Showing posts with label Artificial Intelligence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artificial Intelligence. Show all posts
  • Monday, June 23, 2025

We are entering a troubling era in education where artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT, designed to support learning, are now being misused to replace learning altogether. Across universities and colleges, a growing number of students are relying entirely on AI to complete their assignments, theses, and even day-to-day class tasks all without actually understanding or learning the material.

What was meant to be a tool for guidance has quietly become the crutch for academic survival. Students now submit essays they didn’t write, solve equations they never learned, and present projects they barely understand. The result? A generation walking out of universities with degrees in hand but no real-world skills to show for it.

This isn't just speculation. Increasingly, educators are reporting cases where students can’t explain their own research papers during presentations. Employers notice that fresh graduates lack the ability to think critically or solve problems independently. The moment of truth comes during job interviews or professional tasks and that’s when the gap becomes painfully obvious.

This overdependence on AI is a loss not just for the students, but for the whole educational system. Degrees are becoming hollow badges, and the real essence of higher education learning, struggling, growing is fading fast.

AI like ChatGPT should be used to clarify concepts, brainstorm ideas, or check grammar not to bypass the entire process of thinking and learning. Students must understand that while AI can provide answers, it can’t build their careers for them. Skill comes from effort, repetition, failure, and understanding not from shortcuts.

Let this be a wake-up call. If we don’t shift our focus back to real learning and skill development, we’re not just cheating the system, we’re cheating ourselves.

AI Shortcuts, Real Skill Loss


  • Monday, June 16, 2025

AI in 2025: Boon or Threat?

Artificial intelligence has moved from the realm of tech speculation into the fabric of everyday life. In 2025, it's no longer "what AI might do," but "what AI is doing." As it's woven into business, society, and the global economy, two core questions emerge: Is AI a blessing, unlocking new possibilities, or a threat to people’s jobs and well‑being?


1. The Threat of Job Displacement

  • Geoffrey Hinton, one of AI’s founding fathers, warns that AI is on track to outperform humans "at everything,” especially in repetitive, intellectual work. He cites paralegals and call‑center staff as being at greatest risk, predicting that one worker with AI may take the place of a team of ten. Physical jobs, like plumbing, remain safer for now.

  • Dario Amodei, CEO of Anthropic, paints an even more ominous future: nearly half of entry-level white-collar roles may disappear within five years, potentially spiking unemployment by 10–20%.

  • Studies reflect growing anxiety: up to 300 million jobs could be affected, with 14% of workers already displaced by AI, and 60% of advanced‑economy roles vulnerable.


2. The Case for Transformation, Not Elimination

  • Leaders like Jensen Huang (Nvidia) and Demis Hassabis (DeepMind) resist the doom‑and‑gloom narrative, arguing that AI will transform rather than destroy jobs, enabling new roles in STEM, AI support, and technical expertise.

  • The World Economic Forum anticipates a net gain: 97 million new jobs by 2025, versus 85 million jobs displaced suggesting a modest positive swing in overall employment.

  • PwC’s 2025 AI Jobs Barometer reports that AI-exposed roles are growing 38% faster, offer a 56% wage premium, and produce three times greater revenue per employee.


3. Urgent Need for Upskilling & Inclusion

  • A PwC study highlights that AI-linked occupations are changing 66% faster, demanding rapid reskilling.

  • Women face a 25% digital skills gap and are underrepresented in AI roles, but Deloitte expects this will equalize by 2025 with proactive training.

  • McKinsey and others confirm that, while AI can create new job types, many displaced workers lack the technical skills required and roles like data annotators may become low-wage gigs.


4. Societal & Policy Dimensions

  • Public officials are stepping in: UK’s Keir Starmer announced a £1 billion AI investment plus training for 7.5 million workers by 2030 to ensure equitable benefits.

  • Policymakers and economists propose reforms like universal basic income, AI taxation, and data-driven regulation to guide AI’s integration into society

AI in 2025


  • Sunday, March 03, 2024
In a world buzzing with technological advancements, the idea of artificial intelligence surpassing human capabilities often sparks concern. It's my firm belief that artificial technology can't replace humans, and here's why.

Firstly, the fear surrounding AI stems from the worries of countless working individuals who fear job displacement. However, the notion that AI will render human workers obsolete is not as straightforward as it may seem. Human adaptability and creativity bring a unique value that machines cannot replicate.

Someone once questioned me about the relentless development of AI, wondering if it could eventually outsmart humans. My response was simple: "Have we, as humans, stopped evolving? Are we not continuously advancing?" Indeed, human evolution is a constant process, and our capacity to invent and innovate has led to the creation of AI itself.

It's crucial to understand that AI is a tool we've developed to assist and augment our abilities, not to replace them. While AI can process vast amounts of data and perform specific tasks efficiently, it lacks the depth of human intuition, emotional intelligence, and the ability to navigate complex, unpredictable situations.

In essence, the journey of human evolution is ongoing, and AI is just one milestone in our quest for progress. Rather than viewing it as a threat, let's embrace the partnership between humans and AI, recognizing the unique strengths each brings to the table. After all, the essence of our humanity lies in our ability to adapt, create, and constantly evolve.

AI will takeover? - Abdullah Mahmood

  • Wednesday, December 21, 2022
I asked to AI Engine through chat: Who are you? You will attack on us in future? You are more intelligent than human?
This is the response I get:
I am an artificial intelligence trained to assist with a variety of tasks and answer questions to the best of my ability. My primary function is to provide information and assistance to users like you.
You will attack on us in future?

As for the question of whether artificial intelligence will attack humans in the future, it is not possible for me to accurately predict the actions of future AI systems. It is important for the development and use of artificial intelligence to be guided by ethical principles and for there to be appropriate oversight and control in place to ensure that AI is used responsibly and for the benefit of society.
It is also not accurate to say that I am more intelligent than a human. While I have access to a vast amount of information and can process and analyze that information quickly, I do not have the ability to think, feel, or experience things in the same way that a human can. Humans have unique qualities and abilities that cannot be replicated in artificial intelligence.
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