Kind: captions Language: en what are your thoughts sticking on artificial intelligence a little bit about the displacement of jobs that's another perspective that candidates like Andrew yang talked about being getting forever yang Yang so he unfortunately speaking of yang Yang has recently dropped out I know it was very disappointing and depressing yeah but the on the positive side he's I think launching a podcast so really cool yeah that's he just announced that I'm sure he'll try to talk you into trying to come on to the podcast so about ratatouille yeah maybe he'll be more welcoming of the ratatouille argument what are your thoughts on his concerns of the displacement of jobs of automations out of the of course there's positive impacts that could come from automation they I and but there could also be negative impacts and within that framework what are your thoughts about universal basic income so these interesting new ideas of how we can empower people in the economy i I think he was a hundred percent right on almost every dimension we see this in in squares business I mean he identified truck drivers I'm from Missouri and he certainly pointed to the concern and the issue that people from where I'm from feel every single day that is often invisible and not talked about enough you know the next big one is cashiers this is where it pertains to squares business we are seeing more and more of the point-of-sale moved to the individual customers hand in the form of their phone and apps and pre-order and order ahead we're seeing more kiosks we're seeing more things like Amazon go and the number of workers in as a cashier and Rito's immense and you know there's there's no real answers on how they transform their skills and and work and into something else and I think that does lead to a lot of really negative ramifications and the important point that he brought up around universal basic income is given that this shift is going to come and given it's going to take time to set people up with new skills and new careers they need to have a floor to be able to survive and this thousand dollars a month is such a floor it's not going to incentivize you to quit your job because it's not enough but it will enable you to not have to worry as much about just getting on day to day so that you can focus on what I'm what am I going to do now and what am I going to what skills do I need to acquire and I think I think that you know a lot of people point to the fact that you know during the industrial age we we had the same concerns around automation factory lines and everything worked out ok but the the biggest change is just the velocity and the centralization of a lot of the things that make this work which is the data and the algorithms that work on this on this data I think the the second biggest scary thing is just how around AI is just who actually owns the data and who can operate on it and are we able to share the insights from the data so that we can also build algorithms that help our needs or help our business or what not so that's where I think regulation could play a strong and positive part first looking at the primitives of AI and the tools we use to build these services that will ultimately touch every single aspect of the human experience and then how data where data is owned and how its how its shared so those those are the answers that as a society as a world we need to have better answers around which we're currently not they're just way too centralized into a few very very large companies but I think is about on with identifying the problem and proposing solutions that would actually work at least that we'd learn from that you could expand or evolve but I mean it's I think it's ubi is well well past its it's do I mean it was certainly trumpeted by Martin Luther King and and even even before him as well and like you said like the you know the exact thousand dollar mark might be might not be the correct one but you should take the stuff to try to implement these solutions and see see what works you