Driverless cars should be tested in Darya Ganj: Rajan

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Driverless cars should be tested in Darya Ganj: Rajan

Kochi - He also said India has to embrace technology and become a leader in the digital transformation taking place around the globe.

By PTI

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Published: Fri 23 Mar 2018, 6:41 PM

Last updated: Fri 23 Mar 2018, 8:52 PM

Former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan today expressed fears that Artificial Intelligence would take up jobs--both high skilled and unskilled. He also raised concerns regarding driverless cars.
With advances in Machine Learning,Artificial Intelligence and Robotics, this was going to change still further, as they take up the jobs,ranging from those in unskilled sweatshops to high-skilled professions like medicine, the former RBI Governor said.
"What jobs will humans be able to do in 10-15 years that are immune from threat?Jobs that require high intelligence and creativity; jobs that require human empathy and jobs where human working for us bolster our status in some way," he said, delivering the keynote address outlining his vision for India at #FUTURE Global Digital Summit, organised by the Kerala government.
He also said that driverless cars must be ran along Darya Ganj to see if they work. He made this remark in light of a driverless car that killed a pedestrian in the US.
He said that these vehicles must be 'engaged in the crowded streets to Darya Ganj to be able to show the fact that they work.' He also added that the world needs more time to adopt the technology to the complications of the real world, the Financial Express reports.
He also said India has to embrace technology and become a leader in the digital transformation taking place around the globe without being bogged down by unfounded fears of job losses, incomes or machines replacing humans.
Among the biggest obstacles to technology adoption were fears of man being replaced by machines a fear that has existed since the industrial revolution,but never materialised. "Two hundred years since the industrial revolution, jobs are still around. People and society adapt to do the things that machines cannot do," he said.
 


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