Humans have feared the rise of machines since the 19th century, when textile workers known as the Luddites smashed the mechanical looms they thought would replace them.
Yes, machines have been replacing human workers for a very long time.
Until recently it was manual laborers who had to worry about losing their jobs at factory or farm due to technological progress: robots can do many things humans can’t, more efficiently – and without complaint.
Now, so-called knowledge workers could be on the chopping block, too – from telemarketers and salespeople to surgeons, and perhaps programmers and security software engineers.
Even reporters, news writers and bloggers like me are facing competition from robots (more precisely, algorithms collectively known as artificial intelligence, or AI).
Last week, the giant Chinese internet and gaming company Tencent published an article on its news portal about the rising price of consumer goods in China – not exactly earth-shattering news, except that the article was written by a robot called Dreamwriter.
Dreamwriter wrote the 1000-word article, using algorithms that search online sources and data, in just 60 seconds. The article quoted economists and highlighted trends in a style indistinguishable from a human financial reporter.
According to the South China Morning Post, Dreamwriter’s article was the first robot-written news article in the Chinese language.
The Morning Post quoted a Chinese journalist who said China’s state-run media doesn’t give reporters much creative license, which makes them easily replaceable by robot writers:
You know, many reporters working for government-run newspapers across the country usually copy and paste the statements and news press. They are not allowed to express doubt or really investigate reports against the authorities. So robot reporters could easily replace a lot of Chinese reporters like this nationwide.
Surely things are different in the West, where journalists are expected to produce original work?
Unfortunately for writers, companies like Narrative Science in the US have been producing robot-written news stories for outlets like Forbes and the Big Ten Network going back a few years now.
Robots are already writing thousands of news articles a year about sports, financial and weather reports.
Last year, the Associated Press began using an automated system called Wordsmith to produce articles about companies’ quarterly earnings, although the Verge reports that no human jobs have been lost.
These are data-driven and recurring events that can be based on templates, which is fairly simple work for a robot.
Yet the algorithms powering robot writers like Dreamwriter, Wordsmith (by Automated Insights) and Narrative Science’s Quill, are getting smarter – machine learning even allows them to identify and highlight dramatic “turning points” in sports games or business transactions.
Could robots one day write novels and poetry too?
The Neukom Institute for Computational Science at Dartmouth College, US, is asking AI researchers to find out.
The institute is sponsoring three competitions for its Turing Tests in Creative Arts to see if robots can write “human quality” short stories, sonnets, and dance music DJ sets.
Researchers have been experimenting with robot novels for years – one program called Racter “wrote” a book titled “The Policeman’s Beard is Half Constructed” back in 1983.
Twitter is home to many types of bots, some of which have been tweeting out bizarre poetry.
As a professional writer, how worried should I be?
Robot writers probably aren’t going to replace me anytime soon, but Narrative Science CTO and co-founder Kristian Hammond predicted back in 2012 that 90% of news stories will be written by robots within 15 years.
But I don’t know if a robot could ever write a story like this one, because as a human with hopes and fears, I can write about how it feels to have my job threatened by automation.
It makes me nervous.
Image of human hand touching an android hand courtesy of Shutterstock.com.
Anonymous
According to the Wired article you link to above, Kristian Hammond of that robot-writer company also predicted, about 4 years ago, that a robot would win a Pulitzer within 5 years. How’s that looking?
psy
As a fan of irony, I note that in the sentence:
“Humans have feared the rise of machines since the 19th century, when textile workers known as the Luddites smashed the mechanical looms they thought would replace them.”
…you link to an article which very thoroughly explains that the Luddites did not fear machines, and indeed were textile machine operators in their day jobs.
Paul Ducklin
To be fair, the article says “feared the _rise_ of machines”.
Maybe, just maybe, “rise” is not the right word, implying as it does today some sort of collective robotic intellect. But fearing what the effect of the machines might be on the labour market is quite different from fearing the machines themlseves.
I reckon that if the author had wanted to suggest that the Luddites “feared the machines,” he would have written exactly those words.
psy
Well, maybe I should have been more specific as well…
To beat on the horse just a little more, the article says:
‘… the Luddites themselves “were totally fine with machines,” says Kevin Binfield, editor of the 2004 collection Writings of the Luddites. They confined their attacks to manufacturers who used machines in what they called “a fraudulent and deceitful manner” to get around standard labor practices. “They just wanted machines that made high-quality goods,” says Binfield, “and they wanted these machines to be run by workers who had gone through an apprenticeship and got paid decent wages. Those were their only concerns.” ‘
I was ignorant of the this until I read the article, and like probably most people assumed the Luddites feared machines, or the rise of the machines, or just hated gadgets in general. Apparently, not the case at all. One might twist labor practice protests into “feared the rise of the machines”, but that is at best misleading IMHO.
In any case thank you for an excellent article, and for linking to an another excellent article.
KEN
I am working on a program that will read robotic poetry and criticize it.
Paul Ducklin
10 REM ROBOT POET CRITIC
20 PRINT “ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT”
30 END
Anonymous
Seams pretty Basic.
Steve
I C++ what you mean!
Reusch
Now get this: this article was actually written by a robot posing as John Z. Not only are they outdoing humans in everything they do, they are also getting into human psyche. Phycological warfare?
tartanrose
Don’t worry at all about this…….I reckon you guys are totally safe!
Apart from your excellent informative and helpful articles……….What Robot is going to comment with information on “cable ties for suitcases”…….. on not harming the zips on suitcases to advice on “sawing” one cable with another.
What Robot would bother to inform us of the difference between Chester and the mascot from the Queensland Police! (said with love and respect!)
No, for my fifty plus years in the workplace some of us were worried along the way about being replaced by a Robot………It never happened although sometimes along the way I felt I was the Robot!
Thank you for the great work of all the writers at Naked Security.
tartanrose
Apologies if my comment above looks like a criticism!
It’s not meant to.
Probably just a failed attempt to be witty like Paul Ducklin whose humour I love and posting this while in a hurry to do the iPad update to IOS 9 was not a good idea.
I’ve always tried to be respectful online because……… sometimes…….people aren’t…….and there’s enough stuff going on in the world without adding more negativity, so hope my comment has not offended.