Here's why Google is building a robot army
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For the past couple of weeks, we've all been wondering why Google bought Boston Dynamics, the company that makes those creepy Big Dog and PETMAN robots for the military. This comes after the company announced a project to eliminate death, and after building a secret installation out of cargo crates on a barge in San Francisco Bay. It's as if Google is in the early stages of building a city state.
Historically,
city states like Athens in ancient Greece were contained within
physical walls, anchored to one location. But their tentacles of
influence might reach far and wide; the Greek culture that bloomed in
Athens is said to have Hellenized many parts of the Middle East.
What
are the main ingredients of a city state? It must have a ruling elite
of course, much as a corporation does in its various executives and VPs.
It must have a shared ideology, hopefully one that's boastfully vague —
sort of like Google's motto "Don't be evil." Perhaps most importantly, it must have an army and an economy.
If
you think of Google's Mountain View campus as a city state, and all its
satellite campuses as colonies, then it was kind of inevitable that the
company would raise an army. Already, it has a culture within its walls
that is as strong as any city-state's. Googlers across the globe share
common values, types of work and meals. They exist within a social
hierarchy as clear-cut as any caste system in ancient Greece (though
Google doesn't have slaves, which is nice). And they've even taken on a
state-like role in defending U.S. assets against Chinese hackers.
But
recently, Google's cultural goals have gotten a little more pronounced.
They're not just out to make great web services like search, maps, and
gmail. They're making driverless cars and funding Ray Kurzweil's efforts
to eliminate human death. It's almost like the company is trying to
build its own religion, based on vaguely environmentalist and
Singulatarian ideas. They're acting less like a company, whose goals are
entirely economic, and more like a city-state, whose goals include
ineffable things like quality of life.
Google's robot army reminds me of novels like Neal Stephenson's Diamond Age or Marge Piercy's He, She and It, where companies form city-states that occasionally go to war with each other. In He, She, and It,
the company/city makes its living from selling software, but has to
build cyborg soldiers to defend its walls against hostile takeovers. And
in Diamond Age, corporations create islands devoted to
pursuits like recreating the Victorian age. The companies in these
novels are no longer just economic entities. They are cultures,
conducting social experiments and propagating belief systems that won't
lead directly to profit.
These
days, Google reaches into almost every corner of our lives in the West —
it shapes the way we see the digital world. Those of us whose culture
comes from the internet are already living in a Googlized world, just as
people beyond Greece lived in a Hellenized world back in the 300s BCE.
It makes sense that this city-state corporation known as Google now has
the ability to wage war in the real world as well as cyberspace.
Though
Google's leadership may believe its acquisition of Boston Dynamics will
help usher in a future of AI robots, it may actually be ushering in a
future that looks more like history than The Matrix. We may be
witnessing the return of the city-state, led by corporations rather than
governments. Inside Google's walls, this transformation might be
Utopia. Outside — well, we don't have to worry about outside. We'll have
the robots to protect us against that.
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