The Robots Are Coming, the Robots Are Coming
ARE THE FEARS JUSTIFIED, OR SIMPLY THE CACKLING OF CHICKEN LITTLE?
Artificial intelligence will reach human levels by around 2029. Follow that out further to, say, 2045, we will have multiplied the intelligence, the human biological machine intelligence of our civilization a billion-fold.
― Ray Kurzweil, Futurist and Author
It’s a fact that Life and Society are changing pretty quickly these days.
Indeed, the rapidity of the changes that affect our contemporary social fabric ― our tools and toys, icons and idols ― appears to be driving us toward a “singular” pivot in the history of world evolution.
At least, if we are to believe the Prophets of Artificial Intelligence. However, we need, to ask ourselves whether appearance and what is being said about Artificial Intelligence coincide with Reality.
But it’s not possible to have a reasoned discussion about the future of Artificial Intelligence until we learn to sort out the facts from the hype concerning its current state. And in order to do that, we have to begin insisting on seeing, with our own eyes, robots performing the tasks and actions we are so often told they are capable of.
If you look closely at what’s published about Artificial Intelligence and “AI”, you find that most of it is barely discernible from Science Fiction.
Why? Because most of it claims capabilities for robots and other AI machines which as of today have not been attained and which are still decades, maybe centuries away ― if indeed they are ever attained.
Look for example at a driverless car, that’s a form of … modest intelligence, the average 16-year-old can do it as long as they’re sober, with a couple of months of training. Yet Google has worked on it for seven years and their car still can only drive ― like on sunny days, without too much traffic.
― GARY MARCUS, “The limits of artificial intelligence”, Tech Crunch, Apr, 2017
Take a close look at the stream of photos in a Google Images search on “robots” or “AI”. What you find almost exclusively are photo-realistic 3D artists’ renderings ― not real photographs!
That’s because there are virtually no real photographs to be had. And because any available real photographs are of (ugly) robotic machines whose images do not feed the ubiquitous Sci-Fi fantasy about the imminent advent of Artificial Intelligence.
The core problem with the public discussion of Artifical Intelligence is… us. We have become so inured to “virtual reality” ― which, face it, is not real at all ― that we have difficulty distinguishing between fantasy and reality in published material.
Someone shows us an artist’s photo-realistic 3D rendering of a robot with humanoid form and “intelligent” looking eyes, and we say, “Hey, ain’t that cool? Man, look at that bot working in an office, helping people accomplish all those complex tasks.”
But it’s pure hype at this point, the kind of stuff journalistic dreams. It’s not really happening. (Editor’s note: not in 2017 when this piece was first published and not today in 2024.)
Let’s be clear on this. The best examples the Prophets of Ai can presently give us are the likes of Siri, Alexa, and Cogito, none of which come anywhere closer than the edge of our solar system to demonstrating the level of “intelligence” about which the Prophets of AI wax so enthusiastically.
If you stop to think about it, using your own puny human intelligence, you will quickly recognize that the hype is actually driven by the Profits of Ai.
Not necessarily in the sense of a P&L bottom line, but more in terms of the inflow of long-term investment funds, government research grants, tax concessions, public bond issues, company startup funding, and so on. The conglomeration of which feed the coffers of those with vested interests in fueling the belief we are at the leading edge of the dawning of true Artificial Intelligence.
Consider, if you will the following video of the latest and greatest Boston Dynamics Robot as it performs gymnastic backflips.
This robot is 5'9" tall and weighs about 180 lbs. And all I can say is, “Oooh, hot wooey!”
When my younger daughter was three years old, I bought her a mechanical wind-up dog that was fuzzy-cuddly and would do a more graceful backflip than this Atlas Robot guy — and land on his feet every time.
C’mon, let’s get real. At 16 years old, 4'9" tall and well under 100 lbs, Mary Lou Retton, could have kicked this “super” robot’s ass in gymnastic backflips fifty times over.
Oh, and by the way, take a look at the Atlas Robot shortly after its historic demonstration of its “super” backflip capabilities.
Okay, okay, I know that making fun of a poor robot isn’t nice. But I believe in giving back in kind that which one receives. And to my mind, the Prophets of AI display a deep and abiding contempt for your and my intelligence ― witness their propensity to constantly tell us they have achieved what they very clearly haven’t yet accomplished.
One could, of course, write the divergence between claims about Artificial Intelligence and Reality off to the fact that those working in AI come mostly from the computer industry. For the computer hardware and software industry is, in my experience, the only business sector where it is commonplace to deliver a defective or unfinished product, then spend months and even years charging customers and clients hundreds of thousands, even millions of dollars to correct problems that never should have been part of the delivered product in the first place
But I suspect the more likely explanation is that the quest to develop Artificial Intelligence, in the true sense of the expression, may be very much like the pursuit of meaningful manned space travel ― subject to a radically rising curve of diminishing returns, so steep that the effort expended will never fully achieve the dreamed-of final objective.
― Phil Friedman
Author’s note: This article is one in a five-part series, first published in 2017 — at the beginning of my seven year tenure in the intellectual gulag of those who doubted the hyperbole spouted by the Prophets of Ai. To find the other four articles in the series, go to: Show Me the Intelligence.
Text Copyright 2017 by Phil Friedman — All Rights Reserved
Image Credits: Phil Friedman and Google Images.com
#AI #ARTIFICIALINTELLIGENCE #FUTURISM #PREDICTINGTHEFUTURE #CHATBOT #ROBOTS #BOT #SHOWMETHEINTELLIGENCE #AIREVOLUTION
Originally published at www.bebee.com, 2017.