Big Tech Calling For A Pause On AI Sounds A Lot Like Central Banks Shrieking About Bitcoin Authored by Mark Jeftovic via BombThrower.com, Disruption for thee, but not for meβ¦ For years, central banks have been sounding the alarm on Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies, fear mongering on the threats that they posed to the financial system, the global climate β at one point predicting that Bitcoinβs electricity demand would literally consumeΒ all available energyΒ in the worldΒ by 2020Β . (Fact check: it didnβt) Nevermind that under the stewardship of the central banks, the financial system has lurched from one crisis to the next for decades on end, every one an order of magnitude worse than the prior. The policy response to each crisis (expand credit, suppress interest rates, print money) simply incentivized moral hazard, perverse incentives, and an ever widening wealth gap β while providing the setup for the next crisis. With this unbroken string of failures under their belts, itβs always rich to listen to these insular technocrats, who have zero skin in the game, pontificating about the meltdowns they created. Especially when they get worked up around hazards of a phenomenon that has sinceΒ emerged to obsolete them. Now itβs Big Techβs turn: Warning us about the existential βrisks to societyβ of AI and calling for a time-out. The very people who have benefitted the most from exploiting disruptive technology, regardless of the collateral damage, and in the process became literally the wealthiest people in history, now look at AI in the hands of the rabble, and thereβs a flag on the play. When these tech oligarchs blow out entire industries and replace them with quasi-monopolies in which theyβre majority shareholders, itβs just creative destruction. #LearnToCode, baby. But if a total game changer suddenly finds its way into the hands of the plebs, and the Big Tech incumbents realize it could beΒ theirΒ turn to get their asses disruptedβ¦ by commoners at thatβ¦.Β then suddenly weβre looking at a crime against humanity. The Future of Life open letterΒ was signed by everybody from Elon (βself-driving robotaxis any minute nowβ) Musk, and Steve Wozniak to Yuval (βthe plebs are hackable animalsβ) Harari and sundry other AIΒ incumbents.Β According to their About Page, The Future of Life Institute is an independent non-profit organisation funded by a range of individuals and organisations who share our desire to reduce global catastrophic and existential risk from powerful technologies. And their listing inΒ their entry in the European Transparency registryΒ discloses that their funding: ..is about 87% provided by the Musk Foundation. Speaking of risks from powerful technologies, letβs remember that 19 people have been killed by Teslaβs in self-driving mode and another 21 when their Teslaβs exploded as a result of various crashes (out of a totalΒ known pool of 373 Tesla deathsΒ thus far). Who is really threatened by AI? When I first started playing with chatGPT, I never for a second believed it was any kind of magical artificial intelligence. Iβve always called AI βAlgorithmic Imitationβ. However, it is a quantum leap forward in natural language interface. I instantly recognized who was most at risk by this: the search engines, namely Google, and the entire ecosystem of made-for-Adsense βcontentβ websites whose raison dβΓͺtre is to game search algos. Hence, Googleβs panicked ham-fisted rush job on Bard, and Microsoftβs debacle trying to incorporate chatGPT (in which they are a significant shareholder) into their own Bing. (Soon Iβll be releasing a serialized collection of pieces, working title βInfernal AlgorithmicaβΒ which is aΒ technological grimoireΒ exploring the lower circles of the pay-per-click advertising model.Β Sign up for the listΒ if you want that when it comes out.). This is nothing new. This is the same dynamic thatβs been played out with every disruptive tech innovation, ever β there are even accounts from the Decline of The Roman Empire on how the alchemist who discovered aluminum was beheaded when the Emperor suspected that this breakthrough innovation might devalue silver (the story was described by the Roman writer Petronius, circa 27AD, in his novel, Satyricon, although Pliny The Elder wrote that it could have been apocryphal). Apocryphal or not, the tension between disruptive, rising technologies, and the elites who control the operations and markets of the incumbent ones is real and perennial. In Β βInnovation and its Enemies, Why People Resist New Technologiesβ, Calestous Juma writes how β[Nearly all] debates over new technologies are framed in context of risks to moral values, human health and environmental safety. But behind these concerns often lie deeper, but unacknowledged, socioeconomic considerationsβ. The face-off between the established technological order and new aspirants leads to controversiesβ¦perceptions about immediate risks and long-term distribution of benefits influence the intensity of concerns over new technologiesβ. These calls for a moratorium on AI, the abolition or over-regulation of cryptos and Bitcoin and inevitable calls for technocratic control overΒ your energy consumptionΒ andΒ individual carbon footprint meteringΒ are all riffing on the same theme: youβre too stupid and infantile to use these technologies responsibly. Only The State can figure it out. (No wonder most governments of the world are on a mission to ban cash, privacy β¦and guns). People like Musk, Harari and the ever increasingly batshit Eliezer Yudkowsky (who wants to forcefully curtail computing power to the point ofΒ advocating for the military bombardmentΒ of rogue data centers abroad) should know this. Yudkowsky has been mentioned in these pages before. Heβs the one who is convinced AI willΒ inevitably result in the extermination of all humanity. I had a lawyer who liked to sayΒ βYou canβt suck and blow at the same timeβ. Either you want to ride a tide of rapid technological change to unparalleled living standards, personal wealth and privilege (but which affords everybody else those same opportunities), or not so much. You canβt do both. *Β *Β * SubscribeΒ to the Bombthrower mailing listΒ to get new articles as they come out. You can also follow me on meΒ on NostrΒ ,Β Gettr, orΒ Twitter. My premium letterΒ The Bitcoin CapitalistΒ coversΒ Bitcoin, the digital assset space and crypto stocks. Tyler Durden Thu, 04/06/2023 – 17:40
Big Tech Calling For A Pause On AI Sounds A Lot Like Central Banks Shrieking About Bitcoin
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