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  • The amount of common euphoria and uncritical reception of an idea so big as universal basic

  • income makes me question how many people realize nothing good exists without condition.

  • Somehow we are supposed to trust huge corporations whose sole intention has always been consolidation

  • of wealth and economic power to the point nothing and nobody can question their dominance.

  • Corporations that track our every movement, follow our credit cards and cellphone IDs

  • everywhere we go in order to have a perfect track record of our personality traits and thoughts.

  • Corporations that in order to bring greater profit for their shareholders, exploit child

  • labor in undemocratic countries or failed states, just so that they don't have to

  • employ expensive labor in Western societies.

  • Corporations that aren't shy for being in bed with ones of the worst authoritarian regimes

  • in order to expand their business.

  • Corporations that actively pursue monopolies so that they have the power to influence social

  • discourse and our behavior, by manipulating what we can see, censoring what we can say,

  • and filtering what we can know.

  • Corporations that lobby and bribe our politicians by dumping hundreds of millions of dollars

  • every year in order to rig our democratic process and maintain their unquestionable presence.

  • Somehow we are supposed to expect that these corporations who have never cared about the

  • values and needs of the society, who have securely corrupted our democracy, and know

  • more about us than we know about ourselves, will give us all free income without any conditions.

  • Politicians left and right, corporate leaders, and people from all backgrounds seem to unite

  • behind an idea that could've easily worked if we implemented it hundred years ago, when

  • free market actually worked.

  • I am not here to question whether universal basic income

  • would successfully elevate people out of poverty.

  • I am not here to question whether this form of guaranteed income

  • would make people more productive.

  • I agree that universal basic income could successfully achieve both of those things.

  • I am here to express my skepticism towards the new system and power relationships we

  • are going to build when we implement universal basic income

  • in combination with centralized automation.

  • I am not saying I am 100% right.

  • I am just pointing out that we should be careful about what kind of world we are building under

  • the premise of hopeful dreams and good intentions.

  • The debate about universal basic income is essentially a debate about whether this time

  • technological revolution is going to be any different than the previous ones.

  • And I am on the side that argues this time is going to be different.

  • Artificial intelligence is going to destroy the need for human labor.

  • But not for the reasons others argue.

  • Elon Musk best summarizes this line of thinking:

  • I think that's right.

  • But it's only a part of the whole truth.

  • Robots are going to be better than us in everything.

  • Including manipulation, censorship, and propaganda.

  • It's not just that the robots are going to be better.

  • It's about what social contract are we going to implement around a system where robots

  • can do everything better than humans.

  • There may be a hypothetical time when robots will be completely indistinguishable from humans.

  • But that time isn't going to be in our century and thus shouldn't be a core issue of our debate.

  • We might never even reach that point.

  • Artificial intelligence isn't dangerous because of what it can do, but because of

  • how people who created it are going to use it.

  • Instead we should focus on how the development and deployment of automation currently takes place.

  • And this is where at least in my reasoning, the dream of universal basic income crumbles.

  • My argument is that universal basic income is not going to create a better world.

  • It might create a wathere is less poverty and starvation.

  • But because people will no longer be needed in production,

  • they will lose all of their power as workers to secure their rights and position

  • in the social contract with their economic and political elites.

  • Protesting and striking will lose all its value because corporations and politicians

  • won't be reliant on human labor to prosper and grow their power.

  • And that is going to happen if we don't change anything in the current trends of

  • centralization of power and consolidation of wealth.

  • So when Musk implies that because robots will be able to replace humans:

  • The emphasis should be on the wordchoice”.

  • I think Elon didn't pick this word by a stuttering accident.

  • It might actually be one of his premonitions.

  • Why exactly are we not going to have a choice?

  • Isn't free market supposed to decide what people actually want in the so called 'law

  • of demand and supply'?

  • No business would want to create products in a system where they can't sell them because

  • their customers can't generate income anymore.

  • So is Elon Musk hinting that decisions of a handful of corporations will override the

  • desires of the whole free market?

  • I think this is what makes all the difference between technological revolution of today

  • and those of the past.

  • And that is precisely because human societies have never faced entities consolidating so

  • much power as the biggest transnational corporations are doing today.

  • The argument isn't that we shouldn't implement any form of a guaranteed income.

  • But that we should do it on our own terms rather than having it shoved down our throats

  • by big corporations with pseudoliberal agendas and politicians who only care about reelection.

  • Otherwise universal basic income is going to constitute a new social contract which

  • we aren't going to have any say in.

  • When we look at this issue from a historical perspective each technological revolution

  • completely changed the previous social order and created new forms of government.

  • The next technological revolution triggered by artificial intelligence

  • will also result most likely in a complete rearrangement of the social contract.

  • And as I will soon demonstrate, this process has already started.

  • Before the first industrial revolution in the 18th century, human relationships were

  • tightly locked to the land they were working on.

  • Ownership of more land meant higher position in the social hierarchy.

  • The highest rank belong to the king who owned most of the land in the kingdom.

  • The lowest rank in the hierarchy was held by the peasants, the majority of the population.

  • Most people that couldn't afford any land were working on fields for landlords.

  • But even if those that could afford to own a land usually didn't have enough means

  • to protect themselves from raids.

  • Just getting a sword not to mention a horse was usually extremely expensive.

  • Which is why these people usually formed pacts with nobility and knights to protect them

  • in exchange for tax from yields.

  • When industrial revolution kicked off, it completely dismantled the previous feudal system.

  • Mere possession of land was no longer a requirement for sustainable life.

  • Only those who owned bigger and better machines and

  • worked harder and smarter could accumulate more income.

  • Workers previously tied to their landlords could now go freely into the cities and offer

  • their labor at a plethora of working opportunities.

  • As the industrial revolution went on four things started to happen that are beginning

  • to fade out from reality today.

  • First: human labor entered free market and workers could choose from myriads of different jobs.

  • Second: Competition of business owners was very high and it was extremely easy for workers

  • to switch jobs.

  • Third: Climbing social ladder was for the first time based on merit and hard work and

  • not on just an inherited social status.

  • Fourth: the technological progress vastly improved living conditions and allowed for

  • equal opportunities even for the bottom class.

  • Presence of these four elements at the time of the industrial revolution brought about

  • immense social changes.

  • And likewise, their absence in our time is a symptom of an upcoming social restructuring.

  • In the 19th century, these four new elements empowered middle class and balanced the relationships

  • between workers and business owners, even the most wealthy ones.

  • It became easy for the middle class and workers to organize in unions.

  • Economically, all workers are replaceable as individuals.

  • But as an aggregate, they can unite to protest and strike to cause sudden systematic disruption.

  • Through unions workers and broad middle class were able to convert their economic power

  • to political power.

  • This is how working rights and universal suffrage were granted to people.

  • Not out of the benevolence of the political and economic elite, but because of the conversion

  • of economic power to political influence industrial middle class could pull of to win their cause.

  • The disturbance caused by workers not showing up at work but striking on the streets, was

  • too effective at damaging profits.

  • Unions and workers strikes are still present today, but they bear much less political power

  • than they used to.

  • Why so?

  • Because today workers even as an economic aggregate are replaceable, either by outsourcing

  • the production to countries with poorer working conditions, or by centralized automation.

  • Effects of the decreasing need for human labor is also multiplied by the new economy standard

  • where companies no longer make most of their profits from sales, but when people use their products

  • But that still doesn't explain how we got

  • to this state of extreme imbalance between current middle class and the wealthiest billionaires.

  • Why is it that almost everybody benefited from the inventions of industrial revolution,

  • but only biggest corporations benefit from centralized automation?

  • And that's precisely because something used to be happening in the 19th century that is

  • no longer the case today.

  • And it's this: To balance the power of organized unions at

  • the turn of the 19th century, businesses with significant market power

  • also organized themselves in groups.

  • By abusing the system of trusts, businesses started buying stocks from one another, forming

  • trade associations, or constituting conglomerates.

  • This is how few big business owners managed to accumulate more percentage points of a

  • certain market share when they couldn't do it purely by outperforming their competition

  • with a better product.

