Here Comes the Robot Revolution (Spring)
Tue, Apr 04
In today's session we turn our attention to AI and automation. The current AI renaissance promises to revolutionize work by introducing new efficiencies into the economy that will reduce costs and increase production and productivity. But detractors claim that the human toll of this will be too much to bear, with vanishing jobs and lost human agency. This isn't mere alarmism: more conventional computerized automation has already changed the economy in drastic ways. How do we respond to the challenge of automation with sensible policies that allow us to make the best of automation while avoiding putting able workers into unemployment?
We have three main in-class learning goals. By the end of lecture today you will:
- Consider the economic motivations for automating specific jobs and industries.
- Separate the hype from the reality when it comes to claims about what AI can do versus what it is really capable of.
- Understand the social cost of automation, from low-end service jobs to high-end skilled labor.
The slides for today's lecture.
Read This:
An early perspective on automation from Sun Microsystems co-founder (and creator of the vi editor) Bill Joy
Judith Shulevitz writing in the Atlantic on Alexa and other AI voice assistants
Ross Baird looks into Silicon Valley's Unchecked Arrogance as it benefits itself and harms others with automation for Bright Magazine
Jathan Sadowski explains Why Silicon Valley is Embracing Universal Basic Income in the Guardian
Kevin Maney reporting for Newsweek on How Artificial Intelligence and Robots Will Radically Transform the Economy
MIT Report Examines How to Make Technology Work for Society
These optional readings provide additional context on automation's promise and peril:
There's an Automation Crisis Underway Right Now, It's Just Mostly Invisible
FACT CHECK: Do Robots Or Trade Threaten American Workers More?
Do This:
Reading Quiz 09
Take Reading Quiz 09
This Week's Dialogue Group Meeting
Find at least one hour to meet with your group to discuss the prompt of the week: What concerns about AI are overhyped at the present moment?