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by BriggyDwiggs42
544 days ago
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No, Atlas shrugged explicitly believes that the wealthy beneficiaries are also the ones doing the innovation and the labor. Human/superhuman AI, if not self-directed but more like a tool, may massively benefit whoever happens to be lucky enough to be directing it when it arises. This does not imply that the lucky individual benefits on the basis of their competence. The idea that productivity improvements increase unemployment is just fundamentally based on a different paradigm. There is absolutely no reason to think that when a machine exists that can do most things that a human can do as well if not better for less or equal cost, this will somehow increase human employment. In this scenario, using humans in any stage of the pipeline would be deeply inefficient and a stupid business decision. |
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