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."
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."
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
visit randi.org
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".
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
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...
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.
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
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.
I ignore Anonymous Coward posts. If you want to discuss something, that's awesome. Log in.
Futurists are never wrong (or pill popping kooks) so it's good to hear their reassuring words.
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
Before 10 years there will be an AI that will replace Ray Kurzweil at posting nonsense posts on the internet
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.
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.
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.
that will be 0.01% on farms, 1% in factories, 5% in offices and 94% will be unemployed (or managing their youtube channel)
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.
The work vacuum created by automation has been filled mostly with paper-pushing "bullshit jobs" (David Graeber).
youtu.be/WJhf3qDdgsY
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?
But Ray Kurzweil is STILL the biggest hack on the planet.
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.'"
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.
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.
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.
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
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.
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.
They took our jobs!!!
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.
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.
Said the moron that they wouldn't hire...
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.
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.
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
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.
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.
You're a cuck.
...what your whore of a mother said.
... 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.
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.
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.
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.
At what point in your life did you decide that you definitely would like to have a dick shoved up your ass?
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.
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.
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
>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."
Does this buffoon have any credibility left?
I seriously never worried about running out of jobs until this asshat said we wont... now im worried.
Who the fuck is creimer??
You weren't. And you aren't one now.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
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.
""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
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.
"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
Maybe he is enjoying a little Zorg moment?
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.
what this googlehead has to say if he loses his job
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]
And after that the working class makes a new Hitler rise to power
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.) 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..
We'll all have jobs as EMTs.
Have gnu, will travel.
Or a new Butler.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
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.
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.
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
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.
"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.
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.
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?
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.
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.
Hire a Linux system administrator, systems engineer,
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.
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.
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.
We all know that men who don't have sex with women don't really want to yet.
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.
> 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.
>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.
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.
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.
... 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
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?
Providing comedy relief to AIs observing our quirky behaviour.
Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
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.
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?
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.
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...
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! --
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'
He's been a futurist for a while. How much has come true?
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.
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