UP

EU Commissioner says no to Bill Gates’ robot tax idea

Home page Technology
12 Punto 14 Punto 16 Punto 18 Punto
EU Commissioner says no to Bill Gates’ robot tax idea

Andrus Ansip, the European Commissioner in charge of the Digital Single Market, has said that he does not support Bill Gates' idea of taxing robots that replace human workers.

Axar.az reports citing Fortune.

Microsoft founder Gates made an argument for robots incurring taxes equivalent to that worker’s income taxes during an interview with Quartz in February. "Right now, the human worker who does, say, $50,000 worth of work in a factory, that income is taxed," he said. "If a robot comes in to do the same thing, you’d think that we’d tax the robot at a similar level."

But Ansip has made it clear that he is not in favor of a robot tax. Speaking during a CNBC-hosted panel at the Pioneers tech conference in Vienna on Thursday, Ansip said the "aim of taxation is not just (to) collect revenues... but to increase salaries of teachers and police," CNBC reports. "No way. No way," he added, when asked if he would support the tax.In his February interview, Gates argued that these taxes, paid by a robot's owners or makers, would be used to help fund labor force retraining. He even suggested that the policy would intentionally “slow down the speed of that adoption [of automation] somewhat,” giving more time to manage the broader transition.

Date
2017.06.02 / 20:59
Author
Axar.az
See also

Memory crunch to last until 2027 amid AI frenzy

Markov: WhatsApp soon to be blocked in Russia

Russia warns WhatsApp of full block

Ive, Altman reveal details of OpenAI’s secret AI gadget

Google launches Gemini 3, embeds AI model into search

Cloudflare outage didn’t affect AzStateNet

Google CEO: Trillion-dollar AI boom is irrational

Samsung raises DDR5 chip prices by 60%

Mitsuoka Orochi put up for sale in Japan - Photo

Durov launches Google Cloud alternative “Cocoon”

Latest
Xocalı soyqırımı — 1992-ci il Bağla
Bize yazin Bağla
ArxivBağla