The Science of Fiction
A
reflection on future of work, society and self
Imagine waking up to your personal
assistant (PA), say like an Alexa, Google Assistant, Siri, Cortana or, may be
an independent chatbot greeting you, then walking you through the important
To-Dos of the day and asking what would be your breakfast preference! Let’s
then have this PA on to a drone like device, which means your PA is not a
static device like your TV or, music system but flies around the house and can
also fly in your neighbourhood and some more. When you are not around, it is
connected to other devices in the house including your security system. It has
a good idea of your preferences, and with your usage also understands your
family and friend circle.
Interestingly, the drone with a PA
like smart-device is not a projection into the future, but featured in a
science fiction comedy – “Flubber”, starring Robin Williams that was released
in 1997, a good 21 years ago. The PA was called “Weebo”. The
professor’s home has interesting array of robots and connected devices. Now, if
this has your attention, what if I were to share that this plot was remake of
1961 classic – “The Absent-Minded Professor”. In the classic, the professor’s
companion was a dog, called “The Shaggy Dog”, which in the remake was quite
futuristically turned to Weebo.
Given that PAs are getting smarter
and drone technology is maturing, this looks plausible.
Call it the world of Internet of
things (IoT), AI and PA; the movie was a comedy, but quite prescient.
Does it bring concerns of a society
that spends more time on devices and screens than, actual physical interactions
and thus the disruptive impact of automation, robotics, smart devices and AI on
work, society and self?
Our responses through understanding
this change, participating in this change and benefitting through healthy
experimentation, failing and learning is what holds the key.
Serving the human need
The world of AI built on increasing
computational power, algorithms that feed and process the exponentially growing
data, improving decisional models using Machine Learning and the cognitive
development simulating human-like thinking has had its slow motion growth from
1950s to rapid leap over last 7-8 years. Undoubtedly and unapologetically, it
presents the horizons that feeds human’s need for intellectual development,
research and progress.
While we were not following or
concerned enough, genome research also contributed to more resilient crops and
vaccines.
Then comes the aspect of regulation
which is in the domain of Governments, industry bodies, research institutions
and individual code of ethic and conduct.
Regulation
Let’s accept that regulations precede
the reform required, and sometimes they are response measures post-facto. The firewall
security expected to pre-empt and protect against virus attacks, may also get
hacked and later a stronger protection evolves. Data security and privacy as a
regulation has trailed the development around data sharing and access.
Hence, when regulation is trailing
the technological progress, regulators across the world have to undertake good
amount of understanding and skilling to have informed regulation and not
populist and piecemeal measures.
The domain of regulation needs to
factor wider social impacts, develop clear goals and participate, not just
police or track the changes. If Wikipedia is a content created by users for
other users, regulators need to participate more actively with the constituents
and cannot be passive.
Work and work structures
The discussion on careers in the
formal economy over several decades has been about pursuing an engineering
degree, medical or commerce and accounting, primarily. This has changed and
employable categories is far higher now, with varying degree of specialization
and scope of responsibility. The notion of safer jobs and regular salary has
disrupted with a wave of entrepreneurial growth and burgeoning number of
startups, that experiment business and labor models. The distribution economy
that is global is positively contributing to growth in manufacturing to content
creation categories.
The undeniable nature of economic
growth in countries is now going to be about Science, Technology, Engineering
and Mathematics (STEM) and that its impact will penetrate areas from agriculture
to space science.
Both at Government and individual
level, there has to be greater awareness of this shift and progression.
Society and self
Forget the noise around devices
creating barriers to human contact and interaction, I see more social and shared
nature of our lives.
Recently at a sweet shop, I saw a
carpenter video-calling his friend (or, some relative) asking to see and choose
which sweet to buy. Falling data and voice rates, are making people spend time
on Facebook, Twitter, video-call, video-on-demand and sharing with friends,
family and adding the likes of their lives. The ubiquitous nature of
these technologies, also making people choose alternate careers, improve their
learning from career enhancing courses to improving their DSLR photography
skills.
If a distant library was a source of
learning few decades back, today you can learn, improvise and contribute to the
learning pool.
Fitness devices and fitness groups
are contributing to better health and also insurance premiums that adjust/fall
depending on your investment in your health, or the lack of it.
We are shifting to societies where
Governments will continue to determine political discourse, including economic
and social policies, but with greater power and scope for the individual. If your
Facebook and LinkedIn contact network has people from diversity of countries,
social and educational background on one platform or, common ground, Government
will have to work harder in creating this greater social common ground.
The Fiction to reality
The world will never be short of new
and existing risks arising from politics, technology, demographic and there
will be leaders from business to politics to pander, guide or influence the
choices. The argument on negative effects and disruptive impacts can be quite
solid, but are we looking to win arguments or, change the course of our
societies.
Finally, the beauty of good fiction
is that it creates imaginative future scenarios that are not hindered by the
assumptions and bottlenecks of the present.
Now if you liked the Weebo (assistant),
it sadly dies in the movie, and when the professor wasn’t looking had gone thru
its programs and created its own successor – the Weebette; one AI-bot-drone
creating its own replacement, equally affable.
Very will written Anand..data security becomes a key and the most important thing in the midst of this digital ecosystem
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ReplyDeleteGood one Anand! We all are witnessing good present and looking fwd for better future with right mix of technological advancements and regulatory controls
ReplyDeleteVery well written. We still know very little about about the universe - there are forces, phonemena beyond our understanding. Intelligent lifeform is meant to crack the puzzle. I hope technological evolution will get us there.
ReplyDeleteThese disriptive technologies would further kill human intelligence, imagination and creativity.Technology should not play with human behavior and emotions. The sense of belongingness is lost now. As you rightly said, this should be properly governed through policies, but precisely our choices can make differences. I wish this remains in science fiction.
ReplyDeleteVery well written, keep writing regularly.
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