Crypto, AI, and Bureaucracy
Something we humans seem to be experts at is... bureaucracy. Like weeds, it can grow almost everywhere and you need to regularly weed or it becomes a problem.
In our country, and I'm sure in other places too, the biggest bureaucracy can be found in the public sector, and whenever you can avoid it by doing things online or even via the old-school post office, it's a visible improvement.
This way you can avoid lines, and contact with one or perhaps multiple grumpy employees, but you don't avoid unreasonably long terms to resolve various issues, to move through the system from one department to another, get some signatures, or whatever else is needed, and so on. We are talking about 30 days deadlines. Or, for example, the building permit was a few months of waiting. Both times we needed them recently.
I wonder if many of these bureaucrats understand what's coming for them.
We already see clear signs of the reduction of redundant jobs in society, but mostly in the private sector so far. The public sector is still more human-centric, with an excess of jobs, at least in our country.
I don't have a problem humans are employed in the public sector, although I prefer not to interact with them if I have an alternative. I do have a problem when they take so long to solve issues. Will AIs eventually replace most of them? I have no doubt about that. AI for processing + NFTs for tokenizing + eventually crypto payments would make most of these processes much smoother.
Let's tell you about something fresh in my mind, although it happened in a private company, not in a public one.
I needed to make a contract with the electricity company. The contract was all drafted, all details were completed, so it was just a matter of finding the contract in the system and making the payment. Or at least, that's how I see things as a customer. I tried the first time on Monday, not because I am the kind of person that storms into an office when it first opens for business in the morning and on Monday morning nonetheless, but because I have a slower Monday in general, and I could have afforded some dead time.
The problem was the office was full of people, especially at the service I needed to go to, so the dead time would have been at least 2h30m until I got there, so something like 3h with my time too. I wasn't going to wait that long, so I left.
I returned yesterday, not before checking online (at someone's advice) and seeing I could have made a reservation (which I did for yesterday). Even yesterday, there were two counters where I could go with this contract. At one of them, the employee was most of the time on the phone so practically only one worked for a while. There were only a few people in front of me, but entering contract details takes time, especially if you don't have type very well. When my turn came, I realized what some of the holdback was. When they tried to access my contract, which was pre-filled, it didn't show in their system. They called technical support, nobody answered. They called again, same result. At some point I think they called someone else to "clear" the contract, or something like that. Then it took a couple of minutes until they were able to access it at their end. All this needed both employees to consult each other, so again, only one counter worked.
It's not always the person in front of you's fault. It can be a buggy system or a antique process that hasn't been significantly updated in ages. In this case it wan't the direct human interaction that was lacking, although it often is, at least in the public sector. But improved technology and AI, and in some cases crypto, would fix many of these issues. However, the older generations would still have a very tough time adapting, and I understand them too.
Things are changing rapidly... I am readier than many others, I'm sure of that. You too, since you read this. But many will not see it coming...
Want to check out my collection of posts?
It's a good way to pick what interests you.
Posted Using InLeo Alpha
I am still doubting the future of artificial intelligence and the negative effect it has to offer
The potential negative effects won't go away. Neither will the push for AI development.
This post has been manually curated by @bhattg from Indiaunited community. Join us on our Discord Server.
Do you know that you can earn a passive income by delegating your Leo power to @india-leo account? We share 100 % of the curation rewards with the delegators.
100% of the rewards from this comment goes to the curator for their manual curation efforts. Please encourage the curator @bhattg by upvoting this comment and support the community by voting the posts made by @indiaunited.
I wonder if AI is trying to replace everything in this world. There was a video I watched and there were robots built like human and they could actually do everything a human being could do
It’s really crazy
I don't think it's possible yet. But human-like robots are getting better too.
AI + NFT + crypto = unemployment rate will increase 😁
'+ robots too. That's most likely. People need to be ready for that.
I am really afraid of how the crypto world and the artificial intelligence will really blend and work
I prefer to think less about the various ways this could get wrong, as it doesn't help me or improve the situation in any way.
Here too public sector is an ass to have to deal with, they are grumpy too and avaiable at little and weird hours, with AI this all could be improved, no wait time, better attitude etc...
I think that's the case in many places... I like human interaction, but not grumpy, tired, bored employees who barely say two words. AIs will likely make everything work quicker and probably more exact, once AIs get improved. The interaction itself with an AI probably won't be a pleasure, other than being quick.
Your post made me think about scenarios on why the public sector won't be automated soon. The biggest that comes to mind is the risk of hacking/tampering. I have read of some risks in modern cars where there was some vulnerability found. Others can access it, and control some functions. Imagining this where hackers get control of a robot and started changing data would be dangerous. As we've seen with the Windows OS, battling with virus, phishing, and scams is an ongoing battle. If the robots have cameras for eyes, could a malicious QR code be used against it?
Can't they already make people "disappear" or be born or have fictive lives from behind a screen and a keyboard in highly digitized societies?
The more advanced and connected to our lives technology gets, the more destructive hacking and tempering with it gets. AI is already involved in directing air and ground traffic, for example. They are even more sensitive areas than a few employees manipulating your personal information.
I guess that's true. I was thinking more of it being difficult to trace and fix the hacked data when it is done by a 'legit' entity. The blockchain can technically solve a lot of the 'disappearance', once personal details like fingerprint, retina, or even DNA are stored in the blockchain and easily accessible to all government agencies.
That's one way to do it, link physical bodies with digital identities.
The other way to do it is to make accounts user-owned, have value, and have an almost un-gamable reputation system that determines who can access what based on it. Or something like that.
That's interesting. I guess the transparency of blockchain can help with that un-gamable system. Real world applications of the blockchain technology are exciting.
It sucks when the technology doesn't work and there isn't enough staff. At some point, I hope technology catches up and makes thing easier. I wish things were efficient but most of the time, it isn't.
I think there are different segments of society. Some have highly sped up compared to others, and when they meet, they look at each other as different species, almost. 😀
That's right, there are many problems in regulating it, that's why there are many countries that haven't regulated it yet and people there are using it quietly.
I'm looking forward to these types of systems that will reduce a lot of bureaucracy in the public sector. Sometimes, the workers are not well organised in having their systems or processes up to date or streamlined correctly. AI can solve that problem for good.
I believe that's one of the domains with easy gains by introducing AIs. Different kinds of security measures will need to be in place for this eventuality, to combat hackers, as someone remarked in the comments.