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[–]kingsmegLiberté, égalité, fraternité 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Still not what AI is for. AI isn't coming for our jobs, at least not for most of us. AI will be our new prison guard.

There's an old saying that if you're watching everything, you're watching nothing. They have us all under constant surveillance, they have a giant panopticon connected to our every 'puter, TV, phone, car, fridge, doorbell, traffic light, anything and everything with a camera or a microphone. But they can't analyze the data.

This was Israel's problem with their fence around Gaza. They had images taken every 10 minutes of every square meter of Gaza, plus the fence. And no way to analyze it all. So they handed 'analysis' over to an AI, then they went home for the week-end and enjoyed a nice religious holiday. Turns out the AI wasn't quite ready, plus the AI isn't much use if no one is there watching the AI's screen either.

The AI is already in use on Reddit, policing our thoughts and what we're allowed to say in public. Soon in private too.

[–]RandomCollection[S] 2 insightful - 1 fun2 insightful - 0 fun3 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

https://archive.is/oVzVP

But that’s job creation, not job displacement. New technologies create jobs all the time, but with AI, some of those jobs pay pennies. What’s more, AI can also ask you to train it to do your job before picking up your tools. Going forward, the likelihood that AI will displace many entry-level jobs while creating a few highly skilled gigs seems high. The biggest questions in AI right now nearly all revolve around what these machines are learning from people, whether it’s human skill or human bias.

That's the danger. What will happen to those who can't get the high skill jobs?

The reason why there is talk of a Universal Basic Income and other ideas is because AI is an income distribution problem.