I read everybodyâs 2024 tech predictions so you wouldnât have to.
You thought 2023 was a big year for AI? Buckle up Every new year brings with it a gaggle of writers, analysts, and gamblers trying to tell the future. When it comes to tech news, that used to amount to some bloggers guessing what the new iPhone would look like. But in 2024, the technology most people are talking about is not a gadget, but rather an alternate future, one that [Silicon Valley insiders say is inevitable](. This future is powered by artificial intelligence, and lots of people are predicting that itâs going to be inescapable in the months to come. That AI will be ascendant is not the only big prediction experts are making for next year. Iâve spent the past couple of days reading every list of predictions I can get my hands on, including [this very good one from my colleagues at Future Perfect](. A few big things show up on most of them: social mediaâs continued fragmentation, Appleâs mixed-reality goggles, spaceships, and of course AI. Whatâs interesting to me is that AI also seems to link all these things together in much the same way that the rise of the internet basically connected all of [the big predictions of 2004](. Let me be honest, though: I donât really know what to think about whatâs to come with AI. Maybe 2024 will be the year of artificial intelligence, but I also thought [2023 was supposed to be the year of AI](. And despite hundreds of billions of dollars flowing into the industry, I still donât feel like AI is changing my life. When ChatGPT had its breakout moment after OpenAI released it in late 2022, there was widespread agreement that 2023 [would be the year generative AI hit the mainstream](. And now apparently 2024 will be the year the technology [gets really good]( and [starts changing the way we do absolutely everything](. If your job involves a computer, chances are youâve already noticed some changes. You now have a whole host of AI-powered chatbots, [like Microsoftâs Copilot digital assistant](, which can help you summarize meeting notes or build a presentation. Your boss loves this AI assistant concept because itâs designed to help you do more work in less time, and you might like it simply because it makes your job easier. Either way, with [billions of dollars of investor dollars pouring into AI companies](, we can all expect to encounter these tools more often this year. âI expect mass adoption by companies that will start delivering some of the productivity benefits that weâve been hoping for for a long time,â Erik Brynjolfsson, economist and director of Stanford Digital Economy Lab, wrote [in a list of 2024 predictions](. âIf we embrace it, it should be making our jobs better and allow us to do new things we couldnât have done before.â This is a great prediction, because it will be at least partially correct no matter what happens this year. (Itâs also worth flagging that the Bureau of Labor Statistics [actually showed a slight uptick]( in productivity in 2023 after years of relatively little growth.) You can find similar sentiment in the chorus of experts cheering big moves in AI, including veteran tech journalists like [Casey Newton]( and [Alex Kantrowitz]( as well as research powerhouses like [Gartner]( and [McKinsey](. They all seem to agree that AI will make some technological leaps (i.e., it will get really good) and that progress will have significant impact (i.e., it will change the way we do absolutely everything). An AI-powered election year should make everyone nervous If these two things are true, one place we may see AI become powerful is where weâd least want it: elections. We know for sure that 2024 will be [the biggest election year in history](, with a billion people going to the polls, including in the US. One big fear is that AI, [combined with a breakdown of oversight at social media companies](, will be used to flood the zone with what AI expert Oren Etzioni [called]( âa tsunami of misinformation.â This is a grim prediction, and unlike some of the more optimistic forecasts on AI, itâs not hard to believe it. Generative AI tools can crank out realistic fake images, audio clips, and even videos with remarkable efficiency. And itâs already started. Last April, the Republican National Committee [made an AI-generated ad]( that showed fake images of President Joe Biden alongside fake images of the American dystopia his reelection would supposedly create. The state of Arizona [created its own AI-generated fakes]( and then tried to trick election officials in a two-day simulation meant to prepare them for a flood of misinformation this year. Suffice it to say, the kinds of AI tools youâd need to make ads like these even more believable have gotten better ([and more disturbing]() since last year, and, if the experts are right, theyâre going to get really good this year. Another thing to worry about: hallucinations. One of the major shortcomings of generative AI technology like ChatGPT right now is its tendency to hallucinate, or make up information. And since AI is being hailed as a way to improve the way