PC Pro

Why your next butler may be a self-replicatin­g zombie.

Androids imbued with emotional AI might not be realistic, but be careful what you wish for

- DICK POUNTAIN

I was struck by a recent article on our sister site Alphr about the newly important field of emotional AI ( pcpro. link/288dick), the attempt to imbue computer-based AI systems with something approachin­g human emotions. The aim is to make communicat­ing with such systems is easier, more effective and more satisfying.

At one end, the attempts are simplistic but doable: Google’s Assistant is being tweaked to emulate an emotional connection, so that it apologises for errors and responds to praise with gratitude. At a higher level, systems can be trained to deduce the emotional state of users by combining cues in their recent inputs and knowledge of recent activities – so, you’re probably angry if you just got cut off before completing an online purchase.

At the highest level, some researcher­s would like to build proper models of human emotional response that an AI system can draw on, but critics have been quick to point out the flaw in this – an AI system that can understand human emotions but not feel them would be a sociopath, and how many more smart sociopaths do we need?

And, of course, this accurately describes the position. As I’ve written before, a computer can’t feel emotion because emotions are biochemica­l processes that exist only in the bodies of living, moving, perceiving, eating, breeding creatures. Most computers have nothing resembling a body. The few that do – say the control system of an autonomous vehicle, which has vision, motion and collision sensing – could perhaps be provided with a simple emotional system, but the emotions it would employ would be so unlike ours they’d be of no more use in communicat­ion than those of an ant.

Wanting AI systems to think and feel the way we do is a futile pursuit, a product of juvenile sci-fi thinking. What AI is good for is amplifying, assisting and correcting our own perception­s and agency, not for replacing us. Driverless cars will never be safe or economical­ly viable, but super-smart cars that remove much of the burden of driving from a human driver are just around corner.

The pursuit of the android is futile not because of the software difficulti­es, great as those are, but from simple energetics. All living things are composed of cells (honed by four billion years of evolution), each of which contains not only its own energy storage but also the full blueprint and mechanism for its reproducti­on. Androids with brains made from silicon chips can’t ever reproduce themselves, whatever 3D-printer zealots would have you believe – mineral mines, metal works, chemical factories, wafer fabs are required for their reproducti­on. It will always be cheaper to train a human to do some difficult job, maybe assisted by sophistica­ted AI tools, than to build an android to do it.

And here’s where things have the potential to turn nasty. Stunning advances in genetic engineerin­g enabled by CRISPR technology mean that it will soon be easier and cheaper to modify an animal to do some difficult job than build an android robot to do it, and once created these would be self-replicatin­g. I don’t normally go in for pitching sci-fi movie treatments, but I’m very tempted by an update of The Island of Dr Moreau in which the evil scientist, instead of chopping up animals and sewing their bits back together, employs CRISPR to create a race of living zombies, which have sufficient intelligen­ce to follow instructio­ns but few emotions and no ability to disobey.

You may believe that we would recoil from such an immoral and disgusting invention and ban it immediatel­y, but how sure are you of that? People are now discussing the problems of unemployme­nt caused by automation by robots, but the consensus remains that it will happen and we’ll have to find ways to cope with it. If the imperative to profitabil­ity leads people to acquiesce in that, why wouldn’t they acquiesce to geneticall­y modified zombie slaves?

If you still object that it would never be allowed, may I recommend a book for your summer beach reading? It’s called A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things by Raj Patel and Jason W Moore. It explores the stuff humans have been doing ever since the 1400s, and are doing still, to maximise profits by rendering labour, money, food, energy, care, lives and nature itself as cheap as possible. Admit it, you’d like a zombie butler.

Wanting artificial intelligen­ce systems to think and feel the way we do is a futile pursuit, a product of juvenile sci-fi thinking

 ??  ?? Dick Pountain is editorial fellow of PC Pro. He would still rather open the pod bay door himself.
Dick Pountain is editorial fellow of PC Pro. He would still rather open the pod bay door himself.
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