Matthew Butterick is a lawyer, programmer, writer, and designer. He’s written a long, interesting piece about the inherent risks of AI called Extinction-Level Capitalism. It is well-worth a read; I’ve excerpted several passages here but urge you read the whole thing.
In practice, certain people in a capitalist liberal democracy tend to get increasingly rich. Absent countermeasures, the wealthy gain control of the political apparatus, thwarting liberal-democratic norms. This tension between capital and politics is a long-considered topic. A key early work was, of course, Karl Marx’s Capital (about which more later). In the current era, Mancur Olson’s book The Rise and Decline of Nations set out how small groups with a shared interest (which could include capital concentration) can effectively undermine stable societies. More recently, economists Robert Reich (“How Capitalism is Killing Democracy”), James Galbraith (The Predator State), and Yanis Varoufakis (Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism) are among those who have studied the escalating political consequences of rising wealth inequality. The synthesis might be: as more wealth becomes concentrated in the hands of fewer citizens, liberal democracy weakens, because whichever citizens are losing economic relevance will also lose political relevance. A nation sending many of its citizens toward economic irrelevance risks becoming politically illiberal.
Sci-fi plots are optimized for cinematic impact. So as a metaphor for AI risk, they can lead to faulty intuitions. Among realistic AI risks, we can expect that most will be boring, slow, and depend on minimal extra technology. Whether AI will cause literal human extinction is esoteric—a lightning strike. But AI could easily induce future economic and political conditions that most Americans today would consider intolerable—a cancer that extinguishes a certain way of life. Nobody’s going to make a movie about boring AI risks. But they comprise the majority of worrisome AI outcomes.
Marx’s observation has a subtler implication too. New technology often holds itself out as the starting point of a narrative: from now on, everything is different. When we consider the technology alone, that narrative dominates. But when we zoom out and consider the historical context, the new technology becomes the current endpoint of a much longer political narrative.
What would Marx say to AI critics—social, legal, economic, political—that have arisen so far? Maybe that we’re missing the bigger picture. That as a human invention, AI may be the starting point of a new technological narrative. But as an affront to human workers, it continues a long tradition of capitalist technologies, beginning with the Industrial Revolution (if not earlier).
When we think about AI risk, we’re necessarily making guesses about the future. But when we frame AI in the narrow sense of new technology, we’re primarily considering a timeline that starts now. Whereas when we shift to thinking of AI as a capitalist instrument, we’re considering a timeline that starts centuries ago and has evolved continuously into the present. We can and should study those existing economic and political trends, because those will likely shape the future trajectory. Put differently: AI may be new. But it’s not immune to history.
“Technology always makes certain jobs obsolete; new ones will arise.” AI’s predicted labor replacement is unprecedented in three ways: the diversity of tasks replaced; its outsize effect on highly educated workers; and the backdrop of 50 years of wage stagnation. Automation-driven transitions aren’t necessarily easy, even when they’re narrow and the economy can absorb the workers. Those who handwave over the details should study historical examples. When you tell a large group of workers that their skills no longer have economic value, you risk a political and social tinderbox. Recall Carl Benedikt Frey’s comment: “the short run can be a lifetime”.
Along these lines, I expect that to succeed financially, Big AI will likely need to demolish a significant number of existing tech companies and grab their revenue for itself. By the process described above: Big AI essentially uses its tech customers as an R&D facility. Big AI licenses models to these companies. Tech companies compete to adapt their businesses to AI. Once a concept is proven, Big AI directly takes over that market. The labor-replacement story will grow into a company-replacement story. Many of those tech companies—and their shareholders in the public markets—may also find that AI is a poisoned chalice.
The value of the concentrated resource creates what Jeffrey Frankel calls “a political contest to capture ownership”, which in turn encourages the emergence of autocratic or oligarchic institutions captured by an economic elite who seek to retain control of the resource. The process is self-reinforcing in two ways. First: the economic elite uses its wealth to repress political opponents. Second: as the government derives more income from the concentrated resource, it relies less on taxation of citizens, which weakens democratic accountability.
I could have easily excerpted the whole thing.
Tags: anthropic · artificial intelligence · business · capitalism · Google · Matthew Butterick · openai · usa
We over-5os should worry less about our crepe necks and sunspots and more about our listening skills – and the pettiness we bring to social media
When I was young, there was a huge list of things you shouldn’t do, or specifically wear, over the age of 30; there were fewer explicit rules about what you should and shouldn’t wear over the age of 50, but they were all implied by the fact that it was 20 years since you’d been 30. Then someone lampooned the whole business – it was strikingly memorable but, teeth-gnashingly, not memorable enough that I can remember who it was – with a definitive list of Never Wear This Over 30, which included “a necklace made of ears”. The entire discourse was buried that day, and I never thought about it again, until the weekend, when I was walking up some stairs with a mirror all the way up. That, I could not help but notice, is a very 90s walking style.
