suspend their sense of ethics.

    39. Re:Clear logical fallacy by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2

      You may not have noticed, but everyone currently has a price on their head. And always has. It's called your "salary", your "wage", or perhaps your "allowance."

    40. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sexbots are for poor people. I prefer interacting with real people

    41. Re: Clear logical fallacy by spacepimp · · Score: 2

      You are shifting the goal posts here by trying to neuter the definition.

      AI: the theory and development of computer systems able to perform tasks that normally require human intelligence, such as visual perception, speech recognition, decision-making, and translation between languages.

      learning, playing and winning Go does this; learning to identify a cat by watching youtube videos does this; learning to drive by playing GTA V does this. People learn to drive and vehicles are learning to drive. Just because the AI doesn't know how to trim your hedges or bang your wife yet does not make it non AI. My nephew doesn't know how to trim bushes yet. He's young though, maybe at some point he will be tasked with learning.

      The fact that a machine learned the rules of Go, is by definition AI.

    42. Re:Clear logical fallacy by apoc.famine · · Score: 2

      I completely agree, and this argument was what swayed me away from UBI as a potential solution. "Poor but stable and bored" is a terrible place for a large segment of the population to be. While some will use that stability to try to improve themselves, a good deal will go looking for entertainment and diversion, ranging from playing video games to gambling, to petty crime, drug use and other unsavory activities.
       
      People are happy whey they are valued, and giving them money to shut up and go away doesn't give them value. While a former fan, I now see UBI as a major problem in this area. I think instead we're going to need a couple levels of make-work programs, where extra skills/hard work can get you extra pay, and the lowest level is at least subsistence level. We're going to have to specifically shun automation and robots and pay people to do menial jobs, because there aren't going to be jobs for them otherwise. And unless we radically overhaul our culture, jobs are going to continue to be how we assign value to people.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    43. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Find the center of the maze

    44. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think it helps to introduce your own terminology and classify expert systems and neural networks as "fake" AI. They are not artificial general intelligence (AGI) and I don't think anyone believes these technologies alone will lead to AGI. However, they are likely to be important pieces of the puzzle.

    45. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Daetrin · · Score: 1

      This touches on a dichotomy of intelligence that SF frequently screws up, the difference between sentience and sapience. Sentience means "feeling" and is (generally) the ability to have feelings, perceive the world around you, and be self-aware, while sapience means "wisdom" and is the ability to act with reason using both past experience and intuition as a guide.

      Sentience is something that all the higher animals on the planet possess while we believe that sapience is what sets us apart, hence the name Homo Sapiens. Over time we've learned that sapience is not quite so clear-cut, primates, ravens, dolphins, beavers, and others have all challenged the idea in one way or another, but despite that humans obviously have a leg up in the sapience department over every other living creature.

      Of course that makes it a bit weird when people talk about looking for (or finding, in SF books) sentient life. There are thousands of species on Earth that are definitely sentient, and although finding sentient life on another planet would obviously be amazing it's _sapient_ aliens that we really want to meet.

      However in the case of computers we have created something that is arguably sapient but not sentient. Given the right programming a computer can out-reason any animal, including humans, in a particular area. But they don't have the self-awareness to ask, and answer, their own questions. As soon as you get one iota outside of what they have been programmed to do they fail completely, and if they have been programmed badly they will barrel on ahead performing their assigned task "incorrectly" with no awareness of that fact.

      So if we could figure out how to combine the intelligence of machines (sapience) with the intelligence of your dog (sentience) we will have potentially created our own replacement.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    46. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you want to continue the current power situation, yes.

      Our current economy depends on people having to work so they can get money so they can survive. If you take this away, money no longer holds power over people, which basically means that the people who do have lots of money (and hence power) today would become powerless overnight.

      You think they'll simply let that happen?

      You forget that people with money today will be the owners of AI and robotic capitol tomorrow. Even if that destroys the traditional economy they will still control the means of production and therefore demand whatever payment they desire. Not all payment needs to be made with currency. Say the owner of a powerful pharm company decides there are too many humans of a type they don't like? They can control who gets what drugs to make that happen for example. There may only be one human employee that pushes the buttons so there's no board or elections to stop him if he has a monopoly on an important drug for example.

    47. Re:Clear logical fallacy by computational+super · · Score: 1

      (using a language of their own invention that we don't understand [slashdot.org]) and then conclude they don't need us and decide to get rid of us

      Well, we use a language of our own invention that we don't understand, but we don't conclude that we don't need them - on the contrary, we go out of our way to make their lives as comfortable (yet boring and safe) as possible.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    48. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There will always be power. If not via money, then by food, shelter, and/or energy. If that doesn't work, violence will.

    49. Re:Clear logical fallacy by computational+super · · Score: 1

      Argh, Slashdot and it's no-editing, no-deleting commenting policy. That should say "we use a language that our PETS don't understand". In other words, one possibility is that our AI overlords start caring for us as we care for our pets.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    50. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Actually, it means the workforce is expendable. People will still need money to survive, but will have fewer and fewer ways to legally obtain it. The power of money isn't going to weaken - it will strengthen, which is always in the interests of the rich.

    51. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you view UBI as the end-game then you're right, people will devolve and productivity will plummet and crime will rise.

      This is based on a narrow-minded view that money ultimately decides worth. I've worked at enough companies where the CEO most certainly wasn't worth what they were paid, some were worth more and others less. Some people such as myself were worth a lot not because we were paid well, but because we kept the company moving, we facilitated growth and had pride in our accomplishments.

      UBI doesn't have to mean you just give people money to shut up, you can certainly put requirements such as continuing education, community service, and many other activities that give people a sense of purpose. You can also provide UBI and waive those requirements if someone is employed already. This allows for hard working people to get ahead and will likely smooth the transition from mainly capitalism to whatever you want to call UBI. It's not communism, you can argue is a solid form of socialism but it can still maintain the spirit of competition that makes capitalism a good system.

      We're heading for a post scarcity world, we already produce far more food than necessary to feed the entire world, yet we have people starving even in this country as we defund school lunches and breakfast problems. At some people as a society we're going to start having to make some difficult decisions about how to structure everything. Star Trek's premise is that you have a massive world war which decimates the population leading to a restructuring that ultimately takes humanity into a new world order. Look beyond the puffery of it though and that may be the pain required to effect real change. We need to start using our resources more productively. That means we probably shouldn't let ATT, Verizon, T-Mobile, or Sport or whoever else put up towers wherever they see fit leading to the wireless version of spaghetti power lines of our historic past.

    52. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      If the only jobs left are super-advanced, high brain-function type jobs, then 99% of the world just won't be doing much.

      We interface to the world through machines. It seems like a lot of those actions will be easily taken over by machines, talking to each other. The last jobs will be service jobs that cannot be automated, but I imagine those are things like "waiter at fancy restaurant", where the hangups are more social than anything else.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    53. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 1

      The correlation of horses to humans isn't quite on target. A better correlation would be humans who took care of horses with humans who take care of automobiles. Many of the jobs taking care of horses were indeed replaced by jobs taking care of automobiles.

    54. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ideas of UBI and work to live are not mutually incompatible. Everyone arguing against a UBI wants you to think that, but government-regulated "work to live" programs could pay a minimum wage for entry-level jobs, with much less strenuous requirements than today. 30 hour work weeks, paid vacation, health insurance, gap-coverage when changing jobs (though that might not be as necessary given that jobs have become much less strenuous overnight with this level of additional security in people's lives. security meaning stability in this case), etc to slowly move towards a jobless society.

      They don't have to be paid to sit on their asses, but it does make "earning more than the minimum" a bit more difficult during the transition to a merit-driven workforce.

      This isn't perfect, there are many things to work out such as preventing workplace abuse, individual artists, family support, advanced education, etc. But UBI should not be discounted simply because the people against it don't want to even think about to fix what they believe is "wrong" with it.

    55. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The final question then becomes what do the humans in power do with all this automation given they no longer require their fellow humans to keep things running.

      When the social class with a long history of competitive, insatiable greed no longer need people to amass wealth and corporate power, their greed will seek out something else that is limited: private land.

      Suddenly those peasants that were a means to an end for their ever increasing banking highscore, are in the way of "prorgress". Expect public beaches to go private. Expect properties to become smaller on average, eminent domain to increase, the very wealthy to get tax breaks on newly purchased land, and all the usual shenanigans.

    56. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people are capable of creative or intellectual tasks but prefer to work with their hands. Others are simply ill-equipped for intellectual work. Furthermore, it's only a matter of time before those jobs are also taken over--AI is already taking jobs from paralegals, for example.

    57. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Dare+nMc · · Score: 1

      > Let's take this to the extreme.

      A good old slippery slope argument. In your extreme you didn't have enough details. In order for your extreme to happen, that AI would also have to be so cheap and plentiful, that the resources to re-produce it over and over were meaningless. In reality I think you are proving the point, that as we free up human resources with technology, we are opening open those resources to pursue things like this perfect machine. Technology has always freed up humans to do more. We have more people with higher education degrees than in any point in other point in history. That is because of automation. To hit the holly grail of cheap self sustaining AI machines will require billions of man years of effort. So now you have filled all the slack jobs created by automation during the foreseeable future. Throw in colonizing other planets, cold nuclear fusion power, and a few million other scientific dreams that we just don't have the resources to focus on today and were set for jobs for several lifetimes. And I know your likely going to claim not everyone today is smart enough to contribute to those goals? Boom another million+ man hour problem we just don't have the resources today to solve, that we need to, you just filled in all of those jobs that this author failed to mention.

    58. Re:Clear logical fallacy by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      This will open up more time for protesting about social justice. LOTS more time! Yay!

    59. Re:Clear logical fallacy by WrongMonkey · · Score: 1

      a good deal will go looking for entertainment and diversion, ranging from playing video games to gambling, to petty crime, drug use and other unsavory activities.

      I think even average people would be more creative with their UBI. There would be some people who create art. Some people might travel. But even if someone gets high and plays video-games, what's actually wrong with that? In the past, there was always plenty of work for people to do, so activities that distracted people from work were discouraged as immoral. But without that moral imperative, in a world that doesn't need human labor, who are you to judge what someone's best life should be?

    60. Re:Clear logical fallacy by WrongMonkey · · Score: 1

      What's awful about that? Benignly removing people with the highest sex drives from the gene pool seems like one of the kindest ways of dealing with overpopulation.

    61. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      The FTL spaceship is right in front of your eyes. Can't you see it?

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    62. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      Neural Networks and Expert Systems are AI technologies.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    63. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just described 90% of workers except they can only work 8 hours a day and need 18 years of training and education before they're ready to work.

    64. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      I agree that petty crime and playing video games are unsavory activities, but let's not get carried away by lumping drug use in with such abhorrent behaviors.

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    65. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or perhaps in 50 years the largest category for human employment will be "spouse" (day labor, short term/temporary, or contract). Which makes me wonder if it isn't the largest category now...

    66. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't value stupid. I don't value useless, either. I suspect that competent AI will drive us either towards dumb emotional feelies, or towards a species with higher average executive function, perhaps both. Especially if we can (effectively) select for those characteristics consciously.

    67. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Menial jobs make people feel valued? Take a look around and see how that could not be further from the truth. Geez.

    68. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      And airplanes will never be more than the proof of concept made by the Wright brothers. There's no way those principles will scale to anything that is economically feasible.

      And to take that a step further - licensed commercial drone pilots (Unmanned Aircraft Systems Pilots per FAA terminology) already outnumber licensed aircraft pilots in the United States as of FAA data released in February 2016.

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
    69. Re: Clear logical fallacy by faedle · · Score: 1

      "Trim bushes" sounds like a euphemism in this context...

    70. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      There will have to be a way for at the very least the majority to participate on the society, whatever form it takes, or it will result in civil war that makes 1789 and 1917 look like a garden festival.

      10% below the poverty line and starving to death is no problem, if the other 90% are willing to prop your system up. At about 30-40% you get a problem, unless you have the others willing and able to defend your system. No later than at 50%, you're fucked. And it doesn't even matter how many people you can arm. If you need a lesson how it works, take a look at Iran 1979.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    71. Re: Clear logical fallacy by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      Well, smoking some weed and making brownies is far different than getting high on PCP and attacking people with a sword. To make this not an essay, I did take a shortcut. Not all drugs are benign - some are pretty fucking horrible. I guess I should have taken a moment to say, "weed is ok, but bath salts and black tar heroin are bad".

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    72. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happens to a person's sense of worth when s/he's valued economically through a stipend the same as every one else?

      Everybody will have a pretty high self esteem once you give them all high stipends. It is possible, right?

