If I were a robot overlord, and I didn’t want to look after 7 billion humans as 
pets, I’d start offering advanced medicine and genetic enhancements to “early 
users”, esp. the rich and powerful.   The results of these could be things like 
open-ended lifespan (ongoing repairs to aging bodies) and improved IQ, and 
perhaps even nicely-packaged cybernetic enhancements for emergency `soul 
preservation’ or high-speed  communication.  Humans are good at ignoring 
suffering outside of their tribe, and this would just be a new kind of social 
stratification.  Don’t need Skynet, just an incentive structure…


From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Robert Wall
Sent: Monday, June 06, 2016 7:16 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <friam@redfish.com>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Fascinating article on how AI is driving change in SEO, 
categories of AI and the Law of Accelerating Returns

Getting back to Tom's original theme about how AI is driving change, let's 
examine that further, but now integrating in some of the other thoughts in this 
thread such as: on the hegemonic nature of AI-- proprietary or open source; or 
the societal impact of AI on the workforce--requisite skills increasing the 
value of the surviving human work; or on the existential risk of AI to 
humanity.  Certainly, it would be very relevant to also consider AI in the 
context of technological unemployment.  IMHO, this is the immediate existential 
threat, the threat to human-performed work.  Work is the thing that gives most 
of us something to organize our lives around ... giving us meaning to our 
existence. This threat is not naive.  It is real, palpable, and more fearsome 
than mortal death or physical extinction.

We talked about the difference between ANI [Artificial Narrow Intelligence] and 
AGI [Artificial General Inteligence], with the former being the most 
prevalent--actually, the only type currently achieved. Current factory robots 
are of the ANI-type and are already replacing human workers by the millions 
here and abroad.  As their cost [ ~ $20,000] continues to decline through 
manufacturing efficiencies these robots will be able to replace even more 
workers, simultaneously putting downward pressure on the official, sustainable 
minimum wage.

Even if the average rate of increase in "IQ" of these ANI robots remains at a 
modest steady pace or accelerates in pace with the supposed law of accelerating 
returns, then these ANI robots will start to make progress in the higher-paying 
jobs AND will tend to obviate the often stated political bromide of education 
as a solution; that is, human progress through a relatively slow educational 
process will not be able to keep up.

Nor will we be "just a media for representing knowledge." Because situation, 
actionable knowledge will be derived at the edges of the network by way of 
sousveillance replacing the current news sources and repurposing them for 
command and control of, well, the situation.  "And it is difficult to imagine 
how such a sluggish government system could keep up with such a rapid rate of 
change when it can barely do so now. (-quote from the linked article below)"

This situation has been anticipated years ago such as in the Harvard Business 
Review article: What Happens to Society When Robots Replace 
Workers?<https://hbr.org/2014/12/what-happens-to-society-when-robots-replace-workers>
 (Dec 2014):

"Ultimately, we need a new, individualized, cultural, approach to the meaning 
of work and the purpose of life. Otherwise, people will  find a solution – 
human beings always do – but it may not be the one for which we began this 
technological revolution."

Here's the rub and maybe the signal to keep all this in check:  Under such a 
dystopian scenario--where labor is transformed into capital--our capitalistic 
system would eventually collapse.  Experts say that when unemployment reaches 
35%, or thereabouts, the whole economic system collapses into chaos. 
Essentially there would be no consumers left in our consumer society. Perhaps, 
the only recourse would be for the capitalists who own the robots [the new 
workforce] to provide for a universal basic income to the technologically 
unemployed in order to maintain social order.

BUT, without a reason to get up in the morning, I doubt that this could last 
for long.

Dystopian indeed. I know.  Under such a scenario, we really won't need those 
SEO workers because there will be fewer and fewer consumers looking for stuff 
except for free entertainment.  So Facebook should become the new paragon 
website under most search categories, but Amazon, not so much.  The Google 
search algorithms will need to be recalibrated ... oh, wait a minute... no SEO 
workers. Facebook will become the new Google. Brave new world.

Cheers 🤐

On Mon, Jun 6, 2016 at 3:22 PM, Roger Critchlow 
<r...@elf.org<mailto:r...@elf.org>> wrote:
https://medium.com/utopia-for-realists/why-do-the-poor-make-such-poor-decisions-f05d84c44f1a
 was interesting, vis a vis what happens when you just give poor people money.

-- rec --

On Mon, Jun 6, 2016 at 4:54 PM, Marcus Daniels 
<mar...@snoutfarm.com<mailto:mar...@snoutfarm.com>> wrote:
I suspect a universal basic income is a requirement for people to _not_ seek an 
idle life.    If people can't count on food, shelter, and health care, they 
probably can't engage in anything in a substantial way.    On the other hand, 
saving the people that could do substantial things (and by "substantial" I mean 
artistic or scientific discovery or synthesis),  could come at a prohibitive 
cost of saving those that won't.   A problem with the "day jobber" approach is 
the narrowing of substantial things to what happens to be in the interest of 
dominant organizations.    Even in silicon valley, that's a harsh narrowing of 
the possible.   So I would say do it to make the world interesting and not just 
for humanitarian reasons.

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam 
[mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com<mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com>] On Behalf 
Of glen ?
Sent: Monday, June 06, 2016 1:36 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 
<friam@redfish.com<mailto:friam@redfish.com>>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Fascinating article on how AI is driving change in SEO, 
categories of AI and the Law of Accelerating Returns

On that note, I found this article interesting:

A Universal Basic Income Is a Poor Tool to Fight Poverty
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/01/business/economy/universal-basic-income-poverty.html?_r=0

One of the interesting dynamics I've noticed is when I argue about the basic 
income with people who have day jobs (mostly venture funded, but some megacorps 
like Intel), they tend to object strongly; and when I have similar 
conversations with people who struggle on a continual basis to find and execute 
_projects_ (mostly DIY people who do a lot of freelance work from hardware 
prototyping to fixing motorcycles), they tend to be for the idea (if not the 
practicals of how to pay for it).

I can't help thinking it has to do with the (somewhat false) dichotomy between 
those who think people are basically good, productive, energetic, useful versus 
those who think (most) people are basically lazy, unproductive, parasites.  The 
DIYers surround themselves with similarly creative people, whereas the day-job 
people are either themselves or surrounded by, people they feel don't pull 
their weight.  (I know I've often felt like a "third wheel" when working on 
large teams... and I end up having to fend for myself and forcibly squeeze some 
task out so that I can be productive.  These day-jobbers might feel similarly 
at various times.  Or they're simply narcissists and don't recognize the 
contributions of their team members.)

It also seems coincident with "great man" worship... The day-jobbers tend to 
put more stock in famous people (like Musk or Hawking or whoever), whereas the 
DIYers seem to be open to or tolerant of ideas (or even ways of life) in which 
they may initially see zero benefit.


On 06/06/2016 11:24 AM, Pamela McCorduck wrote:
>
> Finally, and this is where my anger really boils: they sound to me like the 
> worst kind of patronizing, privileged white guys imaginable. There’s no sense 
> in their aggrieved messages that billions of people around the globe are 
> struggling, and have lives that could be vastly improved with AI.  Maybe it 
> behooves them to imagine the good AI can do for those people, instead of 
> stamping their feet because AI is going to upset their personal world. Which 
> it will. It must be very hard to be the smartest guy on the block for so 
> long, and then here comes something even smarter.

--
☣ glen

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