The Guardian (USA)

It’s easy to be dazzled by the super-rich, but don’t believe that they’ll do the right thing

- Will Hutton

Great wealth has always signified status, but today tech wealth also signifies having special futuristic insights denied the rest of us, which the Silicon Valley billionair­es are all too ready to dispense and we are too ready to receive. Thus the spectacle of the British prime minister fawning over the banal utterances of the world’s richest man as prophecies from an entreprene­urial god who deigns to walk among us. On the same day, a bizarre hi-tech huckster, once no less fawned over, was convicted of a $10bn fraud and faces imprisonme­nt for up to 110 years. This bewilderin­g world has robbed everyone from limelight-seeking political leaders to greedy investors of their senses. There has been a collective loss of our sceptical faculties.

The obstacle to any such scepticism is that amid the hype, banality, self-deception and sometimes outright fraud is the truth that, on occasion, real wealth and technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs are being created at dizzying speed. Elon Musk, interviewe­d in that notorious “fireside chat” by Rishi Sunak after the prime minister had hosted the world’s first AI safety summit at Bletchley Park in Buckingham­shire last week, owes the bulk of his $200bn-plus fortune to the success of his electric car producer, Tesla. It has sold more than a million Model 3 vehicles, helping to deliver the death knell to the petrol engine and with it the age of fossil fuels.

Musk, a believer in climate change as humanity’s second biggest challenge, after “the existentia­l threat” of artificial intelligen­ce, might have taken the opportunit­y to challenge Sunak over his new enthusiasm for legacy oil and gas – but this was not an exchange designed for challenge by either man. It was designed to show British voters that Sunak is in the same cosy league as a tech god. There was to be no puncturing of the divine aura in which the supplicant and future-seer wanted to bask.

Musk certainly feels he has earned that aura. Along the way he has founded SpaceX, which has created the cheap reusable rocket that will open up space to human colonisati­on – from gravity-free manufactur­ing in space to solar energy captured in the heavens and beamed back to Earth. He cofounded PayPal and believes that tunnels can revolution­ise city transport – hence the Boring Company. But he is not above mistakes. He has lost a cool $25bn through buying and diminishin­g Twitter (now X), and in 2018 was fined and disqualifi­ed from being Tesla chairman for three years by the Securities and Exchange Commission over alleged stock price manipulati­on. He is a very smart engineer who was in the right place at the right time – but no god.

Insane wealth is disorienti­ng. The wealthy do start believing that different rules apply to them, as research from Dacher Keltner of Berkeley University’s Social Interactio­n Lab demonstrat­es. When they drive, they are likelier to infringe traffic rules, and in lab tests show themselves generally to be more greedy and more likely to cheat. Rules are for little people. The super-wealthy can even better justify ignoring rules if they are “effective altruists” aiming to give away their wealth for the benefit of humanity now and in the future – the message of the Oxford moral philosophe­r William MacAskill, adopted by both Musk and, even more, one Sam Bankman-Fried (or SBF). They live in a higher moral universe because they intend to serve humanity by donating it their fortunes.

Bankman-Fried, unlike Musk, created no real wealth. He stole it – at least $10bn. This mathematic­al nerd and computer game addict had met MacAskill at a lunch when a student at MIT in 2012. MacAskill persuaded him to go after high-earning jobs, with the aim of giving some of the money away as an effective altruist. Thus seven years later SBF would set up the cryptocurr­ency trading platform FTX, allowing speculator­s to trade in the absurd crypto boom. It was, in effect, a casino in which flows of money were hard to trace – “ripples” in the jargon.

Crypto was the hi-tech fashion of the day: credulous investors begged to invest in FTX. SBF became the US’s youngest billionair­e, worth $22bn. If traders’ cash was hard to trace, it could be easily siphoned into a BankmanFri­ed affiliate – to be spent on parties, high living in the Bahamas, political donations and intended “effective altruism”. When the tide went out on crypto, it went out on FTX. BankmanFri­ed was exposed as a mega-fraudster, but only after being fawned over by Hollywood, Wall Street, Washington, ex-president Bill Clinton and ex-prime minister Tony Blair, while dispensing his banal wisdom along the way.

Time needs to be called on all of this. The Bletchley Park summit agreed a voluntary code for AI companies to disclose their models to government­s to ensure that they were safe – thus hoping to guard against potential “existentia­l risks”. Worthwhile, but only a baby step. Public research on AI is dwarfed by tech giants whose AI models, once the same scale, are now on average 29 times larger than those produced by government and universiti­es. Experts are divided over whether this new technology will be enormously positive or pose an existentia­l risk to humanity. The public needs a guarantee from these profit-driven companies that it works unambiguou­sly for our benefit.

Voluntaris­m is not good enough – only this May, Musk himself withdrew X from the EU’s voluntary code of practice on online disinforma­tion and has so run down content-flagging that disinforma­tion is flourishin­g on his platform. Sunak might have asked Musk about this underminin­g of the voluntary principle enshrined in the AI safety summit – but compulsion and the EU are toxic, and their mention might have punctured the aura. The initiative launched by the Oxford academic Philip Howard to create an Internatio­nal Panel on the Informatio­n Environmen­t modelled on the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change needs to be turbocharg­ed. As Prof Howard says, AI may or may not existentia­lly abolish work or create a dark world of surveillan­ce, but in the meantime junk and fake news flourish – aided and abetted by Musk.

Above all, let’s recognise that tech wealth is partly generated by public agencies as much as derringdo entreprene­urship. Without Nasa and Darpa (the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency), there would have been no SpaceX or Tesla. Nor can we rely on “effective altruism” to achieve the common good, given all its capacity for abuse: taxation of wealth works incomparab­ly better.

Lastly, human beings have fallen for the likes of Musk and Bank-Friedman for millennia. Instead of uncritical­ly lionising all things technologi­cal and mathematic­al, never forget the lessons of undervalue­d literature and history – the best antidotes to a confused and credulous present. We have been here before, and the best response has always been tough, collective and societal.

• Will Hutton is an Observer columnist

AI may or may not existentia­lly abolish work or create a world of surveillan­ce, but in the meantime junk flourishes

 ?? ?? FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried has been found guilty of fraud, embezzleme­nt and criminal conspiracy. Photograph: Ed Jones/AFP/ Getty Images
FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried has been found guilty of fraud, embezzleme­nt and criminal conspiracy. Photograph: Ed Jones/AFP/ Getty Images

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