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Search Result for “Stephen Olson”

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OPINION

Trump's Greenland logic rattles Europe, Nato

News, Sara Sjolin & Andrea Palasciano & Sanne Wass, Published on 08/01/2026

» Donald Trump's rationale for decapitating Venezuela's government is fuelling concerns among European officials that they could soon face an existential dilemma over Greenland.

OPINION

AI set to replace most humans

News, Stephen Jen, Published on 22/08/2025

» Is technology more job augmenting or job replacing? This has been a long-standing debate. But recent academic work suggests that technology has been a net destroyer of jobs for decades.

OPINION

Mar-a-Lago accord may aid China

News, Yao Yang, Published on 07/06/2025

» The provisional trade deal reached by China and the United States in Geneva last month exceeded expectations, with the two sides agreeing to roll back for 90 days the majority of tariffs and other countermeasures they had imposed in the preceding weeks.

OPINION

The dollar correction is finally here

News, Stephen Jen, Published on 16/04/2025

» The dollar appears set to embark on a multi-year correction against a wide range of currencies, even without a trade war, as the dollar's lofty Wall Street valuation runs up against Main Street reality.

OPINION

AI phones from Google, Apple will erode trust

News, Parmy Olson, Published on 17/08/2024

» Alphabet Inc's Google is racing to stuff its products with the most advanced artificial intelligence features, including some that will make you question everything you see and hear online.

OPINION

Markets may be sending a signal

News, Mike Dolan, Published on 12/08/2024

» What looks like a financial market in disarray may instead just be normalisation that will ultimately help insulate investment portfolios rather than sending them to the ground.

OPINION

AI's brain fog no defence for arts

News, Parmy Olson, Published on 05/07/2024

» Ever notice how science fiction gets things wrong about future technology? Instead of flying cars, we got viral tweets that fuelled culture wars. Instead of a fax machine on your wrist, we got memes. We're having a similar reality check with artificial intelligence. Sci-fi painted a future with computers that delivered reliable information in robotic parlance. Yet businesses who've tried plugging generative AI tools into their infrastructure have found, with some dismay, that the tools "hallucinate" and make mistakes. They are hardly reliable. And the tools themselves aren't stiff and mechanistic either. They're almost whimsical.

OPINION

Nvidia's huge growth masks AI disillusionment

News, Parmy Olson, Published on 21/06/2024

» Does anyone in Silicon Valley know the saying, "The bigger they are, the harder they fall?" Perhaps it's just a matter of time before they will.

OPINION

Ripe time to allow AI whistleblowers speak out

News, Parmy Olson, Published on 18/06/2024

» Here's an AI advancement that should benefit all of us: It's getting easier for builders of artificial intelligence to warn the world about the harms their algorithms can cause -- from spreading misinformation and displacing jobs, to hallucinating and providing a new form of surveillance. But who can these would-be whistleblowers turn to? An encouraging shift toward better oversight is underway, thanks to changes in compensation policies, renewed momentum to speak out among engineers and the growing clout of a British government-backed safety group.

OPINION

The rise of AI in political warfare

News, Parmy Olson, Published on 07/05/2024

» This year promises to be a whopper for elective government, with billions of people -- or more than 40% of the world's population -- able to vote in an election. But nearly five months into 2024, some government officials are quietly wondering why the looming risk of AI hasn't, apparently, played out. Even as voters in Indonesia and Pakistan have gone to the polls, they are seeing little evidence of viral deepfakes skewing an electoral outcome, according to a recent article in Politico, which cited "national security officials, tech company executives and outside watchdog groups". AI, they said, wasn't having the "mass impact" that they expected. That is a painfully shortsighted view. The reason? AI may be disrupting elections right now, and we just don't know it.