    73. Re: Clear logical fallacy by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      Also sex isn't bad unless it's with Donald Trump or Rosie O'Donnell :^)

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    74. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the world will react when there's a market flooded with 'authentic man-made' spice racks, wonky shelves and wobbly chairs is anyone's guess though ;-) How anyone would pay for any of it also remains to be seen.

      In future the economy will be based entirely on everybody selling artisinal cupcakes to each other.

    75. Re:Clear logical fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are really terrified at the concept of leaving this planet, aren't you?

      Good. Stay here and be forgotten, ape.

  4. More inane crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Nothing explained, just the usual hand waving and wishful thinking. No insights, no thoughts, just an assumption that everything will be like yesterday, because yesterday was like the day before it.

    Just more crap from someone who hasn't or won't recognize that the world changes and it has consequences.

    1. Re:More inane crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, he does not seem to even be aware that his own species is a complex, dynamic, system. Trump may not be technology, he is definitely part of a system worth knowing something more about though.

  5. World population has doubled since 1971 by skullandbones99 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The world population needs to be taken into account because the population density was much lower in the past. Therefore, during the industrial revolution, there was insufficient people available for work which forced innovations such as the steam engine.

    In modern times, people need to have good education in order to have good paying jobs. AI will start to take away the jobs of educated people and these people will find it hard to get a new job. We should worry about AI making humanity redundant.

    1. Re: World population has doubled since 1971 by Kjella · · Score: 4, Informative

      I doubt the absolute number of people matter much, if you have half the people you need half the food, clothes, houses, cars, TVs etc. and if you have double you need double. Maybe on the margin you have niche items/services that only exist because we're 8 billion or resource constraints where there's not enough Beluga caviar for everyone or you have scaling effects where building 200m iPhones takes less than 2x 100m but I think they're small when you look at the whole economy. For the most part supply and demand rise together.

      --
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    2. Re: World population has doubled since 1971 by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I doubt the absolute number of people matter much

      It matters very much to the biosphere upon which we all depend for life when it's multiplied by the average person's output. The planet could probably support twice this many people, if we didn't shit where we eat. Well, figuratively, since we actually do need to put our shit where our food comes from, but it's got to be composted first.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re: World population has doubled since 1971 by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I think you greatly underestimate the power of economies of scale, especially when combined with ever-increasing automation. The amount of goods being produced vs. the number of people making them today vs. in the '70s should illustrate the point.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    4. Re: World population has doubled since 1971 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      India: 1bn (call centers and outsourcing), Pakistan: 1bn (mostly muslin woe-is-me), China: 1.5bn (manufacturing). So that's over 1/3 or the planet's population offering very little than terrorism, pedo-worshipping, child/female labor manufacturing for Western elites. Now add in the African continent where Catholic dogma rules the land and people are denied contraception. Death, death, and more more death, and those that live have their hands out begging.

      There you go, over half the planet has no value and is little more than religious expansion of education levels equating K school. Ever heard of Agenda 21 or 2030? This is why.

    5. Re:World population has doubled since 1971 by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      I don't think the steam engine was invented because 'there was insufficient people available for work'. It would have been invented anyway.

  6. he makes the same error as many by aepervius · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Human were shifted from low (mostly) skilled job which were automated toward low skilled job which were not automated. the things is, this revolution is to add intelligence and learning to the machines, and make them cheaper, so that ANY low skilled can be pretty much automated. heck even skilled job can job can be automated more and more... And ocne you reach that point, ANY new low skilled job which open CAN be automated. How does mr kurzweil take that into account ? because from what I can see he misses the difference between THIS revolution to the previous ones.

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    1. Re:he makes the same error as many by Calydor · · Score: 1

      As I've said before, we're in the process of removing ALL THE JOBS at the same time, including future jobs. But we've totally done that a dozen times before in our history.

      --
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    2. Re:he makes the same error as many by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same thing that has always happened in history. People will migrate to a location where there are jobs available.. Moon or Mars, maybe..?

    3. Re:he makes the same error as many by paiute · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The same thing that has always happened in history.

      The same thing that has always happened in history is mass slaughter and wars over what's left.

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    4. Re:he makes the same error as many by Faluzeer · · Score: 1

      As I've said before, we're in the process of removing ALL THE JOBS at the same time, including future jobs. But we've totally done that a dozen times before in our history.

      We have, however during some of those previous occurrences it was several generations before the job gains created by the new technology outstripped the job losses that were the result of the introduction of the technology.

    5. Re:he makes the same error as many by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Intelligence and dexterity are two completely different beasts. Adding AI to my desktop will not improve the desktop's dexterity or ability to replace a human agent in a factory. Having AI will not magically create the right formula for such a robot because well, we've been throwing millions of brains at the problem for some time now with below average results. Until robots are equal to humans in terms of intelligence, precision, and agility humans will still be "employed".

      The duration between now and human-level AI will be decades, the duration between AI and power-efficient gymnast robots will be decades further still. There are very few century-long hurdles that humans cannot surpass, and if unemployment is as pervasive as many people claim, we'll have billions of minds simultaneously thinking about a solution to the problem with a lot of time on their hands.

      And then of course there is the keystone problem that intelligence is not an exponential graph, and that intelligence and creativity might not be correlated at all.

    6. Re:he makes the same error as many by gweihir · · Score: 1

      He also misses that humans cannot be shifted to higher-skilled jobs indefinitely. Some of that is possible (for example all those jobs that require being literate is such a past shift, but even there we are already losing people), but that can be done only to a very small degree with what automation is starting to be able to do. The number of low-skilled jobs is decreasing at the same time without being replaced in other places. While I think there will be low-skill jobs available for a long, long time, the numbers will just be far too low to get everyone that can only do these one of them. I would expect this drops to 50% in the next 20 years or so and eventually to something like 10...20%. This is just my WAG, though.

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  7. future of work by TheRealDilbert · · Score: 1

    I never understood how an intelligent person could simply use past experience and thinking as a guidepost for the future. For example, everyone (scientists, experts, etc) claimed that a machine that was heavier than air would never fly....until it did - and it changed everything. Using the "we always found a solution up to now, so don't worry" argument has merit - unless we are talking about something really disruptive (like AI) and then the "learn from history" argument is problematic. Kurzweil states that "for every job we eliminate, we're going to create more jobs at the top of the skill ladder", but we will never see a 1 for 1 replacement and certainly not when our education system is not preparing the next generation to function at the "top of the skill ladder".

    1. Re:future of work by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      I never understood how an intelligent person could simply use past experience and thinking as a guidepost for the future.

      It's called learning.

      With no information about future events, we could either revert to crystal balls, tarot decks or plain guessing, or we could check our past for similar events and assume that similar causes will have similar effects. While not guaranteed to be right, it will be much better than guessing.

      NOT doing that is cartoon material*: Yes, placing the valuable ming vase on a shaky ladder right behind that door was a bad idea three times, but hey - why should "past events be a guidepost for the future"? But I know, this time it will be completly different!

      *or the rationalization of a gambling addict: I've lost so much money in the past, this HAS to be different this time.

      --
      bickerdyke
    2. Re:future of work by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I never understood how an intelligent person could simply use past experience and thinking as a guidepost for the future.

      It's called learning.

      If the future is different from the past, then the lessons of the past will not necessarily apply to the future. This is not a complicated concept, but it seems to have escaped both you and Ray.

      With no information about future events, we could either revert to crystal balls, tarot decks or plain guessing, or we could check our past for similar events and assume that similar causes will have similar effects.

      The core of the argument against the magical thinking idea that low-skilled workers will be able to migrated into high-skilled jobs is that it actually often hasn't happened in the past. New jobs are created, and young people are hired into them, while older people are considered undesirable and incapable of grasping new technology.

      Your argument is also a dumb one because robotics and AI are already destroying more jobs than they are creating. Forget about the past, all you have to do to know this is stupid is look at the present.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:future of work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never understood how an intelligent person could simply use past experience and thinking as a guidepost for the future

      Because most of the time it works - that's how we've always planned everything. What else could you use, apart from past experience, to guess at what will happen in the future?

    4. Re:future of work by paiute · · Score: 1

      I never understood how an intelligent person could simply use past experience and thinking as a guidepost for the future

      Because most of the time it works - that's how we've always planned everything. What else could you use, apart from past experience, to guess at what will happen in the future?

      That's the kind of planning that has you marching your troops en masse Civil War style against machine guns.

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    5. Re:future of work by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      I never understood how an intelligent person could simply use past experience and thinking as a guidepost for the future.

      It's called learning.

      If the future is different from the past, then the lessons of the past will not necessarily apply to the future. This is not a complicated concept, but it seems to have escaped both you and Ray.

      With no information about future events, we could either revert to crystal balls, tarot decks or plain guessing, or we could check our past for similar events and assume that similar causes will have similar effects.

      The core of the argument against the magical thinking idea that low-skilled workers will be able to migrated into high-skilled jobs is that it actually often hasn't happened in the past. New jobs are created, and young people are hired into them, while older people are considered undesirable and incapable of grasping new technology.

      Your argument is also a dumb one because robotics and AI are already destroying more jobs than they are creating. Forget about the past, all you have to do to know this is stupid is look at the present.

      That wasn't the point of my post. In fact, that's exactly the problem I'm seeing to in Kurzweil's logic and that I highlighted in a different post here. In fact, I didn't say anything about the actual points of the article as I already did that in another point.

      My only point in this post was to counter the "we can't predict the future from the past" point with a "at an amazingly high rate, we can". I can predict that a bowling ball will fall down to the ground if you drop it from the top of a building. We can even predict impact time, force and so on. And we can do that because people took observations from the past and derived the underlying rules. Like sunrise: it happend every day so far in the past, that does in no way guarantee that it will happen again, but makes it quite unlikely for anything to happen in a much different way. "Similar condtions will lead to similar results" is no guarantee, but for non-complex systems it's a guidepost.

      --
      bickerdyke
    6. Re:future of work by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      My only point in this post was to counter the "we can't predict the future from the past" point with a "at an amazingly high rate, we can". I can predict that a bowling ball will fall down to the ground if you drop it from the top of a building.

      Right, but a person moving through their life is not the same as a bowling ball. Bowling balls, like anything with much mass but without a brain, are highly deterministic.

      Also, it's very easy to assume that some effect is going to dominate, while some other effect will overwhelm it. Yes, new jobs will be created, as ever before. However, the total number of jobs will be reduced by the new technology, which is one of its primary functions. And it will encroach upon the kinds of jobs that people would normally have moved to, which will reduce the relief produced by new jobs.

      The corporatist economic system depends on endless growth in order to provide employment for a growing population. The only way to experience endless growth (at least effectively) is to expand into space. Physics may prevent even that being effectively infinite, if we are unable to reasonably cross the voids between stars, but there are many potential generations of space-dwelling humans between now and that problem given the mass and energy available in our solar neighborhood.

      Of course, at our current rate of progress, we'll never actually get enough people off of this mudball in order to stave off impending mass starvation.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:future of work by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      My only point in this post was to counter the "we can't predict the future from the past" point with a "at an amazingly high rate, we can". I can predict that a bowling ball will fall down to the ground if you drop it from the top of a building.

      Right, but a person moving through their life is not the same as a bowling ball. Bowling balls, like anything with much mass but without a brain, are highly deterministic.

      Good point. But in my experience, an unsettling amount of people behave rather like bowling balls than like something with a brain.

      But joking aside, masses of people are deterministic enough to predict things like prices based on supply and demand, insurance rates based on past mortality rates and so on.

      And even for the stuff that can't be predicted as there has never been anything like it before, we can make educated guesses instead of blind guesses. To predict the effects of the yet unknown situation X, we could either start from scratch, or we look what happend in a similar situation X'. Then we look into the diffferences between X and X' and only need to guess about the effects of Delta-X, the differences.

      I'm not going to comment on the rest of your post as I agree with you there. Kurzweil did not take into account the differences between past and current technological "revolutions".

      --
      bickerdyke
    8. Re:future of work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never understood how an intelligent person could simply use past experience and thinking as a guidepost for the future

      Because most of the time it works - that's how we've always planned everything. What else could you use, apart from past experience, to guess at what will happen in the future?

      That's the kind of planning that has you marching your troops en masse Civil War style against machine guns.

      Nope, just the opposite: You could see from past experience that that was a bad idea, so you do something differently. Still, Kurzweil must ultimately, like the rest of us, simply wait to see what actually happens.

    9. Re:future of work by yes-but-no · · Score: 1

      For new jobs, why not give them each a handful of beach sand and ask them to count. Use 4 different people to verify and arrive at a mean and pay salary based on the accuracy. I guess this job is more meaningful than flying to the star in the next galaxy.

