Chippy_boy
Well-Known Member
Take a look at this and keep reminding yourself, the generated images are of people who do not exist!
Take a look at this and keep reminding yourself, the generated images are of people who do not exist!
People like those 659m rag fans you mean?Take a look at this and keep reminding yourself, the generated images are of people who do not exist!
Maybe we could use it to fill our empty seats?People like those 659m rag fans you mean?
Let's see if genetic engineering lets us keep pace :)Maybe we could use it to fill our empty seats?
More seriously though, I am wondering with the fast pace of AI development, just how long it will be before we are a rather inconsequential species on our planet. 100 - 200 years tops, I would say.
Maybe we could use it to fill our empty seats?
More seriously though, I am wondering with the fast pace of AI development, just how long it will be before we are a rather inconsequential species on our planet. 100 - 200 years tops, I would say.
Yep. I can't see there being any need for actors either, in a decade or so.Does this mean advertising companies no longer have to pay for models ?
And later, none of the world's population.Automation is going to make so many jobs redundant will be no need for half the worlds population.
Automation is going to make so many jobs redundant will be no need for half the worlds population.
There will be as consumers Scotty. Jobs rely on having a market to cater for.And later, none of the world's population.
Most people don't. The self learning part of it has come on in leaps and bounds over the last decade, all the growth is exponential so the speed at which this happens will shock people.Different form of AI but I was amazed when I heard the AI booking a hair appointment. Never knew things were as advanced as they are
Agreed. Neural networks combined with the exponential rise in computing power, is resulting in an astonishing rate of development. When you think about how difficult it is using normal programming methods to try to get a computer to recognise a simple object, and yet now we already have systems sophisticated enough to be able to recognise street scenes well enough to drive a car on their own. And the really scary thing is, we don't know how they do it! These things effectively have a mind of their own - they weren't programmed by us: they learned for themselves how to interpret the data.Different form of AI but I was amazed when I heard the AI booking a hair appointment. Never knew things were as advanced as they are
I've been thinking about this for 35 years mate, seriously.There will be as consumers Scotty. Jobs rely on having a market to cater for.
Chippy that's very apocalyptic from you :)
The last bit is very important, we need to make sure we always build a kill switch, although if we develop (or the computers develop) a truly self aware machine there's an interesting moral quandary there as to whether we'd have the right to enslave it.I've been thinking about this for 35 years mate, seriously.
The inexorable end-point is no need for any human labour (or contribution of any kind) whatsoever. It's not a question of if, merely of how long it will take before this is the case. Maybe 100 years. Maybe 200. Maybe 1,000. But sure as eggs is eggs, it's coming.
There's only two things that could prevent it. (1) We kill ourselves before this comes to pass (very very unlikely, since whatever we do would be unlikely to kill absolutely every human) or (2) we smash up all the machines in some Luddite revolt and go back to the plough and manual labour. Also pretty inconceivable.
But failing that, robots and computers will replace every form of human endeavour. Hopefully they will be our slaves and not our masters!
One worrying aspect of this that seems to go under the radar a bit is that all the extra computer labour will drastically increase our power usage at a time when we're already outstripping our sources of fuel. Energy development needs to keep pace.