Howdy folks,
If you're my age (or your parents are just old souls), you've probably heard the old adage: children should be seen and not heard.
This is obviously an outdated and barbaric concept. Unless you apply it to AI.
Useful robots not withstanding, I'm here today to argue that the best AI, the kind that's going to propel us into the future, should be seen and not heard.
Or, rather, it should be neither seen nor heard.
AI's like electricity that way. I want to know it's there, I want to know it works, but I almost never want to have to think about it.
Most of what's useful in the machine learning world is what I call "backbone technologies." That is, we all know that Microsoft Azure is a big important cloud-based AI system. It's arguably Microsoft's most important product that isn't named Windows.
But Azure hasn't been anthropomorphized or characterized. It's just there, it does stuff, and that's cool.
And when it comes to robots, I think it's important now and in the future to ensure the general public views them solely as machines.
It's says something warm and kind about our species when we learn that people got upset when they saw the Boston Dynamics technicians appear to be shoving and kicking their robots.
Aww, aren't we great? We have the capacity to care about anything.
But what happens when robots permeate our society and our human penchant for emotion draws us to do incredibly stupid things on their behalf?
If you saw a toaster fall onto a subway track, you wouldn't risk your life to save it.
But a certain percentage of the population is completely duped by startup hype, big tech lies, and media hyperbole.
The first time someone dies trying to save a robot, the design paradigm calling for humanesque machines becomes a fatal one.
We don't need machines to become more human-like. We just need them to be useful.