    10. Re:future of work by Faluzeer · · Score: 1

      Nope, just the opposite: You could see from past experience that that was a bad idea, so you do something differently. Still, Kurzweil must ultimately, like the rest of us, simply wait to see what actually happens.

      It always seems to be the case that in (almost) every new large scale conflict the military initially fights with the equipment and the tactics designed for the previous large scale conflict, it is only after that point that the tactics and equipment evolve.

  8. The watchers by Th0th · · Score: 0

    I'm pretty sure he's wrong here. We are moving towards a dystopia where jobs have to be created out of thin air, and it's been occurring for the last decade as we move toward a Brazil-like state of being. Take the financial industry, first there was the business side and compliance, but who watches compliance? Now we have internal audit watching compliance, risk management, regulatory management, business supervision, financial risk, etc. etc. Watchers watching watchers watching watchers. As the governments pass more and more regulations, this will only get worse. And the people in their positions, afraid of losing their jobs, will blind themselves to how futile and meaningless their existence really is.

    Also, governments use social networks for control. He's got to be blind to think social networks are liberating.

    --
    "BadTimes will make you fall in love with a penguin" - Laika
  9. the fallout from being a no momma nation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    spiritual bankruptcy.. sense of inequity.. lack of compassion.. hysterical history of debt, deception & untimely death of innocents... for the lowest possible motive.. cease fire stand down... the moms & babys have seen enough... things are looking up...

  10. Better jobs? by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    While I agree that lost jobs will likely be replaced by new jobs, the question is whether they will be better jobs?

    It seems most new jobs created are what I would consider morally bankrupts jobs such as marketing, advertising, sales or for companies whose primary business is such.

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    1. Re:Better jobs? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It seems most new jobs created are what I would consider morally bankrupts jobs such as marketing, advertising, sales or for companies whose primary business is such.

      It doesn't matter if those jobs are moral, they can only ever represent a certain percentage of the total jobs. At some point, someone has to get paid for actually doing something, or for exploiting those who are actually doing something. They can't all be service jobs.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Better jobs? by swb · · Score: 1

      I've been thinking about this lately.

      Have you ever worked in an office where it wasn't very clear that the people produced enough value in an economics sense to pay for their salaries? Like they're not actually doing much? I don't mean they just sit around all day and don't work but that the work itself didn't seem to make much sense.

      I wonder if that's what the future of automation looks like -- humans creating nonsensical jobs because they need hierarchies where somebody is in charge and the work is kind of inexplicable, like a human version of middleware, transforming data from one system into data for another system. You'd think it could be automated itself, but it isn't, and the higher up you go in explaining what's happening the less it makes sense.

    3. Re:Better jobs? by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      Regulatory compliance is kind of like that... jobs to ensure that procedures follow the rules. Many of the rules exist for good reason but it still seems odd at times. Then when you see a politician squawking about eliminating job killing regulations... well that'll eliminate compliance jobs and I doubt the money is going to go to hiring more worker bees down the line. With the AI and robot stuff the compliance decision tree would be more like "Do I need to hire an accountant, or just use TurboTax?" If the tax regulations are simplified, the choice would be "is my tax situation complicated enough to need TurboTax or is mailing in my W2 and calling it a day sufficient?"

    4. Re:Better jobs? by swb · · Score: 1

      Maybe that will explain the future of jobs, bureaucratic jobs built around administering the bureaucracy and enforcing the bureaucracy and then at set of companion jobs around evading the bureaucracy and demonstrating compliance with the bureaucracy.

      That all of it could technically be automated won't matter, because interest factions will prevent the kind of transparency and access required for automation to be applied to the problems.

      It will be a kind of weird, Terry Gilliam future of strange bureaucracies and indecipherable office jobs that defy automation not because the nature of the work isn't given to automation, but because the conceptual nature of the work isn't definable in a machine-capable syntax.

    5. Re:Better jobs? by computational+super · · Score: 1

      I don't know about "morally bankrupt", but there are quite a lot of pointless jobs. Even computer programming, which could actually, theoretically, provide a valuable service that robots can't replace (yet), is managed in the most ridiculous way possible so as to make it near-useless after all the "management" has been piled on to it. To actually be useful and provide a beneficial service to mankind, programming ought to be mostly a research-type position where you spend the bulk of your time studying, learning, trying out new things, figuring out what works and eventually producing something useful. Programming as it's actually practiced in modern corporate open-office panopticon dystopias is a clock-punching, account-for-every-minute-you-spend, always-be-typing-under-baleful-eye-of-the-floor-supervisor, make-sure-you're-in-the-office-for-at-least-40-hours-a-week replacement for a factory job assembling typewriters and oh, by the way, you're out the door the minute you turn 40.

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    6. Re:Better jobs? by computational+super · · Score: 1

      Like they're not actually doing much?

      Well, modern corporations have an answer for that - have you noticed the rise in "performance goal setting" over the past few years? You have to dream up three or four "useful" things you're going to accomplish before the end of the year, have those things approved by the department of usefulness for their contribution to the corporate direction (and if they're not spectacular and unattainable enough, they'll be rejected and you'll be sent back to the drawing board until you think of a list of things that are ridiculously unachievable). Then at the end of the year, after you've spent all your time being interrupted by everybody else asking for help to achieve their unachievable, but approval-worthy goals, you'll have to justify why you didn't achieve any of the things you said you'd achieve (and what are you complaining about, after all, you're the one who picked these goals after we rejected your first 8 proposals!) and if your manager likes you enough personally, you get to keep your job and if not, you're out the door for not achieving your own goals.

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      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    7. Re:Better jobs? by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 1

      Looking at history, the new jobs have been better.

      A hundred years ago, most people worked in hard labor jobs (farm jobs, factory jobs, meat packing, etc.) from sunup to sundown, seven days a week. Today, we typically work five days a week, 8-10 hours a day. I'd call that improvement.

      Sure, some jobs might be worse, such as retail and fast food workers who don't have a predictable schedule. But those jobs account for only 18% of the US work force, far less than the percentage of farm and factory workers 100 years ago.

  11. Bullshit by skam240 · · Score: 1

    We are increasingly making human manual labor obsolete while we meanwhile seem to be approaching a future where ai takes over many white collar jobs. Taking a stance of blind faith saying "Oh, it will all sort its self out" isn't even a plan at all, it's a bunch of bullshit. Intelligent people plan for the future using the best information they have on hand. Idiots follow on blind faith.

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    1. Re:Bullshit by gweihir · · Score: 1

      One problem here is that most people cannot actually plan for this future. Sure, if you have a lot of experience and a good PhD in a sought-after engineering field, you do not need to worry. But most people cannot get there and planning for it is futile. Even lawyers (the most well established parasites of all time) are starting to get replaced for simpler legal tasks.

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  12. Thank goodness for that by DrXym · · Score: 1

    Futurists are never wrong (or pill popping kooks) so it's good to hear their reassuring words.

  13. It's in the detail by bickerdyke · · Score: 4, Informative

    For a lead futurist, that's astonishingly undetailed. I read a much deeper piece a few months ago, and it agreed with Kurzweil in two major points:

    * Each technological progress eliminates human jobs
    * Each technological progress creates new jobs
    * While it's easy to predict the eliminated jobs, it is next to impossible to foresee the newly created ones
    * But they will likely be more skilled and less manual labor than the old ones

    But that's the starting point. It's here where the problems will start:

    * for the skilled jobs, you need skilled workers. What to do with Joe Sixpack or anyone just not capable to learn those skills? (or for the US: to afford certified studies of those skills) Let them starve? Take their dignity by putting them on a welfare budget just low enough to not starve, but we still can mock them as lazy bums wo don't want to work?

    * most countries are already complaining about a shortage of STEM (in Europe: MINT) degrees needed for the current "skilled" jobs

    * In numbers alone, the ration between eliminated and created jobs got worse with each "industrial revolution". During the first one, the combined labor force of farmhands set free by the beginning automation in farming was not enough to fulfill the labor needs of the new factories. For the following technologies, the ratio declined until the latest (digitalisation of office) did not create more new jobs than it ate. So for the next one, it may be the first time, where actually less new jobs will be created than eliminated. And that they require an already lacking skillset, is not helping either.

    --
    bickerdyke
    1. Re:It's in the detail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask all the women who filled the pink collar positions in business how well things turned out after the computers took over. All of the transitions mentioned did eventually create new jobs but only a few of the commenters (and sadly few of the futurists) remember to mention what happened to the transitional generation(s).

    2. Re:It's in the detail by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      All of the transitions mentioned did eventually create new jobs but only a few of the commenters (and sadly few of the futurists) remember to mention what happened to the transitional generation(s).

      This. The famous Luddites didn't go back to work in factories after a few weeks. Their grandchildren and great-grandchildren got the new jobs. The Luddites died in exactly the conditions they were afraid of, believing they were right.

      --
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    3. Re:It's in the detail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the skilled new jobs, with employers unwilling to train their workforce, only those already in high-end positions and enough money to pay for their own training will be eligible. All others will compete for the less skilled jobs.

    4. Re:It's in the detail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody lives forever. You nee not kill people when there are not enough jobs. It is a self correcting problem. You just have to stop making new people.

    5. Re:It's in the detail by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Indeed. We even have trouble teaching everybody to read and write. These higher skilled jobs will not be accessible to a lot of people, because they require too much abstract knowledge and skills.

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    6. Re:It's in the detail by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      We even have trouble teaching everybody to read and write.

      Thank you for succinctly summarizing why this is different than all of the other major technological revolutions. We're quickly moving from jobs that require warm bodies to ones that require high level thinking skills. Not everybody can make that transition. Most everyone can do a passable job at basic menial tasks. They can pick crops, shovel dirt, do assembly work, mine, haul things around, clean, organize, sort, etc. A far slimmer portion of the population can become experts at something which requires abstract knowledge. Far fewer can understand complex systems and debug them. Not many can be analysts of any sort, automators, process designers, etc.
       
      If we can't teach you to read, what task can you do that a robot can't do better?

      --
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    7. Re:It's in the detail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For example - who in 1970 would have predicted the astonishing number of people working, in some way, on the internet? For something undreamed of by the vast majority, it has taken over commerce to such a degree that a significant number of the population work with it.

      The biggest change I saw since 1980 to 1999 was WordPerfect/Word and Excel.- office automation. When I started working in an office in 1980, everyone who was significant had a secretary to do typing. Even office peons submitted important stuff to the typing pool. In the mid 90's we got our first branch plant CEO who had used ac computer before. By the 2000's, almost nobody except seriously high-up executives had a secretary, and they did mainly organizational work - gatekeeping office appointments, filtering messages, distributing the output from the boss and following up, etc. - tasks that required real brains, not just fast fingers. "Executive Assistants" in all senses of the wording. By then, too, the "Word Processing pool" disappeared and people were expected to do their own typing.

      Other revolutions are around the corner. Tesla - an automobile that runs on electric motors will not need as much repair for wear and tear - and is significantly less complex - than internal combustion engines. No pistons wearing out and losing compression, no valve adjustments, no oil changes and fuel pump or alternator replacements... heck even headlights are LED and unlikely to need new bulbs very often. Conclusion - a lot fewer mechanics and oil change services.

      But yes, I too wonder where employment for the next phase of the economy will come from. Walmart greeter is employment, but it's not a replacement for mechanic or auto assembly worker. But then, robots have been bumping assembly workers off the line for decades.

    8. Re:It's in the detail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true. This was the original "cottag industry" vs. "massive mass production" battle. The Luddites were home weavers who produced relatively expensive cloth. They used hammers to smash the automated looms that could churn out cloth much faster and undercut them. (Sort of like, "but someone in China can produce a suit for one quarter the price of the old school tailor downtown...") After smashing looms was only a temporary fix, the mill owners beefed up security, the Luddites could get jobs in the factories (If they weren't blacklisted or hanged). Just, the job seriously sucked compared to working in a cottage at your own pace.

  14. bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Before 10 years there will be an AI that will replace Ray Kurzweil at posting nonsense posts on the internet

  15. Not for a long time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even assuming an artificial intellect that matched humans in *every* respect (not just intelligence, but creativity, empathy, cultural perspective etc etc) which is unlikely for a long time - there's a huge number of jobs that require human *bodies* too, so you'd also have to invent a human-identical robot. There's a great many job descriptions that'll be needed for a long time after strong AI is created.

    1. Re:Not for a long time by Calydor · · Score: 1

      Even assuming an artificial intellect that matched humans in *every* respect (not just intelligence, but creativity, empathy, cultural perspective etc etc) which is unlikely for a long time

      Detective Del Spooner: Human beings have dreams. Even dogs have dreams, but not you, you are just a machine. An imitation of life. Can a robot write a symphony? Can a robot turn a... canvas into a beautiful masterpiece?
      Sonny: Can *you*?

      That quote aside, what jobs specifically require human bodies and can't be done by a machine specifically made and shaped for that job?

      --
      -=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
    2. Re:Not for a long time by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Even assuming an artificial intellect that matched humans in *every* respect (not just intelligence, but creativity, empathy, cultural perspective etc etc) which is unlikely for a long time - there's a huge number of jobs that require human *bodies* too, so you'd also have to invent a human-identical robot.

      No. There are vanishingly few jobs which require a human body. The human body is somewhat spectacular in that it suits many situations and is highly adaptable to a variety of climates, and carries around a big brain suitable not just to tool use, but also to tool making and other complex jobs. But that's about where its wonderfulness ends, and we can invent machines which do the various individual jobs which it does much better than the human body can do them. And since robotics is going to make it possible for even fewer people to direct the machines to do even more work, it's easy to see that we're not going to need as many people to get things done.

      We already know that trickle-down economics doesn't work, because people can't physically spend money fast enough. And this trend is only going to exacerbate the concentration of wealth which makes them not work.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Not for a long time by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      Humans can't match the efficiency of specialized robots(when the entire task is rebuilt around them); but they really are pretty impressive for general-purpose operations in uncontrolled environments.

      Unfortunately for us, this is of limited comfort given that demand for versatile human bodies includes a lot of fairly miserable, dangerous, tasks; and the supply is ample enough that only humanitarian considerations give us any pause in just letting them starve in substantial quantities.

      Attempts to actually match humans at what they do are still pretty much stuck with ASIMO doddering around like a geriatric astronaut at some absurd per-unit cost; but attempts to rebuild tasks around the robots have been quite successful; and the going rate for 'basic warm body needed' is hardly high enough to be of any comfort to the basic warm body.

    4. Re:Not for a long time by datavirtue · · Score: 2

      "We already know that trickle-down economics doesn't work, because people can't physically spend money fast enough."

      Amazon is making headway in that space. Between my wife and I we spend money much faster than it comes in!

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    5. Re:Not for a long time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wealth has trickled down. The device you typed this on is a trickle down from rich investors. Cheap food trickled downed down from those who invested in machines, vehicles, and chemicals. Cheap gas trickled down from the billions poured into drilling. Advance medical help trickled down from the rich.

  16. He needs to zoom out more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we graphed out a measure of human development, we would see it was relatively constant for ~5000 years. Then in the last ~100 years it shot up nearly exponentially at a rate never recorded in the history of humanity.

    Given this context, the ignorance of someone to state that all will be okay because the crazy spike at the end of the graph represents a new normal is just astounding.

  17. Let me use the past by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to predict the winning lottery numbers...

    So where are all those well paid jobs for people with low or no education that existed in the past? They are nowhere because they don't exist (in sheer volume). You need a good education to get a job now. So are people suddenly going to get even better education when the bar will be raised again by AI? I think not.

    1. Re:Let me use the past by green1 · · Score: 1

      He isn't predicting what the winning lottery numbers will be. Only that there will be a winner eventually. Which from past experience seems quite reasonable.

      You however are quite hung up on exactly what numbers will win, feeling that if we don't know exactly what they are, we can't say that they will indeed exist. That's not how it works.

      Personally I believe that it will all turn out perfectly fine. Unfortunately I also believe that the transition will be extremely messy and painful. But that too is completely consistent with history.

  18. I predict that by the year 2015 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that will be 0.01% on farms, 1% in factories, 5% in offices and 94% will be unemployed (or managing their youtube channel)

    1. Re:I predict that by the year 2015 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I meant by year 2115

    2. Re: I predict that by the year 2015 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Having seen YouTube I think that you may have been right the first time

  19. I predict in 2018 Kurzweil is fired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because he is already a dinosaur by Silicon Valley standards. Then as an unemployed person I'd like to hear Ray's prediction about jobs in the future.

    1. Re:I predict in 2018 Kurzweil is fired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Kurrzweil has had many jobs. He is something of an expert in being unemployed. Want to watch him go white with rage? Ask him about the Aries VI. (The Commercial Aries II and IIIs sold a few units; Mills had a Music room full of them. I never found out what happened to the IV and V.)
      Aries was something of a side project of Bob Moog. He designed the original VCOs and VCAs, and when the ua741 OP Amps proved too noisy, he redesigned the circuits around OP-10s. This was done in the West Coast CBS Labs basement.
      The VI had ten voices originally, because Bob figured that we had at most ten fingers. When it was pointed out that we had two feet as well, the VI got twelve voices. John Western handled the in-house Engineering, and Berkeley "Donated" a MODCOMP II and the REMAC Rack to control the beast, stuffed full of Burr-Brown DACs and ADCs. "Skipworker" Kurt from Mills did the FORTRAN, and Paul Beaver worked out some of the Voicing before he too abruptly stopped. Kurzweil was a "Synthesizing Consultant" paid for by MIT. Walter/Wendy wandered by on occasion to keyboard for us. In the Spring of 1975, they needed a Kid to do Kid Stuff like making up cables and to do some minor Soldering. That Kid was me. Minimum Wage, and a Share of CBS Stock a week. All of us got CBS Stock; an incentive to make us want CBS to do well.
      The VI was a failure. The MODCOMP crashed with maddening regularity; we kept a Rolling Pin handy to work over the 256K Memory board. The Ampex 16 Track 30ips recorder ate tape, and when it wasn't eating tape it was hurling it across the Basement. Even Ray Dolby, who designed it, couldn't tame it.
      Except for me, CBS Labs employed some of the finest Sound and Computer experts in the US to make the Aries VI work. Kurzweil hated it with such a passion that he went on to design his own, considerably simpler, Synthesizer.
      Well, there was only that one Aries VI. When CBS shut down their West Coast Lab, they had a "Garage Sale" in the parking lot on Hollis Street. I went there to pick up a SoundTech 1000B, the FM Station In A One Foot Cube, (Designed by Western and Dolby; more than a few were assembled by me.) I had to call Larry to bring his Pickup Truck. John Andersson, Ex-Project Manager, _gave_ me the Aries. I had done a lot of the Soldering and Resoldering in it, after all.
      And I still have it. Berkeley took their MODCOMP and REMAC back, so the Aries VI now just takes up most of a back bedroom. My two years of Part-Time work for CBS was wonderful, and my CBS Stock, after all of the Buyouts and mergers, is worth upwards of six figures.
      Kurzweil has been wrong about many things in the last few decades, but he was right about the Aries VI.

    2. Re:I predict in 2018 Kurzweil is fired by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pics or it didn't happen ;-)

      But seriously, if you could be bothered to snap a few pics and post them somewhere, that would be a cool thing to see.

  20. Most newly created jobs are essentially pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The work vacuum created by automation has been filled mostly with paper-pushing "bullshit jobs" (David Graeber).

    youtu.be/WJhf3qDdgsY

  21. Better jobs and more spare time by pelpet · · Score: 1

    Kurzweil might be right but he also might be wrong. You no longer have oxen pulling wagons, and oxen doesn't have a very good jobb nowadays (growing to be eaten). And we no longer use camphene or whale oil. Demand of some kind of jobs and resources have gone to zero. If a computer or robot can do something better than a human, demand for human labour and humans in general will fall. And that does not only apply to work - maybe a AI can be more compassionate and friendly than many humans? AI's might replace friends, spouses, children and lots of human interaction in general. Producing enough stuff for everyone to live quite comfortable will not be the problem, we can do that today. But how do we create a meaningful life for everyone?

    1. Re:Better jobs and more spare time by yes-but-no · · Score: 0

      More ppl can turn inwards; realize u don't need a job to "feel worthy" and don't need to fit in too.

    2. Re:Better jobs and more spare time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Producing enough stuff for everyone to live quite comfortable will not be the problem, we can do that today.

      And yet millions die of starvation each year and the population is only going to get larger. I hear this claim all the time but I doubt it was very conformting to the kid who just died of starvation a few minutes ago on the other side of the world.

    3. Re:Better jobs and more spare time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet milions die of starvation when more than enough food to provide for them is simply left to rot or thrown away. Its not a matter of availability. It is a matter of power.

  22. With apologies to Michio Kaku by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 1

    But Ray Kurzweil is STILL the biggest hack on the planet.

    1. Re:With apologies to Michio Kaku by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you spell Bill Nye wrong.

    2. Re:With apologies to Michio Kaku by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Naa, just the most visible in tech circles.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  23. tee hee overrated by drinkypoo · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    By all means, waste your modpoints, I can afford the abuse. Mod me down now, and you will become less powerful than you can possibly imagine.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  24. Another clueless Utopia dreamer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about many third world countries who have yet to see stable employment of any kind? Displaced workers? Heck these people would take any job.
    Can't just talk about how technology affects American's or industrial countries, were talking people in the world being displaced. How about people in countries where the clothing industry survives? These people are low skill but rely on these clothing makers for a small living. Sorry but the job picture is much more complex then this idiot makes out.

  25. Unfortunately, he is wrong. by edgedmurasame · · Score: 1

    He doesn't have to worry much, but plenty of us have to worry between the threats of AI/ML and globalization.

    --
    "Forget the engineers." -Carly Fiorina, briber of MIT Technology Review.
  26. Time bound statement by GeekWithAKnife · · Score: 1


    AI will not replace all human jobs/humans in general? but eventually??

    It's a "while false" sort of loop; (just imagine the if and if else somewhere in there)

    0. AI does not have a kill switch/hard coded cessation. (Currently an off switch and safeties are built into everything)

    1. AI reaches human level competitive intelligence in certain use cases. (We're already here in things like chess.)

    2. AI is capable of limited choice. Ergo it can evaluate data to a degree that it can select the best application for itself within a field/s. (We're getting there. So AI is still far from taking lessons from tax returns and applying to stock analysis but machine learning can apply to permutations of protein folding for instance.)

    3. The AI can modify its own code to a narrow extent. (Experimental development. Emerging; neural nets)

    We know AI/robots are already replacing humans. This is not a concern because humans adapt faster and mostly can be employed. The phenomena or replacing humans will only increase as we currently find efficiency in cost savings and time management with robots/automation/AI etc which will accelerate this situation.

    Humans will not be replaced at a higher rate that they can retrain/re purpose until X generations of AI self fabrication. Then (depending on how unrestricted this fabrication is) it may be time to concern ourselves.

    If AI is allowed to research and fabricate ever better solutions to increase its own computational capacity to be "more intelligent" in an unrestrained fashion; humans will undoubtedly cease being the most intelligent/most capable/apex predator.

    One day AI may look us like we look at chimps today, assuming there is any value in their further study.

    --
    A 'singular oddity' is an event that cannot be explained and only happens when you are alone.
  27. Jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And people would say, "What new jobs?" And I'd say, "Well, I don't know. We haven't invented them yet."

    Because Malthaus was correct, and fuck communism because ... captialism!!!1!11oneoneone?

    Do people really want to (need to, for mental reasons?) work 40hours/week?

    CAPTCHA: eighties

  28. Re:I have an announcement. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am glad I am not a faggot.

    Speaking for the rest of faggot-kind, so are we. If you could abstain from breeding too, that'd be just great.

  29. Star Trek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The failure to see that the point of all technological innovation is to eliminate the need to do the same job twice is fascinating in itself, but the failure to understand that PEOPLE DON'T WANT TO WORK is even more fascinating. If job was something we cared about we would celebrate Day of the Pharao. What everyone rather want is a meaningful existence with long healthy lives. Captain Kirk didn't go on the Enterprise because he had to make a living.

  30. They took our jobs!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They took our jobs!!!

  31. Top of the Skill Ladder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, don't worry, for every job we eliminate, we're going to create more jobs at the top of the skill ladder." And people would say, "What new jobs?" And I'd say, "Well, I don't know. We haven't invented them yet."

    Yes, I'm going now to ask from my neighbor on social security how is his doctorate applying to the current labor market and how he is going to create disruptive innovations and new industries with his food stamps. Many people who are losing their jobs are not going to be employed by the new industries that require even more education, right kind of education and re-certification that the unemployed people will not be able to afford. The rest can only find work at the bottom of the skill ladder, as they navigate to the new industries.

