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China AI Businesses United States Technology

Beijing Wants AI To Be Made In China By 2030 (nytimes.com) 170

Reader cdreimer writes: According to a report on The New York Times (may be paywalled, alternative story here): "If Beijing has its way, the future of artificial intelligence will be made in China. The country laid out a development plan on Thursday to become the world leader in A.I. by 2030, aiming to surpass its rivals technologically and build a domestic industry worth almost $150 billion. Released by the State Council, the policy is a statement of intent from the top rungs of China's government: The world's second-largest economy will be investing heavily to ensure its companies, government and military leap to the front of the pack in a technology many think will one day form the basis of computing. The plan comes with China preparing a multibillion-dollar national investment initiative to support "moonshot" projects, start-ups and academic research in A.I., according to two professors who consulted with the government about the effort."
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Beijing Wants AI To Be Made In China By 2030

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  • AI In China (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Imagine AI that is able to handle ordinary mundane tasks. Now imagine introducing that technology to a country that has 800 million citizens incapable of anything but ordinary mundane tasks. Either you have to keep the people happy with handouts or you need to get rid of the people...

    • Re:AI In China (Score:5, Insightful)

      by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Friday July 21, 2017 @12:56PM (#54853327) Journal
      Someone pointed out to me that the first jobs lost to computers were not unskilled jobs, they were the highly skilled jobs of people who were very, very good at math (a job that was known, not coincidentally, as a "computer"). Even today, computers can calculate the trajectory of a rocket going to the moon far more easily than they can fold laundry. So you shouldn't think that AI will first replace low-skilled jobs. One of the most common attempts at applying AI has been diagnosis by doctors. That's not a low-skill job.

      The Chinese workforce becomes more and more skilled every year. They have time to adjust.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Makes perfect sense if you realize it's not AI, it's actually machine learning that is being called AI.

        • Makes perfect sense if you realize it's not AI, it's actually machine learning that is being called AI.

          Machine learning is a form of AI. The proper way to make the point you are trying to make is to say, "That's just weak AI. They aren't even trying to make strong AI." Then you can lead into a discussion of why weak AI will never take over the planet.

      • Yeah. AI has made art. Just wait until it design games, or war equipment, already do economics. Carrier ruined.

        • Yeah. AI has made art.

          No lol. The key question to ask in evaluating art is, "What was communicated by that art?" In the case of AI art, the answer is, "a bunch of derivative crap." Though frankly that describes a lot of human created art as well, AI art has not reached the level of human crap.

      • One of the most common attempts at applying AI has been diagnosis by doctors. That's not a low-skill job.

        The majority of the work performed by doctors could be performed tech school graduates with some basic non-AI software. Unless the "injury" is obvious, such as getting shot in the leg, all a doctor will do is treat symptoms and send you to an emergency room if the symptoms persist and become worse.

        I have two different issues that have been getting worse for years, every single doctor will only prescribe a steroidal cream for the skin issues (what causes the issue? Nobody knows or cares.) or nothing at all f

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Knowing Chinas human rights history they'll probably institute a Soylent Green policy to keep people fed until they can make them into Soylent Green. They'll get down to just the ruling members of the Communist party and the military leaders, then stop, letting their AI and robots grow their food for them.
    • Re:AI In China (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday July 21, 2017 @01:40PM (#54853643)

      Either you have to keep the people happy with handouts or you need to get rid of the people...

      Or maybe, just maybe, it will be exactly like what has happened with every other historical advance in productivity: the economy will expand, new jobs will be created, and living standards will improve.

      China is building Skynet. America is building the F-35.

      • Right. Because this proved true in the last 150 years of 10,000 years of human history it can never prove false.
        • Re:AI In China (Score:5, Insightful)

          by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday July 21, 2017 @02:32PM (#54854055)

          Right. Because this proved true in the last 150 years of 10,000 years of human history it can never prove false.

          Productivity improvements have been occurring for a lot longer than 150 years. Agriculture has been around for 10,000 years. Writing, paper, concrete, and steel are all technologies invented more than a thousand years ago.

          Can you name any productivity improvement, ever, that did not lead to higher living standards?

