Makes you think, doesn’t it?
https://sloanreview.mit.edu/article/leaderships-blind-spot-in-the-age-of-ai/
Leadership’s Blind Spot in the Age of AI
In 1951, philosopher Martin Heidegger told a small audience, “The most thought-provoking thing in our thought-provoking time is that we are still not thinking.” Few understood him then. Seventy-five years later, the observation has become unavoidable because AI has forced every leader to confront a question about the nature of intelligence and thinking itself. If thinking is nothing but what machines can do, only faster, we have no case: We outsource it to machines. But if thinking is something else — an embodied, attentive activity through which reality reveals itself — then leadership in the age of AI is the task of cultivating a generative capacity no machine can replicate.
Consider the doctor who treats screens instead of patients, the teacher constrained by standardized testing, or the World Cup referee whose real-time decisions are repeatedly overturned by a video assistant referee. Everywhere, situation-sensitive judgment is being replaced by what Hartmut Rosa calls execution logic: prestructured parameters that turn decision makers into mere executors.1 As spheres of discretion disappear, the creativity of human agency drains away. Beneath these surface symptoms sits the deeper question now beginning to surface in boardrooms: What is irreplaceable about us, and which intelligence will be the foundation of durable advantage once everything codifiable has been automated?
Much as I expected… (Just ‘determine’ that every new user is over 16.)
Australia's teen social media ban fails to clear first hurdle in age checks, says study
… A team of software testers, which last year trialled age-assurance software on more than 1,000 Australians, found that platforms did not ask for age proof on any of the 50 accounts it opened after the law came into force and on which it declared the age as 16, the researchers told Reuters.
The previously unreported finding reveals a largely overlooked flaw: while the process has so far focused on the accuracy of photo-based age-assurance software, the initial vetting stage — which guesses a person's age range based on their general online activity — does not appear to be picking up young users for further checks.
Should be interesting to follow…
Illinois Gov. Pritzker signs nation’s ‘most protective’ AI Safety Measures Act into law
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker this morning signed the Artificial Intelligence Safety Measures Act into law at a ceremony in Chicago. The Safety Measures Act, SB 315, establishes a new national benchmark for AI safety, transparency, and accountability.
The new law sets a strong standard for regulating the largest and costliest AI models, known as frontier models. Illinois becomes the third state to set frontier model standards, following New York’s RAISE Act and California’s SB 53, the Transparency in Frontier AI Act.
SB 315 will require frontier AI companies to publish and annually update a plan to address catastrophic risks from their AI models. Most significantly, it requires annual independent third-party audits of safety issues—the first such requirement in any state AI law.
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