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posted by cmn32480 on Monday June 08 2015, @10:57AM   Printer-friendly
from the how-many-robots-does-it-take-to-screw-in-a-lightbulb dept.

Digital technology has been a fantastic creator of economic wealth, particularly in the twenty years since the Internet and World Wide Web were unveiled to the masses. And with non-trivial applications of artificial intelligence (such as Apple's Siri) finally reaching the mainstream consumer market, one is tempted to agree with pundits asserting that the Second Machine Age is just getting underway.

But Yale ethicist Wendell Wallach argues that growth in wealth has been accompanied by an equally dramatic rise in income inequality; for example, stock ownership is now concentrated in the hands of a relative few (though greater than 1 percent). The increase in GDP has not led to an increase in wages, nor in median inflation-adjusted income. Furthermore, Wallach says technology is a leading cause of this shift, as it displaces workers in occupation after occupation more quickly than new career opportunities arise.

This piece led to the latest iteration of the 'will robots take all of our jobs' debate, this time on Business Insider, with Jim Edwards arguing that the jobs lost tended to be of the mindless and repetitive variety, while the increase in productive capacity has led to the creation of many new positions. This repeated earlier cycles of the industrial revolution and will be accelerated in the decades ahead. Edwards illustrated his point with a chart of UK unemployment with a trend line (note: drawn by Edwards) in a pronounced downward direction over the past 30 years. John Tamny made a similar point in Forbes last month.


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by kaszz on Monday June 08 2015, @02:19PM

    by kaszz (4211) on Monday June 08 2015, @02:19PM (#193650) Journal

    The need for a salary mostly comes from these things:
      * Housing
      * Food
      * Health care

    If you can cover this without being employed. You have essentially beat the system. Farmers a few hundred years ago were in essence self sufficient. But when they got sick or got raided they were in trouble.

    To make life somewhat nice you may want:
      * Education - books, internet
      * Internet - mesh networking
      * Resources - metal, microchips, plastic, electricity etc

    It usually is worthwhile to trade and specialize. So that is a likely component in any civilized society.

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  • (Score: 2) by bzipitidoo on Monday June 08 2015, @02:30PM

    by bzipitidoo (4388) on Monday June 08 2015, @02:30PM (#193662) Journal

    You read my mind, about the Industrial Revolution. Farmers used to be pretty self sufficient, even making their own clothes. It was called homespun.

    Don't forget the need for transportation. Cars are a huge expense for the typical family.

    • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Monday June 08 2015, @02:49PM

      by kaszz (4211) on Monday June 08 2015, @02:49PM (#193672) Journal

      Perhaps the key to the future is decentralized industrial production?

      • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 08 2015, @04:29PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 08 2015, @04:29PM (#193712)

        Go show me how you can build a CPU with billions of transistors with decentralized industrial production. A CPU is built and assembled in many places, but it's more of interdependent than decentralized.

        If "decentralized industrial production" is key to the future, it's more likely the key to a dystopic future.

        A dystopia where modern civilization collapses/falls apart and Intel, etc can no longer make CPUs/planes/cars/whatever because too many of the required dependency chains are broken. Go look at all of the dependencies of building some reasonably complicated modern tech - clean water, clean electricity, various metals and parts from all over the world, stuff made in China/Thailand/Israel/etc, stuff assembled in Malaysia/Puerto Rico/etc.

        Then you have decentralized industrial production AKA making your own stuff from scratch.

        Analogy - it's like a human body dying because of some important stuff failing and the body rotting (all the bacteria and fungi are doing the "decentralized production" on the corpse). The heart, kidneys, brain, liver will not work and will never work again- those "factories" can't get started. You need to grow a new body from scratch and wait for it to grow back.

        See also how NASA has forgotten how to build stuff like the Saturn V. If something kills off much of the "ecosystem" you can no longer build a lot of stuff - all the suppliers making the little bits and pieces stop doing it or even vanish completely. The materials and "magic" mixes/ratios might be forgotten.
        http://amyshirateitel.com/2011/04/03/the-lost-art-of-the-saturn-v/ [amyshirateitel.com]

        When the robots are building most of the stuff and 0.001% are keeping the robots going and the rest are oblivious to how things work, things will get even more fragile.

    • (Score: 5, Informative) by Thexalon on Monday June 08 2015, @03:19PM

      by Thexalon (636) on Monday June 08 2015, @03:19PM (#193683)

      Farmers used to be pretty self sufficient, even making their own clothes.

      Not really:
      * In the US at least, the land the farmers were relying on was either stolen from American Indians, or the subject of debts to the banks. The debt issue was a really really big deal in rural areas for most of the 1800s, including more than a few incidents of violent resistance against bank land repossession, and political organizing that turned into the William Jennings Bryan campaign. Lots of families did not end up with the land they had homesteaded.

      * While farmers definitely produced a lot of their own stuff, they also relied extensively on manufactured goods. They knew how to make clothing, build a home, cook, keep work animals, and produce food, but did not make their own teakettles or ploughs or ox yokes or guns from scratch.

      * Sure, they didn't rely on a health care system, but that was mostly because there wasn't much of anything resembling effective medical treatment for most ailments at the time. There was likely to be a doctor serving everybody in a fairly wide area, but a lot of farm families couldn't afford their services, and a lot of people ended up dead as a result.

      It's unwise to over-romanticize the past.

