How Self-Driving Cars Will Reverse a 10,000 Year Trend

Plus other unintended consequences of autonomous vehicles.

Richard Farnworth
The Startup

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Göbekli Tepe in Anatolia, Turkey is the world’s oldest known human settlement. At 11,500 years old, its founding marked the beginning of our species’ transition from small groups of nomadic hunter-gatherers, to complex societies within ever-growing communities.

Göbekli Tepe — Source: Wikipedia

From there, it’s been a one-way street.

By some accounts, Rome became the first city in history to have over 1 million inhabitants in 133 BC. By 1500, 1 in 25 people lived in towns and cities. Then, the industrial revolution sent this process into overdrive, bringing huge numbers of people to the cities in search of manufacturing jobs. At the turn of the twentieth century, London became the world’s first “mega-city” achieving 5 million inhabitants.

As of 2018, 55% of us lived in urban areas, a trend projected to reach two-thirds of the world’s population within the next few decades.

However, technological changes just around the corner may reverse this trend, changing where we live and how human societies are structured.

Escape to the country?

While predictions about AI are notoriously difficult, it’s a fairly conservative bet to…

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Richard Farnworth
The Startup

Data scientist, computer programmer and all-round geek with 10 years of using data in finance, retail and legal industries. Based in Adelaide, Australia.