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According to TechCrunch, the debate over the impact of new technology on society is continuing, especially in artificial intelligence (AI). In June this year, one of silicon valley's most loyal supporters, intends to run for governor of California in 2018 Gavin Newsom (Gavin Newsom) warning of the university of California, Berkeley, computer science graduate, they have a responsibility to "play to the moral authority" to help society better.
On the impact of new technology on jobs and inequality, newtham said at the time: "this is the red code on the road ahead, which could trigger a tsunami."
So is newsom right? Are entrepreneurs and technicians responsible for "playing their moral authority"? To answer this question, and more broadly about artificial intelligence to employment, the influence of digital economy at the Massachusetts institute of technology cooperation plan of common director Andrew McAfee (Andrew McAfee) accepted the interview.
McAfee is one of The world on The new technology may bring economic consequences of authority, one of The 2014 bestseller Machine 2 times (The Second Machine Age) of The author, who recently published a "Machine and Platform, people" (The Machine, The Platform, The Crowd). Three years ago, McAfee and his co-author, professor Erik Brynjolfsson of the Massachusetts institute of technology, discussed the link between digital technology and employment. So what has changed since 2014, and what has been found in McAfee's new book? What surprised him most about the last three years?
On the one hand, McAfee admits, "we all underestimate the speed of new technology," because things are changing faster and more intensely than he thought. On the other hand, he said he was surprised by the number of new jobs created by the new technologies. He says that while these jobs may not be all great. But so far they have at least not seen the "technical unemployment tsunami" that Mr Newtham fears.
Mr McAfee's biggest regret is that he thinks the failure of public policy in the past three years is to prepare for the coming storm. As in the second machine age, immigration policy liberalization or investment infrastructure, education, and research are all being pursued. Today, McAfee warns, we may be more vulnerable to the darker economic consequences of the digital revolution.
Should silicon valley use its moral authority to stop developing the technology that kills jobs? Mike ffie made it clear that this was not the case. He acknowledges that the economy will experience "large-scale automation" over the next 50 years, but at the same time society will have half a century to adapt to the development of robots. McAfee remains an optimist. He says things will get better in the long run. Finally, we will be able to control the upcoming tsunami.