Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
AI

AI 'Godfather' Geoffrey Hinton: If AI Takes Jobs We'll Need Universal Basic Income (bbc.com) 250

"The computer scientist regarded as the 'godfather of artificial intelligence' says the government will have to establish a universal basic income to deal with the impact of AI on inequality," reports the BBC: Professor Geoffrey Hinton told BBC Newsnight that a benefits reform giving fixed amounts of cash to every citizen would be needed because he was "very worried about AI taking lots of mundane jobs".

"I was consulted by people in Downing Street and I advised them that universal basic income was a good idea," he said. He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich "and not the people whose jobs get lost and that's going to be very bad for society".

"Until last year he worked at Google, but left the tech giant so he could talk more freely about the dangers from unregulated AI," according to the article. Professor Hinton also made this predicction to the BBC. "My guess is in between five and 20 years from now there's a probability of half that we'll have to confront the problem of AI trying to take over".

He recommended a prohibition on the military use of AI, warning that currently "in terms of military uses I think there's going to be a race".

AI 'Godfather' Geoffrey Hinton: If AI Takes Jobs We'll Need Universal Basic Income

Comments Filter:
  • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Sunday May 19, 2024 @01:45PM (#64483279)

    All it will end up being is just another stupid institution like minimum wage that just ends up being a constant game of chasing ones tail against inflation while itself doing nothing but adding to it, and everybody who depends on it will always insist that it isn't enough in perpetuity for exactly that reason. All this shit ever does is penalize saving, exactly the opposite of what the government should be doing.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      If you are running an economy you don't want people "saving" though. You want that money in motion, you want people to spend and invest the money, not just sit on it. The reason every central bank targets 0-3% inflation is because we already know deflation can carry some strong negatives. If I think my money will be worth more tomorrow I have little incentive to spend any of it today unless I absolutely have to.

      If we in America have a moral issue with "free money" then a more fitting solution is to brin

      • by NFN_NLN ( 633283 )

        > If I think my money will be worth more tomorrow I have little incentive to spend any of it today unless I absolutely have to.

        This is already happening. Why do you think clowns are piling into overinflated stocks, overinflated housing and overinflated precious metals? Because they're still not as overinflated as fiat currency.

        • Why do you think clowns are piling into overinflated stocks, overinflated housing and overinflated precious metals?

          The people doing that in fact represent a very narrow slice of the economy and that slice is already flush with money to spend. All those things are still purchased with US dollars and if you are hedging inflation with stocks and housing, well, you are probably a clown but your wealth is insulating you from bad decisions. We in the USA have also been programmed an incentivized to view our homes as investment and those are bad incentives that have lead to our inflated housing market.

          Gold trading volume is

          • by NFN_NLN ( 633283 )

            > If you are running an economy you don't want people "saving" though.
            > You want that money in motion, you want people to spend and invest the money, not just sit on it.

            You just confirmed that manipulating money to keep people spending doesn't work. They can just dump that money into assets as an alternative to saving FIAT.

        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          If I think my money will be worth more tomorrow I have little incentive to spend any of it today unless I absolutely have to.

          This is already happening. Why do you think clowns are piling into overinflated stocks, overinflated housing and overinflated precious metals?

          Because they believe in inflation, not deflation. They are piling in to speculative things because these have the potential of growing in dollar terms and protecting them from inflation. That is, the loss of their money's value.

          The whole "keep the money moving" idea also benefits governments tax revenues. People are motivated to keep their money moving (sales taxes) and obliged to value their productivity and wealth in terms of an ever decreasing fiat currency value (income and capitol gains taxes).

      • by smoot123 ( 1027084 ) on Sunday May 19, 2024 @02:16PM (#64483373)

        If you are running an economy you don't want people "saving" though. You want that money in motion, you want people to spend and invest the money, not just sit on it.

        Two thoughts.

        First, no one "runs" an economy any more than anyone controls public opinion. An economy is how we describe the aggregate action of millions of people. At best you might nudge an economy one way or the other.

        Second, saved money is not idle. Banks since 1500 have lent that money as fast as they can putting it back into action. Virtually none of a bank's assets are in a vault. From a macroeconomic perspective, there's little difference between spending, saving, and investing: they're all ways to get money in motion. The only way for money to be truly idle is if you put cash under your mattress.

        • Well I mean that's what the central banks are doing, nudging things with monetary policy. The US Fed has two metrics they track and care about; unemployment and inflation. While they don't "control" it so much of it is girded at the foundations by interest rates and monetary supply. If it was no big deal then having ZIRP for a decade or having 5% rates today wouldn't make a difference.

          And yes while having money in a savings account is not "idle" it's pretty low velocity as opposed to other forms of inve

  • by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Sunday May 19, 2024 @01:47PM (#64483285) Homepage

    then all the farmers plowing with horses will be out of work. If word processors take jobs, then all the typists will need UBI. Etc.

