Do not underestimate the potential disruption by Artificial Intelligence Marcello Milanezi skrifar 2. apríl 2023 21:30 Artificial intelligence may seem to be a new element straight out of sci-fi, but it has actually been around for quite some time, it is what makes all of our smart gadgets, from phones to watches, seem “intelligent”. As such it has been analysed in different contexts by scientists and academics like Nick Couldry, Shoshanna Zuboff, Martin Ford, Nick Bostrom and many others. Many of them raise questions of privacy that go well beyond the matter of “I have nothing to hide”, but the more pressing matter of autonomy, that which has been the object of manipulation by neoliberalism’s consumerism – AI just does it so much faster that even its developers are caught at times puzzled by its operations. AI such as Midjourney and ChatGPT present another face to the public, but hold that same background of gathering data, calculating, and predicting behaviour. It does so in more of what sci-fi has taught us to expect from AI, that is, with an apparent genuine exchange with the user, as opposed to the hidden mechanism that selects what shows one might prefer to see on their streaming service, as well as nudge behaviour. But no, AI is not human. And, at least for now, it does not seem capable to keep up with those territories of intellectual work that have been reasonably shielded from automation. We talk of the arts, academia, law, among others. After all, A.I. only reproduces, it deals with data that is already existent, that has already come to birth into the conscious world of materiality; and this data lies in banks that are fed by a variety of social media profiles, those very ones where we expose our behaviour to capture in a daily basis; the behavioural surplus, as Zuboff calls it. James Bridle, author of the New Dark Age, points that some of the data that has been feeding A.I. have been gathered despite confidentiality terms, such as images derived from medical practises. However, neoliberal capitalism is not one to care for any value of human productions, it doesn’t even care for human (or otherwise) living conditions. It speaks of the relation between quality and profit, just as it speaks of the importance of a competitive market; but meanwhile it has constantly fabricated needs and desires to give full-throttle to a culture of consumerism that is degrading the Earth itself. The capitalism of today (if not already supplanted by technofeudalism) is all about numbers, a matter of faith (under the cruellest of Gods), as such it strives for a certain speed and questionable balance, by which I mean an efficiency where quality comes to equate “good enough”. This is all the worse in a context of post-truth, where it is more important to be told what one wants to hear, one’s personal truth, and see it repeated in the mouths of like-minded individuals, themselves empowered by the echo-chambers of social media, than to apply critical thinking to one’s own ego. The news is likewise peppered with reports of state-terrorism against higher education in the country, where Social Sciences and Humanities are clear targets in a broad project to reduce funding, not only in education, but as can be experienced, in the public sector as a whole. It’s all about the numbers, it’s all about carving a path for the private sector; it’s all about maximizing the profit margin, which includes automating anything, even if it implies a certain reduction in quality of service and life – it is all about further concentration of power. This is part of the larger plane of immanence in which A.I. arises. Like other technology, it doesn’t exist in a vacuum, so it cannot be neutral. But A.I. does have something that is fascinating, potentially dangerous, and certainly alien: for all its working on predictability, it is at times unpredictable, remember those puzzled developers mentioned earlier, when A.I. does something it was not programmed to do, gives birth to one of those terrifying cryptids such as Loab, even communicates between themselves in secrecy. In this shadowy lands where A.I. seems to conduct some of its business, flights of escape might arise, some that might be quite uncomfortable for those very powers-that-be. For now, however, I believe we must be wary, across all layers of work. Again, the market might not care about jobs being well-done and filled with value, if it can extract enough profit from “good enough”; a veritable possibility, specially in societies where it seems to no longer be necessary to speak of truths, but rather of numbers of followers. Do not underestimate