I know this comes up a lot, so there's a risk this guy isn't saying 
anything new here, but I browsed and decided to view the video and thought 
I'd throw it out in case anyone else wants to enter that process. 

Here's the first few paragraphs, linke at bottom. Edge basically. 

*THE MYTH OF AI*

A lot of us were appalled a few years ago when the American Supreme Court 
decided, out of the blue, to decide a question it hadn't been asked to 
decide, and declare that corporations are people. That's a cover for making 
it easier for big money to have an influence in politics. But there's 
another angle to it, which I don't think has been considered as much: the 
tech companies, which are becoming the most profitable, the fastest rising, 
the richest companies, with the most cash on hand, are essentially people 
for a different reason than that. They might be people because the Supreme 
Court said so, but they're essentially algorithms.

If you look at a company like Google or Amazon and many others, they do a 
little bit of device manufacture, but the only reason they do is to create 
a channel between people and algorithms. And the algorithms run on these 
big cloud computer facilities.

The distinction between a corporation and an algorithm is fading. Does that 
make an algorithm a person? Here we have this interesting confluence 
between two totally different worlds. We have the world of money and 
politics and the so-called conservative Supreme Court, with this other 
world of what we can call artificial intelligence, which is a movement 
within the technical culture to find an equivalence between computers and 
people. In both cases, there's an intellectual tradition that goes back 
many decades. Previously they'd been separated; they'd been worlds apart. 
Now, suddenly they've been intertwined.

The idea that computers are people has a long and storied history. It goes 
back to the very origins of computers, and even from before. There's always 
been a question about whether a program is something alive or not since it 
intrinsically has some kind of autonomy at the very least, or it wouldn't 
be a program. There has been a domineering subculture—that's been the most 
wealthy, prolific, and influential subculture in the technical world—that 
for a long time has not only promoted the idea that there's an equivalence 
between algorithms and life, and certain algorithms and people, but a 
historical determinism that we're inevitably making computers that will be 
smarter and better than us and will take over from us

http://edge.org/conversation/the-myth-of-ai

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