Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 325: AI and Big Tech - What critics have wrong
Episode Date: July 30, 2024Is there so much misinformation about AI that it's slowing the advancements in.... AI? How can we set the record straight on Artificial Intelligence, push fear-mongering aside, and ethically put ...it to use? David Moschella joins us to discuss and find out.Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan and David questions on AIRelated Episodes: Ep 238: WWT’s Jim Kavanaugh Gives GenAI Blueprint for BusinessesEp 197: 5 Simple Steps to Start Using GenAI at Your Business TodayUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:1. Big Tech and AI misconceptions2. AI products developments3. America's leadership in AI4. Job predictions and future of work5. Significance of AI in daily lifeTimestamps:01:15 Daily AI news04:20 About David and the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation10:37 Technology doesn't eliminate jobs; AI won't either.14:49 Insufficient information provided for summarization.15:46 Comparison: Industrial vs. information revolution, vital needs.18:59 Reliance on internet for work and backups.23:35 AI impact on misinformation: Awareness, readiness, balance.25:39 AI acceptance accelerates, reaching critical mass quickly.31:06 Text critics miss key points about AI, technology.Keywords:AI news, Elon Musk, AI supercomputer, Memphis, Ashton Kutcher, OpenAI's SoRA, NVIDIA, Apple, market value, AI industry, misconceptions about AI, AI critics, societal challenges, AI benefits, AI development, generative AI, AI and jobs, AI and society, surveillance state, technological innovation, Everyday AI, free course, Chat GPT, PPP course, podpp.com, job predictions, job elimination due to AI, AI in physical tasks, road repair, automation, robotics, declining populations, generative AI, dependence on AI, AI deepfakes, misinformation, legal implications of AI.Send Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
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There's critics all the time talking about AI on all sides, saying, oh, you know, in the future,
we won't need humans.
We'll have AI or people on the other end of the spectrum saying, hey, this artificial
intelligence thing, it's brand new.
We shouldn't pay attention to it.
So today, I'm excited to have an industry veteran with decades of experience in the technology
field to come in and help us dispel some of these big critics who are just getting a lot of this
wrong about AI. All right. I'm excited for today's show. What's going on, y'all? My name's
Jordan Wilson. I'm the host of Everyday AI, and this is for you. We are your daily guide in the form of
a live stream podcast and free daily newsletter, helping you all learn and leverage generative AI to
grow your companies and to grow your careers. I'm excited for today's guests. And we're going to
talk about what big techs critics have gotten wrong.
on AI. So here we go. Please help me. Welcome to the show. David, Michelle, who is the senior fellow
at the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation. David, thank you so much for joining the show.
Hey, great to be here. All right. Hey, for people who don't know, and you have a very diverse and deep
background in the technology fields, but tell us a little bit about what you do at the Information
Technology and Innovation Foundation. Well, the foundation is really there to try to make America more
innovative country. So we try to develop ideas and policies that advance Americans' technology interests,
and obviously that's very relevant today. So we look at everything from AI to competing with
China to sustainable energy, just all the things that really helped to determine America's
innovation future. And also we'll be sharing this in the newsletter today, but tell us a little bit
about the new book that you have?
Yeah, the book is called Technology Fears and Scapegoats.
And it's basically a series of 40 essays taking on what we see as the myths that are used
to tarnish the image of the tech industry, that it's polarizing the world and destroying
privacy and increasing biases and wiping out the middle class and harming children and all
all of these things that is routinely accused of.
And it's just pushing back on those to show how the benefits in all of these areas
tend to be underestimated and the downsides, which sometimes are real, tend to be exaggerated.
So it's a balancing act to really try to tell a much more positive story about the impact
of tech on America and the West so far.
And I'm extremely excited for today's conversation.
And, hey, as a reminder for those of us, those of you joining us live, get your questions in now.
You know, we have a tech veteran here with many decades of experience.
And I'm excited to get into some of these common misconceptions.
But David, let's maybe start here.
What are some of the things that big techs critics are the most wrong about when they're talking about AI?
Well, it's funny because, you know, someone's been around for a while.
AI has long been the holy grail of the tech industry since, you know, people like Martin,
Marvin Minsky and John McCarthy in the 50s and 60s to all the smart people.
They've been trying to make machines as smart as they can.
And just as we get to the cusp of doing that, people start to say, well, maybe this is a lousy idea after all.
And in our view, there are really three problems with that view.
The first is that the fears tend to be exaggerated and the benefits underestimated.