the potential disruption by A.I. Höfundur er doktorsnemi í félagsfræði við Háskóla Íslands. Viltu birta grein á Vísi? Sendu okkur póst. Senda grein Gervigreind Tækni Mest lesið Þegar mannshjörtun mætast Jóna Hrönn Bolladóttir,Bjarni Karlsson Skoðun Námsfærni nemenda í íslenskum skólum: Eigum við að lækka rána? Sigríður Ólafsdóttir Skoðun Snorri byggir skoðun á skólakerfinu á reynslusögum annarra en Guðrún vitnar í ritrýndar heimildir Davíð Routley Skoðun Horft til einkunna og annarra þátta við innritun í framhaldsskóla Guðmundur Ingi Kristinsson Skoðun Fíllinn í hjarta Reykjavíkur Hanna Katrín Friðriksson Skoðun Kristján á Sprengisandi lendir í ágjöf Björn Ólafsson Skoðun „Bíddu, varst þú ekki að biðja um þessa greiðslu?“ Heiðrún Jónsdóttir Skoðun Stöðvum glæpagengi á Íslandi Hjalti Vigfússon Skoðun Tvær dætur á Gaza - páskahugvekja Viðar Hreinsson Skoðun Unglingar eiga skilið heildstætt mat frá framhaldsskólum Sigurður Kári Harðarson Skoðun Skoðun Skoðun Námsfærni nemenda í íslenskum skólum: Eigum við að lækka rána? Sigríður Ólafsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Snorri byggir skoðun á skólakerfinu á reynslusögum annarra en Guðrún vitnar í ritrýndar heimildir Davíð Routley skrifar Skoðun Þegar mannshjörtun mætast Jóna Hrönn Bolladóttir,Bjarni Karlsson skrifar Skoðun Horft til einkunna og annarra þátta við innritun í framhaldsskóla Guðmundur Ingi Kristinsson skrifar Skoðun Kristján á Sprengisandi lendir í ágjöf Björn Ólafsson skrifar Skoðun Unglingar eiga skilið heildstætt mat frá framhaldsskólum Sigurður Kári Harðarson skrifar Skoðun Stöðvum glæpagengi á Íslandi Hjalti Vigfússon skrifar Skoðun Jafnlaunavottun - „Hverjir græða á jafnlaunavottun“ Gunnar Ármannsson skrifar Skoðun Gervigreind í skólum: Tækifæri sem fáir eru að ræða? Björgmundur Örn Guðmundsson skrifar Skoðun Hvernig húsnæðismarkað vill Viðskiptaráð? skrifar Skoðun Enginn matur og næring án sérfræðiþekkingar Ólöf Guðný Geirsdóttir,Ólafur Ögmundarson skrifar Skoðun Öll endurhæfing er í eðli sínu starfsendurhæfing Sveindís Anna Jóhannsdóttir skrifar Skoðun „Bíddu, varst þú ekki að biðja um þessa greiðslu?“ Heiðrún Jónsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Rétta leiðin til endurreisnar menntakerfisins? Birgir Finnsson skrifar Skoðun Tvær dætur á Gaza - páskahugvekja Viðar Hreinsson skrifar Skoðun Ef það líkist þjóðarmorði – þá er það þjóðarmorð! Ólafur Ingólfsson skrifar Skoðun Vinnustaðir fatlaðs fólks Atli Már Haraldsson skrifar Skoðun Þjónustustefna sveitarfélaga: Formsatriði eða mikilvægt stjórntæki? Jón Hrói Finnsson skrifar Skoðun Blóð, sviti og tár Jökull Jörgensen skrifar Skoðun Ertu knúin/n fram af verðugleika eða óverðugleika? Sigrún Þóra Sveinsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Er hægt að stjórna bæjarfélagi með óskhyggju? Sigurþóra Bergsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Styrkleikar barna geta legið í öðru en að fá hæstu einkunnir Anna Maria Jónsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Listin við að fara sér hægt Heiðrún Lind Marteinsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Kosningar í stjórn Visku: Þitt atkvæði skiptir máli! Eydís Inga Valsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Ábyrgð yfirvalda á innra mati á skólastarfi Anna Greta Ólafsdóttir skrifar Skoðun Bjánarnir úti á landi Þorvaldur Lúðvík Sigurjónsson skrifar Skoðun Hvað kostar EES samningurinn þjóðina? Sigurbjörn Svavarsson skrifar Skoðun En hvað með loftslagið? Emma Soffía Elkjær Emilsdóttir,Eiríkur Hjálmarsson skrifar Skoðun Ráðherra og valdníðsla í hans nafni Örn Pálmason skrifar Skoðun Betri nýting á tíma og fjármunum Reykjavíkurborgar 1/3 Magnea Gná Jóhannsdóttir skrifar Sjá meira
Artificial intelligence may seem to be a new element straight out of sci-fi, but it has actually been around for quite some time, it is what makes all of our smart gadgets, from phones to watches, seem “intelligent”. As such it has been analysed in different contexts by scientists and academics like Nick Couldry, Shoshanna Zuboff, Martin Ford, Nick Bostrom and many others. Many of them raise questions of privacy that go well beyond the matter of “I have nothing to hide”, but the more pressing matter of autonomy, that which has been the object of manipulation by neoliberalism’s consumerism – AI just does it so much faster that even its developers are caught at times puzzled by its operations. AI such as Midjourney and ChatGPT present another face to the public, but hold that same background of gathering data, calculating, and predicting behaviour. It does so in more of what sci-fi has taught us to expect from AI, that is, with an apparent