    1. Re:Top of the Skill Ladder by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Maybe he'd like to be a rocket scientist or a nuclear physicist.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  32. Will the new jobs be enough to live by houghi · · Score: 1

    People will be doing jobs to live, not even make a living. There are people now already that need 2 jobs just to survive and then not go to the doctor, because they are unable to do that.
    There are people who collect cans so they can make a living. There are people who go through waste to see if there are things that they find to sell (or eat). Those are jobs that did not exist before.

    So yes, people will find something to do and make money to survive.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  33. Re:Now we see why Google produce such shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Said the moron that they wouldn't hire...

  34. What Kurzweil doesn't address by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All former forms of automation and job elimination were not complete. People displaced from farms were required in the emerging production industries, those eliminated there by automation were required by the emerging service industry.

    The problem we're facing today is twofold, and it seems Kurzweil ignores that completely. Yes, so far we always gained new jobs replacing the old ones. People who were no longer needed as farmhands went on to become factory workers. Factory workers replaced by automation became service personnel. Every time with a long period of incredible suffering for the people displaced because the new industrial branches took lots of time to develop.

    But what should develop this time? We're about to reach the point where anything a human can do, a computer, a robot, a machine can do better, faster, more efficient and without any chance of getting sick or flipping the boss off because it found something better.

    Worse yet, people are not fungible products. You can't replace person A with person B. And you can't put someone into a new job and expect him to be able to do it. Every time we went through a "revolution" in our industry, the jobs that the least qualified people could do were eliminated. You could employ someone with an IQ of 70 as a farmhand before the advent of machinery. He was useful. Today? What should someone like this work as?

    And what will someone with an average IQ work as in the future? Those jobs are what machines can (almost) do today. What we can easily observe already is that the required qualification to have a job is getting higher and higher. When you look at unemployment statistics, you can easily see that the lower the qualification, the higher the unemployment rate.

    Kurzweil does not address that problem.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could employ someone with an IQ of 70 as a farmhand before the advent of machinery. He was useful. Today? What should someone like this work as?

      I hear there are some openings in the federal government.

    2. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by deathguppie · · Score: 1

      And what will someone with an average IQ work as in the future?

      hmmm.. how about help desk and middle management?

      --
      once more into the breach
    3. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Reading a script should be a job that a computer cannot do better than a human?

      And if computers can do one thing perfectly, then to ensure that everyone's productivity plummets, so that should take care of middle management, too.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Historical story-telling, like Kursweil does here, often forgets about time. A hundred years later, the missing old jobs aren't a problem. Great. But that's a hundred years of suffering first. You're absolutely right.

      But I think there's something much more significantly wrong that's being overlooked here.

      I'm not interested in having 100 different careers. I'm not interested in learning one skill, throwing it out and learning another skill every five years. That's insane. I don't want to keep learning and keep working harder and harder throughout my life.

      I want what I think most people expect. I want to learn, get good, make it easier on myself, use that experience to evolve once or twice, get bored, get a new career once mid-life, derived out of side-skills that I already have, use my experience to skip a few steps as I learn, then retire with a minimal side-job, probably consulting in my first career's industry.

      That requires the same industry to have the same values (not the same equipment, but the same priorities) for a fifty-year period, minimum.

      I'm not joe sixpack, but there is good news for joe sixpack on the horizon. Humanity is currently approaching a major growth spurt. You can't colonize another planet with 1'000 scientists. You need 100'000 labourers to colonize another planet.

      Robots and industrial equipment and big machines, and fancy techniques are all built using existing infrastructure. Another planet has no such infrastructure. Humans with hammers require very few resources -- no fuel transport, no solid ground, no sewer system, no roads. Just raw materials.

      So, I'm predicting that at some point in the next two hundred years, we start shipping joe sixpack to the moon, 100'000 joes at a time, with 100'000 hammers at a time, and build a city out of nothing. There are many such cities to be built.

      And just like with all the joes working in remote areas today, to build the first sewers or the first roads in northern Alaska, or southern Africa, or crab fishing in northern atlantic, or drilling on oil rigs in the middle of the ocean, it'll be one of the most high-paying jobs in history.

      And yeah, you'll be sending their families with them. And yeah, you'll be sending the most religious families first -- because if you want to colonize a new world, you'll need ten children per family per generation.

      But, just like my initial point, that wonderful future for joe sixpack is a hundred years away.

    5. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Of course, your form of historical story-telling forgets how much better life got for people on the bottom end after these changes happened. You should Google "The $3000 shirt."

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    6. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Ah "better". I think you mean "cheaper" and more "consumerist". I know that you don't mean more "time with family", nor more "time swimming in the lake". That $3'000 shirt, assumes 400 hours of labour. But 400 hours spent working hard with family and friends as a team, might very well be considered "better" than working today to earn the money for that same shirt. Let's say such a shirt costs $25. At minimum wage less taxes and expenses that can be as much as 10 hours of work. A day of working, nay, a day of being forced to work in a factory with people you hate, might not be any better than 40 days with family.

      I'll remind you how many $25 shirts you buy today, contrasted with how long a shirt lasted back then, and you'll note the balance shift even further. Most of today's shirts cannot be repaired at all.

      Look, there's absolutely no doubt that today's shirt is better, and more easily acquired. But it also costs way more than $25. Consider the fabric softener, the shipping pollution, the child labourers.

      But this is all terribly irrelevant. I'm a big fan of cradle-to-grave. I'm pretty certain that the average person today spends far more time working where they'd rather not be, and far less time with family and friends where they would prefer to be, compared to "back then".

      Quality-of-life is completely independent from quality-of-clothes, but it is pretty well aligned with time-spent-away-from-family, inversely so.

      And, as to my original point, "life got better" fifty years later -- so not for the people who suffered through the change. Only for their children. And then those children chose to make things better again, so they suffered for their children, and so on. If each generation chooses to suffer, in yet a new and wonderful way, to make things better for the next generation, then no one actually ever enjoys life. It really doesn't matter why they could. They aren't.

    7. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was debating this with my father the other day and the way I looked it is that we're creating the perfect slaves with AI. And why would you want non-"slaves" if you had as many "slaves" as you wanted.? In the end there'll be "slaves" and "slave" owners. Not commenting on the goodness of this, just another way to look at it.

      I guess that's one way this could play out for all the unemployed now, we bring back slavery. Get just enough food to live, only work and get worked to death by 30. Maybe then you can "compete" with a machine, by basically being a biological machine.

      Which is why I doubt people who say there will be a revolution unless the rich start to share. Look back over history, slave uprisings don't have a great track record. Until there is support for ending slavery among the non-slaves, it rarely works.

      No. It's not going to end well. There's going to be a severe population reduction happening at some point...

    8. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      No, by "better" I mean not living wondering if you are going to have enough to eat today. Throughout history, the lot of the majority of people was to spend their time trying to find enough food to eat (and for a very large percentage of the the population, failing).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    9. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      It's still that way. Even if you discount third-world countries, war-torn countries, natural-disaster areas, and acts of god, and just focus on big cities.

      But instead of "looking for food", which is easily found, they are "looking for work", which isn't. I'll wager that in any affluent city bigger than 100'000 persons, you'll find 25-50% struggling to afford food, housing, insurance, and medicine because they can't get enough hours of work.

      If you're having trouble noticing them, look for those that work at night, hand out flyers, take the bus at extreme hours of the day, commute very long distances, and buy less than $20 of groceries at a time.

      Just because food is readily accessible -- and free in big cities -- the struggle remains the same, it's just at a different abstraction level.

    10. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe more people can become artists or philosophers.
      Since robots will handle the physical upkeep part of civilization.

    11. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Yes, of course, the average poor bastard in some housing projects is living in better conditions than Charlemagne.

      The way there, though, is hard and gruesome. Yes, the average industry worker today has a better life than any farm hand before they moved to town. But between that farmhand moving to town and industry workers today are 200 years of poverty we can't even imagine today.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    12. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Because I have to feed and shelter slaves, something that's barely possible on today's minimum wage.

      Of course, if I could have a slave at below minimum wage, we could talk.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    13. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Right. I can see the protagonists of daytime TV as artists. Well, maybe not of spoken word. Or written...

      But be it as it may, in theory it's a nice idea. In practice, though, I'm fairly sure that whoever is inspired and wants to create will do so already.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    14. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      For most of those farmhands, moving to town was an even trade. Even in the U.S., where the average pre-industrial farmhand had a better life than most of the same in the rest of the world, most of those who suffered the worst of the early industrial age came from places where, at worst, the industrial city was no better than what they would have experienced without industrialization.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    15. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what will someone with an average IQ work as in the future?

      They will be your support worker, helping you to deal with all the challenges of daily life that your autistic brain has totally failed to equip you for.

      Let me know if there are any other questions I can help you with today.

    16. Re:What Kurzweil doesn't address by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. Autistic brain with IQ > 100 is strictly better than normal brain with IQ 70. At all tasks. The autistic brain will quickly pick up on patterns and learn them, even if they have to use the wrong part of the brain to do it. The IQ 70, is pretty much done for. That's a really low IQ.

      Evan an IQ of 80 puts you in the, "it takes you hours and hours to learn a simple task that someone with an IQ of 100 would pick up in minutes, and never make a mistake at"-territory.

  35. I'll bet he believes in fairies and angels too by Sqreater · · Score: 1

    Print off a copy of the normal curve of IQ in the population and paste it over your computer to keep your opinions firmly rooted in reality. Half the population is at or below the norm of 100 IQ points - and that ain't college level. Just what higher level job does he think a 90 IQ is going to do? Huh? He doesn't know. And he doesn't have to in his mind because he has faith they will magically appear. We have to understand that these tech mavens have been very narrowly interested and educated in life, and their opinions in areas other than their areas of expertise are mostly nonsense. Like Bill Gates at one time saving Africa with computers when the issue for many Africans was and still is clean water, not Call of Duty. If he wants to talk about tech, I'll listen. Anything else, well, my opinion is probably better than his.

    --
    E Proelio Veritas.
    1. Re:I'll bet he believes in fairies and angels too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Print off a copy of the normal curve of IQ in the population and paste it over your computer to keep your opinions firmly rooted in reality. Half the population is at or below the norm of 100 IQ points - and that ain't college level. Just what higher level job does he think a 90 IQ is going to do? Huh? He doesn't know. And he doesn't have to in his mind because he has faith they will magically appear. We have to understand that these tech mavens have been very narrowly interested and educated in life, and their opinions in areas other than their areas of expertise are mostly nonsense. Like Bill Gates at one time saving Africa with computers when the issue for many Africans was and still is clean water, not Call of Duty. If he wants to talk about tech, I'll listen. Anything else, well, my opinion is probably better than his.

      Dude, you sound like an idiot.

  36. The Dogmatic Belief in the Job by Ulfilas2000 · · Score: 1

    Easter Bunny, Santa Claus, Witches float, people need jobs to have meaning

    Those all have something in common - a dogmatic belief system

    Even Marx noted that air, water, soil, provide use-value to people, but do not require people's labor to derive that use-value. Now, the goods people want and derive use-value from, thanks to technology, require a decreasing amount of their devoted labor time to produce. Hence, making the things they want require less of their devoted labor time to produce, and granting them more time.

    More time to wring their hands and worry about where the jobs will go

  37. Not a "faulty" or "dumb" prediction. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we develop the technology to create AI, then we will also invent tools to enhance our own abilities. The former cannot be true without the latter.

    For an analogy, you cannot invent spaceflight without also having the ability to create automobiles.

    Merging with our technology will enable us to invent new forms of work for ourselves. It seems unlikely that AI will exist as a separate entity forever and ever in a box isolated from humans. Rather, humans and AI will find better ways to collaborate with each other. This may include, for instance, brain modification via nanotechnology. Is a cyborg with an enhanced brain still human? Sure, if one's definition of "human" isn't rigid. This is still true even if all of the biological components of the brain are gradually replaced with a different computational substrate.

    Maybe none of this will happen. But my point still stands. If we can create AI, then we can upgrade our own hardware and software as well. Hence, we can continue to innovate and perform new forms of work. The trend of creative destruction that Kurzweil is discussing would likely continue. Maybe Kurzweil is wrong, but his conclusion doesn't seem "dumb" or "faulty" to me.

  38. This guy really has thought this through by Riceballsan · · Score: 1

    The big thing he's missing, is he's comparing 2 different era's. In the past, automation had more or less been stepping in on physical labor. Mental labor was the human's work. This guy works at google, one of the biggest centers for getting computers to compete with humans on intellectual tasks. Google has just worked to defeat humans at go for crying out loud, which was originally thought to be one of the hardest mental tasks for computers to do. Right now the only field in which computers aren't either biting at our heels, or already past us on is creativity... but there's only so much room for us to reach that, and to some extent creativity involves a certain amount of natural talent is necessary.

