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5 oeuvres 461 utilisateurs 7 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Jerry Kaplan is currently a fellow at the Center for Legal Informatics at Stanford University and teaches ethics and impact of artificial intelligence in the Computer Science Department.

Œuvres de Jerry Kaplan

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Nom légal
Kaplan, Samuel Jerrold
Date de naissance
1952-03-25
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieux de résidence
San Francisco, California, USA

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Critiques

Overall, a good overview of AI. The first half or so of the book was a very useful 'for beginners, generally intelligent, but not computer scientists' introduction to the components of AI, how it works, what it does and doesn't do, why it is happening now, etc. The last 25-50% of the book was Kaplan's personal extrapolation about ethics and society with respect to AI, and a lot less valuable. In retrospect if I'd stopped reading right when that tangent started I probably would consider this a 5/5 basic introduction.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
octal | 2 autres critiques | Jan 1, 2021 |
Il futuro esisterà soltanto se è esistito un passato che una volta era presente. Questo libro è uno dei tanti che cerca di mettere a confronto l'idea di intelligenza degli esseri umani con quella che si pensa possano avere le macchine. Se "istruire" significa mettere dentro e "educare" "mettere fuori", possiamo facilmente pensare che tutte le "macchine intelligenti" di cui, giorno dopo giorno, gli esseri umani si stanno dotando, siano fornite di abbastanza "intelligenza" da essere considerate tali. Dal telecomando al cellulare, dal pc al gps siamo circondati da una vera e propria rete di "intelligenze". Pure non sapendo come funzionano, le usiamo, ad esse ci affidiamo, di esse ci fidiamo. Non ci rendiamo conto che non ne possiamo più ormai farne a meno eppure osiamo metterle in discussione. C'è chi non si fida e ne diffida, c'è chi ad esse si affida pensando che forse soltanto una intelligenza artificiale potrà salvarci dalla nostra umana storica stupidità. Il pensiero artificiale dei robot potrà funzionare meglio di quello umano? L'autore di questo libro sembra crederci e non sarò di certo io a smentirlo. Devo confessare però che le sue argomentazioni non mi hanno molto convinto. Mi rendo conto che i giochi saranno molto lunghi, che ogni giorno il presente sembra il futuro e non sai più fare le dovute distinzioni tra passato, presente e futuro. Per un dinosauro come me, mi basta pensare con il poeta che arriveremo ad un punto in cui gli uomini si renderanno conto che di essere arrivati da qualche parte, per scoprire soltanto che quello sarà il punto da dove erano partiti.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
AntonioGallo | 2 autres critiques | Oct 9, 2019 |
A concise overview of artificial intelligence with an exceptional bibliography to explore. The author presents his ideas, along with his predictions and opinions, in a reasonable tone that makes it easy for the reader to ponder as he, she, or it goes through the material.
 
Signalé
ReneEldaBard | 2 autres critiques | Oct 15, 2018 |
Goodbye, Rosie the Riveter, Hello HAL

This look at the near future takes a different tack than most. It’s not so much whizzbang/Jetsons as how are we going to manage at all. The problem is the solution everyone is working on – automation. Robot machines taking over all our jobs, huge unemployment, grim prospects. Jerry Kaplan calls himself a progressive optimist. He has prescriptions for all of this to work for us instead of against us. Unfortunately, his prescriptions require a total rethinking of government and society. At the moment, the regressives are in charge, so the chance of any of his ideas being implemented is microscopic.

Humans Need Not Apply is best when it poses conundrums. When robots are able to fulfill requests, who is liable for their actions? Their owners? Their programmers? The dealership? What if you told your robot to win a chess match, and it arranged to down the airliner bringing your opponent? What if a surveillance system saw a man and a woman discussing a key, one grabbing it from the other, and the system immobilized the man and called the police? There is lots of legal precedent from the time of slavery that the slave is responsible, for everything, being simple private property. Do we put robots in jail? What happens when robots run the factory, and the whole company for that matter? The owner could be an offshore corporation, and may or may not have humans at the helm. These are great questions we are about to face for real.

Kaplan also presents scenarios where robots are not necessarily humanoid replacements. He gives the example where students watch classes at home, then go to schools to do their homework so teachers’ aides can help them. It’s all part of a complete makeover, where there is less and less need for paid labor of any kind. Driverless cars mean elimination of truck drivers as trucks roll 24/7. There will be no need to own a car at all. A car will come for you, take you to your destination, and park itself somewhere. Once the strawberry picking machine is in mass production (shortly), no farm workers will ever be needed again. Education will not be a way to get ahead, it will be a lifelong need to keep up with shifting labor requirements.

Kaplan boils the problem down to one great evil in our way: inequality, in which the rich consolidate more and more of the assets every year. While the stats say the averages climb every year, the 99% suffer more and more with less and less. Kaplan’s answers include more government help in the form of labor mortgages that fund all this training for a cut of future wages, and public benefit companies that are far more beneficent than C corporations.

Because this book so thought-provoking, let me say what Kaplan missed is the greatest equalizer of all. Economist Henry George realized 170 years ago that land is the root of all greed. By taxing land used for profit, speculation ends, the consolidation of wealth slows to a crawl, families can afford to live, cities become hives of affordable activity, and the entire society changes shape as people have more disposable income.

So while Humans Need Not Apply has an answer, there are far more direct solutions to the coming crisis of computers and robots doing essentially everything.

David Wineberg
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
DavidWineberg | Jun 3, 2015 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
5
Membres
461
Popularité
#53,308
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
7
ISBN
31
Langues
6

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