AI mania. It happened before. In 1895.
About 130 years ago, a scientist made a discovery that he could expose photographic paper to emissions from a glass tube and it went straight through human flesh and formed an image.
It was astonishing, interesting, and he reported it and the entire world went batshit crazy, completely bananas.
We all think, apparently, that we’re just doing all this — the so-called “AI revolution” — for the first time and we are not.
History is not some boring subject from school. History tells us about the stupid idiotic mistakes that people make, especially when they’re up against phenomena that they don’t understand, like X-rays.
Today, as in 1895, it’s much better to make some explosive and ridiculous overinflated claim and get yourself a whole lot of investor money, fame and fortune.
As then the harms, the toxicities are rife now. Science for the common good is out the window, and people are using x-ray machines on customers feet in shoe-shops, with no protection against radiation exposure. Tech today is a free-for-all and we have no protections.
There’s a fundamental failure to grasp the requirements for safeguards.
What Röntgen did
He took a device called a Crooks tube that had actually been invented 30 years prior.
And he created this image of the hand on the photographic plate.
Now, why did everybody go crazy? Well, because of the image.
Newspapers published it, and people were saying
“Oh my god, I’m going to be on the train and there will be a guy with a Röntgen machine looking through my clothing.”
“There’s no privacy, X-Rays can look through walls.”
“It’s the end of the world.”
Applications
Of course X-Rays have useful applications: we know today that they are for diagnostic imaging.
Thomas Edison, the American inventor and scientist, he among lots of other people discovered that you didn’t need to just use photographic paper.
He built the fluoroscope, which is much more common sort of portable X-ray machine, semi-portable.
And people were like, “Well, look, X-rays are amazing. They’re incredible.”
“Let’s have X-Ray machines everywhere,” they said.
Radium
Radium and Polonium were discovered by Marie Curie and her husband Pierre and rightfully it won them the Nobel prize in 1911.
You didn’t need a Crookes tube, this stuff gave off a glow all the time, just sitting there. It seemed amazing.
Just look at it, right? It glows, it must be wonderful.
Doctors hate you for using this one weird trick. Let’d not regulate this marvellous technology — that will just slow everything down.
Harms
But all of this stuff was incredibly harmful. Of course. You get sick and die.
Its effects are pernicious and operate over longer time spans.
People who were exposed to these X-rays, got ill and died.
There was one instance where a child had a head injury and they put them in front of an X-ray machine for an hour. They got a good image, and burned off half this kid’s hair. And most likely gave him a fatal dose of radiation.
“Are they good or are they bad?”
One side said they’re good, one side said they’re bad. Well, uh, can’t they be both?
Radioactivity and x-rays are not an insanely miraculous wonder technology that can be used to renew cells.
And yet, that’s what everybody said. Why did they say it? Because they are excitable. What’s worse is that the press repeated everything that was said, magnified it
A man named Ebenezer Byers, an American industrialist drank many bottles of this wonder cure.
He later helped the Federal Trade Commission track down and prosecute [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eben_Byers] shyster doctors and manufacturers of these substances by giving testimony to investigators. But he died young.
Projection is not Reality
Soon as we see something with our own eyes, we project. We draw a line through it up and to the right and we say, “Oh my god, it can do all of these incredible things.” But your projection is not reality.
When Google’s uh deep mind scientists first came out with their scaling is all you need uh paper, they pointed out that there were some interesting and unexpected effects. They found that when you scaled up, it seemed to follow instructions.
This was for the Large Language Model an “x-ray of the hand” moment.
Oh my god, how could this possibly be? Is it sentient? Will it overtake humans?
How could you have a Large Language Model that actually follows instructions? That’s mind-blowing. It solves math problems, oh my.
Could it possibly be that in the large body of language that you trained it on, there was actually some instructions?
Could it actually be that the problems you’re asking it to solve like mathematics problems where a question is followed by an answer soon is sitting there in the collection of documents that you trained it on?
AI is not God, its Auto-complete
They looked at that and they said, “Oh my god, there’s all this untapped well of incredible benefits. What is the large language model going to come out with next?”
“Oh, it’s incredible and amazing. We must use it for everything.”
“We must give it to our 5-year-olds.”
“We must give it to our 5-year-olds.”
Except kids are using this, becoming dependent on it, and committing suicide.
The people that are building the thing and profiting off it, they don’t want to regulate it. They want to keep building it without restraint, giving it to whoever they can, without any barrier, on the basis it can be used as a panacea for all of our ills.
It’s going to educate our kids. It’s going to find a cure for cancer.
AI is Dangerous
Or maybe it’s actually a cause of cancer. Maybe it’s radium water all over again.
It’s filling our public discourse with toxic slop, with revenge porn and deepfakes. People who turn to it for answers are being drawn into psychosis.
All this has happened before.
AI is not so great. There’s been actual transformative technologies such as the automatic telephone exchange.
The ability to dial someone’s number and have it automatically connect you to someone far, far away and speak to them as though they are standing next to you. No operator, no delays, no privacy or security issue: it transformed commerce, society and even healthcare.
AI is not even close to these results.
Conclusion
AI — like x-rays and radium — is harmful and useful in a few well-defined and fairly boring contexts.
It must stringently and vigorously regulated. The harms include:
* abuse of people’s work
* the toxic effects on education of kids
* the destruction and hollowing out of capability in our arts
* the cocksure framing of inaccurate answers from LLMs
* impacts of LLMs on kids and the vulnerable
* the revenge porn & deepfakes
* the fraud
And as well as all of those things it’s sucked up capital and stifled innovation in science and technology.
Regulate AI now.
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