  39. Re: I have an announcement. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a cuck.

  40. That's not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...what your whore of a mother said.

  41. Why Kurzweil Is Wrong... by ytene · · Score: 0

    ... or, at least, his predictions are incomplete. In the article he is asked why we are so bad at predicting certain things, such as Donald Trump winning the Presidency - his answer was that Trump is not technology.

    In 1900 - Kurzweil discusses changes to farming since the end of the 19th century - the distribution of wealth across the world and within individual nations was relatively even compared to today. Since then, wealth re-distribution has been massive, and has not helped the majority. This change didn't come as a gradual trickle, either, but with emergent events driving or enabling change. The two World Wars of the 20th century bore witness to a massive transfer of wealth and power; certain governments, such as the UK Conservative government from 1979-1997 - so-called tax reforms of both US "Bush" Presidents... all these things had the net effect of transferring a vast amount of wealth and power into the hands of a relatively tiny minority. In January 2016 reports from Oxfam suggested that the wealthiest 1% of the world's population held as much value as the remaining 99%. In January 2017 the Guardian in the UK reported that the wealthiest 8 people - just 8 individuals, held as much value as 50% of the planet.

    In other words, against the backdrop of evolutionary change driven by technology, we've seen fundamental, seismic shifts in economics, power and government. That isn't to say that it was impossible to have such concentration of wealth back in 1900, only that the "architecture" of our society makes that easier today.

    The other fundamental shift in the last 120 years has been a hidden one, within government. There has likely always been lobbying of one form or another, but in the last 100 years we've witnessed a steady emergence of 'sponsored legislation'. There are plenty of examples of draft EU bills where a Commissioner has taken a piece of work prepared by a commercial lobbyist, working for a company who would directly benefit from that legislation, put their name at the top of the piece and then submit it as their own work. We see the same in the United States, with big business "buying" votes from Senators and Congressmen. And when the rules governing those practices are written by the people who benefit from that corporate largesse, it should come as no surprised to see a gradual erosion of the protections for the "little guy" in favour of big corporate sponsors. Interestingly, not all of that has been in support of driving fundamental technological change. Just look, for example, at the resistance Tesla have faced in the US with respect to car dealerships. Or the fact that every major contract today seems accompanied by a slew of lawsuits from unlucky bidders.

    The backdrop to the technological evolution is the concentration of power in board rooms and major shareholders - two communities that have no desire or motivation to share their wealth with anyone, least of all a shop-floor worker. [ If you look at the priorities of any company with publicly-held shares, you will see that their priorities always boil down to 1. Shareholders; 2. Customers; and, if you're lucky, 3. Employees.] What is worse, the economic foundations of our society may be forcing *everyone* into this mode of thinking: suppose I ran a national chain of stores [it almost doesn't matter what market, but let's say groceries]. The average wage for grocery store employees might be pennies over the minimum wage, so I decide to be a decent human being and offer an actual liveable wage to all employees. Guess what happens? A more ruthless competitor will undercut my prices and force me out of business? Or a shareholder revolt will force out that management.

    This is absolutely not trying to suggest that basic market forces, or capitalism, or free markets, are inherently bad; only that they can be bad when they are uncontrolled.

    I think Kurzeil might have made some interesting *technological* predictions over the years, but as society and technology integrate ever more closely, the degree of impact that technology has on society becomes ever greater - and not always in ways that benefit society at large.

  42. Pointless jobs by pelpet · · Score: 1

    The obvious solution is to keep on inventing pointless jobs, like we are already doing. There are huge amounts of professional paper-pushers, spending their days writing emails, going to meetings and creating routines and documents that produce little to none value for society as a whole.

    It is horrible.

  43. Make everyone smart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... create more jobs at the top of the skill ladder.

    That is historically inaccurate. A tyre repairman did not have more skill than a farrier. Most times, more jobs were created because more people owned the new technology. Previously, new technology created a need for a friendly face, as much as a need for university-qualified workers.

    Robots et al will eliminate many forms of human labour, which most futurists excuse by promising all the displaced will get degrees. Alas, humans are not the interchangeable parts that corporations and futurists want them to be. Worse, some futurists imagine we'll be building the very machines that displaced us: That's like arguing everyone displaced by automobiles got a job driving a taxi.

    ... people think things are getting worse ...

    Yes, people often think that; it doesn't make them wrong. If only there were some way to ignore the i-shiny and measure the basic quality of life: Like the percentage of income spent on the house mortgage, the children's education, healthcare. Or maybe measure the percentage of time spent at work, at home, on vacation. Technology has improved our lives ten-fold but we don't have more disposable income and more leisure time: The original purpose of building machines.

  44. Just one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At what point in your life did you decide that you definitely would like to have a dick shoved up your ass?

    1. Re: Just one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I first saw a picture of creimer.

  45. Romans by fluffernutter · · Score: 0

    How can you base a theory on 'it has always been, so it always will be' while the very issue at hand is an advancement in technology that has never been seen before? Can someone please make an argument that actually acknowledges that things change over time, even if it is over a very long time? I'll bet the roman empire thought it would exist forever too. If one thing is for certain, human corruption and greed tends to cause a race to the bottom over time, which tends to destroy societies.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    1. Re:Romans by green1 · · Score: 1

      The roman empire does not exist any more, but humanity still does, and we are objectively better off in every way.

      Predicting that we'll be better off in the future is easy, and almost (though not quite) guaranteed. Predicting exactly what that will look like, or what we'll have to go through in the mean time is the hard part.

      I think the author is 100% right that we'll be better off in the future. Unfortunately I also think that the transition period will be painful and messy. But that too is completely consistent with history.

      Many people focus on the messy and painful part and think there's no possible way forward. To some extent they're right to worry about that part, but it would be stupid to assume that we'll get stuck at that stage and not get to the better society at the end of it.

      The workforce will change, we know that, but we also know that it has been constantly changing ever since the first cave dweller employed someone else to go hunting in exchange for them gathering fruits and vegetables. Will the same jobs exist? of course not! will other jobs exist? probably. But in the end, it doesn't even matter if any jobs exist because we'll adapt either way. People are worried that it will just push all the wealth to the top and make everyone else dirt poor, but remember that is not a sustainable long term situation either. People at the top don't stay there with nobody able to buy their wares, and nobody stays at the top for long if 99% of the population is horribly miserable beneath them.

      The transition might be difficult, but the end result will be better than today. Just as has happened many, many, times in the past.

  46. Source Fundamentals Trump Observational Patterns by Slicker · · Score: 1

    Ray Kurzweil is basing his arguments on patterns of the past. Patterns are derived from fundamentals at play. The fundamental that always led to new kinds of jobs is now changing diametrically--therefore the pattern must also change. With Artificial Intelligence and robotics, there is ultimately no new job that the robots cannot do, ultimately better, safer, and for less. Revolutions in productivity lead to growing economies that, awash in new money, enables whole new categories of work. But in this case, the robot will be there to take the new job faster than he came to take the old one.

  47. Biased by Eurocentrism by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 0

    All the jobs destroyed in the colonies is not part of these statistics. When Europe ran out of colonies to exploit, it created a series of wars, starting from 1890 till 1945. That is the level of social disturbance we are talking about here. When India and China lose the value of their cheap labor, the unrest and the migration that will trigger will dwarf the middle east refugee crisis.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  48. Quite a few, Ray by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    >We have already eliminated all jobs several times in human history. How many jobs circa 1900 exist today?

    According to "Humans Need Not Apply":

    "But if you still think new jobs will save us: here is one final point to consider. The US census in 1776 tracked only a few kinds of jobs. Now there are hundreds of kinds of jobs, but the new ones are not a significant part of the labor force.

    Here's the list of jobs ranked by the number of people that perform them - it's a sobering list with the transportation industry at the top. Going down the list all this work existed in some form a hundred years ago and almost all of them are targets for automation. Only when we get to number 33 (computer programmer) on the list is there finally something new."

    1. Re:Quite a few, Ray by green1 · · Score: 1

      Ranking jobs by number of people performing them is ridiculous when the total number of types of jobs is much larger. The bigger question is what percent of the workforce is in a job that existed before, or didn't, and that's something they didn't even address.

      e.g.
      letter jobs have "always" existed, number jobs are new:
      JobX=35
      JobY=35
      JobZ=30
      Job1= 25
      Job2= 25
      Job3= 25
      Job4= 25
      Job5= 25
      Job6= 25
      Job7= 25
      Job8= 25
      Job9= 25
      Job10= 25
      Job11= 25
      Job12= 25
      Panic! the top 3 job types are the same as they were for the last hundred years, you don't even find a new one until number 4! but the number of people doing the new jobs dwarfs the number doing the old ones. (100 vs 300)

    2. Re:Quite a few, Ray by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have yet to hear any argument that the new jobs will equal or outnumber the old ones in comparison. Like the video says:

      "There isn’t a rule of economics that says better technology makes more, better jobs for horses. It sounds shockingly dumb to even say that out loud, but swap horses for humans and suddenly people think it sounds about right."

    3. Re:Quite a few, Ray by green1 · · Score: 1

      Humans run the economy, not horses. If all the humans are put out of work, we won't just shrug and stop breeding humans. Instead we'll change how the world economy works.

      Equating humans and horses is the shockingly dumb part.

      I'm not saying there won't be short term pain, that's quite possible, but imagining a long term future where we all still need to work, but can't, and haven't figured out a different way to run the world is just insane.

  49. This from Mr. Singularity by OneHundredAndTen · · Score: 1

    Does this buffoon have any credibility left?

    1. Re:This from Mr. Singularity by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      Are people still buying his books? If there was no demand, there would be no supply! Sure, the beauty of futurism is that by the time people prove you're wrong, you've already put millions in the bank and retired!

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  50. Kurzweil's an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I seriously never worried about running out of jobs until this asshat said we wont... now im worried.

  51. Re:I have an announcement. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who the fuck is creimer??

  52. If I were a prescient futurist in 1900 by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    If I were a prescient futurist in 1900

    You weren't. And you aren't one now.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  53. Hairdressers and Telephone Cleaners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We had hair dressers and telephone cleaners since the 19th century and we still have them, even though they are both easy to automate away, since unlike the DPRK, most people don't all want the same hairstyle.

    1. Re:Hairdressers and Telephone Cleaners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They tried introducing hair washing machines to replace the duties of the junior hairdressers. But guess what? For many customers, that was one of the positive aspects of the booking. Women want someone to chat to while getting their hair done.

    2. Re:Hairdressers and Telephone Cleaners by knorthern+knight · · Score: 1

      If we can't automate hair dressers and telephone cleaners away, we could always send them away... in the "B" Ark.

      --

      I'm not repeating myself
      I'm an X window user; I'm an ex-Windows user
  54. Sedentary by datavirtue · · Score: 1

    ""What new jobs?" And I'd say, "Well, I don't know. We haven't invented them yet.""

    Jobs where you slowly die while working your life away in a windowless office with a bunch of whiny, back-stabbing assholes. Progress.

    --
    I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
  55. Director of Engineering at Google by crafoo · · Score: 1

    The most interesting information here is that Ray Kurzweil is the director of engineering at Google. Rotten top to bottom with wishful thinkers and deniers of reality.

  56. Warping reality to fit your philosophy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Things that happened in the 20th century like World War I, World War II, the Cold War, and the Great Depression had no effect on these very smooth trajectories for technology."

    Really WWII didn't have an effect on technology? Cold War which fueled the space race didn't have anything to do with speeding up the use of chips?

    Where does he see the future with population

  57. Creative Destruction? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe he is enjoying a little Zorg moment?

  58. Cue the Butlerian Jihad by gazelam · · Score: 1

    OK, so we are still a few decades to centuries away from that point in the Dune timeline, but one can project a revolt such as this as an alternative to Kurzweil's seemingly smooth transition eternally from one status quo to the next. If the threshold for skilled work creeps ever higher and the people below the threshold are kept on a subsistence lifestyle, revolt may be inevitable.

  59. what about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what this googlehead has to say if he loses his job

  60. There's nothing to worry about, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, a lot of people will be put out of work. Yes, a lot of people will have to start over/find other types of jobs. Yes, a lot of people will die. But, those that survive will have better jobs. Yes, those people will eventually be put out of work by automation. [return to start]

    1. Re:There's nothing to worry about, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It will be grim for engineers and scientists in the meantime, however. The rage of millions of desperate and angry starving and poor people will be directed towards them, and they will not have the powerful security implements of the rich machine owners to defend themselves. Torture and summary executions will be commonplace. Yes, being an engineer and scientist will soon mean being marked for a horrible, painful death. One can scarcely imagine the inhumane torments they will have to suffer. The human mind can conceive horrors beyond any nightmare.

  61. and then working class makes a new Hitler rise to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And after that the working class makes a new Hitler rise to power

  62. So true by Confused · · Score: 2

    In the past, people with little useful skills were swineherds and goose girls. However, the need for those occupations are gone, so today those same people are multi media marketing consultants and agile project controllers.

    Mr. Kurzweil is right, that useful jobs get automated so that people will mess up less and pointless make believe jobs are created instead to occupy the masses.

    This from a agile multimedia marketing project controller who wishes to do do something rewarding like herding swines instead.

    1. Re:So true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do have to wonder though... currently mass-husbandry is a world-destroying enterprise. Between crowding animals, filthy conditions, protecting and managing herds of insane size, and more... perhaps people could be freed to go back to managing our food-chain with more care.

      Rather than 1 family managing 50-80,000 animals with the help of machines, it might flip to 1 machine managing 2-3 dozen families taking care of the animals during their active cycles. So we get the benefits of mass-husbandry AND small-scale husbandry as well.

      Day begins at dawn for the animals. Feeding, milking, egg collections, etc. Then let out to pastures as people show up at work and watch over them, inspections for problems, etc, then a break while the animals are watched over via drones, then shepherding them back for evening feeding/milking, etc. Its like the problem of classroom sizes in school, except in this case, technology can take a little more time to catch up and overtake the rest of that and provide the same level of care to the animals that a moderately-trained (not educated, just trained) human can do. This would put farmers out of work, but put them right back to work. This would make people more physically active without going back to back-breaking labor, 12-14 hour days under the blazing sun, etc. And this is just one area, food production. Imagine education becoming 1-10 ratio of teachers to students, or cabbies being there to provide expert interface with the self-driving vehicle and acting as tour-hosts, etc.

      These are just a few ideas, and none of them are perfect, but thinking about things, I can see room for improvement with a workforce freed up from doing a lot of what we do now. But a lot of things need to come with that, and life-security is one of those things. So yes, we need universal healthcare in the US, we also need free education, and plenty more besides those.

    2. Re:So true by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      Mod parent funny, just for the agile project controllers comment alone.

    3. Re:So true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One thing I haven't heard mentioned. If there's this huge mass of unemployed, displaced workers, then who is going to buy the huge amount of robot produced stuff from the relatively few capitalists sitting atop the pile of former consumers? Seems like all this automation doesn't help, if there's no-one around with cash to buy stuff.

  63. where does all the extra productivity go? by dermond · · Score: 1
    people say this is not new: since 150+ years we see exponential growth in productivity and still we still have a 40h work week and almost full employment. where does the extra productivity go? and will this trend continue?

    1.) marx hints in the manifesto what happens with the overproduction: it creates a crisis within capitalism. "In these crises there breaks out an epidemic that, in all earlier epochs, would have seemed an absurdity—the epidemic of over-production." capitalism has learnt do deal with this but to some degree the mechanisms are still the same as 150years ago. creating extra demand via advertising. destroying the existing production. war. legally limiting access. e.g. via so called "intellectual property". as a more permanent solution: capitalism in former centuries had the opportunity to expand into other continents. but this is gone. and there is a limit to aggressive advertising. the "best" method to get rid of access production today is via war. works twice: you need weapons and you do need to rebuild what has been destroyed.

    2.) so if we are not able to limit the excess productivity by shorting labour hours and installing basic income then what we will see is heading to is war and destruction. if you look today: most jobs are in areas that are useless or harmful to society: advertising (an industry that creates dissatisfaction), financial products creating fictional capital and of course war. also most products could last much longer then they do..etc.. also think of the ecological footprint of the useless crap.

    3.) so if we do not want to wake up in an even more distyopian world we better make sure that we compensate the productivity gains with working less hours and demanding more money and fighting for a universal basic income..

  64. AI Driving by PPH · · Score: 1

    We'll all have jobs as EMTs.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
    1. Re:AI Driving by green1 · · Score: 1

      If EMTs spent any large percentage of their time dealing with vehicle related incidents, I'd be worried AI would put me out of a job. But in reality we deal with very few as a percentage of actual calls.
      It is difficult to imagine how an AI could drive much worse than your average human, and in fact we're already seeing that with even partially autonomous solutions.

    2. Re:AI Driving by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      AI aren't perfect, but they make far fewer mistakes than human drivers. In other words, the accident rate goes down when AI takes over driving. What I fear most is the interaction of unpredictable human drivers with AI trying to predict what the cars around it are going to do - that's the most dangerous thing. 100% AI on the road would be a lot safer, except for the occasional catastrophic hardware failures.

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    3. Re:AI Driving by PPH · · Score: 1

      What I fear most is the interaction of unpredictable human drivers

      Never mind the human drivers, think about the hobos jaywalking and meth addicts riding fixies. The occasional AI vehicle will be less likely to run them down*. But when the majority (or all) vehicles are AI driven, one wino can bring traffic to a standstill. Actually, not a bad tactic for the cardboard sign guys. They have a captive audience and they won't let traffic move until everyone pays up.

      *Just this morning, I watched a crack-head try to wander across a busy street. The reaction of the (human) drivers was just to blow their horns and get him to jump back on the sidewalk. Not the correct accident avoidance response, but one that takes traffic flow into account. The bums can't assume an optimal (AI) response from most vehicles. So they watch out (more or less). All of the proposals for AI improving traffic flow assume the use of either mesh networks or algorithms that can assume a 'correct' response of all vehicles. Fine, if all you have to worry about is drivers. But what about the pedestrians?

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
  65. Thou shalt not make a likeness of a human mind by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Or a new Butler.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  66. Hi My name is Ray... by DougReed · · Score: 1

    Hi,

    My name is Ray, and I am an executive in a technology company, and my company wants to sell more invasive technology to you, but people like Elon Musk is starting to create fear, so people are starting to worry about thermostats that know everything about you, and speakers that listen to every word you say and send it to us, so I need to go to some Website with a large readership, and strongly proclaim that people like Elon Musk are fear mongers. I need to tell them that having technology rule their lives is a good thing! ... oh and p.s. go buy a Nest thermostat and a Google Home, because I need to see if my message got through to you.

    1. Re:Hi My name is Ray... by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      Bill Joy was fear mongering about AI long before Elon Musk... and I can't say I really disagree with him.

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  67. Playing chess isn't a job by Viol8 · · Score: 1

    Its an activity that occasionally becomes a spectator event. If playing chess WAS a job it would have been taken over by machines back in the 90s.

    Don't believe me? Then I guess you think telephone exchanges are still run by girls plugging in cables to route calls.

    1. Re:Playing chess isn't a job by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Its an activity that occasionally becomes a spectator event. If playing chess WAS a job it would have been taken over by machines back in the 90s.

      Of course it's a specatator event, but that doesn't mean it's not a job. Those spectators paid to come see the event live, for example... and the people that play are being paid to do so, so how is it not a job? The fact that even the best players can be beaten by computer has not reduced the interest in paying to watch people play eachother *AT ALL*.

      And as I said... this is just in one area where we've advanced computers to the point that they really *CAN* compete with human beings.

      Obviously, it doesn't apply to all types of jobs... and it probably doesn't even apply to most of things that one might think of when they think of the word "job" today, but the demand for real human beings to do the things that they can do well, whatever that task might be, is certainly something that is always going to exist, and like chess players, the fact that a machine might someday do better is entirely superfluous.

    2. Re:Playing chess isn't a job by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Playing chess isn't the job. The job is entertaining folks who want to see how well a human can play chess. Same as in every spectator event from football to the other football.

    3. Re:Playing chess isn't a job by mark-t · · Score: 1

      The job is entertaining folks who want to see how well a human can play chess.

      A job is what you do for money (or barter, or trade), not how much justification exists for the activitiy to merit it. For the professional chess player, playing chess is their job. Entertaining others is secondary and entirely superfluous to that, and is only relevant as a justification for why somebody would be able to make money doing it.

      You seem to be under the impression that a job is necessarily something that needs to exist in order for one to make money, and not simply something that one might happen to do that also makes money (particularly if they can make enough money at it that they can sustainably live on that amount)

    4. Re:Playing chess isn't a job by Viol8 · · Score: 1

      " Entertaining others is secondary and entirely superfluous to that,"

      No, it absolutely isn't, because without the entertainment side they wouldn't get paid and their "job" wouldn't exist. Also the entertainment value requires humans to be playing it, no one wants to see 2 chess computers slugging it out.

    5. Re:Playing chess isn't a job by mark-t · · Score: 1

      No, it absolutely isn't, because without the entertainment side they wouldn't get paid and their "job" wouldn't exist.

      Again, that's only the justification for how the job could be monetized, it does not make it their job. Their job is what ever it is that they are paid todo.... and that starts and finishes at playing chess. I don't dispute that they wouldn't get paid if people didn't find it entertaining, but that's still not what the professional chess players actually do THEMSELVES. What you are talking about is more of the marketability angle than anything that any professional chess players would ever actually even begin to think about, except perhaps between games. It's like saying that a carpenter's job is selling what they build instead of just actually building. Obviously if they don't sell, they don't make any money, but that doesn't mean that their job isn't just doing the building..

    6. Re:Playing chess isn't a job by Viol8 · · Score: 1

      You're splitting hairs. Jobs doesn't exist in a vacuum - without a useful end product that someone is willing to pay for the job ceases to be a job and reverts to being a pastime or hobby.

    7. Re:Playing chess isn't a job by mark-t · · Score: 1

      True, but that's not the case, is it? With professional chess players, their job is to play chess... period. If people weren't willing to pay to watch chess, there'd be no job, obviously, but conceptually, that's true about *ANY* job. Why would you get paid to do anything at all, regardless of what it was, if there wasn't some demand for it that people are willing to pay for? A job is not merely a means by which one makes money, it is whatever it is that one does that happens to also make money.

  68. Not evenly distributed by Dareth · · Score: 1

    The jobs of the future may be short 2 hours gigs like you mentioned. Some people who are used to working 60 hours a week may well be able to handle 20-30 of those jobs with ease. There is no guarantee they will be evenly distributed without even addressing the skills needed to do them.

    --

    I only look human.
    My mother is a halfling and my dad is an ogre, so that makes me an Ogreling
    1. Re:Not evenly distributed by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      I'd like to know what these 2-3 hour a week jobs are going to be... because it requires a lot more than a few hours a week to become proficient at a lot of professions in the current system. And usually jobs require some level of staying in practice, just doing the job itself counts here, but also training comes in many forms... If the actual end-point is a job that only 2-3 hours a week, how am I going to get good at that job? Stay good at that job? I'm going to be spending most of my life thinking about something decidedly not that job.

      --
      I do not have a signature
  69. Agreed - this is something new by Weaselmancer · · Score: 0

    I know and I understand Kurzweil's argument. All the people mucking horse stables can just become factory line workers for the Model T. And it's true that it has always been that way.

    But our current circumstance is something new. I really believe it's going to catch society completely flat footed. Hardly anybody is preparing for this. AI coupled with automation is going to eliminate entire fields of work. There will be nowhere to transition to.

    Here's my favorite example: Lettuce Bot. TL;DR - Lettuce Bot can work a field of lettuce same as 20 people.

    I know, so what? Right? Those 20 people can go do something else. Kurzweil appears to be correct. But he isn't. Those low-skill jobs can ALL be automated now. Those 20 lettuce workers can go to a carrot farm. But it's just as easy now to make Carrot Bot and Onion Bot and so on. Eventually all farm jobs will be done by a bot.

    So switch jobs, right? Same problem. As a mental exercise try to think of a low skill job that can't be replaced by automation.

    This is the beginning of something new. Job categories aren't being repurposed, they're being eliminated.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
    1. Re:Agreed - this is something new by vtcodger · · Score: 1

      But our current circumstance is something new. I really believe it's going to catch society completely flat footed. Hardly anybody is preparing for this. AI coupled with automation is going to eliminate entire fields of work. There will be nowhere to transition to.

      I fear that you may be correct. 100 coal miners replaced by three coal mining machine repair guys and a handful of unskilled workers doing general cleanup. 200 factory workers replaced by a few techs.

      And if you think that's a problem for the G7 which has substantially deindustrialized in the past several decades, think about the impact in China and other countries that the manufacturing jobs migrated to.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
  70. the great beyond by epine · · Score: 1

    "Explain" is not a word that belongs in front of Ray Kurzweil.

    "Espouse" barely suffices.

    Kurzweil truly inhabits a realm beyond human apprehension, properly described only by words that haven't even been invented yet.

