Mëds wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 10:42 pm
5thhorseman wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 5:36 pm
Wordy, but not a word salad. He's saying that technological innovation is moving so fast nowadays that our ethics are unable to keep up. Not a new thought.
Probably one of the first things I've heard that asshat (Trudeau, not 5th

) say that I can agree with.
Although I got a kick out of him talking about us doing things without considering the consequences.
When you say "ethics are unable to keep up". Are you meaning that we don't have time to theoretically apply them to the end point prior to deployment of the given innovation?
It's more than about lack of time to apply ethics, it's that we haven't even realised the impact of said technology to understand what our ethics should be, and to enact laws to put guardrails in place.
For example Facebook's algorithm to stimulate people's addictive behaviour, especially in children. We were all happily connecting with our long-lost high school buddies before we realised this was going on.
Or the interaction between social media and free speech. Are social media considered common carriers or not? Nobody anticipated these companies would grow into behemoths and more or less replace mainstream news, or you would have been an investor and be relaxing by the pool like Griz right now.
How much money laundering and child trafficking happened, aided by Bitcoin, before regulations caught up?
How many of us speak to our phones when using Google search or texting, or interacting with Android/Apple Auto. Speech recognition has come a long way and I love it, but for it to work, the system is always listening, waiting for the keywords like "Hey Google". What happens that speech data before the trigger words? Is it discarded or stored somewhere? Interestingly an ad agency has recently offered this data to advertisers for targeting purposes. Is this covered under privacy laws or did we just blindly sign away our rights to prevent its' use when we agreed to the Terms and Conditions?
The latest frontier is, of course, AI. There aren't really any guardrails at all and the first real laws are currently on Gavin Newsome's desk waiting for his signature.
Maybe if these technologies took 30 years to develop, like Trudeau's martial arts master learning to kill with his finger, we'd have thought of these things ahead of time.