Earlier in the week, Martin blogged about his experiments with ChatGPT, the new AI chatbot that's about to replace human "experts" across the world. We all agreed how scary this was. I commented that it reminded me of Dave Eggers' firm belief that society is moving towards handing over freedom of choice in return for the safety of conformity.
Here's another extract from The Every, a novel which is best described as 1984 meets Catch 22 with a healthy dollop of Gulliver's Travels. Yes, it's satire... but so close to reality that it's hard to work out which bits are true and which bits Eggers has created for comic effect.
In the following extract, Delaney has gone to work for the HereMe department which creates Smart Speakers. Eggers uses this as an excuse to chronicle the secret history of Smart Speakers, which sounds like fiction… until you realise we’ve already lived through much of it.
Smart speakers had an awkward introduction to the world.
They arrived in the 2010s to phenomenal sales, with hundreds of millions of
households adopting them within the first five years. Before The Every entered
the picture, the makers of the devices assured the buyers that the AI
assistants were never activated unless their designated name or code word was
spoken. This reassured the users that their private everyday conversations were
not being heard, that only brief requests were audible, and even then, never
stored. But a few months later, it was revealed that the smart speakers were in
fact listening all the time, or could
listen all the time. In fact, they could be activated by their manufacturers
any time at all. For this, the manufacturers apologised; perhaps there had been
some confusion, they said. Were we unclear?
The users, though momentarily upset at this foundational and
central deception, were assuaged when they were told that under no
circumstances were their conversations recorded.
It would be, both users and manufacturers agreed, an egregious breach of trust
to have a machine that a customer brought into their house – a machine,
everyone noted, that was purchased primarily to play music and inform them of
the current traffic – actually recording
the conversations conducted in these private households. That would be
unethical. And so it was assumed that no recording was being done by these home
assistants, until one day the manufacturers admitted that they had in fact been
recording just about every conversation every user had ever had, from the very
beginning.
Again the makers were contrite. When you were asking before
about whether we were recording conversations, they said, we didn’t quite
understand what you meant. We thought you meant recording and listening to these conversations, and
that of course we would never do. We would never.
We record the conversations of hundreds of millions of users, yes, but no
humans ever listen to any of these conversations. Conversations in the home,
between family members, are private, are sacrosanct! they said. We simply
record these conversations to improve our software, they said, to optimize our
services, to better serve you, the customers, better.
And for a while the users, though feeling wary and burned by
the series of revelations, looked askance at their smart speakers, wondering if
the tradeoff was actually worth it. On the one hand, their private family
conversations were being recorded and stored offsite for unknown future use by
a trillion-dollar company with a limitless litany of privacy violations. On the
other hand, they could find out the weather without ever looking out the
window.
Fine, the users said sternly, fists on hips, you can
continue to record everything we say, but – but! – if we ever find out that you
manufacturers were having actual humans
listen to our conversations, that will be one step over the line.
We would never! the manufacturers said, hurt by the
inference, which, they felt, was offensive even to think about, given how open
and transparent they had been from the start. Didn’t we reveal, they asked,
after we were caught, that our smart speakers were turning themselves off an on
at their own behest? And didn’t we admit, after we were caught, that we were
listening to and recording anything we wanted at any time, anything that was
said in the private homes of millions of users? And didn’t we reveal, after we
were caught, that we were recording all the private conversations every user
had in the privacy of their own homes?
After all this openness and contrition, they said, it stings
to think that customers would wonder aloud if the other shoes might drop. No
more shoes, said the manufacturers, would be dropping. We stand before you
barefoot and humbled.
When it was revealed that the manufacturers had in fact hired
10,000 humans, whose only purpose was to listen to, transcribe and analyse the
private conversations that had been recorded by these smart speakers, the
manufacturers were amazed at the outrage, as muted as it was. Yes, they said, we have all along been
recording and listening to your conversations, but none of these 10,000 workers
know your names, so what possible
difference would it make that we have all of your private conversations
recorded, and that we could with one or two keystrokes de-anonymize your
conversations at any time? And given the fact that every database ever created
has been hacked, these recordings could be accessed by anyone at any time who
had will enough to get them? What, the manufacturers asked, are you getting so
worked up about?
In fact, no one got worked up at all. Lawmakers were mute,
regulators invisible, and sales skyrocketed.
Eggers goes on to suggest the logical next steps for Smart Speakers... and they seem frighteningly prophetic. Go read The Every if you want to be really scared...
Miracle Legion came from Connecticut in 1983. They were on Rough Trade for a while, so the NME loved them. This is from their 1992 album Drenched. I'm a sucker for songs with "Ba ba ba ba baaa" choruses.
Soon they wouldn't need to employ 10,000 people to do it, just one AI...
ReplyDeleteHa! It's already out of date!
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