Episode 2529: Who is cheating whom in American universities?
“Who’s Cheating?” asks Keith Teare in his weekly summary of tech news. Keith is defending a Columbia University student who was punished for openly used AI in his classes. As Arthur C. Clark famously noted, advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, and so its use is often viewed as cheating by the old regime. But, as Keith and I agree, the $80,000 annual fees that universities are now charging for an undergraduate education could also be seen as a particularly egregious form of cheating. Especially since that a similar education could mostly be achieved by a $20 monthly OpenAI account.
Five Takeaways
* AI usage in education is causing institutional resistance, with a Columbia student's expulsion highlighting the tension between traditional learning and new technology adoption.
* Universities face an existential crisis as AI makes knowledge more accessible, potentially undermining their expensive business model of gatekeeping talent.
* Google's search dominance is threatened as Apple explores AI alternatives and companies like Anthropic develop competitive search APIs.
* OpenAI is navigating a complex transition, maintaining non-profit governance while uncapping profit potential, signaling Altman's focus on commercial applications.
* The future of AI lies in the application layer, with OpenAI's hiring of Instacart's CEO for applications suggesting a strategy to own the entire AI stack from infrastructure to user interface.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
Laura Mason: How the French Revolution and the January 6 American Insurrection Are Bookends in the Struggle for Democracy
Graciela Mochkofsky on The Prophet of the Andes: A Latin American Journey to the Promised Land
Justin Gregg: What Animal Intelligence Reveals About Human Stupidity
Hans Greimel & William Sposato: Is the Carlos Ghosn Story Really a Parable About the Limits of Davos Man and the Globalized Neo-Liberal Order?
Edward Chancellor on the Real Story of Interest: How Low Interest Rates Are Bad For Everyone (Except Central Bankers)
Sean McLain: What Does the Carlos Ghosn Story Tell Us About Contemporary Japan?
Eli Saslow: How Covid Compounded All the Best and Worst Things About the America of the 2020s
Natasha Sizlo: How an LA Real-Estate Agent Went to Paris and Wrote a Memoir of Love, Loss, and Destiny
Mike Rothschild: Is QAnon a Threat to Civilization or Childish Distraction For the Digital Underclass?
Peter Coy: Why Economics Might Not Be the Dismal Science That We Love to Hate
Christopher Kolenda: What Afghan War Veterans Can Teach America About How to Listen Empathically To Our "Enemies"
Richard Vague on Wiping the Financial Slate Clean: The Case For a Debt Jubilee
Dean Schroeder: What Denver and the Danes Can Teach Silicon Valley About Innovating Local Government