      --
      The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
      • (Score: 2) by SubiculumHammer on Monday June 08 2015, @04:15PM

        by SubiculumHammer (5191) on Monday June 08 2015, @04:15PM (#193708)

        What we were speaking of was not reality but an idealized example that it takes fairly little to be (relatively) self-sufficient and healthy...but that in that system it does not take much of an external disturbance (i.e. drought, bankers, raiders, a broken ankle) to take that (relative) self-sufficiency away.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 08 2015, @04:38PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 08 2015, @04:38PM (#193716)

        It's unwise to over-romanticize the past.

        Or be ignorant of it and be modded informative.

        Start here: The Homestead Acts [wikipedia.org]
        Most farmers in the US neither stole land from Indians (land ownership was an alien concept to them) nor were they indebted to banks. They got the land for free to push people west.

        Historically, manufacturing is rather new. Even in the us the population was split between farmers and what was self described as blacksmiths-a term that lost its meaning hundreds of years ago and was a catchall for a maker of anything that cant be folded. It was wives and daughters that did the rest.

        What does the poor healthcare of the past have to do with self-sufficiency. Squirrels have no doctors, does that mean they are not self sufficient?

        • (Score: 1) by KGIII on Tuesday June 09 2015, @02:32AM

          by KGIII (5261) on Tuesday June 09 2015, @02:32AM (#193901) Journal

          Ignorance does not mean that it was not stealing. If I have unknowingly left my wallet on the trunk lid and you come along and take it then you have still stolen. Minimizing what you did to my people (and assuming we were all without property considerations) is asinine at best.

          --
          "So long and thanks for all the fish."
          • (Score: 1) by KGIII on Tuesday June 09 2015, @02:35AM

            by KGIII (5261) on Tuesday June 09 2015, @02:35AM (#193904) Journal

            I should specify a generic you and not you personally. You did not do shit.

            --
            "So long and thanks for all the fish."
          • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Tuesday June 09 2015, @01:06PM

            by Thexalon (636) on Tuesday June 09 2015, @01:06PM (#194053)

            Also, given that I had specifically referenced homesteads, assuming my ignorance of the Homestead Act was obviously wrong.

            The only reason the US government had that land to give away to homesteaders was because they had taken it from the people who had lived there previously, as part of their approximately 300-year campaign of genocide against native peoples.

            --
            The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
            • (Score: 1) by KGIII on Tuesday June 09 2015, @02:43PM

              by KGIII (5261) on Tuesday June 09 2015, @02:43PM (#194085) Journal

              No, it was ignorance on the part of the Natives. They did not know the game was rigged and many tribes did not have a concept of land ownership. On the East Coast there was ownership in that areas were specifically utilized by non-warring peoples and had been that way for countless generations.

              --
              "So long and thanks for all the fish."
              • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Tuesday June 09 2015, @03:34PM

                by Thexalon (636) on Tuesday June 09 2015, @03:34PM (#194107)

                many tribes did not have a concept of land ownership

                Oh yes they did. Or at least ownership over the various rights to use land - they fought wars with each other as well as the US over that ownership, and included rights to land in treaties with the US government. The stories of deals like selling Manhattan for beads had to do with the fact that the Dutch were making that deal with the Carnasee on Long Island, not the Manhattans, so the Carnasee leaders were obviously quite happy to sell what they didn't own.

                Native American leaders were in no way ignorant of the threat they faced. The reasons they lost amounted to:
                1. They weren't immune to European diseases (that alone wiped out something like 95% of their population in the 1500s, and is probably why they couldn't resist the English or Dutch or Spanish the same way they successfully resisted the Icelanders).
                2. They were outgunned militarily. Even relatively late in the conflict e.g. Little Big Horn, most of their warriors were armed with bows, not guns. That wasn't because they didn't want guns, but because the only way they could get their hands on guns and ammunition was to kill or capture a white person who had them.
                3. The US routinely violated treaties made with them. Or in some cases would invite a leader to a meeting to discuss a treaty and promptly shoot him when he arrived.

                --
                The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
                • (Score: 1) by KGIII on Tuesday June 09 2015, @05:09PM

                  by KGIII (5261) on Tuesday June 09 2015, @05:09PM (#194126) Journal

                  I meant individual land-ownership but, obviously, was remiss in my submission. My sincere apologies. I had thought it clear but it certainly was not.

                  --
                  "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  • (Score: 2) by LoRdTAW on Monday June 08 2015, @06:26PM

    by LoRdTAW (3755) on Monday June 08 2015, @06:26PM (#193748) Journal

    The only problem is we live in a world where everything and everyone is under control by some entity. There is no land that you can legally live on without paying taxes or rent. I can't go into a park and set up a small farm. Same for private land. I can be arrested and charged with trespass. Every square mm is controlled by someone. Hunting requires a license as well as fishing in many areas. Licenses cost money and you can't make money without paying taxes.

    The really sad part? You want to truly live for free? Go to prison. You can live in one for life and never have to work, pay taxes, worry about health care or bills. Sure it's a living hell but I suppose that is the price you pay for completely free living. Truly irony at its best.

    My take? Life is perverse and sick.

    • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Monday June 08 2015, @11:10PM

      by kaszz (4211) on Monday June 08 2015, @11:10PM (#193855) Journal

      There's not much free land but there is cheap land.