Artificial intelligence probably won't kill you, but it could take your job: Don Pittis - Action News
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Artificial intelligence probably won't kill you, but it could take your job: Don Pittis

As the federal government and business giants pour cash into artificial intelligence, experts believe most of us don't understand the true risks and rewards.

Keep an eye out for killer robots, sure, but economic disruption is the more likely threat

Arnold Schwarzenegger hams it up with his alter ego the Terminator. Experts say the danger is not that AI is too strong, but that we will trust it when it is too weak. (Mario Anzuoni/Reuters)

Computer scientist Zachary Chase Lipton hates the termartificial intelligence, which he saysgives people the wrong idea. Heprefers to call itmachine learning.

Lipton, who used to earn his living as a musician, would be a dream example for Prime Minister JustinTrudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau,who are hoping to retrain Canada'sunderemployedto serve a resurgent artificial intelligence industry.

But the AI whizsays retraining may not be enough toprevent a wave ofsocial disruption when the techeconomy leaves the poor and middle class behind.

My employment prospectsare considerably greater owing to machine learning than they were when I was playing saxophone in New York for 50 bucks and drinks tickets.- Zachary Chase

Lipton is not one to scoff at the opportunities offered by retraining.

"My employment prospectsare considerably greater owing to machine learning than they were five years ago when I was playing saxophone in New York for 50 bucks and drinks tickets," says Lipton, on the phone fromPalo Alto, Calif.

After deciding in his late 20s to switch from playing the sax to playing with computers, Lipton is now a paid adviser to the giant online retailer Amazon and has just been head-hunted as a professor by Carnegie MellonUniversity. Hehasn't even completed his PhD.

Only five years ago Zachary Chase Lipton was playing jazz, but even though he now works in artificial intelligence for Amazon and has accepted a professorship, 'technological unemployment' is his biggest concern. (Point14 Records)

Also last week, Lipton made a splash in tech circles with his blog post, The AI Misinformation Epidemic, one of a series of articles he is planning under the rubric Approximately Correct.

Future filled with possibility

In Canada there has been an outbreak of coverage on artificial intelligence as Canadian governments and businesses invest in AI research, including the new non-profit Vector Institute.

"By encouraging cutting-edge technology like AI while at the same time creating a culture of lifelong learning, we will be with Canadians every step of the way as they lead us into a future filled with possibility," said Morneau at last week's institute launch.

Lipton agrees that the technology is valuable in many areas,especially in such things as improvingthe efficiency of medical systems. But he worries that so much attentionby the popular media on what he calls "artificial general intelligence" andintelligent killer robots meanscritics mistakenly suggest that AIis dangerously powerful.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau samples virtual reality during the launch of the Vector Institute, a non-profit centre to research artificial intelligence. (Accenture/Canadian Press)

"Another worry is that AI is not that strong, but it's good enough to be convenient," says Lipton. The terms AI and "neural networks" leadthe misinformed toimaginethese systemsreplicate human intelligence, something he says won't happen for a long time, if ever.

He offersthe example of a Facebook algorithmthat throws up fake news over important news. He has seen ostensibly impartial AI systems, intended to predict prison recidivism rates, whichembed racial discrimination.

Taking humans out of the equation

But like many other Silicon Valley computer prodigies, his biggest worry has little to do withmathematics or science. Lipton, who studied economics as an undergraduate, fears thatAI is fundamentally transforming the economy to take humans out of the equation.

Traditional economics tells us that capital and labour are complementary. More ovens (capital) areno good without more bakers (labour).But we are at a watershed where that may have changed.

"I think now with automation we'll be investing in capital for the purpose of replacing labour," says Lipton.

A survey last year of CEOs by the executive search firm Korn Ferry showed 44 per cent said"robotics, automation and artificial intelligence (AI) will make people 'largely irrelevant'in the future of work."

That kind of thinking worries Richard Mueller, head of economics atAlberta's University of Lethbridge. He observes that everyone imagines driverless cars and trucks are coming in the distant future, including his brother-in-law, who drives a giant truck at thecoal mine in Elkford, B.C. But within the controlled conditions of private mine sites, driverless trucks are already being used around the world.

While the world waits for fully autonomous vehicles on public roads, giant driverless trucks like this one are already eliminating jobs at mine sites. (Komatsu)

"Those guys are ripe for replacement almost immediately," says Mueller, who has given a series of lectures on the future of work in the automation age.

No one can predict the future, and so far the unemployment rates in Canada and the U.S. have been falling. But a new study from the U.S. National Bureau of Economic Research has observed that automation is winning the race for U.S. jobs.

While Both Mueller and Lipton support the idea of retraining, they fear that many of those disinclined to technical skills may never be able to earn a good living in a market economy.

Mueller worries that as AI improves and gets cheaper, many of the jobsleft for humanswill be those so badly paid they are not worth replacing with a machine.

Lipton, who thinks the solution may ultimately requirea redistribution of wealth from capital to labour, thinks that the biggest problem could be helpingthose whose jobs have been stolen by smart machines to find meaningful lives.

"The one thing we shouldn't automate is music," quips the sax man. "We'll teach everyone to play jazz. Your purpose in life is toswing."

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

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