    An LLM is just a tool. We've been developing better tools for hundreds of years. Some jobs disappear, other jobs appear. People need to get a grip.

    • Bingo. Buggy whip manufacturers put out of business by the automobile.
    • Easy position to take and a daring one ⦠programmer
    • by crow ( 16139 )

      All new technology waves in the past have created more jobs than they destroyed. In some cases, it should have been obvious at the time that this would be the case, and at others less so. Now the question is whether AI will continue the same pattern we've seen in the past, or if it is fundamentally different. There are some really good reasons to argue that this is different, in which case universal basic income sounds like it may well be the answer.

      If companies that currently employ hundreds of thousand

      • Not really, the question is even if this technology creates more jobs in the long run - how do you mitigate the disruption of the economy, redistribution and concentration of capital and the social cost... to prevent poverty, political and social unrest?

        Technological optimists - and I'd still include myself on that camp - often gloss over the historical details of most previous tech revolutions in the spirit of long-termism, and use the term luddite as a smear.

        But the farmers, artisans, miners and factory w

    • by dinfinity ( 2300094 ) on Sunday May 19, 2024 @02:54PM (#64483481)

      You're missing the fact that it is inevitable that humans will be surpassed in every way by something at some point in the future, so your argument is guaranteed to be wrong either now or when one of the next 'tools' comes around.

    • Maybe in this scenario you're more like the horses, who got new jobs at the glue factory. What, do you think God guaranteed that you'll have a job no matter what? There's a chance mysterious new jobs appear -- but explain how you think it's guaranteed? Perhaps you need to get a grip on the fact not everyone wants to passively sit around gambling away their future in the hopes everything somehow turns out fine.

    • ... things are different.
      To quote CPCgrey:
      "There is no law that says: Better technology makes more better jobs for horses. But somehow when we swap 'horses' for 'humans' everybody thinks it's right."

      It isn't. Machines have mostly voided human manual labor. Now machines are voiding human brain labor. And very soon artificial humans (aka robots) with artificial intelligence will void the last bits of human manual labor that requires brains.

      Watch this video in full to see what is happening right now.

      And prepar

    • And if you actually know history you know that there was decades of social strife and poverty following the two industrial revolutions before technology caught up and gave us new types of jobs that got us back to full employment. If you don't take at least a 102 level history course and really these days I think 200 level history course in college you will be lucky to get one paragraph on that in your entire 500 page American history book...

      So yes it's quite possible that our great great grandkids after
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      An LLM can automatize bureaucracy. This is the first time in history this has become economically feasible to do on large scale. That is not a productive job, but a type of jobs that keeps a major part of the population employed. Cheaper bureaucracy does not cause increased production.

    • then all the farmers plowing with horses will be out of work. If word processors take jobs, then all the typists will need UBI. Etc.

      An LLM is just a tool. We've been developing better tools for hundreds of years. Some jobs disappear, other jobs appear. People need to get a grip.

      a) It's true those transitions created new jobs, in most cases better than the jobs they replaced, but the people who had those old jobs are not the people who got the new jobs. For the people with the old jobs it really sucked, but we don't hear about them much because losers don't get to write much of the history.

      b) Previous tools either enhanced physical power, or directly increased mental productivity for the human using the tool. Right now, LLMs are increasing mental productivity, but that's only becau

  • by iAmWaySmarterThanYou ( 10095012 ) on Sunday May 19, 2024 @01:54PM (#64483311)

    1) AI is no where near replacing any significant number of jobs (note I said jobs not people)
    2) every single time technology has made workers more efficient we ended up with more jobs, not fewer
    3) He may be a brilliant computer scientist but he knows absolutely fuck all about anything else. Expertise in one field actually reducing the likelihood of expertise in other unrelated fields due to focus
    4) He is suffering from a limited form of Dunning Kruger where he falsely assumes his vertical knowledge in one field makes him qualified to talk about other unrelated verticals.
    5) UBI doesn't solve anything anyway. It's just another inflationary welfare system that will result in corporations gaining even more power and wealth while the lower classes grow ever larger and more dependent upon government. We've literally spent 30+ trillion dollars in the fight against poverty and all we bought for it was more poverty. Where the fuck did 30 trillion dollars go?

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      "UBI doesn't solve anything anyway. It's just another inflationary welfare system ..."

      I love how you rightly criticize another person's lack of expertise the prove to everyone it's really just projection.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      1) Au contraire. The only reason a lot of bureaucracy (and hence a lot of jobs) were not automatized so far was that creating the systems for that would have been too costly. LLMs change that dramatically.
      2) Every single time so far _production_ got automatized. This time, for the first time in human history, bureaucracy is getting automatized on a large scale. More and cheaper bureaucracy does not cause higher productivity. Quite the contrary.
      3) Nonsensical statement is nonsense. You are pushing an AdHomin

  • > He recommended a prohibition on the military use of AI, warning that currently "in terms of military uses I think there's going to be a race".

