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Comment Re:Robots vs people, child hit vs not (Score 2) 128

I'm glad that worked out for you, but it's not like humans have a great safety record avoiding child pedestrians. You're talking about a pretty rare case where you can tell when something is about to happen due to clues, but let's face it, most accidents are going to happen because it's hard to see, or there was no warning, or the driver was distracted by a cell phone. If you just added auto-braking to all passenger cars, what do you think would happen to those pedestrian collision statistics?

Comment Ideal (Score 3, Insightful) 128

This is pretty much the ideal situation where a self-driving car can perform better than a human driver. The car was probably following the posted speed limit precisely. It's likely been designed to cope with this specific situation because it's relatively common. And it can detect and react to the pedestrian faster than a human reaction time.

Comment Re:Thank you Gamers! (Score 1) 70

Well, you've just outed yourself as the idiot in this scenario. You see, they control the stuff that has value, and the stuff that creates value, and they can trade that value for soldiers (or maybe just create a robot army) to stop you from taking it. This isn't new; it's how authoritarian regimes already work.

Comment Re:Thank you Gamers! (Score 2) 70

You think that if AI or automation advance to the level where we have vast automated factories and build and repair themselves, that the people (or AI) that control these things will happily share ownership of it with everyone? You're delusional. Once the average person is deemed to be more trouble than they're worth in productivity and output, they'll be left to rot at best, and exterminated at worst. Whoever controls the technology will have zero incentive to do anything else. The only reason the masses are tolerated at all today is because they can be manipulated to do something useful and productive. Don't look forward to a future where robots and AI can do everything we can do, only better. It won't be liberation.

Comment Teenager in a 72 year old's body (Score 4, Insightful) 204

We all thought piracy was OK when we were teenagers or young adults and didn't have any money. Eventually you mature enough to realize that if you're going to create a movie that costs $100 million, it cost that much because all those people listed at the end of the movie need to eat and need to buy gas, and need to save up for their kids' university education. If you followed the free software model for movies, then some rich guy who really, really wants to watch a movie has to pony up the $100 million to make a movie, and then he has to give the finished product away to everyone else. Most of us are smart enough to see that's going to result in zero movies being made. There are other alternatives... you could use a gofundme or kickstarter model... everyone has to pay up front and when we reach our goal of $100 million, then the movie gets made. After it's been made, is it then free for everyone else to copy? Doesn't that create the same problem? Shouldn't the 10 million people who put in $10 each get half their money back if another 10 million people watch it after it's made? Personally, I think yes. So I don't think anyone should get to see it for free. Everyone should have to pay an ever-decreasing amount out to the people who already paid.

Comment Tesla (Score 5, Interesting) 83

Before the 100% tariff that Canada imposed, almost all Tesla vehicles sold in Canada were manufactured in China, so Tesla was the brand most impacted. I believe that the new deal for 49,000 will end up allowing a lot of Tesla vehicles, and a few EVs that other existing brands make over in Chinese factories, and we're not going to see so many BYD vehicles, as I don't think it's worth setting up dealerships, etc. I suppose BYD might create a partnership with another brand for a few years and use those dealerships. In exchange for the EV deal, China agreed to lower tariffs on canola exports from Canada, which was a big deal for farmers in western Canada.

If China wants larger numbers of EVs, then I suspect the Canadian government will require that BYD or whoever setup a manufacturing plant in Canada as a stipulation. That's similar to Japanese manufacturers.

As a Canadian I'd prefer we avoid too many "deals" with China, but the fact is that the North American free trade agreement is probably not going to get renewed this year (even though Canada is the largest buyer of American-made cars and trucks by far), and we need to rapidly expand our trade with countries other than the US because the US has made it clear that they're going to use trade as leverage to exploit any country that trades with them. That's they're choice, but it means countries are incentivized to diversify away from buying American.

Comment Re:Backwards into stupidity we go (Score 1) 306

It blows my mind that you would claim that "America's breadbasket is really not great farmland absent supplementation" when it's well-known that this is some of the highest farmland quality in the world. But be careful of using the word "breadbasket" because wheat is typically grown on marginal farmland because it's so good at growing in marginal conditions. You don't grow wheat in super-fertile soil because it's a waste.

Comment Re:Backwards into stupidity we go (Score 1, Insightful) 306

It's a little weird to me that the people who advocate for vaccines to save lives (I would count myself among them) are often the ones who also perpetuate the myth that the human population is continuing to explode into some kind of Malthusian standing-room-only overpopulated future. While vaccinations improve quality of life substantially, rapid population decline due to very low birth rates will drastically reduce wellbeing. This is just basic logic. The specialization needed to maintain a high tech society requires a lot of people. If you drop the population size, then we have to move our skillsets back towards being generalists. While that's not the end of the world, it will certainly drop our standard of living substantially. And before anyone says we'll just use automation to make up the difference... that's exactly the type of high tech solution that requires extreme specialization.

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