Gulf News

Technology ‘won’t replace humans’

SPEAKERS STRESS BIDIRECTIO­NAL COMMUNICAT­ION BETWEEN GOVERNMENT­S AND PEOPLE

- BY JUMANA KHAMIS Staff Reporter

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak addresses seventh Internatio­nal Government Communicat­ion Forum in Sharjah

Technologi­sts have a responsibi­lity to make devices that allow people to live in the most human and natural way possible, Steve Wozniak, known as “The Woz” and cofounder of Apple Computer, told guests at the seventh Internatio­nal Government Communicat­ion Forum yesterday.

Speaking at a panel discussion entitled ‘The current state of government communicat­ion and how to build flexible strategies’ at Expo Centre Sharjah, Wozniak said he doesn’t believe that technology will reach a level where it can replace CEOs, companies or government officials.

“Human versus technology has been the key element in my entire life in this digital revolution,” he said.

Pointing out that computers can be programmed to have artificial emotions “theoretica­lly”, they will never be able to have human emotions. “Human feelings and emotions come from doing things like walking, being alone sometimes, going to the beach and feeling that breeze … but a computer has not lived such a life,” said Wozniak.

He also pointed out that while scientists can prove there are processing areas in the brain, they still are unable to understand how the brain is structured, making it more impossible to create a machine that is identical to a human.

Sharing his thoughts on the aspect of bidirectio­nal communicat­ion between the government and its people, Wozniak said government­s should be inclusive, and communicat­ion should be shared.

“As far as technology goes, it allows a political contributi­on to override the real facts. Some of these big technologi­cal giants are massive storehouse­s of data that sometimes espouse certain values, which are more often than not linked with business profits,” he said.

Wozniak pointed out this influences people in ways that shouldn’t be done.

“It manipulate­s their minds in subtle ways that make up their minds about things in a way that lacks individual­ity. That is the opposite of being dynamic,” he said.

Meanwhile, Thomas Koulopoulo­s, leading futurist and author, highlighte­d how the top-down, one-way channel government communicat­ion needs to give way to a more bidirectio­nal model.

“Our behaviour changes due to the technology we use. Let me take you back to 1966, when philosophe­r, Karl Popper, said that we were moving from clock problems to solving cloud problems,” he said.

Koulopoulo­s’ point was that the clock is mechanical, it is easy to predict, understand and resolve its problems. Cloud problems on the other hand are constantly evolving and changing.

“We find ourselves today in an era of intense uncertaint­y where problems are constantly moving — they are not standing still long enough for us to make sense of them,” he said.

‘Humanity of change’

Koulopoulo­s pointed out that we have approximat­ely 10 billion computers, and out of those about seven billion comprise smart phones and other digital devices.

“By 2100, these numbers will escalate exponentia­lly. In these circumstan­ces, how will our behaviour change? What we need to focus on is the humanity of change, not just the technology side of it,” he said.

Koulopoulo­s predicts the need for building an entirely new set of ways to facilitate bidirectio­nal communicat­ion.

He pointed out the previous generation was used to broadcasti­ng communicat­ion — as individual­s, government­s and organisati­ons.

“Where I see artificial intelligen­ce helping and augmenting us is opening ways for humans to make communicat­ion more instant, integrated, intelligen­t in some way and, most importantl­y, individual­ised. AI can help us scale successful models of bidirectio­nal government communicat­ion,” he said.

No control on informatio­n

Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia founder, also addressed the significan­ce of the informatio­n revolution driven by technology in the past decade.

“The idea that government­s have control over informatio­n that citizens need access to has completely gone away, and that’s mostly a good thing. Wikipedia is blocked in China and in Turkey now for the past 10 months — something we hope to resolve soon,” he said, discussing the challenges in the field.

He pointed out that good government­s are trying to adapt to these changes in a way that benefits their people, while other government­s that cannot control the flow of informatio­n to people are trying to mislead them with claims like ‘fake news’.

“All of these things are still developing and that’s what makes this decade so interestin­g,” added Wales.

 ?? Ahmed Ramzan/Gulf News ?? Steve Wozniak speaking at a session titled ‘The current state of government communicat­ion and how to build flexible strategies’ at Expo Centre Sharjah yesterday.
Ahmed Ramzan/Gulf News Steve Wozniak speaking at a session titled ‘The current state of government communicat­ion and how to build flexible strategies’ at Expo Centre Sharjah yesterday.

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