
Should AI And Robots Be Taxed To Protect Workers?
Forbes, 06 June 2025
Detroit used to be the richest city in America, some said it was the wealthiest in the world (in the early 1950's).
Forbes, 06 June 2025
Detroit used to be the richest city in America, some said it was the wealthiest in the world (in the early 1950's).
ITIF, 05 June 2025
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said last week that artificial intelligence could eliminate half of all entry-level white-collar jobs within five years and cause unemployment to skyrocket to as high as 20 percent.
Federal Banks of Dallas, 03 June 2025
Recent rapid improvements in the capabilities of artificial intelligence (AI) have raised concerns about these technologies’ impact on employment, specifically, the rollout of generative AI models such as ChatGPT.
Project Syndicate, 29 May 2025
Liberal democracies like the US are not guaranteed continuous technological progress. Innovation depends on openness, impartial rules, and vigorous competition, but Trump is systematically dismantling these pillars of US tech dominance.
FT.com, 16 June 2025
Economic miracles stem from discovery, not repeating tasks at greater speed, argues Prof Carl Benedikt Frey, OII.
BBC Radio 5 Live, 09 June 2025
Prof Andy Przybylski shares his perspective with BBC Radio 5 Live about whether social media is a danger to kids.
El Pais, 09 June 2025
Trump's policies seem designed to dismantle the pillars that have given the country a great competitive advantage
Washington Post, 31 May 2025
Tactics used to make AI tools more engaging might be reinforcing harmful ideas.
New Scientist, 30 May 2025
Artificial intelligence has removed many of the barriers to understanding a new language, but there are still good reasons to do things the old-fashioned way
FT.com, 02 May 2025
Significant time, cost and shortages of skilled staff represent barriers to rapid acceleration in automation
The Economist, 26 May 2025
And any jobs-pocalypse seems a long way off with insights from Prof Carl-Benedikt Frey
The Economist, 27 May 2025
The lessons of the past are clear, argues the economic historian Prof Carl Benedikt Frey: in the long run, tariffs choke growth