  • But unlike today, 19th century monopoly seeking attempts turned out to be largely unsuccessful

  • because the public outrage of empowered middle class forced the government to take action.

  • There are three most resonating historical cases.

  • John Rockefeller's Standard Oil, J.B.

  • Duke's American Tobacco, and James Hill's Northern Securities.

  • All of these companies used various methods to take advantage of their market positions

  • to form artificial monopolies.

  • All three of these companies sought to become monopolies in their industries following similar

  • formula: buying stocks of businesses that relied on them; merging and acquiring other

  • companies to gain bigger market share; and cut out other resisting competition by artificially

  • underpricing your products to the point others are put out of business.

  • Eventually the US government sued all three of these companies under anti-trust clause

  • from the Sherman Act.

  • The Courts later ordered to dissolve all of them as unlawful and artificial monopolies.

  • And while some big businesses continue to engage in anti-competitive practices today

  • the government and the public no longer take any sufficient counter-measures.

  • Since American Tobacco and Standard Oil were broken up in 1911 the only anti-trust case

  • that resulted in dissolution was the AT&T breakup in 1982.

  • Predatory business owners managed to win the fight for the balance of power against the

  • middle class.

  • When in 2005 the Southwestern Bell Corporation recreated AT&T by purchasing its parent company

  • together with a dozen of other children of the breakup from the '80s, the US government

  • did nothing.

  • When Verizon did the same with the rest of the baby Bells in the same year, the US government

  • did nothing.

  • And that's how the two largest telecommunications corporations were born that today enjoy either

  • a monopoly or a duopoly everywhere they operate.

  • Forming business trusts became the instruction manual for big businesses in every industry

  • to create monopolies.

  • Big banks caught up on the trend too.

  • Vast deregulation of the '80s and '90s allowed for the mergers of commercial and

  • investment banks, which was strictly forbidden under the Glass-Steagall Act (repealed by

  • Clinton in 1999).

  • Taking advantage of other regulatory loopholes opened up by Reagan and Bush, banks began

  • to engage in risky investments with people's money.

  • Investment banks could make outrageous bets with high likelihood of failure, because the

  • money they used from the commercial banks were federally insured and backed by government

  • bailouts in case of a downfall.

  • Nothing changed on this despite 2008 financial meltdown.

  • Banks took this old industry standard to a whole new level: if you seek to become a monopoly

  • today you don't get punished but rewarded.

  • But it wasn't the banks that started the new

  • technological revolution.

  • It was the Internet-enabled tech industry.

  • Previous industrial revolution had a strong affect on moralityfeudalism was no longer

  • ok, slavery was no longer ok, and soon even child labor was banned.

  • So did the new tech start-ups brought any moral innovation?

  • They built-up on the old practices of predatory

  • banks and telecoms.

  • Google started off with thedon't be evilbut even they quickly realized that

  • being predatory at all costs is the way to go.

  • Merit of the product is no longer what brings the winning.

  • If you want to win you have to consolidate faster than everyone else.

  • Google took this to their heart so much they acquire or merge with a new business every month.

  • And on top of the questionable acquisitions, Google abuses its dominant search engine position

  • to censor out any competing business that offers similar services to the ones of Google.

  • Google is no longer just a search engine, but hundreds of other things, including an

  • email provider, biggest video hosting site, developer of artificial intelligencebut

  • most notably, Google is an advertiser, which means they are a data broker.

  • The same goes for Facebook, which also is a data broker and an advertising network more

  • than it is a social media platform.

  • Apple too acquired 30 companies just in 2014.

  • And companies that Apple couldn't acquire found themselves fighting in aggressive patent

  • wars that Apple loves to wage in order to price out their competitors by excruciating

  • legal costs.

  • And remain certain that incumbent telecom operators like Comcast or Verizon do exactly

  • the same, which is why you haven't probably seen so many successful municipal broadband

  • projects or other competitive Internet Service Providers.

  • And just to be clear none of these are legitimate monopoliesthat is when a company outperforms

  • competition purely based on the merit of their product.

  • All of them are artificial monopolies, which means they have actively conspired against

  • competition through various legal gymnastics to artificially elevate their market positions.

