AI killed the maths brain
With the ability to task AI to code, start-ups and tech giants alike are hiring fewer and fewer entry-level computer scientists. PHOTO: REUTERS
ChatGPT was released 2½ years ago, and we have been in a public panic ever since. Artificial intelligence (AI) can write in a way that passes for a human, creating fear that relying too heavily on machine-generated text will diminish our ability to read and write at a high level. We've heard that the college essay is dead, and that an alarming number of students use AI tools to cheat their way through college.
This has the potential to undermine the future of jobs, education and art all at once.
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Straits Times
34 minutes ago
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Fugitive ponzi scheme boss assumed dead may be alive, London police say
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CNA
an hour ago
- CNA
Broadcom shares drop as revenue forecast fails to impress
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Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
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In April it added some of the most sophisticated types to an export control list in its trade war with the United States, forcing all exporters to apply to Beijing for licences. That put a once-obscure department of China's commerce ministry, with a staff of about 60, in charge of a chokepoint for global manufacturing. The ministry did not immediately respond to Reuters' questions sent by fax. Several European auto suppliers shut down production lines this week after running out of supplies. While China's April curbs coincided with a broader package of retaliation against Washington's tariffs, the measures apply globally. "Beijing has a degree of plausible deniability – no one can prove China is doing this on purpose," said Noah Barkin, senior adviser at Rhodium Group, a China-focused U.S. thinktank. 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In 2022, the United States put sweeping curbs on sales of advanced semiconductor chips and tools to China over concerns the technology could advance Beijing's military power. But the move failed to halt China's development of advanced chips and artificial intelligence, analysts have said. Beijing punched back a year later by introducing export licenses for gallium and germanium, and some graphite products. Exports to the United States of the two critical minerals, along with germanium, were banned last December. In February China restricted exports of five more metals key to the defence and clean energy industries. Analysts face a hard task in tracking the pace of China's approvals following the Trump-Xi call. "It's virtually impossible to know what percentage of requests for non-military end users get approved because the data is not public and companies don't want to publicly confirm either way," said Cory Combs, a critical minerals analyst with Trivium, a policy consultancy focused on China. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.