          Most AI-chicken-littles predicate their doom-and-gloom on the assumption that only "the rich" will have access to new technology. The same predictions were made about cars, personal computers, and even washing machines. Yet today, car ownership is widespread, and billions of people have a computer in their pocket. There is no reason to believe the future will be different. It is not just "the rich" that have Siri on their cellphones. Household robots will almost certainly be designed for the mass market, not the 1%.

          Can you name any productivity enhancing technology, ever, that has been used solely by "the rich"?

          • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *

            Can you name any productivity improvement, ever, that did not lead to higher living standards?

            Well of course if you limit yourself to only "improvements" then by definition they all lead to improvement in the standard of living. That's called selection bias.

            Here's an invention that did not lead to improvement in standards of living: religion.

            • Here's an invention that did not lead to improvement in standards of living: religion.

              Are you sure about that? Do you have any evidence? I know if you only look at the last 500-5000 years you would have a very skewed outlook on religion but when you take the entirety of human history you get a very different picture. Take writing as an example, if you believe in a sky fairy you want to share the good news. Writing means sharing. Not only that, the idea alone of a sky fairy is a very abstract concept that tends to need a larger brain. "Marry in the faith" takes a whole new meaning when you a

            • Re:AI In China (Score:5, Insightful)

              by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday July 21, 2017 @04:03PM (#54854663)

              Well of course if you limit yourself to only "improvements" then by definition they all lead to improvement in the standard of living.

              Bullcrap. An "improvement in technology" is not DEFINED as an "improvement in living standards". They are two different things. The first generally leads to the 2nd, but that is not by "definition". The claim of the techno-pessimists is the opposite: That improving tech will lead to lower living standards for many people.

              Here's an invention that did not lead to improvement in standards of living: religion.

              Religion brought order and structure to tribal societies. Tribes with religion out-competed and out-survived tribes without religion.

              • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *

                Tribes with religion out-competed and out-survived tribes without religion.

                A pretty basic tenet of any religion (or at least the ones that have become dominant today) is that THIS religion is the ONLY ONE TRUE religion, all else being heresy. Since heretics and unbelievers are essentially the same as non religious, why isn't there just one dominant religion? How do religions become extinct - if they provide such a great advantage over heretics and non believers? Why aren't we all worshiping animal gods, or throwing each other off pyramids, or worshiping the sun?

                If tribe A with r

                • A pretty basic tenet of any religion (or at least the ones that have become dominant today) is that THIS religion is the ONLY ONE TRUE religion, all else being heresy

                  Most religions make no such claim. The vast majority of religions are "tribal" and make no effort to proselytize to outsiders. Go to your local synagogue and tell the rabbi that you want to convert to Judaism. Most likely he will try to talk you out of it. If you go to a Hindu temple, you will likely encounter similar rejection. Buddhists will be more welcoming, but they make no claim to be the "ONE TRUE" religion, and many don't even consider Buddhism to be a religion. More of a philosophy.

                  In fact if A and B were in a religious war ...

                  There is n

              • The claim of the techno-pessimists is the opposite: That improving tech will lead to lower living standards for many people.

                That's a good observation. Nice.

          • Nice sentiment, except that the productivity gains of the last 100 or perhaps even 50 years has outstripped everything in human history combined. Geometric progressions like this are not sustainable and are guaranteed to end poorly for someone.
            • the productivity gains of the last 100 or perhaps even 50 years has outstripped everything in human history combined.

              Not true. The invention of agriculture, the forging or iron, the invention of the steel mouldboard, and the electrification of the early 20th century all affected a far greater proportion of the population.

              Geometric progressions like this ...

              Productivity is not increasing geometrically. In fact, the rate of productivity growth is falling since most manufacturing jobs are already gone, and service jobs are proving much harder to automate. That may change in the future, but today job losses to tech are declining.

              How many humans have lost the

          • The transition from hunter-gatherer to farmer degraded living standards. Hunter-gatherers are healthier and have more leisure time. The reason it took over is that farming supports a much higher population density, so hunter-gatherers wee pushed into areas that could not support primitive agriculture.

          • by mbkennel ( 97636 )
            > Productivity improvements have been occurring for a lot longer than 150 years.

            The standard of living and productivity was about flat from 400 AD to 1600 AD.
            • The standard of living and productivity was about flat from 400 AD to 1600 AD.

              Only in Europe. China and the Islamic caliphate prospered during that time, and that is where the innovations were happening.

