Posted 2013-February-01, 12:59
According to a guest on the Daily Show, an assistant professor with MIT (I think), her experience as a former F18 pilot and a current advisor on the development and use of remotely piloted aircraft (aka drones) was that the latter are far better than the former in many ways, including:
- cost
- decision making: a F18 pilot is acting on his or her own, with only a single tactical commander on the radio, whose ability to know what is going on is limited. A drone operator is part of a team, with a number of others capable of observing precisely what he is confronting and thus decision-making, in terms of firing weapons and targeting, is more reliable
- safety: obviously the drone operator is far safer than the F18 pilot, but the increased precision of the ordnance and the better decision making make for fewer collateral casualties and significantly reduced risk of friendly fire incidents.
Her thesis was also that as with many other forms of technologies developed primarily for military uses, civilian applications will soon become a major factor.
I think we can agree that some of these civilian applications will cause a lot of concern and may result in grief. I think it will be a long time before a civilian drone could wreak the havoc of a fully-fueled commercial airliner crashing into a building, but drones could be weaponized with anthrax or other biological weapons as well as more conventional items, such as explosives or nerve gas.
And Big Brother already uses drones and it would be naive to think that governments, the world over, won't expand such uses. The reality is that we no longer live in a free society, in so far as our ability to live without government surveillance is concerned. Even this forum is probably routinely monitored by a software program, as are virtually all emails and long-distance phone calls. It is unlikely that any human would ever look at anything written or spoken by most of us, but only because of volume constraints.
In the UK, especially in London, surveillance cameras are omnipresent, and private surveillance exists in many commercial areas in the US and Canada (and elsewhere), and a lot of private homes. The technology to monitor people, and the memory to store the observations, have been getting cheaper and cheaper and rate to continue doing so.
The fact is that matters like privacy are social constructs as much as any other 'right' might be. Our grandchildren will grow up (mine are growing up) in a world in which they will take it for granted that much of their lives will be accessible to others.
And as for technology: I saw a 60 Minutes segment the other day in which they said that robotics has led Phillips to move its electric razor business back to Europe from China. The robots are cheaper. However, the move gave rise to few new European jobs, and those were high-tech jobs manufacturing and servicing the robots. Hence, in large measure, the 'jobless recovery' in the US.
Fedex will probably be using unmanned aircraft for its freight business in a decade or two, costing a lot of pilots their jobs. Robots already assemble our cars. 3-dimensional printing is starting to replace old-fashioned machining.
What this seems to mean is that the role of the skilled or semi-skilled manual worker is vanishing. The jobs used to go to China, but it seems likely that China (and India) has only a limited time in which to enjoy that sort of outsourcing before it loses out to robots.
Science fiction has often portrayed the near-future (100-200 years ahead) as having a stratified society based on whether one has work or not, with the bulk of the population having none. That seems inevitable to me, and I am happy that my type of work won't vanish in the few years I have before retirement.
The same sort of science fiction routinely describes a world in which disgruntled individuals or groups possess the ability to wreak havoc. I see no way of avoiding that, and it may get worse not better. As the rich countries accelerate their progress, while simultaneously condemning many citizens to relative poverty and lack of opportunity, and as the fight for water and arable land (and defensible sea coasts) is driven by global warming, the reasons for strife will increase, rather than decrease. We are already seeing how the 'need' for security results in the loss of personal freedom, and that can't help but get worse as the potential for small groups or even solitary individuals to cause harm increases.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari