“Money, money, money,” as the great ABBA said. One positive
aspect of capitalism is the search for efficiency, which I see as a valuable
pursuit with a goal of making life easier for everyone. The immediately present
negative aspect of the capitalist obsession with efficiency is the side effect
of job loss. Kai-Fu Lee, in the documentary, defined efficiency essentially as “How
can I do this with less people?” and explained how AI integration into
workspaces is only making the rich richer and the poor poorer by increasing
efficiency. A common response to the ‘people will lose their jobs’ protest is the
‘they can retrain’ argument, but the reality is much more complicated than that.
People who lose their jobs do not usually have the resources nor time to pay
for and complete educational programs and, as for company training programs, hiring managers will almost always prefer either a
candidate with 1) experience and age to cut down training cost and reduce the
time before an employee adds value or 2) no experience and fresh out of college
so that they can save on salary, making it extremely difficult to obtain
enrollment in a company training program as someone who lost their job after
years in the workforce.
In the documentary Pedro Domingo asserts that the growth of AI and its implementation into any and every aspect of our daily lives is a positive thing on the basis that AI adapts the world to you. I, being a somewhat lazy person, am always looking for ways to cut down on time-wasting tasks and make my life easier. AI was originally marketed to us under this time-saving/lifestyle-improvement kind of umbrella of products like Alexa, the Roomba, and Tesla’s self-driving cars, and I bought into it immediately out of, as the documentary points out, an inherent trust in the forward progression of technology improving our lives based on a long positive track record. It’s gotten to the point now, I think, that AI has become too invasive and is actively altering our minds. There’s something to be said for going through a little bit of hardship, and if AI becomes too good at adapting the world to us, we run the risk of leeching all opportunity for people to become mature, well-rounded, empathetic adults from our environment.
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