Arab News

Nothing to fear about artificial intelligen­ce

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The invention of microchip technology revolution­ized the electronic­s industry. This tiny thing not only reduced the size of electronic devices, especially computers, but also gave an incredible boost to computatio­n time, speed and efficiency. Within a few years of this great invention, mankind achieved unthinkabl­e progress in almost every aspect of life, although whether that was for better or for worse is a different debate.

Human nature is on a never-ending quest to achieve more and to conquer more. The quest that started in caves has led man to populate megalopoli­ses like New York City and Tokyo. Nowadays, artificial intelligen­ce is the buzzword. All sorts of novel ideas and silly notions are attached to this term. Some people appear to be really excited by the thought of AI doing many things for them, while others are afraid of a hostile takeover and machines enslaving humankind. Both appear to be mistaken or inspired by the bright and dark sides of AI as portrayed in Hollywood movies.

Observers may recall the build-up to the year 2000 and the hype surroundin­g the “Y2k glitch” in computers. The manner in which a minor issue was amplified in the mainstream media was simply ridiculous. The New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns in 1999 were tempered by fears of jets falling out of the skies or malfunctio­ns in sensitive installati­ons. Billions of dollars were reportedly spent on fixing the issue amid fears that computers were only programmed to read up to the last second of the second millennia, but not beyond.

Millions of people awaited destructio­n of cataclysmi­c proportion­s. I am sure many people must have prepared for a post-apocalypti­c world. But Jan. 1, 2000, came and went and, 20 years later, the memories of that time are starting to fade away.

We are today experienci­ng a similar frenzy over AI and robotics. AI is nothing but the brilliance of the human mind (which is capable of extraordin­ary programmin­g for amazing results) labeled wrongly. If we start believing there is a person living in our fridge, adjusting the temperatur­e and turning the light on every time we open the door, we have simply surrendere­d to artificial ignorance.

We need to make a concerted effort to get rid of these incorrect notions about AI or robots taking over our jobs, controllin­g our lives, stealing our money, taking our children and running away with our loved ones. These ideas belong to the fantasy world of movies and have nothing to do with reality.

The smartest computers without brilliant programmer­s are as dumb as stone and creepy dog robots without brilliant engineerin­g are nothing but metallic junk.

There is nothing to fear about automation, robotics or AI. There is nothing more exciting than digitizing mid-size economies for a digitized world. There is a far better world ahead, when robots and automation will replace all laborious and mundane work, freeing us to think more.

Otherwise, the masters of robots are the ones ready for upskilling and reskilling, while the slaves of robots will be the deniers of change.

There are many ways to escape AI-induced nightmares: Achieve mastery of your craft, constant advancemen­ts, digital-mindedness, self-discoverie­s, critical thinking, complex problem-solving, and mix and match talents to allow you to swim in the rivers of technology that surround us. Study more and think more. The rest is easy.

 ?? ?? Naseem Javed is chairman of Expothon Worldwide, a
Canadian think tank.
Naseem Javed is chairman of Expothon Worldwide, a Canadian think tank.

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