So they're telling the overwhelming more negative story than we think is true.
The second is that, and really the West really needs AI.
We may need all the AI we can get to remain competitive,
but also just to take on the societal challenges of the future.
This almost certainly will require sort of a redeployment of people,
and assets from much of what is going on.
And we use the analogy of people shifting from farms to cities,
people shifting from offices to rebuilding society along many, many dimensions,
which we can get into.
And the third that I think is really relevant is that the reality is that there are very few areas.
There are a lot of things AI can't do.
And even the things that it can do very, very well,
and we're big fans of AI,
In every case that we can think of, the combination of a human and AI is superior to either the human alone or the machine alone.
And this idea of looking at AI as sort of a co-bot, something that works alongside of you, is something we see all the time and seems to us by far the most likely pattern going forward.
And that's a great story, we think.
You know, yeah, it's a good point you bring up there, David.
I think when people think AI, they think, oh, it's brand new with chat GPT.
It's like, no, you know, the first chat bot was Eliza in the 1960s, right?
You know, but one thing that I'm always divided on because I think some of the smartest people in the world have this take.
And then there's people that don't know much have this take.
But there is this thought, you know, that, hey, in the future, you know, us humans, we may not even need jobs, right?
like Elon Musk famously said two weeks ago that jobs would be optional.
And, you know, people like Bill Gates and Sam Altman have kind of opined on this.
Do you think that those, you know, not saying those people are wrong, but do you think
that that train of thought where people say, hey, humans aren't really going to be needed in most
jobs?
Is that also where people are going wrong?
Yeah.
I mean, people have been predicting that technology would eliminate jobs since the Industrial
Revolution over and over again since it's originally.
the so-called Luddites and the textile mills and rebuild.
And there's never been any evidence that that's proved true.
You have temporary dislocations of workers,
but the economy itself expands and creates more work.
And we don't see any reason why that's not true with AI at all.
And as we say, is AI going to repair a road?
Is it going to install plumbing?
Is it going to grow your,
is it going to convert a high-rise building into a vertical,
harm to grow food. Is it going to repair the environment or all the war torn and damaged cities
around the world? Is it going to do all those things? No, it isn't going to do all those. Well,
it may contribute to them, but humans are going to be needed to do that. Plus, it's always been
true that when new technologies come around, humans find other things to do. And you don't have to
predict the industries of the future to believe that very likely that we'll have them, because we
always have. And so the entire history and most of the arguments about the future seem to us
as overwhelmingly positive. And when we listen to even tremendously capable people like Musk and
others who predicts the downsides, when you actually hear their arguments and their downside
examples, they're not that, they don't really make sense. People talk about student plagiarism
and they talk about deep fakes.
And these things sort of seem quite manageable to us.
So the big fears seem really highly, highly speculative in contrast to the benefits,
which we see is quite real today.
Yeah.
And I'm going to throw something up on the screen here for our live stream audience.
You know, you said something there, David, about, hey, can AI repair a road?
There's kind of this, you know, viral things.
thing, a billboard that said, hey, chat, GPT, finish this building, and then doing a building
under construction, right? But I guess on the flip side of that, David, you know, maybe to play devil's
advocate and looking at future technology, right? But, you know, obviously the AI systems,
the large language models themselves are becoming, you know, more powerful in theory. You have
things like computer vision, you know, getting better and better, more affordable as well.
And then you also throw in this, you know, speaking of Elon Musk, you throw in this.
you throw in this, the humanoid robots, right? And then people start to connect those things and they say,
okay, well, could AI repair a road? Well, if you have an autonomous vehicle and you have humanoid robots
with computer vision, I don't know, could they? So, you know, as we look at the future of technology,
right? And I know it's hard to predict. No one has a crystal ball. But is it crazy to think that some of those
even jobs could, in theory, be done by whether it's AI or, you know, humanoid robots, factories, etc.
Could human jobs just maybe look completely different?
Well, they might, and everything just said might happen,
but there's so many steps to get there that worrying about today seems, etc.
But to me, honestly, even the bigger part is that we actually need some of that to happen.
You know, the world is looking at an environment,
particularly in the west of aging and declining populations.
And if you didn't have the mass migrations we have,
they'd be dropping even more.
And when you get into that mode,
you do need to automate a lot of things.
You do need a lot of robots.
And there's sort of the marquee examples of that today.
Or if you look in Korea, South Korea, rather,
and Japan, where the populations are going to drop very, very sharply
in the next 20, 30 years.
And their use of automation and robotics is now how they've
plan on coping with the changes.
