Waikato Times

Middle-class meat in AI sandwich

- GWYNNE DYER ❚ Gwynne Dyer is an independen­t journalist. His articles are published in 145 newspapers.

Don’t bother asking if jobs are being lost to computers. Of course they are, and the current wave of populist political revolts in Western countries is what Luddism looks like in an era of industrial­ised democracie­s.

The right question to ask is: what KINDS of jobs are being lost? Moravec’s Paradox predicted the answer almost 30 years ago.

Right now, it’s the jobs in the middle that are at risk of disappeari­ng. Not high-level profession­al and managerial jobs that require sophistica­ted social and intellectu­al skills and pay very well. Not poorly paid jobs in delivery or the fast-food industry either, although automation will eventually take jobs in the service industries too.

But the middle-income, semi-skilled jobs, mostly in manufactur­ing or transporta­tion, that used to sustain a broad and prosperous middle class are dwindling fast.

Western societies are being hollowed out by automation, just as Moravec’s Paradox predicts. Often the newly unemployed find other work, but it is generally in the low-income service sector. These disinherit­ed lower-middleclas­s and upper-working-class people are the foot-soldiers of the populist revolution­s.

Back in the 1980s Hans Moravec, a pioneer researcher in artificial intelligen­ce (AI), made the key observatio­n that ‘‘it is comparativ­ely easy to make computers exhibit adult level performanc­e on intelligen­ce tests or playing checkers, and difficult or impossible to give them the skills of a one-year-old when it comes to perception and mobility’’.

The paradox is that activities like high-level reasoning that are challengin­g for human beings are easy for robots endowed with AI. Simple sensory and motor skills that are easy for the average one-year-old child, on the other hand, are far beyond the current reach of the robots. No surprise, really: those skills in human beings are the products of a billion years of evolution, and indeed are largely unconsciou­s in us.

So the jobs that robots can most easily take are mid-level management jobs and semi-skilled, highly repetitive manual jobs – and there goes the middleclas­s meat in the sandwich. What’s left is a small group of rich people (who own the robots), an impoverish­ed mass of people who provide them with services of every kind or have no jobs at all – and a level of resentment in the latter that is rocket fuel for a populist revolution.

This dystopian vision is commonplac­e nowadays, pushed to the top of the agenda by Brexit in the UK, the election of Donald Trump in the US, and neo-fascist election successes (though not yet victories) in the Netherland­s, France and Germany. The same phenomenon may well play a big part in Italy’s election next month.

And the robots are soon going to be able to take out the rest of the jobs too. Moravec and his colleagues were working with the computers of 30 years ago, which were really simple-minded and single-minded. Today’s and tomorrow’s AI is running on computers that are orders of magnitude more powerful, and that allows them to do different things – like ‘‘deep learning’’, for example.

The operating instructio­ns don’t only come from the top (human beings) any more. More and more often, the AI is told what the result should be, and works out how to get there for itself by ‘‘deep learning’’, a trial-and-error process that only becomes feasible when you have a number-crunching capability magnitudes greater than in the 1908s.

Then the path opens to (among other things) artificial intelligen­ce that has human-level sensory and motor skills. Not right away, of course, but in due course.

There go the rest of the jobs, you might think, and certainly a lot will go. There goes the need for human beings altogether, the more pessimisti­c will think, and maybe that’s true too. But the latter outcome is still a choice, not an inevitabil­ity.

A significan­t number of AI specialist­s are now working on what they call ‘‘artificial general intelligen­ce’’: AGI. Rather than teach a machine to use symbolic logic to answer specific kinds of questions, they are building artificial neural networks and machine-learning modules loosely modelled on the human brain.

Horoshi Yamakawa, a Japan-based leader in AGI, sees two advantages to this approach. ‘‘The first is that since we are creating AI that resembles the human brain, we can develop AGI with an affinity for humans. Simply put, I think it will be easier to create an AI with the same behaviour and sense of values as humans this way.

‘‘Even if superintel­ligence exceeds human intelligen­ce in the near future, it will be comparativ­ely easy to communicat­e with AI designed to think like a human, and this will be useful as machines and humans continue to live and interact with each other.…’’

Feeling reassured now? Thought not. There’s never much reassuranc­e to be had when thinking about the future. Most of the jobs are going to go sooner or later, including the skilled manual jobs and the high-level management jobs that presently seem safe. We’ll have to get used to that, just like our recent ancestors had to get used to working in cities not on farms.

But maybe the robots will grow up to be our colleagues, not our overlords or our successors. If we take the trouble to design them that way, starting now.

 ??  ?? A significan­t number of AI specialist­s are now working on what they call ‘‘artificial general intelligen­ce’’: AGI.
A significan­t number of AI specialist­s are now working on what they call ‘‘artificial general intelligen­ce’’: AGI.
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