  • Now all of this begs the most important question: why is it that in the 1900s the government

  • banned artificial monopolies while today it is perfectly OK with them and even rewards

  • them by bailouts from the tax payers money?

  • The answer is this: Corporations today learned from the mistakes

  • of the 19th century monopolies and began converting their economic power into political influence,

  • exactly what the middle class used to do at that time.

  • And they did this by inventing the 'revolving door' and dumping millions into lobbying.

  • This is how it looks today: AT&T spent $16 million in lobbying just in

  • that single year

  • 93 out of 120 AT&T lobbyists between 2015 – 2016 previously held government jobs.

  • Google spent $15 million in lobbying in 2016 and had 78 out 92 lobbyists from government

  • positions.

  • Verizon spent $10 million in 2016 84 out of 106 lobbyists from government revolving door.

  • Facebook spent $9 million with 31 out 33 lobbyists from the government.

  • Apple $4 million on lobbying, 38 previous government employees now working as lobbyists.

  • Twitter dumped $700,000, and 16 out of 17 lobbyists came from previous government employment.

  • Microsoft: $ 9 million on lobbying, 100 lobbyists out 118 with previous government employment.

  • Amazon $11 million 56 out of 69 lobbyists with previous government jobs

  • Walmart $7 million 79 out of 91 lobbyists from the government

  • Comcast $ 14 million 126 lobbyists out of 147 with previous government jobs

  • Walt Disney $4 million on lobbying, 19 lobbyists out of 22 that held previous government jobs

  • General Motors $9 million on lobbying, 40 lobbyists out of 53 with previous government

  • jobs ExxonMobil $12 million on lobbying, 27 out

  • of 37 lobbyists with previous government jobs McKesson Corporation $1.3 million on lobbying

  • 17 out of 23 lobbyists with previous government jobs

  • 21st Century Fox $5.5 million on lobbying, 34 out of 40 lobbyists with previous government

  • jobs Berkshire Hathaway $6.3 million on lobbying,

  • 62 lobbyists out of 75 with previous government jobs.

  • JPMorgan Chase $3 million on lobbying, 39 lobbyists out of 45 with previous government

  • jobs Goldman Sachs $3.2 million on lobbying, 45

  • out of 49 lobbyists with previous government jobs

  • Coca-Cola $8 million on lobbying, 35 out of 50 lobbyists with previous government jobs.

  • This is the conversion of economic power into political influence in the eyes of the big

  • corporations.

  • And what is the middle class doing to counter this?

  • Nothing.

  • Nothing at all.

  • We are now incredibly divided because of the identity politics and we are flooded by issues

  • like massive cultural immigration and terrorism that weren't present in the daily lives

  • of the 19th century middle class.

  • When an important issue comes that we should unite behind it never happens today because

  • we completely rely on media intermediaries to deliver us information.

  • When Amazon rolls out its Alexa devices into people's homes the first thing that should

  • be trending on Youtube is how it shamelessly spies on all household conversations and hands

  • over all that private information to everyone willing to pay a nickel.

  • Instead, Steven Crowder is only outraged that it's probably a social justice warrior.

  • As if none of that collected information could be maliciously used at any point in the near

  • future with conservatives becoming the first targets.

  • But I don't solely blame people for this.

  • Corporations know they can do a lot with the potential of their algorithms.

  • Tech monopolies realized that we trust them too much so they started to abuse our trust

  • and became extremely efficient at it.

  • And don't just take my word for it.

  • Listen to Bret Weinstein for Christ's sake:

  • Facebook frequently conducts experiments on people who use it by manipulating their social

  • feeds.

  • In 2012 Facebook successfully manipulated people's emotion as a part of a social experiment

  • to measure how affected people are by the contents of their news feeds.

  • Later the New York Times reported on instances where Facebook actively manipulated trends

  • on a societal scale in third world countries that triggered massive social responses.

  • The scale of one such response managed to overthrow the government of Indonesia.

  • And in other 6 countries Facebook decided to turn off visibility of news coverage to

  • measure the impacts on the democratic development.

  • Twitter most likely does the same by tweaking trending hashtags and blatantly censoring

  • opinions that don't align with their agenda.

