[tt] marshall brain(y) robots
Eugen Leitl
<eugen at leitl.org> on
Wed Oct 29 11:33:05 CET 2008
http://blog.wired.com/gadgets/2008/10/robot-lovers-an.html
Brainy Robots To Lead To Longer Unemployment Lines?
By Priya Ganapati October 25, 2008 | 6:21:58 PMCategories: Robots,
Singularity
Marshall_brain
Robot lovers and outsourcing opponents could soon have something in common:
the fear that their jobs are at stake.
In the future robots will take over many tasks performed by American workers
today potentially leading to increased unemployment, says Marshall Brain,
founder of How Stuff Works and author of e-book Robotic Nation.
"In theory we should all be able to go on a perpetual vacation as robots do
all the work," Brain told attendees in a presentation at the Singularity
Summit in San Jose. "Instead because of the way the economy is structured
right now, when robots arrive it will have devastating effects on all of us
because there will be so many unemployed people."
The implications of an increasingly automated economy could be dire for
society unless we restructure our economy, he argues.
While productivity has risen over the year, worker compensation has not kept
pace and there is increasing concentration of wealth, says Brain.
Developments in robotics means that technologists could be creating a second
intelligent species, claims Brain. "So far no credible evidence to indicate
that there is more than one intelligent species in the universe, which is
us," he says. "But that changes with the robots."
Computational power has significantly increased in the last two decades and
is growing exponentially. In 1992, computers could perform about 300,000
operations per second. By 2022, it is likely to jump to a trillion operations
per second and by 2042 it could be a quadrillion operations per second,
predicts Brain.
"A $500 machine that can do that, whenever it happens, combined with vision
and natural language processing could change how we look at robots," he says.
Potential applications of robots could then be in use as automatons in fast
food restaurants, transportation, education, construction and retail among
other areas. "We will have robotic cashiers, robotic stocking, sweeping, help
and cart retrieval at Wal-Mart," says Brain.
To deal with that version of the future, he suggests society should redesign
the economy to get the benefits of automation.
His solution? Spread the benefit of productivity to everyone by breaking the
concentration of wealth, increase pay and reduce the work week. Sounds a lot
like socialism, doesn't it?
The idea provoked a question from attendees. When industrialization first
occurred there were fears of massive unemployment which never panned out. Why
will the integration of robots into the workforce be any different?
"We didn't create a second intelligent species 150 years ago," says Brain.
"Now we are doing that with intelligence that will get better and better."
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