Tomatoes, AI & 15 minutes of fame?

I just planted out the first few tomatoes seedlings. It’s still a little bit early, but I like to get an early start. It doesn’t always work out well, but worth a try, to get a ripe red tomatoes before Xmas. Last year, my early plantings all ended up shrivelled by a late frost. Such is life! It doesn’t stop me trying. A sure fire way to know that it’s the right time is when I see the wild, self-sown seeds start to pop up. But that will be another month yet.

I’ve just finished reading two books on AI. I thought that I should get myself informed in some small way, as it is coming fast and we are told will be part of almost everything that we do in no time at all. When I was working in Korea back in April/May, everyone in my circle was using it in some way. Most on their phones as recreation, others having to take courses as part of their workplace training. Some as a requirement of their studies. It was everywhere in my environment, daily experiences and exchanges with my cohort. I’m not that interested in using it. I even have ’siri’ switched off. But sure enough, I will probably be forced to engage with it at some time, – probably sooner than I imagine. I’m not a Luddite, but I’m not rushing in either. It will come soon enough, or so I’m told. I can’t see it helping me to pack the kiln, or weed the vegetables!

Richard Susskind has spent his entire life working on AI. From his Doctorate on AI at Oxford in 1980 right up until the present time, it has been his complete lifes focus. He expresses some caution, but overall, I got the impression that he is pretty ‘gung-ho’ about its potential and trajectory. As someone who has been completely immersed in its development, he feels that any shortcomings can and will be managed and overcome to make it the servant of humanity.

Harari on the other hand, as a scholar of the history of information technology. He also received his PhD from Oxford. He is quite sceptical and is very cautious about what might happen. He is not involved in any AI development. He simply looks at what has happened in the past with the development and implementation of past information technologies.

His book takes us on a long journey from the stone-age through the Bible, the witch hunts to Stalinism and on to modern popularism, and how every new technology has been coopted for individual gain, power and profit.

After reading Susskind I was a little better informed, but still perplexed. After reading Harari, I’m not exactly scared, but certainly concerned. I am at least better informed. I didn’t sit down and read them cover to cover. I read them chapter by chapter, one or two each evening. I’d rather be outside gardening if the weather is nice, or inside potting when it’s not, as these are the things that bring me the greatest pleasure. The luxury of reading is an after-dinner activity, where it has to compete with sowing patches on my worn out clothes, or watching the idiot box, on the rare occasion when there is something worth watching. So it’s taken me a month to read them both, and over that time, my attention has fallen on various articles in the news, concerning AI.

Yesterday, I read that Australian tech billionaire, Scott Farquhar wants unfettered access to all copyright material free of charge to train AI Large Language Models. He claims that AI will deliver $115 billion in productivity gains. If it does, which I’m sceptical about. That money certainly wont be going to any person whose creative copyright was stolen to train them. It will be completely swallowed by the tech billionaires, who will progress to Gazillionaires and we’ll all be charged to access our own material and any supposed benefit that might accrue.

I also read that $1.5 billion is being invested every day in AI development. Those investors are going to want their money back with interest. AI access is going to be very expensive and will be embedded in everything that we do and purchase.

I recently read an interview with Demis Hassabis. Sir Demis is a British artificial intelligence researcher and entrepreneur. He is the chief executive officer and co-founder of Google DeepMind and a UK Government AI Adviser. He, as an AI developer is totally sucked in by the hype that he is creating. Of course, he is making a motza out of it too – no surprises there. He is claiming that it will be ten times more productive than the industrial revolution and 10 time faster, plus, everyone will be getting rich and having time off etc etc. Isn’t it amazing how these very clever blokes. and let there be no doubt about it, they are ever so bright. How can they be so stupid with a capitol S! Hassabis and Farquhar are talking like simpletons (with a capitol S). None of their claims are likely to come to fruition in the way that they state. I’m not very clever, but I can smell bull s**t a mile off. Many people will be worse off when they loose their jobs.

There is already sufficient wealth in the world for everyone to be well fed, comfortable, safe and with access to effective health care, but as Harari points out, corruption, nepotism and greed mean that 70% of the available wealth is all tied up in pointless and excessive accumulation of useless assets like super yachts, personal jumbos, spare mansions in multiple countries etc. etc. Non-productive, excessive consumption, for no good reason – other than excessive greed and stupidity. (with a capitol S)

Hassabis claims, “we should be in a world of what I sometimes call radical abundance. He paints a picture of medical advances, room-temperature superconductors, nuclear fusion, advances in materials, mathematics. It should lead to incredible productivity and therefore prosperity for society. We should be in an amazing world of abundance for maybe the first time in human history.”

He uses the word ‘should’ a lot. But it won’t turn out like he is suggesting! No good will come of this over-hyping of AI. There will still be a four year waiting list for an operation in NSW, There will still be genocide in Gaza and senseless slaughter in Ukraine. They should know better! They should be talking about all the unemployment that is going to come along with it. How will this prosper society?

I heartily recommend Yuval Noah Harari’s book “Nexus”.

On a brighter note;

In Korea, they have these giant TV screens on the side of major roads used for advertising, just like we have static bill boards here.

I got these images sent to me from 2 different friends a few days apart. I can see that it is me on a giant TV screen on the side of the freeway in Korea. I can’t read it, but I know the image. Its from the TV documentary made about my work in Korea during my recent trip there. I’m assuming that it is an add for the doco? 

It’s all about my work researching low emissions technology in wood kiln firings, and introducing it to potters, research institutions and universities, to try and clean up the atmosphere, and make the world a better place. Potters aren’t responsible for very much of the atmospheric pollution in the world on a per capita percentage basis,  cleaner cars and industrial processes will make a much bigger impact, but every little bit helps. Potters must play their part. I’m doing my bit – without AI.

The main reason for potters and ceramic institutions being interested in my work, is because there is a substantial local blow-back when people see a kiln chimney belching out black smoke. So they quite rightly ask, why are they still allowed to be so filthy and polluting? Change is coming, albeit slowly. A World-Wide the ban on diesel engined vehicles starts to come in, in some countries in 2035, and by most by 2050. 

Once coal burning power stations are all closed down, and these broad, society wide changes are introduced. I predict that it will be impossible for a potter to belch out black smoke and get away with it. There will be legislation to severely limit carbon particulate emissions. Potters need to be engaging with this issue now, so that when the time comes, we can show that we can, if not eliminate, then at least severely limit any PM 2.5’s emitted from our chimneys. 

It’s going to be a big challenge, and might not prove to be even possible, but the sooner we start, the sooner we will get to a good workable and hopefully affordable solution. We have about 10 years.

I’m working on it.