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Could a ‘grey swan’ event bring down the AI revolution? Here are 3 risks we should be preparing for

Investing / opinion
Could a ‘grey swan’ event bring down the AI revolution? Here are 3 risks we should be preparing for
swans
James Lauritz/Getty.

By Cameron Shackell*

The term “black swan” refers to a shocking event on nobody’s radar until it actually happens. This has become a byword in risk analysis since a book called The Black Swan by Nassim Nicholas Taleb was published in 2007. A frequently cited example is the 9/11 attacks.

Fewer people have heard of “grey swans”. Derived from Taleb’s work, grey swans are rare but more foreseeable events. That is, things we know could have a massive impact, but we don’t (or won’t) adequately prepare for.

COVID was a good example: precedents for a global pandemic existed, but the world was caught off guard anyway.

Although he sometimes uses the term, Taleb doesn’t appear to be a big fan of grey swans. He’s previously expressed frustration that his concepts are often misused, which can lead to sloppy thinking about the deeper issues of truly unforeseeable risks.

But it’s hard to deny there is a spectrum of predictability, and it’s easier to see some major shocks coming. Perhaps nowhere is this more obvious than in the world of artificial intelligence (AI).

Putting our eggs in one basket

Increasingly, the future of the global economy and human thriving has become tied to a single technological story: the AI revolution. It has turned philosophical questions about risk into a multitrillion-dollar dilemma about how we align ourselves with possible futures.

US tech company Nvidia, which dominates the market for AI chips, recently surpassed US$5 trillion (about A$7.7 trillion) in market value. The “Magnificent Seven” US tech stocks – Amazon, Alphabet (Google), Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla – now make up about 40% of the S&P 500 stock index.

The impact of a collapse for these companies – and a stock market bust – would be devastating at a global level, not just financially but also in terms of dashed hopes for progress.

Jensen Huang, chief executive of Nvidia, which has become the world’s most valuable company. Lee Jin-man/AP.

AI’s grey swans

There are three broad categories of risk – beyond the economic realm – that could bring the AI euphoria to an abrupt halt. They’re grey swans because we can see them coming but arguably don’t (or won’t) prepare for them.

1. Security and terror shocks

AI’s ability to generate code, malicious plans and convincing fake media makes it a force multiplier for bad actors. Cheap, open models could help design drone swarms, toxins or cyber attacks. Deepfakes could spoof military commands or spread panic through fake broadcasts.

Arguably, the closest of these risks to a “white swan” – a foreseeable risk with relatively predictable consequences – stems from China’s aggression toward Taiwan.

The world’s biggest AI firms depend heavily on Taiwan’s semiconductor industry for the manufacture of advanced chips. Any conflict or blockade would freeze global progress overnight.

2. Legal shocks

Some AI firms have already been sued for allegedly using text and images scraped from the internet to train their models.

One of the best-known examples is the ongoing case of The New York Times versus OpenAI, but there are many similar disputes around the world.

If a major court were to rule that such use counts as commercial exploitation, it could unleash enormous damages claims from publishers, artists and brands.

A few landmark legal rulings could force major AI companies to press pause on developing their models further – effectively halting the AI build-out.

3. One breakthrough too many: innovation shocks

Innovation is usually celebrated, but for companies investing in AI, it could be fatal. New AI technology that autonomously manipulates markets (or even news that one is already doing so) would make current financial security systems obsolete.

And an advanced, open-source, free AI model could easily vaporise the profits of today’s industry leaders. We got a glimpse of this possibility in January’s DeepSeek dip, when details about a relatively cheaper, more efficient AI model developed in China caused US tech stocks to plummet.

Artificial intelligence investment has driven remarkable growth on stock markets. Seth Wenig/AP.

Why we struggle to prepare for grey swans

Risk analysts, particularly in finance, often talk in terms of historical data. Statistics can give a reassuring illusion of consistency and control. But the future doesn’t always behave like the past.

The wise among us apply reason to carefully confirmed facts and are sceptical of market narratives.

Deeper causes are psychological: our minds encode things efficiently, often relying on one symbol to represent very complex phenomena.

It takes us a long time to remodel our representations of the world into believing a looming big risk is worth taking action over – as we’ve seen with the world’s slow response to climate change.

How can we deal with grey swans?

Staying aware of risks is important. But what matters most isn’t prediction. We need to design for a deeper sort of resilience that Taleb calls “antifragility”.

Taleb argues systems should be built to withstand – or even benefit from – shocks, rather than rely on perfect foresight.

For policymakers, this means ensuring regulation, supply chains and institutions are built to survive a range of major shocks. For individuals, it means diversifying our bets, keeping options open and resisting the illusion that history can tell us everything.

Above all, the biggest problem with the AI boom is its speed. It is reshaping the global risk landscape faster than we can chart its grey swans. Some may collide and cause spectacular destruction before we can react.The Conversation


*Cameron Shackell, Sessional Academic, School of Information Systems, Queensland University of Technology.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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13 Comments

Don't forget the orange swan...

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Orange swans are like traffic cones... Distractions from real things worth paying attention to, but somehow influential enough to sway the behaviours of many

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I actually think they're not doing anything.

They're thinking of changing the colour of hi-viz, because people have become used to it, and don't notice it.

20 years I've observed increasing health and safety measures, and during that time our workplace deaths and injuries haven't moved (or got worse). It's not there for safety.

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2

Surely a law against stupid would fix that…..

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1

Queenstown wants to electrify everything.

But but.  Only one main line in over mountains.  Just one.

They are thinking of another.  But thinking thinking.

NEC minute.

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true but most of the expensive homes have solar and genset

 

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And batteries

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4

And a fireplace, which is great in a multiday power out if it has a hotplate

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We're pretty clever how we've managed to reduce our self sufficiency for the sake of convenience.

Wood? Fire? Bugger that, give me a complex machine made elsewhere, that I have to source the fuel off someone else for. So long as it's got a remote.

Which circles back to the best way for insulating yourself from multi coloured swans; produce your own eggs.

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I remember when they opened four negative pressure rooms in Middlemore in 2014 and thought that was a good effort to prepare for a pandemic 

https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/256629/nz-hospitals-ready-for-risk-…

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New Zealand sure has a high level of exposure to natural hazards - modelling shows a 23% chance of a >$10B damage event within the next 6 years...

But the *good* news is there's only a 1% chance in the next 50 years of a M9.1 Hikurangi subduction-zone earthquake & tsunami. It'd be expected to cause ~22k deaths, 26k injuries requiring medical care, and $144B in building damage alone. Remember to keep a stocked emergency kit!

https://x.com/Charteddaily/status/1986674002568618407

https://x.com/Charteddaily/status/1986674002568618407/photo/1

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"COVID was a good example: precedents for a global pandemic existed, but the world was caught off guard anyway."

New Zealand was caught off guard? New Zealand threw away their 2017 Pandemic Plan and paniced like sheep in a weapons grade psyop. The Black Swan was the fact no one predicted the public health sector and politicians would do every in their power, and invented new powers, to maximise pharmaceutical sales of an experimental gene technology.

 

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... and saved my life! 

As well as many, many others.

Keep the public health services going I say - can you imagine another COVID where we are (or just a few maybe) reliant on private health services ? Do have a look at the USA mortality figures compared to NZ or UK.

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A really good article.  Short and to the point.  Last sentence is indeed our (i.e., humankind's) biggest problem. 

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A really good article.  Short and to the point.  Last sentence is indeed our (i.e., humankind's) biggest problem. 

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