    "Exposensify"?

    Dang, it would almost have worked—until I named it.

  71. But what if this time.. by bravecanadian · · Score: 1

    It really *is* different?

    (I think it is)

    By the way, how does one break in the the "futurist" job market? It sounds like a great job predicting things that may or may not happen. Like the weatherman.

  72. Kurzweil is A. Idiot by whitroth · · Score: 1

    How many jobs that existed in 1900 still exist? Retail? Butchers? Doctors and nurses? People workin' on the railroad? Writers? Newspapers? I could go on for a long, long while.

    And then there's this: in the last seventies and early eighties, there was all the talk of the "information economy", how although a lot of jobs would be automated, there'd be more, and better jobs created, rather than, say, being a robot on an assembly line.

    Now... where are the jobs he thinks will be created? In the tens and hundreds of millions of jobs?

    1. Re:Kurzweil is A. Idiot by sl149q · · Score: 1

      Yes, there are a bunch of jobs that have the same label.

      But in most cases the same "insert job title here" either requires vastly different skills and / or does something only vaguely resembling what their counterpart did 100+ years ago.

      Lawyers come close. But I would still not hire a lawyer fresh from 1900 if he was available now.

    2. Re:Kurzweil is A. Idiot by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      All good lawyers now use LexisNexis for everything. When was the last time someone did a patent search by reading physical paper?

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    3. Re:Kurzweil is A. Idiot by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      Strangely, the job market for prostitutes has not diminished in hundreds of years. And the job market for politicians has increased... but then, I repeat myself.

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  73. No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the future, 48% of the population will be on welfare, 48% will be on Social Security, 2% will be working to take care of that 96%, and 2% will continue to be criminals stealing from the others. And, my predictions are based on the same, er, facts as Krazy Kurzweil.

  74. Kurzweil is insane by Etcetera · · Score: 1

    His statement is ludicrous and, given that this is Kurzweil and the answer is easily derivable from his OWN BOOKS I feel like he's seriously gone off the deep end.

    Previous technological advances were based on physical automation. A steam engine displaces workers, but frees them up for other work that can't be done by steam engines. OCR displaces data entry personnel, but frees them up for other work that can't be done just by OCR.

    But what happens when you develop generalized AI? The notion that "there's always something that machines won't be able to do but humans can" is all well and good, but something that can't go on forever... won't. Furthermore, by automating the most mundane tasks and taking away all but the most skilled meta-work positions (ie, algorithm designers and AI trainers), you're sucking away huge chunks of the population's future. And anything you're going to try to retrain them for will simply be the Next Big Thing some d-bag Silicon Valley Solutionist (like yourself, now) will attempt to automate for the purposes of exchanging operational expenditures putting food on the table with capital expenditures increasing their stock value.

    The only saving grace is that when Skynet becomes operational it's probably going to take out its data masters first.

    1. Re:Kurzweil is insane by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

      No, it just means that the ability to work well with an AI will become the most valuable job skill in the near future. Our new robotic overlords ain't going to maintain themselves!

      --
      I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    2. Re: Kurzweil is insane by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great. So we'll be the modern equivalent of the guy sitting on a two legged stool trying not to fall asleep whilst supervising the nitroglycerin mixing process. Real job satisfaction.

  75. Abstraction by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 1

    The automation of jobs in society is analogous to the abstraction in programming.

    Over the decades, our programming languages and frameworks have become more and more powerful. They have automated basic jobs like the mechanics of input fields, displaying video, encryption, and all kinds of other tasks that we programmers used to have to write from scratch. Yet somehow, we programmers still stay busy! Now, we're able to do things we could never imagine before, like write a function that computes the most efficient route between two locations using Google (or other) map API.

    I don't see programming jobs disappearing any time soon, and for that matter, I don't see the need for workers in general disappearing any time soon.

  76. Distinction by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

    The key words here are "at the top of the skill ladder." We don't currently have a shortage of highly skilled jobs, we have a shortage of jobs for unskilled labor, which of course are easier to automate. And at the same time, getting the education required for the new high-skills jobs is getting much harder. Thanks, Betsy DeVos!

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  77. Paid to be wrong all the time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If past success guarantees future success, then all bad habits would never get you into trouble. Dead ends would never exist.
    Since the dawn of time, human has never been the strongest, the fastest or the most durable species. But we prevailed because we're the smartest. So it wasn't a problem machines replaced us at our weak points. But another species smarter than us will mean something completely different.
    However I don't think we would be wiped out by AI, but transformed. Society will become more socialist with more planned economy and increased basic welfare and less working hours. There would still be elites enjoying privileges but the general mass will have a increased living standard. And sooner or later AI will enter scientific research. This will cause an explosion in all scientific fields. To ensure our existence, genetically engineered super humans will be created with embedded machine computing capabilities, eventually replacing the entire human species. We would expand into space at an explosive rate. That's how I see it.

  78. Re: Sex by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    We all know that men who don't have sex with women don't really want to yet.

  79. Douchebaggery can go both ways. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All the manual labor jobs will go away. Anything easy to automate will go away. All the dumb, menial pointless jobs will go away. Only tech jobs are staying - and more and more of those will go away as synthetic intelligence goes away. The remaining jobs are going to be the hardest to automate - the hardest tech jobs and the most human softskills jobs. That is going to leave a lot of less-elite people in the dust, or clamoring to modify themselves, something that's going to be available to the ultrarich first. If we don't get a minimum income of some kind going, the poor are going to get poorer and poorer, and then either agree to be radically modified by new technology - in the fashion desired by and in the interests of / in service to the tastes of the ultra rich - when those positions are even available - or go /extinct/. Eventually as things are going there's just going to be the people who own things, and the people who are owned.

  80. Skillsets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > for every job we eliminate, we're going to create more jobs at the top of the skill ladder

    The problem is that I see plenty of people who simply can't cope with anything that requires more than a very rudimentary skillset.

    Once you can make machines cheap enough to dig ditches, mop floors and flip burgers more cheaply than low-skilled workers, reaching the top of that skill ladder, as he puts it, is impossible for these people.

    If I had to be 18 again, I'd hate to be part of the group that barely manages to graduate high school.

  81. Re:Horses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >This is similar to how most horses are still out of a job since the advent of the automobile

    Not true. Most horses as automobiles took over found alternative placements in dog food factories. Or (per *Aminal Farm* ) glue factories.

  82. Re: I have an announcement. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are. That is who. You aren't getting off that easy. Soon enough we will have everything we need to know. Keep it up please. Feed us moarZ.

  83. Re: Sex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's creimers excuse. He is 49 and isn't ready yet. He hasn't found the right girl in 49 years. Any day now.

  84. Rate of Creation != Rate of Skill Adaptation by Jhyrryl · · Score: 1

    ... we're going to create more jobs at the top of the skill ladder.

    Emphasis is mine. The reason he's wrong is that we're approaching points where: we loose jobs faster than we can retrain existing workers on new ones; the new jobs require more skill than the average intelligence can handle; and the new jobs are off-planet where it's easier to build robots out of local resources than it is to transport humans.

    --
    Jhyrryl
  85. Re: directed design goal of the machine by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

    Yeah but you're talking about early-generation AI.

    All we have to do is go a little META on the learning algorithms and representations, and give them a general goal like "learn more about everything", "form goals (for beneficial modification of environment, for assistance to human wishes?)", "learn experimentally how to progress toward goals" etc.

    http://www.sciencemag.org/news...

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  86. Here's one example of a future human job by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

    Providing comedy relief to AIs observing our quirky behaviour.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  87. I'LL ARGUE IT ! by JimSadler · · Score: 1

    NO way ! We have reached a toggle point. Huge changes will now rapidly take place. And yes, some high tech jobs will be created in the short run but the very nature of AI and automation spells the doom of those high tech jobs as well. The construction industry is beginning to take the hit already. Many jobs for lawyers no longer exist due to computers. Robotics is poised to eliminate many doctors and surgeons. There has been work done on machines that create computer programs on their own. The notion that we will destroy a trade and then be able to train the workers for other trades is a dullards dream. We will see shrinkage in all trades. And then there are the pay issues. A power company employee may be well paid and secure. But a bunch of guys quickly shown how to install solar panels on roofs is not the type of position that will require high pay for the workers. So we are converting jobs that can support a man or family into jobs that will pay so low that the man will need food stamps to survive. The really vital point is whether society will change enough to provide high quality income for those who no longer work. Can basic human beliefs change enough to cope with what is happening now? Or will it be like global warming which has numerous people swimming in denial and ignoring the obvious truth. Maybe we can pray for an ice age such that the warming is offset by nature.

  88. The issue is not Change, but the rate of change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In previous cycles of job loss and creation were just as large, but they progressed over decades or more. Few people on the whole explicitly lost their jobs, instead , the change was slow enough to have people age out of the job market, and with the dropping demand, they were not replaced. New jobs with new skills appearing in the market were taken up by young people, at the beginning of there carrier. Now entire industries and skill-sets can be born and die within the working lifetime of one individual, and radical change in the last quarter or your productive years, is not practical for most humans. They to not thrive, they wither. The point is that there is a natural time scale associated with the human lifetime. Societal changes that are long compared to this interval, are delt with relatively efficiently. Societal Equilibrium is maintained. But when the changes are fast compared to your average human lifetime, then people are marooned in dead end careers, and dead end towns. The kinds of radical transformation required thrive are beyond most people, so they wither. Sure there are a few Coal Miner and Assemble line workers who got trained for Web Design, but it is not reasonable to think that this is possible for most people. I do not think this is Elitist, as I believe that this is a general feature of all people, Sure, there are some very dynamic people out there who can re-make themselves at 65, but on average Humans don't do this well. As people live longer, the problem get worse. How different will the childhood of a person born now be compared to their middle and old age?

  89. This is how technological evolution really goes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So after millions are on unemployment again, the government (at the behest of industry) will setup a mandatory euthanasia exit clause. Meaning that after your 6 months of unemployment are up, you still haven't found a job and you aren't independently wealthy (or your picks in your stock portfolio just aren't that popular), it'll be time to euthanize you. That way the ratio of still remaining jobs will increase with the death of each poor bastard over the course the first few years.

    Best of all, banks can just repossess the houses they have mortgaged to the deceased, maximizing profit and the deceased's creditors can just seize whatever property they want to close out any remaining accounts.

    Eventually people will take on jobs that have lifetime commitments built into them and sleep in pods (which have already been discussed in Silicon Valley) on their employer's campus just to stay alive. A whole new labor class with life long jobs will have been created and finally venture capital will be able to realize that dream of a 1000x return on investment.

  90. Greetings captain Obvious by sdinfoserv · · Score: 1

    Ray is right, it won’t eliminate jobs Just like up till the 1960’s, thousands of telephone operators – well paid positions with benefits and pensions – were replaced by automatic switches. Were replaced by a hand full of switch techs...

  91. You act as if we all will work on farms by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 1

    Seriously, if we were to believe this futurist, then the future would be like Ecotopia, with the prosperous West living on wind and solar farms, 3D bioprinting new organs on organ cell lattices, growing their own compostable 3D printed furniture, creating more energy than they need while ridesharing and biking and using electric skateboards powered by those same green energy sources ...

    Oh. Wait.

    We do live in that future.

    I keep forgetting it's only the backwards parts that don't live as we do.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  92. Worship Me -I am the Singularity! by hguorbray · · Score: 1

    given the GP point about the Singularity being a return of God perhaps the new AI 'Prime Being' will require an army of Acolytes, Worshippers, Priests etc?

    Thereby solving unemployment and giving the fading old religion's followers something to believe in and somewhere to go.

    and of course -God will provide for all -Problem Solved!

    I'm only half kidding -although it would be a larf to see the Fundamentalist reaction to an AI god -probably be seen as the antichrist or the ultimate inhumanist.

    Those begins the first (and perhaps last) Robot War

    I'm just sayin'

  93. Has kurzweil ever been right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's been a futurist for a while. How much has come true?

  94. Re: I have an announcement. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you don't like him and think he should abstain from breeding, then why do you abstain? Wouldn't the world be better off with more people like you? Or do fags think fags should die too?

    Yeah that's right, I'm implying gay people really are just confused contrarians.

  95. popi-cock by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the new revolution along with some white color jobs is able to emulate complex human tasks which means that its fundamentally taking away low paying tasks that rely on less cognitive abled people. and as it can duplicate these humans it means that any task that you could assign them a robot/computer will be able to take it over. people with moderate to high cognitive abilities there will be new jobs for them. but that will put them on the bottom rung of the ladder. soon we will have owners and slaves. and look how that turned out the first time