Technology could kill 5 million jobs by 2020!

THOT CATALOG

All Star
Supporter
Joined
Jun 1, 2013
Messages
1,147
Reputation
270
Daps
4,166
Basic income will save society. And capitalism. Most European societies are prepared for that already.

Target poor people with emotional advertising. They end up spending their basic income cheques on consumer goods they don't need instead of utilities. Rich get richer, crime goes up, and then for profit prisons get more free labor.

Genius. :ohhh:

Nikkas on the Internet trying to offer economic opinions but can't even figure out how to improve their own miserable lives. :mjlol:

Can't wait till prison shares go public. :mjlol:
 
Last edited:

Boy Wonder

Ain't kissing ass for no rep
Joined
Sep 6, 2015
Messages
1,468
Reputation
160
Daps
3,894
The Rise of Human-Level Intelligence
We are on the cusp of a tech-based societal transformation that will be at least as big as that of the Industrial Revolution. This isn’t just machine-driven automation for tedious manual labor. We’re talking about man-made creations that can “think” at a human level – or even beyond.


To be fair, that second-wave revolution won’t actually be here for quite some time. Optimistic projections put that kind of breakthrough in the 2040s or 2050s while more conservative models predict the 2080s or 2090s. So, we have anywhere from a few decades to close to a century.
But when you look at the advancements made in the past few years, it’s hard not to get excited over the possibilities. A few decades might seem far away, but that time is going to zip on by and the breakthrough will arrive before you know it.


For example, driverless cars are on the horizon. It’s not as sexy an idea as, say, hoverboards or flying cars, but it’ll still have an enormous impact on the way we live our lives and conduct commerce. Driverless cars aren’t generally intelligent in the same way that people are, but driving is a big, complicated, subtle cognitive task which is quickly moving into the reach of robots, and that’s a sign of things to come.

It’s not even necessarily clear that traditionally intellectual jobs are safe. Even in the near future, machines like IBM’s Watson system that famously won on Jeopardy may take over data-heavy jobs like doctor and lawyer, thanks to their ability to consume and integrate far more information than humans. In fact, traditionally intellectual jobs may be among the first to go. Ironically, some of the tasks we think of requiring enormous intelligence (like those that depend on an enormous amount of domain knowledge) are proving much easier for machines than relatively basic tasks like cleaning a house or making a burger.
You're clueless if you really think Artifical Intelligence will be anywhere near Human Intelligence anytime soon.
 
Top