Chess
JC pontificates about technology
An occasional series.
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A complicated, but not complex, system. Therefore not a great grounds for concluding that software is going to eat the world and turn we mortal meatsacks into battery-pods for Skynet, but that won’t stop thought leaders from leaping to just that conclusion anyway.
Will chess-playing AI chatbots take your job, or is this just a lazy analogy? Well, it’s mainly lazy. Ask yourself: “is my job like chess?” If it is, you should get your coat. The sooner you start looking for a job that isn’t, the better.
Feature | Chess | Not Chess |
---|---|---|
Complexity | Complicated. | Complex. |
Number of players | Two | Who can say? |
Rules | Simple. Static. Common. | Unclear, changing, often differing between players, incomplete, liable to change without warning. |
Logic | Fully logical. | Basically irrational, except by accident. |
Outcome | zero-sum | non-zero sum |
Data | All relevant data available to both players at all times. | Incomplete, mainly absent. What data there is will be ambiguous, unevenly distributed, and may only emerge once it is too late. |
Language | Mathematical. No scope for ambiguity | Ambiguous, metaphorical; requiring interpretation and psychology. |
Boundaries | Entirely bounded: two players, 8 x 8 board, 16 pieces each. | None. Whatever you bring to the party. |
Now, it is true that algorithms, and combinations of algorithms, can help crunch data and provide you with information that you might not otherwise have that give you more tools for making those value judgments that wicked environments impose on you. But while you’re fiddling around with your kit, the other guy might just have already shot you, you know?
And in any case, this is no different to how humans have used technology since the plough. Ploughs don’t plough fields by themselves, after all — and they can’t help us with when, or which field, to plough. You are still needed.
So, truck drivers: time to start thinking about a new career now, because in ten years’ time you are going to be in a tight spot. Lawyers — there’s a bit more lead time for you.