For the best listening experience and to never miss an episode, subscribe to Machines Like Us on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
The people running technology companies love to make wild predictions about the future. They’ve told us that artificial intelligence will cure cancer, eliminate drudgery and solve climate change. But those utopian visions haven’t materialized. Where are the revolutionary moonshots we’ve been promised?
Aza Raskin may well have one. Raskin is the president of the Center for Humane Technology and the co-founder of the Earth Species Project, a non-profit using machine learning to decode animal communication.
Raskin and his colleagues are envisioning a world where birds can vote and dolphins get to represent themselves in court. That might sound hard to believe – but Raskin says they’re not far from making it a reality.
So I wanted to ask him: what happens to our world – and to us – when animals have the right to speak?
Mentioned
My Octopus Teacher (2020), directed by Pippa Ehrlich & James Reed
Unlocking Avian Secrets: How Tiny Biologgers Are Revealing the Hidden Communication of Carrion Crows, by Earth Species Project
AI-powered playbacks engage in flexible vocal interactions with zebra finches, by Logan S. James et al.
Decoding Killer Whale Communication From Above and Below, by Earth Species Project
Innovative Behaviours and Synchronization in Bottlenose Dolphins, by Stacy Braslau-Schneck
What the World Thinks About AI and Animal Communication: Findings from Our First Global Survey, by Earth Species Project
Recordings courtesy of Dr. Vittorio Baglione and Dr. Daniela Canestrari (University of León), Logan James and McGill University, and the Raincoast Conservation Foundation.