finally someone ...factoring in ...EVIL :o
Our
fantasies about becoming cyborgs are getting ever closer to reality.
Recently in the resurrected version of Newsweek (which I suspect is a
robot), Kevin Maney wrote an excited article on “brain apps”
which monitor EEG signals and allow you to automatically detect when
your brain is in a state of “peak productivity.” What’s more, the
grandiose claim of these apps is that they will train you to be able to
enter peak productivity at will. By analyzing brainwaves and teaching
you how to mimic the brain activity of experts, these apps can make you
into an expert with minimal training in a fraction of the time it
normally takes. In a few years this type of technology may be
implanted, making us truly cyborgs.
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We
have moved beyond creating robots and software to do work for us. We
now want to become robots ourselves so that we can even more work – all
the time, in a heightened state of “peak productivity.” Our cyborg
fantasies have been completely co-opted by the cult of productivity. The much-hyped Singularity,
in which machine intelligence becomes superintelligence and surpasses
human intelligence, and then merges with it (or something), is not about
some deep philosophical and technological barrier—it’s about becoming a
superworker: a cyborg of extreme productivity.
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Since
the dawn of the robotic age we have dreamed of a utopian future where
benevolent yet super powerful and intelligent robots do all of our
menial jobs, handle our daily affairs and allow us to generally take it
easy and explore the higher pleasures of leisure. Long before the
digital revolution in 1891, Oscar Wilde wrote, “All unintellectual
labour, all monotonous, dull labour, all labour that deals with dreadful
things, and involves unpleasant conditions, must be done by machinery.”
Isn’t this why we invented robots in the first place?
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Wilde
thought that the purpose of life was amusement, enjoying cultivated
leisure, making beautiful things, or simply contemplating the world. He
naively thought that the spread sufficiently advanced machinery would
allow everyone, including and especially the poor, to be liberated from
street sweeping and other degrading types of manual labor (like working at Starbucks today). Wilde continues, “On mechanical slavery, on the slavery of the machine, the future of the world depends.”
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Ever
since the Czech playwright Karl Capek gave us the word “robot,” which
means worker in Czech, humans have been tantalized by the idea that an
intelligent machine could indefatigably and perfectly perform monotonous
and dull labor. Indeed, robots now form a critical part of almost all
forms of industrial production.
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There
is a cruel irony in the fact that as machine intelligence increases, as
robots become more human-like, one of the only growing job sectors even
for university educated people is menial labor. What’s more we are busier than ever, and our working hours have been increasing. Which forces the question, what the hell are all the robots doing?
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Despite this we are warned that robots will replace 70%
of occupations by 2020. This is often presented as a threat, but wasn’t
this the intention all along? To build machines capable of doing our bullshit jobs for us?
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Apparently
fearing the robot takeover and the potential for a society of
“cultivated leisure” we are now desperately trying to become robots
ourselves in order to boost our productivity. While Silicon Valley pumps
billions of dollars into realizing the Singularity, app developers, the military and many others are busy trying to decode our brains in order to hijack them into efficient robotic productivity.
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Could
it be that we’ve been tricked into pouring our innovative energy into
making ourselves better slaves? If the digital elite achieves its dream
of a perfect union with machines, what becomes of the rest of us who
either can’t afford cyborgification or who actually enjoy life as a
regular human being? Would one Singularitized human be expected to
handle the workload of 100 unenhanced workers? Robots will have of
course taken the rest of the jobs.
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