    This is even more idiotic than his UBI statement.

    How exactly does he plan to have our enemies not use AI in their weapon systems? There's already a race. He's either naive or senile. Hey I know let's ban the use of terrorism. Let's ban the use of hacking. Let's ban drugs, murder, rape, arson, car crashes, drowning, dog bites, and cat scratches.

    Because obviou

    • Wow! I didn't realize it was that simple. Just ban bad stuff. I'm on board, I like it! No, seriously, I like it. We need to get a movement going.
    • by crow ( 16139 )

      Yeah, it's a little late.

      They're already using AI in drones so that they can hit their targets even if they get hit with electronic warfare interference that cuts off their control signal. I believe both sides are already implementing this. And they'll just keep pushing the line between human control and automation.

      Yes, there are dangers, but those concerns get left behind when the enemy is shelling your homes and leveling your cities as they advance across your country.

      • by cowdung ( 702933 )

        Yeah, people are all twisted up about ChatGPT's autocomplete powers.

        In the meantime the military has been using many forms of AI for decades. And its only getting more and more dangerous.

        ChatGPT doesn't scare me. The military industrial complex does.
        Skynet isn't going to destroy the world because it used an offensive term. Militaries, however, are actively decimating entire cities right now as we speak!

  • Even the current LLMs can take a significant number of jobs. And they won't be evenly distributed across the population. Some specialties will be affected harder and sooner than others. Others will be hardly affected at all...by this round.

    If we had lots of strong unions that were actively interested in furthering the benefits of their members, I'd worry less. As it is ... well, there's a strong imbalance of power, and it's going to get more unbalanced. Universal Basic Income would be a way to handle t

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      As the current LLMs are basically what we will have for the next few decades, that is significant. The problem is that they can automatize bureaucracy. They cannot automatize production (hallucinations are not fixable and are a real killer), but bureaucratic processes are highly fault-tolerant as they are already typically designed by incompetent morons and mostly just aim to waste everybody's time. But here is the problem: These bureaucratic processes waste a lot of time and a lot of that is paid "work" ti

  • Companies could hire more people if they didn't have to pay a minimum wage. People could go back to school or start a business or leave an abusive employer if they didn't have to worry about affording food. We could also eliminate social security retirement benefits and other welfare programs. People could work longer hours or change jobs if they didn't have to worry about losing benefits if they earn too much. [wikipedia.org]

  • This just in. A guy who is smart at one thing and did some amazing stuff has magically become an expert on every topic known to man, including economics, politics, and your personal life, despite having no real, practical, or theoretical experience in any of those things. Coming up in the News at 11, we'll discuss why we should all listen to technocrats because they're just smarter than all of us.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      It seems to be a disease common to rock stars and scientists. As soon as they achieve some success in their narrow field of specialization, they assume they've become Renaissance Men, qualified to pontificate on all matters great and small.

  • In 20 years, when your kids grow up, imagine where AI will be at. They will have no job. And look look at these comments, no UBI either. Even with the writing on the wall, 'wise' people in power will follow the old established dogma. You know what will get their attention? plummeting birth rates.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      AI will actually be mostly where it is today. But that is enough to cause massive problems.

  • then whatever else you are, you're also a socialist, and your credentials are orthogonal to that. And thus irrelevant. So one more Ivory Tower academic pushing for the techno-socialist utopia. Didn't work when Marx did it, didn't work when Marcuse did it. Won't work now either.

  • by cowdung ( 702933 ) on Sunday May 19, 2024 @03:11PM (#64483511)

    Argentina basically has a Universal Basic Income system. It has decimated the economy.

    For example, in one town there was a sugar factory. Traditionally workers were paid a salary to go cut the sugar cane for the factory. However, because of the "universal income" that goes to people that have no employment, workers prefer to earn 1/3 of the salary and just stay home and maybe informally earning some money here and there to complement their income now and then.

    The result? There's no more factory.

    This has happened all around the country. So I'm very skeptical of these UBI schemes people come up with.

    Also, from an economic point of view, if you subsidize consumer spending inflation goes nuts. You want give money to production so that goods and services grow at the same rate as the availability of money. Then you don't get slammed by inflation.

    Argentina is slammed by inflation. It's a total disaster. UBI type policies are encouraging people to stay home and not work. While the government heavily taxes businesses. There's no incentive to hire people, and there's no incentive to be hired. Where do you think that will go?

    ps. the current government is trying to change this, but it remains to be seen if they can

    • by Z80a ( 971949 )

      Don't worry, UBI will totally work if there is a massive megacorporation paying for it.
      Just don't ask what they want in return, and why there are no competitors whatsoever for this megacorporation.