genuine exchange with the user, as opposed to the hidden mechanism that selects what shows one might prefer to see on their streaming service, as well as nudge behaviour. But no, AI is not human. And, at least for now, it does not seem capable to keep up with those territories of intellectual work that have been reasonably shielded from automation. We talk of the arts, academia, law, among others. After all, A.I. only reproduces, it deals with data that is already existent, that has already come to birth into the conscious world of materiality; and this data lies in banks that are fed by a variety of social media profiles, those very ones where we expose our behaviour to capture in a daily basis; the behavioural surplus, as Zuboff calls it. James Bridle, author of the New Dark Age, points that some of the data that has been feeding A.I. have been gathered despite confidentiality terms, such as images derived from medical practises. However, neoliberal capitalism is not one to care for any value of human productions, it doesn’t even care for human (or otherwise) living conditions. It speaks of the relation between quality and profit, just as it speaks of the importance of a competitive market; but meanwhile it has constantly fabricated needs and desires to give full-throttle to a culture of consumerism that is degrading the Earth itself. The capitalism of today (if not already supplanted by technofeudalism) is all about numbers, a matter of faith (under the cruellest of Gods), as such it strives for a certain speed and questionable balance, by which I mean an efficiency where quality comes to equate “good enough”. This is all the worse in a context of post-truth, where it is more important to be told what one wants to hear, one’s personal truth, and see it repeated in the mouths of like-minded individuals, themselves empowered by the echo-chambers of social media, than to apply critical thinking to one’s own ego. The news is likewise peppered with reports of state-terrorism against higher education in the country, where Social Sciences and Humanities are clear targets in a broad project to reduce funding, not only in education, but as can be experienced, in the public sector as a whole. It’s all about the numbers, it’s all about carving a path for the private sector; it’s all about maximizing the profit margin, which includes automating anything, even if it implies a certain reduction in quality of service and life – it is all about further concentration of power. This is part of the larger plane of immanence in which A.I. arises. Like other technology, it doesn’t exist in a vacuum, so it cannot be neutral. But A.I. does have something that is fascinating, potentially dangerous, and certainly alien: for all its working on predictability, it is at times unpredictable, remember those puzzled developers mentioned earlier, when A.I. does something it was not programmed to do, gives birth to one of those terrifying cryptids such as Loab, even communicates between themselves in secrecy. In this shadowy lands where A.I. seems to conduct some of its business, flights of escape might arise, some that might be quite uncomfortable for those very powers-that-be. For now, however, I believe we must be wary, across all layers of work. Again, the market might not care about jobs being well-done and filled with value, if it can extract enough profit from “good enough”; a veritable possibility, specially in societies where it seems to no longer be necessary to speak of truths, but rather of numbers of followers. Do not underestimate the potential disruption by A.I. Höfundur er doktorsnemi í félagsfræði við Háskóla Íslands.
Snorri byggir skoðun á skólakerfinu á reynslusögum annarra en Guðrún vitnar í ritrýndar heimildir Davíð Routley Skoðun
Horft til einkunna og annarra þátta við innritun í framhaldsskóla Guðmundur Ingi Kristinsson Skoðun
Skoðun Námsfærni nemenda í íslenskum skólum: Eigum við að lækka rána? Sigríður Ólafsdóttir skrifar
Skoðun Snorri byggir skoðun á skólakerfinu á reynslusögum annarra en Guðrún vitnar í ritrýndar heimildir Davíð Routley skrifar
Skoðun Horft til einkunna og annarra þátta við innritun í framhaldsskóla Guðmundur Ingi Kristinsson skrifar
Skoðun Enginn matur og næring án sérfræðiþekkingar Ólöf Guðný Geirsdóttir,Ólafur Ögmundarson skrifar
Skoðun Þjónustustefna sveitarfélaga: Formsatriði eða mikilvægt stjórntæki? Jón Hrói Finnsson skrifar
Snorri byggir skoðun á skólakerfinu á reynslusögum annarra en Guðrún vitnar í ritrýndar heimildir Davíð Routley Skoðun
Horft til einkunna og annarra þátta við innritun í framhaldsskóla Guðmundur Ingi Kristinsson Skoðun