Google has just announced the appointment of the head of
their self-driving car division. These basically driverless cars--really sea level drones--are one of the
proudest products of the artificial intelligence industry, of which
Techglomerates like Google obviously regard as the future of the race (“Google Hires Auto Veteran to Lead Self-Driving Car Project,” NYT, 9/13/15). The question is where is the driverless car going
and in general what will happen when artificial intelligence takes over where
those of humans leave off (Google X is in fact the mysterious name given to
the division formerly run by Sebastian Thrun and devoted to these kinds of
“heady” explorations)? For instance, if you have ever been at a boring dinner
party, one of those sit down affairs populated by stuffy academics where
everyone competes for their 15 minutes of fame, you will realize how much more
fun it would be to have dinner with a computer. In the movie Her that’s exactly what happens when
Joaquin Phoenix falls in love with his Siri like operating system (whose voice
is played by Scarlet Johansson). But let’s say you get in your newly acquired
driverless car thinking you’re going to a meeting. Naturally the intelligence
at the wheel will want to put on some tunes and if it’s a nice day it might go for
some 60’s Beach Boys oldies like “Don’t Worry Baby,” “I Get Around” or “Surfer
Girl.” All of a sudden you will find your driverless Subaru veering of the Long
Island Expressway and onto the Meadowbrook which leads to Jones Beach. Even
though it’s your car, you have given the wheel over to something else which like Christine, the car in the Stephen King novel, obviously has a mind of its own. Who are you to argue? You
will try to rationalize saying OK I’m
playing hooky from my job, but my driverless car knows what’s best for me. It
has one of the most advanced motherboards in the country or even universe.
Well, you end up having a nice day and even meet a cool chick, but it’s really
time to get home. You shower and climb into the car thinking you’re on your way and you will get back in time to make up for your absence with a top rate
power point the next day. Your focus groups will really go nuts and you’ll
become a marketing guru. But lo, your driverless car has other ideas in mind. It seems to want to hit a bar
on the way home and what’s worse it goes for those dives. You sit baking in the tawdry parking lot with its buckling concrete
and are forced to wait until your driverless car has had enough, whatever that means for
AI’s, who don’t drink, but are looking for action anyway. You could take a
walk, but it's your car and you still want to know what its plans are and
where it’s going. You open the glove compartment and look for something in the
manual that tells you how to get a driverless car back under your control. However,
that’s the one thing missing since the whole essence of the driverless car is
that it has no driver. Light, brakes, engine maintenance are all covered, yet
there’s nothing about proxies or decision making. There’s nothing even about
what happens to your driverless car when you die. Will the car simply take care
of itself and continue to perform it’s alternate side of the streets parking
tasks and annual NYS vehicle inspection? Will it embark on one of those trips across the country? Your mind goes back to that first day
in the showroom. You had a funny feeling about the car, which you were afraid
to acknowledge. It seemed willful, even there, like it had a mind of its own.
Now you see you were right. You start having second thoughts. If you hadn’t
bought a driverless car, you might not have gotten into this mess in the first
place.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.