So using AI is a form of cheating, then they’re told at graduation AI is the future, meaning this professor failed to prepare them.
And you wonder why students boo and walk out on AI commencement speakers.
If universities were properly doing their job, graduating students would be the most coveted employees in the workforce as they would most prepared to lead their businesses into this new AI world, like graduates did with the internet 25 years ago, and the PC 40+ years ago.
Instead students get muddled and conflicting messages about using AI and left confused about what is expected of them.
@atrupar We are lucky to have a guy like Rutte managing through this, honestly. Yes, it’s all smoke and mirrors, but what’s the alternative? Is it really any good? This is where Europeans win, been playing court games forever. He is right to play it smart.
@paulg Make better exams, move on with times. The tools are out there, so it is stupid to evaluate on a basis that they are not. Are we preparing people for fantasy world? I can only see very particular situations in which using AI should not be allowed.
@ArinzeOkpala2@visegrad24 I would love to see real world studies of safety with those systems vs. control- which I assume don’t exist because the tech is just now being deployed across the board. Having driven cars with lane “control” and annoying, distracting “advice”, I have a feeling about the results.
In related news, July 4th 2026 was intended to be the original end-date of DOGE, where they would have cut over a trillion dollars from the annual federal budget.
But instead it dismantled, because nothing stops this train.
@MechsWorld@FT 80s cars like Mercedes, Toyotas, were pretty much indestructible. Obviously newer cars are much safer, but electronics ruin reliability and, in many cases, driving experience.
@CryptonMaximus@OliverBalogh1@RnaudBertrand This is the risk. The interesting thing is that people complain about ‘elites’ and ‘rulers’, without realizing they were normally the ones who created them.
@zerohedge It will be a mix of all 3, converging to a scenario in which there’s intervention in the monetary base (aka printing). Warsh will play tough - and rightly so. This can go on for a while, but ultimately the pressure will be there to ease.