AFP
WASHINGTON
Advances in artificial intelligence will soon lead to robots that are capable of nearly everything humans do, threatening tens of millions of jobs in the coming 30 years, experts warned Saturday.
‘We are approaching a time when machines will be able to outperform humans at almost any task,’ said Moshe Vardi, director of the Institute for Information Technology at Rice University in Texas. ‘I believe that society needs to confront this question before it is upon us: If machines are capable of doing almost any work humans can do, what will humans do?’ he asked at a panel discussion on artificial intelligence at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Vardi said there will always be some need for human work in the future, but robot replacements could drastically change the landscape, with no profession safe, and men and women equally affected.
‘Can the global economy adapt to greater than 50 percent unemployment?’ he asked. Automation and robotization have already revolutionized the industrial sector over the last 40 years, raising productivity but cutting down on employment. Job creation in manufacturing reached its peak in the United States in 1980 and has been on the decline ever since, accompanied by stagnating wages in the middle class, said Vardi.
Today there are more than 200,000 industrial robots in the country and their number continues to rise. Today, research is focused on the reasoning abilities of machines, and progress in this realm over the past 20 years has been spectacular, said Vardi.
‘And there is every reason to believe the progress in the next 25 years will be equally dramatic,’ he said. By his calculation, 10 percent of jobs related to driving in the United States could disappear due to the rise of driverless cars in the coming 25 years. According to Bart Selman, professor of computer science at Cornell University, ‘in the next two or three years, semi-autonomous or autonomous systems will march into our society.’
He listed self-driving cars and trucks, autonomous drones for surveillance and fully automatic trading systems, along with house robots and other kinds of ‘intelligence assistance’ which make decisions on behalf of humans. ‘We will be in sort of symbiosis with those machines and we will start to trust them and work with them,’ he predicted. ‘This is the concern because we don't know the rate of growth of machine intelligence, how clever those machines will become.’