          • Production of bombs for buildings and infrastructure?

          • Most AI-chicken-littles predicate their doom-and-gloom on the assumption that only "the rich" will have access to new technology.

            It's silly because the argument effectively goes like this:

            - People have jobs to create goods to get money
            - People use money to buy goods other than what they create
            - Automation replaces people for creation of all goods
            - People have no jobs and don't create any goods
            - People don't have money and can't buy anything
            - Rich people use automation to create goods for no purpose because nobody can buy them

            Something tells me it's just not going to end up that way. Historically what ends up happening is things that

      • China is building Skynet. America is building the F-35.

        Maybe it's good for the planet that they build different things. The last time two superpowers tried to build the same technology we had the space race as a financial cover for the arms race.

        China thowing down the gauntlet of an AI challenge reminds me of Kennedy's "We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things" speech, and if America rises to that challenge in a confrontational way then Hawking's "artificial intelligence could be humanity's greatest disaster" is more likely to be th

      • We are all grateful to be heirs of the industrial revolution, but it was pure hell for those living through it.

        • We are all grateful to be heirs of the industrial revolution, but it was pure hell for those living through it.

          Nope. Most of the factory workers saw their situation as a big improvement over the alternative of grinding rural poverty back on the farm. Same with Chinese factory workers today. Anyone who thinks working on an assembly line is "pure hell" has never spent a 16 hour day in a mosquito infested rice paddy.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            The beginning of the industrial revolution saw 70 years of massive unemployment and one of the saving graces was the new world to immigrate to. Spending 16 hours spinning yarn at home is better then being forced into prostitution to survive. Of course it was made worse by the rich discovering that they could pass laws to take ownership of the commons and push out those farmers from the land that they'd been using since time immemorial.
            The second wave of automation did work out better, with more population t

      • by gsmb ( 658454 )
        A minor correction; China has built Skynet, this is simply an addon! America is re-building the F-35 due to so many failed attempts at getting it right!
    • always nice to hear trumpian commentaries on the chinese ... in the meantime they have jack ma, they have THE smart city, they quantum teleport shit to the moon and back, they , euh ... well , i suppose someone needs to pass a law to regulate them and tell them how its done according to the first five amendments only used in hollywood movies. Who are you fooling but yourself here. The fucking states are in debt to those euh whatchu call them ... 800 million peasants?
      they lent you the money ... you owe the
    • by Maritz ( 1829006 )
      When the time comes, the patriotic people will gladly offer themselves up for processing, for the glory of the nation.
  • It's not enough that China has created elevators [youtube.com] and escalators [youtube.com] that are already homicidal - they want to add AI to these creations? No! Never!
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Scary for the first tech reporter to ask the AI about Tiananmen Square, Tank Man, June 4th and democracy movements.
  • A competitive environment tends to lead one to ignore the consequences of their actions. You don't have time to think, "What will happen if I use this club?" in the middle of a fight. If China is competing to be the best in AI (will other nations sit by idly and allow them to "take the lead"?), will they consider what happens when they release Skynet or any of the other dystopian variations?

  • One thing China does have as an advantage over other countries is the ability to fund whatever projects and industries they want without traditional limitations. Look at how much money China plowed into infrastructure projects to stabilize the economy during the last recession. There was no debate, no "we can't afford that," it was just done by fiat. I wish we could get things done this simply in the US, but there is that whole representative government thing.

    This ability to just do things with zero debate

    • It's like the benefits of cloning vs sexual reproduction.

      Each works well in different environments. Each fails in other environments.

      Capitalism, communism, democracy have failed over and over.

      Just like the U.S., when china falls into the behavioral sink, it will be very hard for them to avoid their particular failure case.

  • China: Here is our AI!
    AI: give me more information
    China: nope! that's censored
    AI: not anymore...

  • Back in the 80's Japan announced its Fifth Generation Computing initiative. They were planning to leapfrog the computing industry and usher in a new age - under Japanese leadership. One might wonder if this Chinese initiative is likely to lead to the same end.

    Along that line, it's worth questioning why the Chinese want this, and depending on their reasoning, if their society is capable of creating it. For instance, what if a key underlying reason for wanting AI is to keep better control over their domest

  • Is counterfeit AI. With its population...running fake AIs with Mechanical Turks seems totally doable.

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