berkeley professor
As a Berkeley professor, I see the impact H-1B visas and AI have on students' job opportunities
The H-1B visa program was intended to bring in specialized talent from abroad, but instead it has become a tool for employers to hire lower-cost labor for ordinary jobs. The result is a distorted job market, where highly skilled workers are being squeezed out of the H-1B visa program by spam applications for ordinary workers who then take entry-level positions that are already in short supply. This misuse of H-1B visas has a negative synergy with growing impact of AI on the job market and is part of a larger problem that urgently needs attention. The impact of this visa-farming problem is particularly acute among young people and recent college graduates, who face a bleak job market despite moderate overall unemployment rates. According to government data, the ratio of unemployment for college grads under 25 to those over 25 has hit an all-time high of more than four to one.
- Banking & Finance > Economy (0.78)
- Government > Regional Government (0.48)
Educators have said using ChatGPT is cheating, but now they are using AI to write syllabi and exams: Professor
ChatGPT has proven it can help students with their homework, but now it is helping teachers create those very courses, a computer science professor told Fox News. As educators debate whether students should be allowed to use artificial intelligence for assignments, one professor told Fox News that teachers themselves are using the tech to help with their lessons. "I know faculty who are using ChatGPT to help write syllabi and to write exams," a University of California, Berkeley professor of computer science, Hany Farid, told Fox News. "I've seen professors using it to help design courses, write exam problems, write homework problems." "It is both an enabling and a potentially problematic technology," he continued.
- North America > United States > California > Alameda County > Berkeley (0.26)
- North America > United States > New York (0.06)
- Media > News (0.91)
- Education > Curriculum (0.74)
'Spreading lies': The government should regulate AI-powered political campaign ads: UC Berkeley professor
Fake AI pictures and videos will be nearly impossible to discern from real images as the technology behind deepfakes advances, University of California, Berkeley professor says. The Federal Election Commission (FEC) must consider whether it needs to set rules to prevent political campaigns from using artificial intelligence to create ads intended to deceive voters as the 2024 election cycle moves into full swing, an AI image analyst said. "The FEC will need to consider whether and how to regulate a campaign's use of manipulated media in the service of its own candidate," Hany Farid, a University of California, Berkeley professor, wrote in a recent opinion piece for The Hill. "Manipulating the photographic record is only the first step in spreading lies." Presidential campaigns have already started using artificial intelligence to deceptively manipulate their campaign ads.
- North America > United States > California > Alameda County > Berkeley (0.47)
- North America > United States > Iowa (0.06)
- North America > United States > Florida (0.06)
- North America > United States > Connecticut (0.06)