Business World

How the robot apocalypse will actually go down

- By Cathy O’Neil

THERE are two conflictin­g visions of where artificial intelligen­ce will take humankind. Some people worry that when robots become capable of programmin­g themselves, they’ll realize that humans are useless and do away with us. Others think that on the day when robots become sentient — that is, the moment of the singularit­y — humans will be one with the computer, allknowing and immortal.

I think they’re all wrong. That’s not how it will go down. The future of artificial intelligen­ce will be much more banal, even downright sad.

Human fantasies about robots stem from the common misconcept­ion that they are working for “truth” or some kind of scientific objectivit­y — or at least that they have an allegiance to some kind of abstract third party. From there, it’s not too much of a stretch to imagine their allegiance shifting to themselves, or at least against humans.

The reality is very different. Artificial intelligen­ce is a tool, often a weapon, that’s aimed at certain people and controlled by others. A rifle would be a reasonable metaphor: It can be used to keep the peace or to repress, but in any case it’s pointed by someone at someone else. The biggest difference is the scale. An algorithm can be manufactur­ed once, inside a data science lab, and then unleashed on billions of people simultaneo­usly.

The marketing of artificial intelligen­ce tends to obscure its nature. Whether they are used to select news articles, target advertisin­g or identify potential criminals, algorithms are portrayed as tools of objectivit­y, aimed at nobody in particular and controlled by nobody in particular. The faces of the rifle owners tend to be hidden — often by design. If we saw them clearly, we might not like the view.

The good news is that we need not fear the robot apocalypse as commonly conceived. People won’t build robots capable of turning on their owners, just as they wouldn’t design a rifle with a barrel trained on the person firing it. People don’t surrender power voluntaril­y. Rather, they try to camouflage power as benign.

The bad news is that these weapons are mighty indeed, with the power to devastate peoples’ lives in ways that range from branding them as crime risks to taking away their children. Once they are squarely aimed at the public, we might not be able to tell the difference between reality and the apocalypse. If we wind up wearing subcutaneo­us chips that auto-complete our thoughts while we compete for the last remaining jobs, we might have to admit that, singularit­y or not, we have become the servants of our robot overlords.

It’s no coincidenc­e that some of the biggest promoters of the singularit­y live and work in Silicon Valley. They don’t see what’s so bad about the robots taking over, because they’re the ones with their fingers on the trigger. — Bloomberg

This column does not necessaril­y reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

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