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Futurist Adam Dorr on how robots will take our jobs: ‘We don’t have long to get ready – it’s going to be tumultuous’

about 23 hours ago
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If Adam Dorr is correct, robots and artificial intelligence will dominate the global economy within a generation and put virtually the entire human race out of a job.The social scientist doubles up as a futurist and has a stark vision of the scale, speed and unstoppability of a technological transformation that he says will replace virtually all human labour within 20 years.The Guardian’s journalism is independent.We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link.Learn more.

Dorr heads a team of researchers who have studied patterns of technological change over millennia and concluded that the current wave will not just convulse but obliterate the labour market by 2045.What cars did to horses and carts, and electricity to gas lamps, and digital cameras to Kodak, are templates for the coming shock, he says.“Technology has a new target in its crosshairs – and that’s us.That’s our labour.”Whatever you do in whatever sector, within a generation machines will be able to perform the same task just as well, if not better, and for a fraction of the cost, says Dorr.

“Costs are improving consistently, capabilities are improving consistently.We’ve seen that pattern before.If I can get the same thing or better for the same or lower cost, switching is a no-brainer.We’re the horses, we’re the film cameras.”Dorr, 48, is a technology theorist with a PhD in public affairs from the University of California, Los Angeles, and is the director of research at RethinkX, a US-registered nonprofit that analyses and forecasts technological disruption.

It was founded and is largely funded by James Arbib and Tony Seba, technology entrepreneurs and investors,Dorr spoke to the Guardian on a visit to Ireland, where he addressed the Dargan Forum, a two-day gathering in Dún Laoghaire, south Dublin, that focused on green and digital transitions,Dorr combined an ominous prediction – humanoid robots powered by increasingly capable artificial intelligence will spread across virtually every industry, leaving humans unable to compete – with a jarring blast of optimism: handled well, this revolution will usher in “super-abundance” that will liberate humanity,But handled badly, new extremes of inequality and oligarchy beckon,The transition will be faster than most people think, says Dorr.

“We’ve documented 1,500-plus technological transformations across all of human history.Through the theoretical lens that we’ve developed, a consistent set of patterns emerge over and over and over again.”Once a new technology captures just a few percentage points of “mind share or market share”, it tends to acquire overwhelming dominance within 15 to 20 years, which according to Dorr, means robots and AI will soon make human labour all but obsolete.“Machines that can think are here, and their capabilities are expanding day by day with no end in sight.We don’t have that long to get ready for this.

We know it’s going to be tumultuous.”Some sectors will have an interregnum during which humans can work effectively alongside robots – just like the period when chess grandmasters teamed up with chess programs – but sooner rather than later humans will just be in the way, says Dorr.Jobs whose value depend on human input – such as sports coaches, politicians, sex workers, ethicists – will endure but even they will face competition from machines.“There will remain a niche for human labour in some domains.The problem is that there are nowhere near enough of those occupations to employ 4 billion people.

”Sign up to TechScapeA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesafter newsletter promotionVenerable institutions and practices may no longer be fit for purpose, so societies need to urgently prepare by devising a set of guiding principles and re-evaluating concepts such as value, price and distribution, says Dorr,“I don’t have the answers,We don’t even know if we have the right questions,We need to experiment now and try out new ownership structures, new stakeholder structures,”He has written a book, Brighter: Optimism, Progress and the Future of Environmentalism, that is a paean to clean energy and hope.

He acknowledges the perils of economic dislocation, populist backlash and misinformation but says that is not inevitable.Gains in productivity and abundance will be vast and distribution – for instance, by emulating the example open source software – could be fair.“This could be one of the most amazing things to ever happen to humanity.”Previous futurists have predicted eras of leisure and been spectacularly wrong but Dorr says this time it really will happen and the tiny portion of society who in the past did not need to work, such as aristocrats, will offer guidance on how to fill the time.“We can think of examples of spoiled rich brats who seemed sort of aimless and perhaps miserable but others were able to live meaningful, purposeful lives.