I guess we all learned it from Bez out of Happy Mondays, the man specifically employed (if you would use such a LinkedIn word for it) to bring happiness to the nation with his physical joie de vivre: leading with the shoulders, as if you’re in a ferocious hurry to get to the front of somewhere, with your neck hunched in to bypass the attention of the authorities because of all the drugs you are about to either sell or buy, the rest of your body an afterthought.
Continue reading...Move comes after thrashing in opening game in Mexico
Tunisia still to face Japan and Netherlands in Group F
Tunisia sacked their head coach, Sabri Lamouchi, on Monday after a 5-1 defeat by Sweden in their first World Cup game. The Tunisian football federation announced his dismissal on its Instagram account.
“An agreement has been officially reached to dismiss coach Sabri Lamouchi,” the statement said. “Plans are under way to appoint Mondher Kebaier as the national team coach [on an interim basis].”
Continue reading...STOCKHOLM (ANP/AFP) - De Britse fabrikant van vliegtuigmotoren Rolls-Royce gaat drie kleine kernreactoren bouwen in het zuidwesten van Zweden. Dat maakt het Zweedse energieconcern Vattenfall, dat Rolls-Royce hiervoor heeft geselecteerd, maandag bekend. Het is volgens beide bedrijven voor het eerst in ruim veertig jaar dat het land nieuwe kernreactoren krijgt.
De zogenoemde Small Modular Reactors die Rolls-Royce gaat bouwen, komen bij de bestaande Ringhals-kerncentrale. De drie reactoren met elk een vermogen van 470 megawatt moeten straks jaarlijks ongeveer 12 terawattuur (TWh) aan elektriciteit opwekken. Vattenfall-topvrouw Anna Borg verwacht dat de eerste reactor mogelijk rond 2035 gebouwd kan worden.
Zweden stemde in 1980 in een niet-bindend referendum voor het afbouwen van kernenergie en heeft sindsdien zes van zijn twaalf verouderde reactoren gesloten. Het land besloot in 2023 om kernenergie flink op te schalen om aan de stijgende vraag naar stroom te kunnen voldoen.
BARCELONA (ANP/RTR/DPA) - Vrienden en familie hebben Lewis Hamilton door zijn moeilijkste dagen geholpen, de dagen waarop negatieve gevoelens over zijn overstap naar Ferrari hem somber stemden. "Zij hebben mij gered. Echte mensen die me kennen en nooit aan me hebben getwijfeld", vertelde de 41-jarige Brit over zijn bevrijdende overwinning in de Grote Prijs van Barcelona-Catalonië, de 106e GP-zege in zijn carrière, maar pas de eerste voor Ferrari.
Het duurde 31 grands prix voordat de zevenvoudig wereldkampioen zijn eerste zege bij de Italiaanse renstal kon vieren. Hamilton bekende dat het jaar 2025, zijn eerste bij Ferrari, af en toe een hel was. Het lukte hem na zijn jarenlange succesvolle periode bij Mercedes niet te presteren in de rode bolide. "Ik begon met groot enthousiasme, maar daarna volgden er veel twijfels en negativiteit en die hielden het hele jaar aan. Ik ben ook maar een mens, dus er waren momenten dat die negatieve verhalen me diep raakten van binnen. Toen had ik de mensen nodig die me altijd hebben gesteund."
Zij motiveerden hem om niet op te geven. "Je moet in de kern in jezelf blijven geloven en nooit aan jezelf twijfelen. Ik heb harder getraind dan ooit en het team geeft me nu ook het vertrouwen; ze geloven in de veranderingen waar ik om heb gevraagd. Het is langzaam allemaal samengekomen. Ik ben nu heel gelukkig, het zit goed. Ik hou van wat ik doe, er is geen beter gevoel dan racen in een Formule 1-wagen."
Het lijkt erop dat de Amerikaanse realityster Kim Kardashian ook een rol heeft gespeeld in de opleving van Hamilton. Dat is althans de mening van Toto Wolff, de vorige teambaas van Hamilton bij Mercedes. "Die twee lijken het heel goed met elkaar te kunnen vinden. Misschien helpt het om een vriendin te hebben. Mij hielp het om een partner te hebben en een stabiel gezinsleven."