Settings

Theme

I'm a computer science professor at UC Berkeley. Tech jobs are drying up

businessinsider.com

8 points by thirdacc a year ago · 4 comments

Reader

thirdaccOP a year ago

https://archive.ph/h4Cwg

IronWolve a year ago

Article makes an interesting point "We need to accept the idea of universal basic income"

I think if robots or even AI become the norm, a tax on business robots will be required. But its a big and complex issue.

But then, someone has to also repair and program the AI and robots. Hopefully theres a right to repair law to make sure jobs are created. Also product ownership... so many variables to the market.

  • al_borland a year ago

    I’m not sure which way things are going to go, though I tend to lean on the side of this being like any other technology change of the past. Some jobs are lost, new ones are created, and the world moves on.

    That said, it wouldn’t be a bad idea to have a system in place as a hedge. Andrew Yang spoke about it years ago when he ran. I thought it would be a good idea to simply get the systems in place, even if it wasn’t really paying out much of anything. Once the systems are in place they can be dialed up or down as needed based on what happens with these markets. It would also shift some of the incentives around AI as a whole. Even if new jobs are created, it will take time, so having some kind of UBI funded by AI profits, could help ease that transition period. Trying to build the system as a reaction, instead of a proactive hedge, will likely go poorly, or simply not be done.

  • streetcat1 a year ago

    Dont worry.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection