If you’re a movie fan or a
cryptologist, you probably know who Alan Turing was. In the movie ‘The Imitation Game’, the code
breaker savant was portrayed by the omnipresent Benedict Cumberbatch. Among his contributions to society is the
Turing Test. A machine passes the test when a human interlocutor cannot
determine if they are conversing with said machine or with a human.
Toymaker Mattel now
endeavors to have its classic doll, Barbie, pass the Turing Test – at least
when conversing with a 9 year-old girl.
In a wonderful article in the New York Times magazine, James Vlahos
describes the development of a soon-to-be released Barbie with the artificial
intelligence to hold a real conversation with its (her?) human companion.
What most interested me is
the idea that it’s not necessary to pass the Turing Test if your human
companion knows a machine’s limitations but treats it like a human anyway. If you’ve had kids (or remember being one),
you know that a youngster can have elaborate, imaginary conversations with a
stuffed bunny, the family pet or with Barbie.
No response required.
So, what if Barbie could
talk back? Would a child know that
Barbie is just a toy just as she knows that Fido is just a dog? Probably.
Would Barbie pass the Turing Test?
Probably not.
The implications are
interesting if not yet well understood.
A study done by economists at Deloitte and Oxford University reports
that technology has been changing the nature of the work we do for centuries,
eliminating the most monotonous, dangerous or physically challenging work. Yet, when technology destroyed jobs, it
created many more new ones.
The report also provides a
list of those likely to lose their jobs to technology in the next 20 years. At
the top of the list – are you ready for this? – Telephone Salesperson.
It took a moment for that
to sink in. What if the recorded
robo-call you received just as you sat down to dinner was from Barbie instead
of a recorded message? Or, to turn it
around, what if Barbie were programmed to answer 800 numbers instead of being
programmed to talk with 9 year-olds? Hold queues would disappear.
Could she handle it? Maybe not today…. But soon!
What of the workforce as a
whole? It’s easy to assess the
historical impact of creative destruction on people’s jobs. Assembly line workers who lost jobs to robots needed
to be retrained for something new.
On the other hand, it was once
thought that accountants would lose their jobs to Excel Spreadsheets. Instead, they have prospered by using that
tool to offer new services.
And, so it goes. Jobs that barely existed at the turn of the
Century are now plentiful --- webmasters, solar panel installers, optical
engineers – while others have faded away – telephone operators, draftsmen,
travel agents.
Futurists like MIT’s David
Autor and Andrew McAfee suggest that we might see a barbell effect. Those in very high skill professions – brain
surgeons, for example – will use technology to be more productive and effective
at their jobs. Others, like legal
secretaries and the aforementioned Telephone Sales people, are vulnerable to
being pushed down the compensation ladder to personal service jobs like nursing
assistants or hotel workers. So, high-income professions will become more
productive and create more value while low-income jobs become more
numerous. The middle gets hollowed out.
McAfee is optimistic, telling
the Huffington Post “the technological
progress we are experiencing is the best economic news on the planet, bar none.
It will increase the material bounty of our world, giving us higher volume,
more variety and better quality goods and services at lower prices.”
He
worries, however, about how quickly the workforce can adapt. Our public schools still prepare students for
the jobs of the 20th Century.
Our infrastructure is crumbling and our government’s policies stifle
entrepreneurs.
Technology
improves productivity and drives economic growth. People lose jobs as it happens. It’s an unstoppable force.
Big
companies and government are not driving these changes. Consumers are. We prefer low-friction, efficient service. It’s easier to shop on your smartphone than
to go to Wal-Mart. It’s easier to print
your boarding passes at home than to wait in line at the airport. And, it’s easier to send an email than to
mail a letter.
We
can’t stop the unstoppable. We need to
find ways to deal with it.
WHO WILL LEAD?