And so, yeah, some of that will happen.
Some of it needs to happen.
But, you know, the speed, the ability to do that is still pretty far out in the future.
That's such a good take.
And it's something that maybe doesn't get talked about enough, you know, especially here, you know, in the U.S.,
you know, people have been talking about the impact of, you know, kind of baby boomers retiring.
It's, I forget the name Silver Streak.
But an interesting take there, David.
But I'm curious, as someone that has been in, you know, kind of market research around technology companies for many decades, how would you explain the potential impact of, you know, not just AI, but generative AI?
Because I think sometimes people, yeah, they say, oh, you know, they go to the Industrial Revolution or they go to the Internet or they go to the cloud.
Is it fair to maybe compare today's generative AI to current technological revolutions of decades past?
Or would you say maybe that generative AI and where we're at today is maybe a unique enough case that you can't really compare it.
It's not apples to apples.
It's a very fair comparison, the Industrial Revolution versus the information revolution.
How can you not compare those two things?
But the one thing we would say is that it's always been true.
I think is true today that the physical world of food and shelter and transportation and, you know,
and energy that these things are fundamentally more important to the lives of people than information,
that emails and texts and e-commerce, social media, all of these things are really interesting and important,
but they are of a lesser impact on most lives.
One of the example we use is that if you live in a hot climate,
a lot of people wouldn't trade their air conditioner for the entire internet.
There's a certain hierarchy of needs,
and those needs are really being seen now in the wars in Ukraine
and what it's done to food and energy,
and you're seeing with China, what it's done with supply chains,
that these things are vital to people's day-to-day.
lives. And ChachyPT is fantastic. I use it a lot. It is incredible what it does. But if I didn't
have it for a month, it would have almost no impact on my life. In fact, it would have no impact
on my life. Whereas take any of those other things away. And so people, because it's the industry
of our time, it's the growth, it's the jobs, it's the money, people tend to think that it's more
important than the changes of the past. And we're not good. They're actually fundamentally
less important than the changes of clean running water, refrigerators and ovens and electricity
and lighting and cooling and appliances and all these things that define the last, you know,
first half of the 20th century, though to most people, those things are not just more, but they're
head and shoulders more important than anything going on in the entire Internet. And so we don't
say that to demean our industry. I mean we all spend our.
careers in it. It's done phenomenal things, but it's easy to overestimate our importance
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David, you bring up an interesting point there, right?
So you said, hey, if chat GPT goes down, it's not really going to affect your life.
And interesting timing because about two days ago, you know, chat GPT had some major.
down, you know, downtime, perplexity did as well, Claude did it well, and all kind of at the same
time. And a lot of people online had the opposite, you know, take as you did. They said, wow,
it's hard for me to work right now. So they've become maybe too reliant on AI. Maybe their
employers or department heads have implemented it too much. So might there be a time in the very
near future where people and businesses become maybe a little too reliant on AI? And
And, you know, kind of the expectations for productivity and KPIs, you know, increasingly go up because of AI.
Could that be problematic if we're all around two or three systems?
I'm sure it could in the same way that we're all dependent on the Internet to do most of the work that we do these days.
If you're in the nature of the jobs that you and I have, that you can't really work.
The Internet goes down.
But you can't really work if the power goes down either.
And so, you know, those fundamental infrastructure services we rely on,
and there almost certainly will be a time that if, you know, well, yeah, you look at Chat
EBT right now, but in the future it's going to be multiple other, there already sort of is,
but there'll be many other forms of AI.
And like any business system, they go down, people will have a hard time working.
But, you know, the levels of reliability in the tech industry are pretty impressive.
You look back over the years and how many times has Google or Amazon or Microsoft gone down for any significant length of time?
And you've got to give a lot of credit for that.
It's pretty amazing.
So the backups they have, their ability to replicate things around the world, it is pretty high levels.
The biggest problem they would have would be the same problem with the economy.
They don't have the energy to run the systems.
and some sort of energy disruption could stop it all in a fundamental way.
But reliability is something every layer of infrastructure has to do.
Electricity has to run.
TV stations have to run.
Everybody has to run.
And we generally do a good job of that.
That's overall, I don't think you've been a huge problem.
You know, David, something else, you know, as we talk about what?
critics, you know, big tech critics get wrong maybe about AI. It seems like there's a lot of fear
and maybe some of this is timing with the election here in the U.S., but there's a lot of fear
or maybe attention or conversations happening specifically around AI deepfakes, right?
