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IGP researcher Jen Weedon writes: "The critical question isn't just 'What don't we know yet about how this AI might fail?' but also 'What do we already know, and that we're choosing not to address?'"
"This isn’t the first time the BLS commissioner aroused presidential ire," writes Tim Naftali. "But at least Nixon faced constraints."
"The critical question isn't just 'What don't we know yet about how this AI might fail?" but also "What do we already know, and that we're choosing not to address?' writes Jen Weedon.
Anya Schiffrin, co-director of the Technology, Policy, and Innovation Concentration at SIPA—and lifelong Upper West Side resident—shares her favorites.
Robert Y. Shapiro told Newsweek: "This is very plausible. Historically in the US, we have had Vice Presidents being the obvious candidate once incumbents presidents have served their terms, or sometime later."
“In the old days we thought capture was mostly a problem in Africa and Latin America and then in Eastern Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall,” noted Anya Schiffrin, another scholar of media capture and the director of the Technology, Media, and Communications specialization at Columbia University. “What’s happened in the last six months in the US is worse than anything we imagined.”
New summer option enables faster degree completion and greater cohort alignment.
Political science professor at Columbia University Robert Y. Shapiro to Newsweek: "The Democratic primary polling is much too early and all we are seeing is name recognition for past presidential candidates and ones in the news lately in a visible way."
Pooja shares more about what surprised her about graduate school, especially beyond the classroom. With NYC as your playground, there are so many unexpected perks about being at SIPA.