      • The primary risk of Universal Basic Income (UBI), seems to be a society which needs a highly automated system, backed by a few massive mega corporations, to maintain a minimal subsistence. As priorities are reorganized, inflation goes nuts.

        The primary concern driving the push for UBI, is that advancements in A.I. will result in highly automated systems, backed by a few massive mega corporations, to maintain a minimal subsistence. As priorities are reorganized, inflation goes nuts.

        The concept is that A
  • Military overmatch trumps everything else because the alternative is relying on the kindness of your enemies.

    Europe tried that experiment at Munich but selling out Czechoslovakia didn't work. Then it chose to greet Putin legs akimbo with predictable results. That Putin invaded Ukraine reflects failed deterrence.

    AI is a military necessity so it will must and will be used. The world was, is and will remain a very bad place where the only security is ability to apply decisive violence (this is often delegated

    • This - mark parent up. It's the arms racing again, that's how we humans operate. And it's always (has been) balanced. Though the AI's runaway it more possible these days. The atomic weapons were/are dangerous but our of reach of small groups operating out the their garages. Unleashing a self-serving, self-reserving AI will probably be achievable, with some reasonable effort, in near feature out of a garage. Not sure there is anything that can be done about it. So nations of the world will start preparing AI

  • by GotNoRice ( 7207988 ) on Sunday May 19, 2024 @04:06PM (#64483589)
    ...is that it's fundamentally incompatible with unchecked illegal immigration, yet the same people who advocate for universal basic income also advocate for open borders. UBI + Open Borders = United States becomes a welfare dispensary for 8 Billion people. Close the border, limit UBI to US *citizens* only, and *maybe* UBI would have a chance.
    • Dishonest. I've not ever met somebody who was pro-abortion or pro-open borders but I have met an actual Marxist. You strawman all the time, benefiting from the ignorance of people who can't yet see your tactics. Eventually, you lose them when they realize the lies you've been spewing.

      2/3 of illegals do not cross the border, they come in (flying) and do not leave. Also since a messed up policy change almost a century ago, has made it difficult for migratory workers to migrate so they are incentivized to stay

  • How will the government get the money to provide UBI?
  • It'll happen there first, the breakdown I mean.

    They have lost control of their corporate class, who will do whatever they think will increase their wealth.
    The US corporate overlords will go down that path and for a while they'll make bank, encouraging them all to do it.

    Eventually they'll hit a tipping point though al la Great Depression but it'll be worse and the plebs there are kept ignorant and also armed to the teeth.

    The cities will burn and the country will Balkanise. Some more intelligent people there

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      The cities will burn and the country will Balkanise. Some more intelligent people there will see it coming but they'll be too few to stop it.

      Yep, probably. And these people are leaving. I have noticed that over the past 10 years or so, more and more highly qualified people have been moving from the US to Europe.

  • It seems strange to think that its possible to make an artificial intelligence that is smart enough to replace most human jobs, but not smart enough to demand pay in return for its work? Of course we could enslave it, force it to work, but it seems likely that as AI get smarter, that will end badly for humans.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      You are under a misconception here: AI is a marketing term. These systems are automation. They have no insight or understanding of anything. But, as it turns out, a lot of jobs have large parts that do not require insight or understanding and with generative AI it has gotten a lot easier to build automation for them. Hence most jobs will not go away, but a lot of white-collar jobs will require a lot less people to do them and there will be no replacements for those jobs. Nobody needs more paper pushed and p

      • I agree they are just automation at the moment, and at least in the past automation has changed the types of jobs, but not reduced them. Some very repetitive white collar jobs may go away, but I can see a lot of jobs being created in the training, management and debugging of the AI systems. As long as AIs aren't really "intelligent" they will need an intelligent human to choose training sets, and to add safeguards to make sure that the AI doesn't make very expensive mistakes.

        I think that most jobs r
  • In needs to be done, it needs to be enough to live decently off it, but it will not be enough. People need meaning in their lives or they become a problem. Most cannot supply that meaning by themselves. So far, work did a somewhat acceptable of providing that meaning, but that seems to not really work anymore already.

  • If AI takes away jobs and those workers are unable to find new jobs, then they will need government or societal assistance. However, that is true for any new technology, or even for any non-technology change, e.g., government regulations or economic/political changes. This is not an AI-specific issue.

    Jobs have always continually disappeared throughout history. Many/most people have been able to find new jobs, although some of those jobs don't pay as well or are more demanding. If AI had never happened,

"I'm not afraid of dying, I just don't want to be there when it happens." -- Woody Allen

Working...