Washington Examiner / Magazine
January 10, 2023 Issue
January 10, 2023 Print Edition
Cover Story
Machine politics
What is the promise of artificial intelligence? For some prognosticators, notably Google’s Sundar Pichai, AI is “more profound than electricity or fire,” a world-transforming development that will alter every facet of human existence for the good. Others, the late Stephen Hawking among them, have argued that AI’s superior cognition “could spell the end of the human race.” What if both these visions are fatally flawed? A technical and scientific phenomenon, AI is nevertheless the product of human culture and will be carved, at least in part, into shapes that suit us. Thus, it is not only significant but possibly determinative that AI has made a powerful enemy of late. Perhaps uncoincidentally, this foe has its own designs on how humanity will work, build, and make decisions in the coming years. I speak, of course, of wokeness. And if anyone doubts that “political correctness gone mad” has its eye on our machine-directed future, let him look no further than the “Ethical AI” movement, an ambitious hodgepodge of activists with a single goal: that the robots shall be no “smarter” than today’s political orthodoxies allow. TECHNOLOGY TRENDS TO WATCH FOR IN 2023 Conceived in the 1940s as “computer ethics,” the Ethical AI movement can trace its roots to both the post-Nagasaki scruples of the U.S. scientific community and Isaac Asimov’s much-heralded "Three Laws of Robotics." While the field in its infancy was esoteric and largely theoretical, it...

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