In recent weeks there has been a lot of talk about how Australia should use AI to increase productivity. I agree that AI could help productivity, but I also reckon AI is a distraction. A lot of the productivity benefits will come from making information and processes available online so that AI can use them, rather than from the AI directly. AI can't push a button or call an API that doesn't exist, so to make AI useful we'll have to create those things—and we will benefit from that whether or not we choose to use AI.
What I'm saying is that instead of rushing into an expensive and complex AI system to do things, why not start with a simple button that does the thing instead?
Scott Farquhar, Chair of the Tech Council of Australia, has actually hinted at that in a less-noted part of his recent National Press Club address (Disclaimer: Scott's company Atlassian acquired my company ThinkTilt in 2021, but we have no current connection). He's very much in favour of adopting AI, but he also asks for all levels of governments to make their services available via an API. I agree. APIs are how we make information and processes available online, and I think both business and government should focus on adopting APIs before AI.
Some specific examples:
None of this is to say that AI won't have any benefits. Scott's example of AI skin cancer screening is a good example of something that can be done better with AI (after all, your body doesn't have APIs). But in many popular examples of how AI might revolutionise our lives the AI seems dispensable—the real revolution would be that business and government open up their processes and information. They don't need an expensive and complex AI solution to do that, a simple button would suffice.