Submitted by IntroVertu t3_11yfwx6 in singularity
In the 18th century, the advent of mechanization and the increase in agricultural yields reduced the need for labor in the countryside. Peasants were then forced to leave for the cities to find work. People therefore left their villages in droves to look for work in the factories that were developing rapidly in the cities.
Later, a large part of the workers are in turn replaced by machines (which automate and massify even more the production of goods and thus of wealth). The primary and secondary sectors being now assured by machines, the citizens turn to the tertiary sector. Their job? Managing the complexity of a world that has become ultra-sophisticated. To manage this complexity, cities play an important role because they gather brains in one place and greatly facilitate knowledge exchange and collaboration.
But now, with the democratization of AI, many service sector jobs (consultant, translator, writer, financial analyst, radiologist...) will be replaced by these same AI. Maybe even all jobs except those requiring specific human interaction. Thus, accumulating people in cities seems suddenly less useful since it is now the AI that will "manage the complexity of the world". Why should we stay in ultra-polluted and overcrowded cities when most of the interactions we had before will become useless (from an economic point of view) ?
In your opinion, will the democratization of AI further accentuate the rural exodus or will it, on the contrary, make people return to the small cities and/or countryside?
darklinux1977 t1_jd7gwyo wrote
very good question ! In fact, this will be one of the last bequests of the sovereign state: the quality of the Telecom infrastructure and its resilience. For the AI and these dependencies to work, you need, among other things, cheap data, even free data, so efficient and amortized structures, only a strong sovereign state can make the ISPs bend. If a sovereign state has solved this problem, the very concept of megalopolis is dead