Why Society Should Expect More From AI

Why Society Should Expect More From AI

In a recent poll I shared, almost 70% of you said AI is not overhyped and are excited about its potential. This got me thinking: what will it take to fully realize this potential, and are we making the right tradeoffs as a society–as we move toward an AI-driven world? Let me delve into this further.

The societal costs of AI

Today, society is incurring significant costs as we accelerate AI development. These costs fall into three main categories:?

The first major cost is environmental. For example, did you know that the processing power needed for AI is doubling every 100 days? According to the World Economic Forum, by 2028, AI could use more power than Iceland did in 2021!

To make this a bit more concrete, training a large language (LLM) model like GPT-3 uses nearly 1,300-megawatt hours of electricity. That’s roughly equivalent to the annual power consumption of 130 U.S. homes, or 1.6 million hours watching Netflix, just to match the energy needed to train GPT-3! According to the Peterson Institute for International Economics, the carbon footprint of training an LLM is equivalent to about 626,000 pounds of carbon dioxide, leading to climate change and its many devastating effects.

The exponential growth of electricity needed at data centers (which is ultimately where AI models crunch away) also depletes our freshwater resources. For example, training GPT-3 in some U.S. data centers uses about 700,000 liters of clean water. Each time an AI model ‘thinks’ (a process called ‘Inference’), it again has to use computing resources. For example, ChatGPT answering about 20-50 questions is like the tool 'drinking' a 500ml bottle of water. As of June 2024, 627 million people use ChatGPT monthly–do the math, that’s a lot of water consumption! All this could negatively affect nature’s ecosystems and agriculture.?

The second societal cost of AI is financial. ?We have all heard about Sam Altman’s ambition to raise $7 trillion from investors to build new factories to make chips specifically designed for AI, and about his plans to build a $100 billion data center with Microsoft for AI. Similarly, companies like Anthropic, Google Deepmind, Meta, etc., are all spending billions of dollars to train the latest and greatest AI models. This is a massive reallocation of financial resources from other societal/financial uses. Every time money is spent on something, there’s an ‘opportunity cost’ of what else that money could have been spent on. Imagine the positive social and financial impact those billions or trillions of dollars could have if they were invested in other areas.

The third major cost to society of AI, as I see it, is job losses. According to a recent report from Goldman Sachs, AI could replace the equivalent of 300 million full-time jobs, and according to the McKinsey Global Institute, by 2030, at least 14% of employees globally could need to change their careers due to digitization, robotics, and AI advancements. While many new jobs will be created as people get reskilled, the disruption of employment (no matter how transitionary) caused by AI cannot be ignored.

Are all these costs worth it??

In some ways, these three massive costs society is paying for AI are to be expected. As the saying goes, ‘no pain, no gain,’ right? Incurring costs for a major breakthrough isn’t necessarily futile, as long as they yield commensurate (or ideally, more) benefits than they cost.? This is a standard way in which investors look at deals; they calculate a ‘return on investment’ (ROI). So the big question for us, as a society, is ‘Are we getting the ROI we deserve from AI?’

Right now, I would argue that the excitement and use cases being touted are largely NOT worth all the societal costs.?

Much of the focus seems to be on chatbots and AI assistants that can do things like write poems, create songs, plan vacations or create meal plans for us. We’re thrilled with the ‘deep fakes’ and marvel at the ‘AI art’ that machines are creating. Startups with no revenue and no real use cases are getting billion-dollar valuations because they promise us yet another way in which AI will entertain or allow us to do our white-collar work with much less effort.

Don’t get me wrong; these feats are worth marveling at. Never before in history has technology advanced to a level of intelligence that is almost human-like. What I’m saying is, society should expect more from AI and hold it accountable. We need to see significantly better ROI from AI.

Anyone who knows me knows that I often say “Do Hard Things.” This comes from my belief in the responsibility that comes with privilege. The only way we can justify privilege is by using it to do really hard things for society, like solving big problems and creating opportunities for others.

Similarly, when we’re consuming all these resources for AI, we shouldn’t be doing so just for frivolous reasons. We should instead be using AI to solve the world’s most complex, difficult problems. I’m talking about truly meaningful things that unleash progress for humanity and don’t just make us lazier and entertain us. That’s the only way we can justify the environmental and financial “privileges” that AI is enjoying today.

In the coming weeks, I’ll share a few use cases where I believe AI is “earning its privilege” of consuming large chunks of our financial and environmental resources. I’d also love to hear from you–what real, scaled use cases (not ‘proof of concepts’)? have you seen that make you say ‘Now, that’s worth the cost of AI!’?

#DemandMorefromAI #AIforReal #MeaningfulAI#ExpectMorefromAI

Eloge NIYOMWUNGERE

Impact driven entrepreneur|Critical thinker|Gogettaz Africa 2022 Impact award Winner and more |Speaker| YALI Alumuni |Generation African Fellow|BBA holder In Production and Operations management

4 个月

Interesting view.. I always get inspired and learn a lot from reading your articles dear Fred Swaniker . And this consistently pushes to think deep of how best to integrated all these aspects in my business given to stay ahead of my competitors . Keep it up , we are following from Burundi and inspired to keep doing hard things .

Orbeenga Apine

Business Development Enthusiast ? Workflow Automation Specialist

4 个月

Hi Fred, quality article, but then again that's expected from someone of your understanding.however, while I see your concern in most of the article I will deviate from your contention to even remotely apportion a blame to AI for not matching returns on resultant costs..humans are completely to blame. AI has demonstrated nothing but capacity to produce material value to real world human challenges, is it bringing education to the remotest of individuals, or predicting future outcomes.or diagnosis and treatment?whichever Human problem AI even at this nascent state can produce that value If properly directed.but alas, as is customary to humans when gifted things free what do we do with this unimaginable gift? Play around with it asking silly questions..is just the way of humans, similar to the analogy of religion God gave us the gift of free will and what do we do with it we chose sin and destruction and violence.anyways, as much as it pains me to say this, because myself cannot afford the technology if it's not free, but we should Pay to use AI because most people myself included are completely unaware of these costs. And oh, I forgot I'm also a beneficiary of one of your programs in conjunction with Mastercard AICE. Just complete.

Kezah Kayitesi ,MBA

Business Architect: Catalyzing Business Growth | Championing Innovation and Entrepreneurship | Creating an Impact

4 个月

Insightful read! Intriguing how easy it is to overlook the environmental implications of AI. As for finance is there room to look at this from the perspective of “current deprivation equating to futuristic substances”, yes the money could be allocated to more “dire” world problems but it’s plausible AI will bring about more permanent and sustainable resolve independent of repetitive investment. As per “job loss” “the crisis of irrelevance”, I think its an ideal moment for governments to take a more intentional approach to building social economic models such as universal basic income/services (for the future), to cushion against economic dislocation. We could as well challenge the entire fabric of employment, seeing that soon robots will indeed play the role of producer and consumer making most of our 8-5 roles and very existence void, perhaps then “employment” will revolve around simply living.

Gutu Zelalem

Msc, Engineering manager, Logistics Management Specialist

4 个月

Good insight!, the cost is enormous I think it is going to be crucial in industry 4.0.

Andrew Karue, MBA, MCIArb, iNED

Risk Management Expert @ SNDBX | Certified Arbitrator and Mediator

4 个月

I believe a fourth big cost is ensuring AI uses relevant and truthful data that is contextual to Africa. We will need to build our own data and stories that make AI relevant to the African context otherwise we once again risk falling behind in this world’s “arms race”

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