Tag Archives: Tech Bros

Efficiency is NOT the measure of a human life

I was brought up as a Catholic, but I’ve been an atheist since I was sixteen so I really, really don’t care what the Pope says or does. Except for now. The Pope’s document – Magnifica Humanitas – is about the effect AI may have on humans, and that I do care about, a lot.

This is the video analysis of Magnifica Humanitas I just watched:

Honestly, this was the best 13 minutes I’ve ever spent because it encapsulates so much of what chills me about this iteration of AI. And the fact that it comes from the Pope of all people is mind boggling. Anyway for those of you who haven’t spent the same 13 minutes, here’s a quick summary of the points covered in the video:

  • Transhumanism is the philosophy underlying much of the development of AI in the West. Transhumanism is something Peter Thiel embraces – instant alarm bells. Transhumanism basically says that humans are inefficient and their value is based on the degree to which they become more efficient. Or are made to become more efficient. Hmm…
  • The Just War Doctrine is now obsolete because autonomous AI weaponry has no conscience. Therefore the rules that described how and when a war might be justified – e.g. in defence – are no longer in play.
  • Private tech companies – our beloved Robber Barons – are now more powerful than some governments and control what we see, hear, and think.
  • AI is built on something very close to slave labour. The specific example is Third World data labellers who work under poor conditions for very little pay. What are data labellers? They are the people who literally attach a label to all sorts of images so AI knows what they are – e.g. car, backpack, street lamp etc etc.
  • AI is not neutral. AI may be a machine but it is built/trained by people with distinct biases, therefore what comes out of AI is also biased.

If any of these five points caught your attention, please watch the video. Or at least click on the relevant timestamp in the description of the video. Don’t know how? Click the ‘More…’ option in the description found below the video and then click one of the links that will take you directly to the point you’re interested in:

Have a great weekend everyone.

Cheers,
Meeks


“The pain of change is never distributed evenly.”

The Industrial Revolution that [eventually] led to the technological age we now live in, was not all ‘yay, yay, rah, rah, ain’t life grand’. It took roughly 60 years before the people suffering through the beginning of the Industrial Revolution actually felt any kind of benefit. And that benefit wasn’t handed to them by benevolent Industrialists. They had to fight for it, inch by inch by inch.

Want to know what the first benefit to ordinary people was? Young children – little children – no longer lost fingers because they were forced to crawl under blocked machines to unblock them. Guess what happened when the machines suddenly started up again?

And the second great benefit? The 10 hour [working] day. This was down from 14 hours for everyone, including children.

For most people, the lived experience of the Industrial Revolution was horrific, but we are never told about that part when we learn about English history at school. I know I wasn’t. It was all dressed up as a wonderful example of progress. No mention of cruelty or human greed…

I strongly recommend watching this entire video, but if you only watch a bit of it then start from this point:

I, personally, think that the current iteration of AI will fail because it can’t be trusted to do the job ‘industrialists’ have been promised. But there will be new versions of AI in the future, the only question is whether we have to suffer through another Industrial Revolution, or whether we can make the next one gentler and more equitable.

I truly hope the transition will be kinder for our children, and our children’s children, but I do not believe the Tech Bros will be any kinder than the Robber Barons of the Industrial Revolution. It’s simply not in their DNA. We, the people, will have to force our governments to do what all governments are supposed to do: protect us.

I may be old but I’m sharpening my pitchfork right now.

Meeks


The Nerd Reich

I’ve written before about the dangers of corporatism so you won’t be surprised to learn that I’m not the only one; I’m simply the least famous. The following article discusses a theory about the Tech Bros – arguably the most powerful of the current crop of corporates – by tech journalist, Gil Duran:

‘…a growing number of Silicon Valley elites are pursuing a vision of power not rooted in the common good, but in profit, feudal hierarchy, and total control of the platforms that define daily life for hundreds of millions of people.

Duran dubs this emerging ideology the “Nerd Reich” — a slurry of right-wing ideas championed by ruthless tech overlords like Palantir founder Peter Thiel, Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, and cryptocurrency titan Brian Armstrong, with some OpenAI CEO Sam Altman sprinkled in for good measure. Drawing on the reactionary writings of Curtis “Mencius Moldbug” Yarvin and the cryptolibertarianism of tech investor Balaji Srinivasan, this philosophy isn’t explicitly outlined by our billionaire overlords, but is nonetheless a useful framework that explains their increasingly undemocratic actions.’

Futurism

The Futurism article ends with this:

“We have a bunch of CEOs telling us that AI is going to get rid of millions and millions of jobs,” Duran argues. “Well, what’s going to happen to those people who can no longer work? What is their future? What is the future of their children? What does democracy look like when you don’t get to eat unless someone like Elon Musk is approving of your existence?”

I strongly recommend reading the entire Futurism article because it’s a peek into a future that would do credit to a post-apocalyptic novel.

Meeks