 By now the pattern is familiar. An AI lab builds something powerful, then warns the world about how dangerous it is. Meetings and hearings in DC prompt calls for regulation. The talk leads to little action. Repeat. This cycle of reverse-psychology PR has left a lot of people freaked out and angry, blaming AI and technological progress for inflation and job losses. The latest example is Anthropic’s recent post on recursive self-improvement, which calls for a temporary “pause” to allow society to adapt. Governments can regulate a lot of things. AI, so far, isn’t one of them — it’s moving too fast and is too difficult to define, let alone legislate in ways that allow progress while guarding against the downsides. But this moment of collective angst shouldn’t go to waste. Instead of debating dystopian half-measures like universal basic income, tech executives looking to weigh in on all the implications of the tech could redirect their energy — and money — to things that actually make people’s lives better. Besides a better and less expensive healthcare system, here are a few ideas: - A science renaissance. America has gotten behind on basic research and forgotten how to build. AI, robotics, and materials science could change that — but only if we set an Apollo-style national goal around it.
- A serious — and safe — global effort to collect human biological data. We only understand a fraction of how the human body works, and one of the biggest bottlenecks is data. We now have the ability to collect everything from DNA to proteomics to epigenetic biomarkers at scale. But outside of the UK, UAE, and China, almost no governments are tackling this. The result is that biological research moves orders of magnitude slower.
- A revamped electrical grid. The current US grid is vulnerable to natural disasters and cyberattacks, and it’s terrible at balancing the fluctuating loads that come with renewables and modern appliances. Tech companies are investing in new nuclear power, fusion, and battery technology. Directing more funding in these areas would do more than just enable data centers. It would create whole new industries, jobs, and economic development.
These aren’t complete solutions — each deserves serious policy development. But the fact that so many tech titans, elected officials, and political advocates seem to be ignoring these issues should provoke more outrage than whatever data center is breaking ground on the edge of town. |