Report: Coordinated resilience infrastructure is needed in age of AI
Highly coordinated resilience infrastructure is needed in the age of artificial intelligence, says a new report released Thursday from the Elon University Imagining the Digital Future Center.
A survey found 82% believing artificial intelligence will play “a significantly larger role in shaping people’s lives and key societal functions in the next 10 years or less.” The resilience infrastructure is to “counterbalance the human and systemic challenges posed by widespread AI adoption.”
Authored by Janna Anderson and Lee Rainie, the nonscientific canvass was conducted between Dec. 26 and Feb. 12. More than 4,000 experts were invited to respond, drawing 386 responses to at least one aspect and 251 responses to open-ended questions.
“The central risk described by these experts is not a single catastrophic AI event,” said Anderson, professor of communications and senior researcher for the center. “They said accelerated AI use will lead to a cumulative reallocation of human agency until people and institutions find it harder to question, contest or even notice what has changed. That drift can look like ‘progress’ in the short term, but it has a price – the gradual weakening of human judgment, accountability, shared truth and the social fabric that makes self-government possible.”
Among the findings, only 13% said the level change is 20 to 30 years away. In decisions guided by artificial intelligence, “56% said that the time they expect AI will be significantly more advanced it will influence, guide or control ‘nearly all’ or ‘most’ human activities and decisions.” Another 24% said it would influence, guide or control nearly half.
Mel Sellick, founder of the Future Human Lab, said, “AI has become the infrastructure through which all relating now happens. Even when we think we are not using AI directly, we are constantly interacting with what AI has already touched. There is no ‘outside’ anymore. Some form of AI is upstream of everything. We are the last generation that knows what human capacity felt like before it became inseparable from AI.”
The report also found only 33% saying people “will be more satisfied than dissatisfied with AI systems at that time; 31% said people will be more dissatisfied than satisfied; 33% said people will have an equal amount of satisfaction and dissatisfaction with AI systems.”
Other findings include worries about the loss of human agency; epistemic fragmentation and collapse of shared reality; need for “existential literacy”; the “work quake,” meaning an economic threat and identity upheaval; new divisions and inequities; automated complacency; change in social interaction; and complications when nonhuman actors move into human spaces.
Latest News Stories
GOP candidates for Illinois governor challenge Pritzker on state finances
WATCH: Dems call for Noem’s impeachment, dismantling DHS
WATCH: Los Angeles area robotics team starts 25th season
Miller: Illinois ‘dragging its feet’ on voter rolls as election nears
Judge stops end of TPS for Haitians
Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker wants to extend pension buyout program
Congressional Conflicts: Like Pelosi, NJ Rep. has made tens of millions from Wall Street
Clintons agree to appear before House committee, no date set
Head Football Coach Resigns as Board Approves Personnel Changes
Google to pay $68M to end Assistant recordings class action
Dems fail in first try to use ‘state sovereignty’ to ‘veto’ ICE
Report says California’s bond debt load exceeds $99 billion