we search for information, a sudden flood of accidentally fake information [could be just as big a problem]( as deliberate misinformation. Google and Microsoft [are already using AI]( to provide paragraph-long answers to search queries that show up above the traditional lists of links, which themselves [increasingly include AI-generated content](. Is it all full of hallucinations? Itâs hard to know. The threat of misinformation is just one of a long list of reasons why lawmakers in Washington and around the world have been scrambling to regulate AI, and those efforts are going to intensify this year. The European Union [is working on the worldâs first comprehensive AI law](, although the technologyâs capabilities [are leapfrogging the new policies]( before they can be put into place. Biden [has also been assertive about kickstarting the process]( of building a regulatory framework for AI here in the United States, signing the [Executive Order on the Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence]( last October. And Congress [is expected to pick up the AI debate]( in 2024. Iâm barely scratching the surface here. Yes, AIâs influence will just keep growing. But what may come after this year â you know, the reason why thereâs a [big debate over responsible AI]( and a collective fear that [AI superintelligence could rise up]( and destroy society as we know it â is even more serious. But itâs not all bad Itâs also important to remember that some things happening in tech this year sound downright fun. On the hardware side of things, the big event to watch is [the imminent release of the Apple Vision Pro headset](. The company says it will begin selling the mixed-reality goggles in âearly 2024.â That could be soon â itâs early 2024 right now â but it likely wonât matter to a lot of people [since the headsets will cost $3,500](. Thereâs also the fact that plenty of companies, including big ones like Google and Meta, have tried to make headsets mainstream, but Appleâs track record of succeeding where others have failed has people extra excited about the Vision Pro. This will be Appleâs first new major product since the Watch launched a decade ago, so expect frenzied attention on the idea that weâll be wearing computers on our faces, talking to lifesize avatars, and staring less at our phones in the not-too-distant future. (Instead, I guess, weâll be staring through our phones.) Weâre also supposed to [go back to the moon]( this year â or thereabouts. We wonât actually land on the thing, but NASAâs Artemis II mission, scheduled for November, could put astronauts closer to the moon than theyâve been since 1972, the year of the last Apollo mission. An actual lunar landing [is slated for the Artemis III mission in 2025](, and eventually, NASA [plans to build a base camp]( there, potentially allowing us to mine the moon for resources that allow us to live there forever. Back on Earth, weâll learn more about outer space thanks to the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, which is expected to go online this year in Chile. Itâs essentially [the worldâs largest digital camera]( and will start scanning the entire sky over the southern hemisphere every three days for 10 years, mapping our solar system and the Milky Way in detail and giving us more information to understand mysteries like dark energy and dark matter. The observatory also looks [like a spaceship]( crashed into the side of a mountain. Itâs too soon to tell what will make 2024 exceptional. And maybe it wonât be. Perhaps the elections around the world will go off without a hitch, maybe even relatively misinformation-free. Maybe work will still feel like work by December, and AI chatbots wonât be our new watercooler buddies. But as the months fall away, the future will remain uncharted, surprising things will happen, and predictions will be proven wrong. Thatâs whatâs causing the anxiety, by the way. We donât know whatâs going to happen because it hasnât happened yet. âAdam Clark Estes, senior editor [An illustrated â2024â is seen through a binocular field of view.]( Paige Vickers/Vox [24 things we think will happen in 2024]( [From Trump to Tesla, how 2024 will shake out, according to the Future Perfect team.]( [An illustration of three unhappy figures on a carousel with a Hinge logo on the top. Itâs decorated with hearts and red and pink ribbons.]( Jess Hannigan for Vox [Online daters love to hate on Hinge. 10 years in, itâs more popular than ever.]( [Hinge has tried its darnedest to fix online dating. Is the real problem us?]( [Digital illustration depicting the evolution of a man in a zip-up hoodie from sitting at a desk in front of a computer, to crawling, to lunging, to standing up straight on a hoverboard, appearing buff and muscular, with his zip-up hoodie discarded on the ground. This takes place in an office building with a glass wall overlooking skyscrapers.]( Richard A. Chance for Vox [Silicon Valleyâs very masculine year]( [Ravenous, carnivorous, and totally yoked: How men in tech have evolved.](
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