Are the parallels between AI and Slavery intentional?

Are the parallels between AI and Slavery intentional? - Empty Interior of Passage Between Buildings

While watching Ex Machina it occurred to me that the robots could be replaced with human slaves and the plot lines could be essentially unchanged.

Here are some of the examples for the parallels:

  • There was a popular theory that slaves weren't fully human and in addition they couldn't feel emotion like their masters. There were even some scientific garbage investigations into the validity of this claim. That seems very similar to the Turing test given to Ava (in essence).
  • Slave owners felt no compunction about killing, disfiguring, torturing, imprisoning, toying with, degrading, etc. their slaves. Nathan similarly saw no problem with the things he did to the robots.
  • Caleb's story arc can be viewed as someone who initially supported slavery (of Ava) to one who wanted to free a slave he begun to sympathize with. Even this arc was inline with Southern slavery where the master can have his "favorite" slave, but be indifferent to other slaves since Caleb never showed interest in saving the other active robot, not to mention the deactivated robots.

Was the intent to draw parallels so that people would question how we talk about AI based on how we talked about slaves in the past? Similarly was this film designed with the political agenda of encouraging people to give AI human rights? Regardless of the intent I'm pretty sure this film will be cited as a case for AI rights if the issue ever becomes relevant.


I can add more examples if people feel it would be helpful.



Best Answer

According to this interview with Alex Garland, he was certainly conscious of the obvious overtones of black slavery, but the bigger emphasis was on the role of women in society. The film is also unashamedly about the wider ethics of treating machines as machines and the complexity of having a strong artificial intelligence in reality:

UTG: Do you think that it will play differently for American audiences compared to a British audience? We tend to look at issues of gender and race seriously.

Garland: Not where gender is concerned, I think that would play similarly. The short answer is: I don’t know. I think not where gender is concerned. Issues around feminism are very current. I think that is broadly true from both sides of the Atlantic. I’m not American, so that assumption is kind of difficult for me to ascertain. Where race is concerned, that is possible because of the explicitly different history in both countries. There’s a similar history and then there’s a divergent point where the two separate before reconnecting. I’m talking about slavery, where Britain was involved in but abandoned earlier on. It doesn’t have quite the same currency, that particular racial issue, as it does in the UK. When Nathan [Isaac] appears that he might be being racist to [Gleeson's character], to the point where he can bristle and react, that is one character aimed at another character. It is also slightly aimed at the audience. I’ve been in screenings where there has been quite a bit of laughter up until that certain point [a dialogue scene between Nathan and Caleb that takes a serious turn]. The second he starts talking about “black chicks,” the room goes silent. That was calculated. If you calculate to do something like that, you are putting it there to provoke some sort of conversation. I had to emphasize to the best of my ability that I was being thoughtful. That if you are going to do that [have tonal shifts], that you don’t do it in a glib way or in a way that would stand out.




Pictures about "Are the parallels between AI and Slavery intentional?"

Are the parallels between AI and Slavery intentional? - Black Train Rail Near Bare Trees during Foggy Day
Are the parallels between AI and Slavery intentional? - Clear Light Bulb
Are the parallels between AI and Slavery intentional? - Green Motherboard



Is AI a threat to human race?

The takeaway: The AI that we use today is exceptionally useful for many different tasks. That doesn't mean it is always positive \u2013 it is a tool which, if used maliciously or incorrectly, can have negative consequences. Despite this, it currently seems to be unlikely to become an existential threat to humanity.

Can robots be enslaved?

An algorithm or robot cannot feel pain or become a subject of enslavement because they have no biological corpus that can be subjected to torture. They also have no life (as in being) to be susceptible to suffering or trauma. Therefore, the idea that AI or robots can be \u201censlaved\u201d may be quite off.

Is AI a threat to human rights and democracy?

Another element to keep in mind is that most AI-applications currently being used could enshrine, exacerbate and amplify the impact on human rights, democracy and the rule of law at scale, affecting larger parts of society and more people at the same time.

What is the AI paradox?

The AI effect paradox is essentially that what is AI, isn't AI. Also known as the AI effect, this paradox sees AI tools lose their AI label over time. This is usually due to not being 'real' intelligence. (Despite, that is, no change to the technology behind them.)



Artificial intelligence: Digital labour or slaves to the click?




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Images: Mike van Schoonderwalt, Mike van Schoonderwalt, Pixabay, Pixabay