I think we will find meaning in our relationships with our friends and family and our connections to our communities.It sounds sappy but I think it’s deeply true.”
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As much as £5bn needed to revive UK’s struggling high streets, study finds

As much as £5bn is needed to revive ailing UK town and city centres, with areas including Bradford in Yorkshire, Newport in south Wales, and Blackpool in Lancashire having double the proportion of empty shops as London, a study has found.A report from the Centre for Cities thinktank showed that the health of high streets across the country has varied significantly, and called for authorities to focus on developing homes and high-paying jobs in central locations to increase local spending power.Retailers have called for a cut in business rates, lower employment taxes and cheaper parking fees to help revive high streets.The report found that reforming the “flawed” business rates system was not enough to revive high streets in struggling local economies as many properties already do not pay rates.Andrew Carter, the chief executive of Centre for Cities, said: “Our research shows the high street isn’t failing everywhere

about 4 hours ago
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Bank of England says UK banks can increase riskier mortgage lending; Nvidia becomes first $4tn company – as it happened

Newsflash: The Bank of England is recommending that lending rules are relaxed so that banks and building societies can issue more mortgages at high loan-to-income levels.The BoE’s Financial Policy Committee is recommending that individual lenders should be allowed to increase their share of lending at high LTIs to above the current limit of 15%.This could make it easier for borrowers to stretch themselves to afford a more expensive property.High loan-to-income loans are defined as those at a ratio above 4.5

about 12 hours ago
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UK government’s deal with Google ‘dangerously naive’, say campaigners

Google has agreed a sweeping deal with the UK government to provide free technology to the public sector from the NHS to local councils– a move campaigners have called “dangerously naive”.The US company will be asked to “upskill” tens of thousands of civil servants in technology, including in using artificial intelligence, as part of an agreement that will not require the government to pay. It is considered in Whitehall to be giving Google “a foot in the door” as the digitisation of public services accelerates.However, the agreement prompted concerns about the precariousness of UK public data potentially being held on US servers amid the unpredictable leadership of Donald Trump.The Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) said Google Cloud, which provides databases, machine learning and computing power, had “agreed to work with the UK government in helping public services use advanced tech to shake off decades old ‘ball and chain’ legacy contracts which leave essential services vulnerable to cyber-attack”

about 11 hours ago
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Linda Yaccarino stepping down as CEO of Elon Musk’s X

The CEO of X, Elon Musk’s social network, announced on Wednesday she would resign.“After two incredible years, I’ve decided to step down as CEO of 𝕏,” Linda Yaccarino wrote.Musk replied to her tweet: “Thank you for your contributions.”The outgoing CEO said, “When @elonmusk and I first spoke of his vision for X, I knew it would be the opportunity of a lifetime to carry out the extraordinary mission of this company. I’m immensely grateful to him for entrusting me with the responsibility of protecting free speech, turning the company around, and transforming X into the Everything App

about 12 hours ago
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India cruise to victory in fourth T20 and seal historic series win over England

India made history at Old Trafford on Wednesday night by winning the fourth Twenty20 international by six wickets, sealing their first T20 international series victory in England.“This time, this team, this atmosphere, it’s magical,” Radha Yadav said. “We want to create something big going forward. We are going to dominate, no matter what.”England sit above India in the International Cricket Council’s T20 team rankings but the manner of this defeat suggests the rankings have not quite caught up with reality

about 6 hours ago
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India beat England by six wickets to win fourth women’s T20 and series – as it happened

Righto, my work here is done. Congratulations India. Plenty for England to ponder. Raf’s report will land shortly and we’ll be back in the morning. I think there’s a Test match on

about 6 hours ago
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Bank of England rolls out looser mortgage rules to help first-time buyers

about 13 hours ago
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Prax Lindsey oil refinery owners urged to ‘do decent thing’ for workers

about 17 hours ago
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Seven UK housebuilders to pay £100m to fund affordable homes after CMA investigation

about 20 hours ago
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Looser bonus rules and tax breaks needed to save London stock market, says CBI

about 23 hours ago
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London’s stock exchange needs a shot in the arm from the Treasury | Nils Pratley

about 23 hours ago
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ASA cracks down on online pharmacies advertising weight loss injections

1 day ago