Should AI steal your job?
The real question is not what the technology can do but what it ought to do. Sarah O’Connor on the people fighting for the future of work
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Exploring how unifying scientific theories could revolutionize technology and energy while posing ethical challenges. The post Don Lincoln: The quest for unification in physics, how Newton linked celestial and terrestrial gravity, and the pivotal role of electromagnetism in technology | Lex Fridman Podcast appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Read full articleThe real question is not what the technology can do but what it ought to do. Sarah O’Connor on the people fighting for the future of work
Technology helps owners see the big picture and plan more effectively.
The rise of agentic AI is reshaping careers by allowing professionals to collaborate with digital assistants, thereby reducing cognitive load. Salesforce leaders assert that success now relies on adapting to technology and focusing on meaningful work that requires human insight and creativity.
The intelligent and thoughtful encyclical is an important warning of the uses and misuses of a rapidly developing technology. Silicon Valley is wrong to dismiss it Often I’m asked if I think that the novels of the future will all be written by AI. It’s not so much a question as a provocation. Do I worry that a machine can do what I do, only better? I usually say something like: “No algorithm is going to write Anna Karenina!” which is also not a real answer. So I’m grateful to Pope Leo XIV, the American pope, for his recently issued letter to the world, Magnifica Humanitas: On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence. It’s a long (more than 40,00 words), intelligent and thoughtful encyclical in which the pope addresses the uses and misuses of a rapidly developing technology. Now when someone asks my opinion of AI, I can refer them to the pope’s letter, or at least chapter three. Continue reading...
Pope Leo XIV’s new encyclical on artificial intelligence includes a statement that warrants serious attention from technologists and policymakers: “Technology is never neutral.” Magnifica Humanitas (“Magnificent Humanity”) is a clarion call to all people to act with courage and solidarity as we enter an age already being transformed by artificial intelligence, the greatest change in…
Newly appointed chief secretary to the Treasury Lucy Rigby wants to roll out technology across Whitehall
The post Japanese Yen barely blinks as Tokyo CPI prints to script appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Yen got the data it had been waiting on, and proceeded to do almost nothing with it. Tokyo CPI for May landed at 1.6% YoY on the headline measure, with the core reading excluding fresh food holding at 1.5% YoY (matching April’s four-year low) and the core-core measure (excluding fresh food and energy) steady at 1.9% YoY. All three came in essentially in line with what positioning desks had penciled in, and all three remain below the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) 2% target. The Yen’s reaction was a shrug, and that shrug is the entire story. Three measures, no signal The April print had set the bar this low for a reason. April’s collapse in core-core to 1.9% YoY from 2.3% YoY was the print that pushed June hike pricing meaningfully out, and May simply confirmed there was no quick rebound coming. Energy subsidies are still capping petrol prices, food disinflation is filtering through, and th
AI's rapid rise could trigger economic depression by 2028, reshaping industries and job markets worldwide. The post Kevin O’Leary: AI could trigger economic depression by 2028, the role of technology in driving innovation, and the impact of Chinese interference on US power projects | The Diary of a CEO appeared first on Crypto Briefing.