And what that means for our society and our ability to decipher, you know, what's real and
what's fake. Are the critics who say that this is, you know, kind of, you know, kind of, uh,
something you can't miss, like, oh, deepfakes are going to, you know, take over mainstream media.
Like, are they wrong on that? Or are deep fakes really that dangerous?
I would say, you know, of all the things that people worry about with AI, you know,
copyrights and bias and surveillance and automation and wiping out jobs,
I actually think deep fakes are the most real right now.
I mean, that's a serious problem.
The technology is amazing.
They can fake a lot of things.
make them look extremely real. And that is an issue. But how big an issue, we're already deep into the
2024 election cycle. And has it been a major factor so far? I would say no. And people are already
waking up to it. You know, for a long time, people had to adjust it. Well, this thing is a photograph,
but there was this thing called, you know, Photoshop that could make things look real. And people adjusted
to that without a whole lot of issues.
And that defakes, they're better.
They're harder to detect.
There's no question about that.
But people aren't stupid.
It's all right, the first time, you know, a year from now,
people see something.
They go, well, is that real?
How do we determine whether that is real or not?
And there'll be whole processes about that.
It might even do a good thing of getting people to rely on,
less on just any random internet stuff and more on allegedly trust.
sources, and a lot of things could happen along those lines. But, you know, an idiot, and a lot of it's
just a lawsuit. You look at Scarlett Johansson and others just suing saying, you can't do this.
They're going to have a strong case. And people doing that in America, I think, will have real
problems, foreign actors hiding behind, you know, proxy servers or whatever. You know, that's going
to be an issue. But there's still no evidence that that's an unmanageable issue.
And the upside of deepfaces, there's so many really funny ones.
I mean, it's a tremendous source of entertainment and comedy and satire and such things
when you know that they're sort of just joking.
So, you know, it's a real one.
I say I think it's the most current real one.
But if you look at it perspective, is it swaying voters between Trump and Biden?
Not that I can see.
You know, speaking of, you know, kind of AI everywhere, and, you know, I love David, that analogy, you know, Photoshop and versus photography and, you know, people eventually kind of caught on that you can't believe every single photo, right?
But one thing that I kind of think on the flip side of that is I think people had this, maybe this extended time or extended period to even just get used to the concept.
of what it meant for something to be photoshopped.
And maybe that was before, you know, you had, you know, social media that things would take off
and people wouldn't vet to see if it's real or not.
So in the day and age where, you know, things can in theory go viral in minutes and not everyone,
right?
So maybe I think sometimes I live in a bubble and I just assume, oh, everyone knows AI deepfakes.
But, you know, a lot of studies show that the overwhelming majority of even Americans aren't using any form
of AI on a day-to-day basis.
So I guess how can you balance
like those things
in terms of the impact of AI technology
on something like deepfakes with,
hey, is the world really ready
with how quickly kind of misinformation
or disinformation can spread?
Yeah.
First of all, Americans are using AI all the time.
They just don't know that they are.
That every time you go to Amazon
and see how they summarize their reviews,
for each product. That's a tremendous example of just mass-scaled AI to deliver tremendous value
that could never really be done by humans. Same thing with TripAdvisor and all those sort of services
that summarizing those things and making it easy. So people are using it. And that'll be
predominantly the case that most of the uses you'll do, you won't even know. It was driven by
AI. And that's generally a good thing. But your real point is about speed. And, and
And speed is really interesting.
As you said in your opening remarks, so look how fast Nvidia has reached the scale it has.
It is faster than the past in terms of the acceptance of the current generation of AI products.
But as I said in my opening horse, AI from a conceptual point of view, if you go back to neural networks, goes back to 1940s.
And so a lot of this stuff has taken a great deal of time to reach any sort of useful and critical mass.
and it's now reached that scale.
And maybe a useful analogy would be, you know,
there was all kinds of mobile phones for 10 or 15, 20 years,
and most people didn't use them much.
They were good.
But now a sudden the iPhone comes along and breaks a berry,
and all of a sudden, boom, everybody has it.
And you could say, well, now iPhones are accelerating at a great pace.
But no, they just had a phase change that brought them to the masses.
And that's really what happened.
And that's what happened with chat GPT.
is not a new innovation.
It's not a new, really anything.
Conceptually, it just has the scale of processing power and data
to deliver that as a service through the cloud
in a way that it couldn't be done before essentially the cloud era.
