When AI Takes Our jobs, Only Developers Stand A Chance Of Work

AI, robots, and other automation could put most of humanity on the dole as the jobs evaporate.
 
For many years, technology has been doing away with jobs from leech collectors to elevator operators and milkmen to telephone operators.

Technology is now threatening jobs from bartenders to your friendly neighborhood postal worker to even your Uber driver. Only a few jobs may escape the coming age of smart automation.

Under the assumption that AI, robots, and other automation poised to make most workers permanently unemployed, some politicians, economists, and techies have proposed that we accept a future with little to no work.

Some want to provide everyone a regular payment, called universal basic income (UBI), essentially, an income you're guaranteed whether you have a job or not. In May, for example, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg came out in favor of UBI.

This sounds like some kind of hard left, but it has conservative supporters such as Charles Murray of Bell Curve infamy. After all, if there is work for only a very few, how does everyone else survive?

You might think the notion of a no-employment future is far-fetched, and so UBI is a solution to a problem we won’t have. But if you look at how capital-intensive technology has become and the parallel trends of the inequality of basic education and the inequality in job opportunities while assuming the lower-end jobs will be the most heavily automated, the need for some survival mechanism for the bulk of humanity suddenly doesn’t seem so far-fetched.

For years, the answer to a question like "What is your Uber driver going to do once his job is automated" was "something else." But from coal mining to steel to automobiles, we haven't seen that “something else” happen in a lot of places.

Another answer was "Move somewhere else," but do we really want to see another major American city go the way of Detroit or Gary, Indiana? And if we are on the verge of an automated future, where could people actually go for those remaining jobs?

There are several notions for how UBI would work:

  • Zuckerberg's vision sounds more like turning the whole populace into a bunch of trust-fund babies who have ready access to education and venture capital. UBI would keep them afloat between their startup efforts.
  • Some economists are talking about paying everyone at the poverty level, so they can subsist. They’re essentially giving up on an possibility for meaningful work, or comfortable lives. Even that low-ball UBI could cost $3 trillion a year.
  • Murray wants to end all social programs to pay (part) of the cost and give you $3,000 a year that must be spent on health care, which proves that Murray has no idea what health care actually costs in the US.

The UBI is substantially different in most plans from existing programs like the Earned Income Tax Credit because you'd receive it regardless of your ability to earn other income. Meaning, I'd be able to make my incredible riches afforded me as an InfoWorld contributor, keep my day job, and still get my $1,000 a month.

Where would the money come from? Ideas include taxes on robots, corporate profits (though who they’ll sell to is an interesting question), and the few working people left.

Even among supporters, the idea is not without concern. Although Tesla and SpaceX chief Elon Musk says the robots will inevitably replace us all, he also wonders if that plus the UBI will make us feel useless.

And not everyone agrees that automation will ultimately destroy jobs. Instead, it will return us to some kind of feudal serfdom.

This is scary stuff, right? Do we really want a world in which we must live on $12,000 per year with no health care and little prospects for education or work, even if the robots serve our every need, at least, until our $12,000 runs out.

For now, your best bet is to be one of the people doing the automation: Double down on your skills as a software developer, bone up on math and machine learning, and be glad you're still in demand, for now.

Infoworld

You Might Also Read: 

Robots Will Invade The Workplace

 

« How To Keep Your Business Data Safe
Making It Big in Cybersecurity »

CyberSecurity Jobsite
Perimeter 81

Directory of Suppliers

ZenGRC

ZenGRC

ZenGRC - the first, easy-to-use, enterprise-grade information security solution for compliance and risk management - offers businesses efficient control tracking, testing, and enforcement.

The PC Support Group

The PC Support Group

A partnership with The PC Support Group delivers improved productivity, reduced costs and protects your business through exceptional IT, telecoms and cybersecurity services.

CSI Consulting Services

CSI Consulting Services

Get Advice From The Experts: * Training * Penetration Testing * Data Governance * GDPR Compliance. Connecting you to the best in the business.

Authentic8

Authentic8

Authentic8 transforms how organizations secure and control the use of the web with Silo, its patented cloud browser.

Syxsense

Syxsense

Syxsense brings together endpoint management and security for greater efficiency and collaboration between IT management and security teams.

Applause

Applause

Applause provides real-world software testing for functionality, usability, accessibility, load, localization and security.

Superscript

Superscript

Superscript (formerly Digital Risks) is an insurance broker for small businesses, sole-traders, landlords and high-growth tech firms. Our services include Cyber Liability insurance.

PhishLabs

PhishLabs

PhishLabs provides 24/7 services that help organizations protect against the cyberattacks targeting their employees, their customers and their brands.

Combitech

Combitech

Combitech is the Nordic region’s leading cyber security consultancy firm, with about 260 certified security consultants helping companies and authorities prevent and manage cyber threats.

Beame.io

Beame.io

Beame.io is an information security company that distributes open source authentication infrastructure based on encryption.

Seric Systems

Seric Systems

Seric is a technology business specialising in security, infrastructure and data management.

Ericom Software

Ericom Software

Ericom is a global leader in securing and connecting the digital workspace, offering solutions that secure browsing, and optimize desktop and application delivery to any device, anywhere.

Beazley

Beazley

Beazley are a specialist insurer with three decades of experience in providing clients with the highest standards of underwriting and claims service worldwide.

AU10TIX

AU10TIX

AU10TIX’s smart forensic-level ID authentication technology links physical and digital identities, meets compliance mandates, and ensures your customers know their trust and safety come first.

Mjenzi Cloud

Mjenzi Cloud

Mjenzi Cloud is a provider of cloud IaaS solutions including managed backup services, affordable & secure cloud virtual compute/storage/compute services, bare-metal services and cloud security.

Conquest Cyber

Conquest Cyber

Conquest Cyber builds adaptive risk management programs where innovation is most needed – within defense, intelligence, federal civilian agencies and the industrial base that supports them.

Great American Insurance Group

Great American Insurance Group

Great American's Cyber Risk Division offers cyber solutions for small and medium-sized businesses.

Yogosha

Yogosha

Yogosha is a crowdsourced cybersecurity platform enabling a win-win collaboration with the most talented hackers to detect and fix vulnerabilities on your most critical systems.

Cylab - Carnegie Mellon University

Cylab - Carnegie Mellon University

Carnegie Mellon University CyLab is the University's security and privacy research institute.

Assured Clarity

Assured Clarity

Assured Clarity are a global consultancy, specialising in Risk Management and Data Privacy, through Education, Awareness and Training, throughout an organisation.

Zally

Zally

Using advanced behavioural biometrics and AI, Zally is the world's answer to next-generation security.