  • Google has such a search engine monopoly that if they decide to put your name out of their

  • rankings, you don't exist.

  • They can easily rewrite the history or reality simply by tweaking its algorithms.

  • Google is also extremely polite to the political elites, when it doesn't even suggest anything

  • controversial about their personalities.

  • And everybody knows about Youtube's algorithms screwing up.

  • In my case, Youtube allowed only two of my 30 videos to get through the algorithm.

  • The rest of my videos are just sitting here despite the fact that I do everything I can

  • with search engine optimization for all of my videos.

  • Amazon also enjoys immense power as a retail monopoly.

  • If Amazon decides to not list your product, you are never going to make sustainable sales.

  • This is how they completely transformed the book publishing industry because if Amazon

  • doesn't like some book, they'll take it off the shelves and publishers aren't going

  • to support it.

  • Big Internet service providers, now vastly deregulated, can straight out filter all internet

  • content.

  • Not only to just prioritize their services, but to also benefit certain agendas over the others.

  • TV and radio are beyond repair, we all know that.

  • But we at least expected the Internet to be the medium of free flow of information.

  • Not anymore.

  • It is a very common practice for billionaires to buy news outlets and media companies.

  • You could basically track ownership of 90% of US media to just a handful of the biggest

  • corporations.

  • Telecommunications providers step way outside of their original fields to also capture media

  • dissemination and advertising industry.

  • Which I would say is massive conflict of interests.

  • One could almost think that CEOs of all these companies could just sit behind one coffee

  • table and decide what you are going to read about tomorrow.

  • Every major social media tracks you across all of your online activities.

  • They don't just use your likes, comments and private chats to profile you for advertising.

  • You can't even get a device without an advertising ID attached to it.

  • The moment you sign up for any service you are logged for life.

  • These are the conditions under which universal basic income is going to be negotiated.

  • How this is not inclining anybody to believe it will result in some form of a dismantlement

  • of democracy and free market is beyond me.

  • So once again: you are very welcome to advocate for something so fundamentally impactful as

  • universal basic income.

  • But before you do you should make sure you are sitting behind the negotiating table alongside

  • those who are actually going to make that decision.

  • Because right now you are not even invited.

  • The line between the jurisdiction of the government and influence of corporations blurs.

  • Our only chance to get a seat behind that table is to balance the distribution of AI power.

  • And the only way we can do this is to develop decentralized and completely free and open

  • source artificial intelligence.

  • Not free as infree beerbut free as in freedom.

  • That is an AI that everybody who uses it has full ownership of it and is granted full control

  • over that ownership.

  • As opposed to a closed source product, where your ownership rights are dictated by the

  • developer of that product.

  • This means you can transform, tweak, or build up on the open source AI to improve it.

  • By developing artificial intelligence under this open license, everybody can be granted

  • equal access to the AI power.

  • There is an open source alternative to Amazon Echo and Google Home called Mycroft, which

  • explains the best how it works:

  • This is the only viable opposition to the proprietary AI developed secretively by big corporations.

  • So what you can do right now is to start looking for

  • open source alternatives and support their developers.

  • This is why folks like Elon Musk are right about AI while disconnected people like Mark

  • Zuckerberg are completely wrong.

  • The politics behind developing our open artificial intelligence is to make sure no actor can

  • overpower everyone else by developing an exponentially more powerful AI.

  • And this is what it's going to look like:

  • We can't rely on the promise of the world where we'll no longer have to work and corporations

  • and governments will give us everything to make us happy.

  • We should also own the AI and then with its power decide what kind of a world we shall

  • build on top of it.

  • We can't have a discussion about universal basic income without making sure the AI serves

  • all of us and not just the lucky few biggest owners of automation.

  • Not the government regulations, but open source developers

  • are going to become our martyrs for freedom.

  • Thanks for watching.

The amount of common euphoria and uncritical reception of an idea so big as universal basic

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ユニバーサルベーシックインカムが間違っている理由|少数者の手の中にあるAIの力 (Why you are wrong about Universal Basic Income | The power of AI within the hands of the few)

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    王惟惟 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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