And so speed is a tricky concept,
and you could argue that AI is really fast,
or you could actually argue that's actually really slow
and that we just happen to be in a flourishing face.
phase. But looking ahead, you can expect pretty rapid development, just as you've seen with,
you know, the internet and mobile and all these things.
You know, I think it becomes easy at times, David, to react to, you know, critics who are
talking about AI, right? I feel it's always, you know, hindsight's 2020 to sit here and say,
oh, yeah, they have this wrong. But maybe if we were to flip, flip the script and say,
okay, you know, David, now you're the critic, right? Tell us about AI.
So, you know, how do you see this unfolding?
And again, not asking you to, you know, crystal ball this, but, you know, as someone that's been following trends in technology for many decades, how do you see this unfolding in the next couple of years?
Because I think a lot of people feel this uneasiness and this uncertainty of what generative AI means, not just for their jobs, but for society and for our relationship with the real world.
how might you see this all unfolding?
Yeah.
To your last point about people, I always tell people to relax.
If you look at how much tech has already happened since the Internet started,
most people really like that.
The real consumer internet started roughly 1995.
So you've got 30 years there of things that consumers really like.
And policymakers and critics and media do a lot of tech bashing,
But the average consumer doesn't do much of that.
They say, wow, Amazon is great, and iPhones are great, and Google Maps is fantastic.
And they just use all these things, many of which are free.
So, you know, if you liked all of that last 30 years, you're going to like the next five or ten,
the ability to translate any language, which is the most fantastic thing.
You know, in school, if you use for a student, you want to try to get some of
ideas about something to write, it's the most fantastic school aid compared to any old things
that people have ever had. So students will absolutely love it. And I think a lot of teachers will
too. And so I think for the short term, there's going to be a lot of tremendous benefits.
In the long term, you know, I'm not really a long term for the side. That's sort of the
sci-fi world, but there are concerns. You could have something like what you see happening in
China, a surveillance state where everything is tracked and you have social credit systems that
monitor your behavior and punish you for bad things and theory will reward you for a so-called
good thing. That could happen, but to me, that only happens if we want that to happen.
And this is sort of why a lot of the work we do at ITIF is about policy that you don't want
to go down that path. And that requires policies that have sort of American versions,
or internet-type versions of that
rather than, you know, not to pick on China,
but Chinese-type versions of that today.
And, you know, that's a dystopian future potentially.
And China could always reform,
and it doesn't have to be horrible.
But if you look at the path they're on now,
that's the path we want to avoid.
And a lot of our work is about how to do that over the longer term
and maintain the freedoms and choices and benefits
and minimize the downsides.
And, you know, that's been true for the Internet.
There's always been fears about the Internet.
But, you know, they're deeper and we'll realize the technology gets more powerful.
So, you know, that's something that keeps us awake at night and thinking about.
Speaking of things to think about, David, you've given us a lot of those.
So in today's episode, you've given us, I mean, we've talked about the future of jobs in an AI world, you know, potential dangers of deep fakes,
where AI is currently trending.
But, you know, as we wrap up today's show,
what's maybe the one biggest takeaway
that you want people to leave with
when it comes to even just
what big tech critics are getting wrong about AI?
Well, the one that I would just expand that,
the things that text critics are getting wrong about AI
are the same things they're getting wrong
about technology in general.
And that America has historically been a pro-innovation,
pro-technology, society, and economy.
But we're moving in the world, well, that's less and less true,
and we're now becoming an economy that often seems more concerned
with preventing potentially harmful change
than potentially exciting benefits.
And that that has the risk of really slowing innovation in our society.
And the bottom line is America has dominated the tech world
for just about its entire history,
but we now have a real competitor in China,
and China is going full bore on all of these issues,
and they may use it in ways that we don't like,
but the underlying technologies are largely the same,
and whoever is going to lead in those technologies
is going to be very powerful player in the world.
And when we hear people talk about putting
the brakes on AI and slowing innovation and all these things. To us, that sounds like we might
seed the field to rivals, not just China, but India and potentially others. And to us, that's a
future we want to avoid, that America has benefited tremendously by dominating the tech world
for so long and so deeply. But you can now see pass where that might change and having attitudes
that want to prevent that is just really important.
And that's really the message that we do through our ITIF work
is to try to encourage America to remain the innovation leader in these areas.
So good, y'all.
My forearms are burning from typing so many notes from so many great takes from David.
So, David, thank you so much for your time today
and for coming on the Everyday AI show.
We really appreciate it.
Thank you.
All right.
And hey, as a reminder, everyone, yeah, we covered a lot.
And that's only a fraction of it.
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