An Uber self-driving automobile ran down and killed a woman in
Tempe, AZ. It apparently got confused by traffic patterns that had not been programmed into its artificial mind.
Also this week, the world discovered that Facebook, even if it does
serve as something of a networking tool, is really a data mining operation that
attempts to decipher your mind and sell the information to whomever. Or, at
times, to give it away to politically sympathetic politicians.
As it happened, Facebook’s stock has been tanking. Yet,
great tech geniuses Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg are nowhere to be
found. One cannot help but feel a rush of Schadenfreude, especially in the case
of Sandberg, a self-proclaimed feminist heroine who has made a second career
out of handing out bad advice to women.
Spengler (aka David Goldman) reads the convergence and
analyzes:
Now
Americans have discovered that cars won’t drive themselves like magic and that
the Facebook fishbowl is not a substitute for ordinary human interaction, but
rather a vast commercial experiment in profiling their behavior. Only a handful
of Facebook users will delete their accounts and cancel their broadband
connections, to be sure, but the bloom is off the lily: The Internet giant no
longer can sell the concept of community, and it is not clear what it will sell
except the sort of connectivity that is provided by any number of competitors.
We can grant Facebook credit for selling the concept of
community, but still, it merely masks the absence of same in today’s
America.
Spengler adds the important point that Americans, especially
the tech elites, got drunk on their own genius and failed to notice that their
products required a real infrastructure.
The
idea that Americans would be the designers and Asians would be the
manufacturing worker-bees had an obvious and fatal flaw. At some point, the
advancement of the technology requires real physical infrastructure, and
research and development will come to grief without a working partnership with
the factory floor. Without the sort of physical infrastructure that China is
building into its new cities, computation can’t solve all the problems that
arise in intersections like the corner of Mill Avenue and Curry St. in Tempe,
Arizona.
The
people of China have leapt from traditional life into the modern world, and
their entire life experience is a sequence of innovations. They are far more
eager than Americans or Europeans to adopt new technologies because they never
made a habit of old ones. For example, E-commerce now accounts for 30% of
retail sales in China, but less than 10% of retail sales in the United States.
He is making the obvious point, namely that our confidence
in our genius and our brilliance has blinded us to the fact that other nations
are catching up to us in technological innovation. But also that
the world of bits and bytes will eventually come a cropper when everything
around it is disintegrating.
Doesn’t Spengler’s analysis bring to mind the
picture of San Francisco, a city that was built by and for the tech oligarchs,
but where their magnificent mansions and high priced life styles are surrounded
by squalor and misery, by homeless encampments and rising poverty, and where environmentally friendly homes protect the oligarchs from having to deal with streets filled with every manner of filth.
"At some point, the advancement of the technology requires real physical infrastructure, and research and development will come to grief without a working partnership with the factory floor. Without the sort of physical infrastructure that China is building into its new cities, computation can’t solve all the problems that arise in intersections like the corner of Mill Avenue and Curry St. in Tempe, Arizona."
ReplyDeleteI agree with the first sentence, but not so sure about the second. China has a lot of *very old* cities, and a lot of the new ones seem to be basically ghost towns, created in response the misplaced investment incentives.
In both countries, I think self-driving vehicles will likely be limited to specific routes/areas for a considerable time.
Even in the case of rail transportation, even on a closed and limited network with tight human supervision, excessive trust in automation has been known to lead to fatal results. See my post Blood on the Tracks:
https://chicagoboyz.net/archives/43911.html
(Of course, one might respond by saying that Washington Metrorail is an especially-badly-managed organization...indeed, an NTSB report referred to the organization as having a "learning disability"....but this is probably also true of many state and local highway departments)
Might be leaking a little. Not bursting yet.
ReplyDeleteAccording to police reports, the woman hit in Arizona stepped into traffic in a way that would have been nearly impossible for any driver, human or cyborg, to avoid. She was not 'run down and killed', in the normal meaning of those words, by a rouge vehicle, though video has not yet been made available for general viewing.
ReplyDelete