Submitted by MicroSofty88 t3_zymu1w in gadgets
Andyb1000 t1_j28snat wrote
Reply to comment by KSRandom195 in Saudis take control of US augmented reality company Magic Leap by MicroSofty88
For me it’s as simple as charging robots the same income tax as an employee. In my work, we account 40% additional salary for “on costs”. These are typically the wrapper that goes around managing employee; employee benefits, welfare, pensions, continual professional development and professional services like HR to deal with employee issues.
Any business that goes all in on automation is already making a 40% cost saving versus us bags of mostly water.
Versability t1_j28x5xq wrote
Amazon and Walmart are the two companies with the most employees in the entire world as far as I’m aware. It’s a pretty large margin too, as nobody but these two companies employs over 1 million people.
If automation replaced human workers, wouldn’t both of these companies have fewer workers than everybody else instead of more?
Versability t1_j28xicr wrote
I stand corrected—according to Wikipedia, McDonald’s is also on that list. Besides governments, Walmart, McDonald’s, and Amazon have the most employees.
123hoe t1_j290cni wrote
They deliver with drones and some of the warehouses already are replacing sorters with robots Amazon could fully autonomize tomorrow if the govt relaxed fsd requirements and hopefully give ubi or nationalized necessities
Versability t1_j296rwi wrote
Lmao There’s no regulation stopping Amazon from being fully automated. What is this FSD you speak of?
TheAmateurletariat t1_j298v6p wrote
Afraid it's not that simple since robots are not the same as humans 1:1. This would be easy to circumvent by creating 1 "robot" that could do the work of 10 people.
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