Santa Barbara County News and Events

La IA en realidad no está “quitándote” tu trabajo. Esto es lo que está sucediendo en su lugar

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating

Por Lisa Eadicicco, CNN

Es poco probable que la IA quite tu trabajo en un futuro cercano. Al menos no todo tu trabajo.

Las preocupaciones sobre la inteligencia artificial reemplazando a los trabajadores humanos aumentaron en el último año, mientras las empresas reducen sus plantillas, los modelos de IA se vuelven más capaces de realizar tareas de oficina y los negocios integran la IA más profundamente en sus operaciones. La IA fue la principal razón citada por las empresas para los recortes de empleo en abril por segundo mes consecutivo, según informó el jueves la firma de recolocación ejecutiva Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

“La ansiedad por la IA en el trabajo es real: desde el miedo a perder el empleo hasta la presión de mantenerse al día con una tecnología que evoluciona rápidamente”, escribió Microsoft en un informe sobre cómo la IA está cambiando el trabajo publicado la semana pasada.

Pero la realidad de la IA en el entorno laboral no es tan blanco y negro, dicen los expertos. Las empresas están utilizando la IA para automatizar ciertas partes de los trabajos en lugar de reemplazar puestos completos.

Los líderes empresariales están averiguando lo que la IA puede y no puede hacer, y recalibrando los trabajos existentes en torno a responsabilidades que solo pueden ser realizadas por un humano. Y miles de empleos han sido recortados en el proceso, siendo la empresa de infraestructura web Cloudflare y la firma de criptomonedas Coinbase las últimas en anunciar recortes de personal.

“Realmente son muy pocos los puestos de trabajo que han sido totalmente automatizados con la tecnología actual de IA y robótica disponible”, dijo Alexis Krivkovich, socia sénior de McKinsey & Company, quien colidera la Práctica de Personas y Rendimiento Organizacional de la firma.

La IA es técnicamente capaz de automatizar el 57 % de las actividades relacionadas con el trabajo, dijo Krivkovich, citando investigaciones de McKinsey. Pero ese porcentaje está distribuido en “piezas y partes” de varios trabajos y responsabilidades dentro de una organización.

Nitin Seth, cofundador de la firma de servicios digitales y consultoría Incedo, asegura que su empresa ayuda a los clientes a aumentar la productividad mediante la IA al menos un 20 % a 25 % sin reducir el personal en la misma medida. Esto se debe a que la IA solo maneja ciertas partes de diferentes roles.

“No se puede tomar un cuarto de Lisa, un cuarto de Jessica, un cuarto de Nitin y un cuarto de otra persona y convertirlo en una sola persona”, dijo Seth.

El temor de que la IA quite empleos ha afectado más a la industria tecnológica. Los ingenieros de software han adoptado cada vez más la tecnología para ayudar a escribir código, y el 90 % de los trabajadores tecnológicos utilizan IA en sus trabajos, según una encuesta de septiembre del brazo de investigación de Google. Stack Overflow, un popular foro de preguntas y respuestas para desarrolladores, descubrió que el 84 % de los encuestados ya usan herramientas de IA en el proceso de desarrollo de software o planean hacerlo.

Pero el trabajo de un ingeniero de software implica mucho más que solo programar: incluye revisar el código, diseñar sistemas, solucionar problemas y decidir qué construir. Las empresas pueden ajustar los títulos de los puestos para reflejar eso, dice Boris Cherny, jefe de Claude Code en Anthropic.

“Creo que para finale

Families going ‘no contact’ doesn’t always mean the end

Kraig Pakulski 0 15 Article rating: No rating

By Madeline Holcombe, CNN

(CNN) — Two of Liza Ginette’s kids don’t speak to her, and she is proud of them for it.

From the outside, it might have looked like they had fairly normal parent-child issues, she said. She had a tumultuous marriage to their father and difficult divorce. She feels that she forced a new romantic relationship on her kids while tending to dismiss their feelings and sometimes having emotional outbursts, she said.

By 2021, her elder daughter had had enough and went “no contact.” Two years later, her younger daughter cut off communication as well, said Liza Ginette, who lives near Raleigh, North Carolina.

She does not want to use her last name to protect her children’s privacy but uses her first and middle name online. She makes social media content to coach other families who have gone no contact.

For everything that I might have done wrong, I kind of feel like I did something right, because I always taught them not to take bull from anybody,” Liza Ginette said.

There has been a lot of talk about families going no contact –– it has been described as a rising trend of ungrateful adult children being cruel to aging parents or a younger generation setting boundaries with parents unwilling to treat their children with respect. But the truth is more nuanced, experts say. The decision to go no contact is often difficult, but there can be growth that comes out of it.

At first, Liza Ginette was distraught and confused at her children’s silence. Everyone told her she was a good mother, she said. But then she started intensive therapy, and the introspection made her realize that she needed to take accountability for some things in her relationship with her children. She had more understanding about why her daughters made their decisions and realized that all she could do was put in hard work to grow as a person.

“I think that parents get stuck in this idea that they’re being punished when it’s not,” she said. “It’s really that these kids need to heal from something that they’ve gone through.”

Is no contact just a trend?

People talk a lot more about families who go no contact –— take the Beckhams or the British royal family –– but there isn’t data to indicate that this dynamic is the growing trend the public often describes it as, said Dr. Lucy Blake, a senior lecturer in psychology at the University of the West of England.

This kind of disconnect between parents and children is often talked about as rare and unusual, but data shows that 1 in 5 people will become estranged from their fathers, Blake said. About 6% or people lacked a relationship with their mother, a 2018 study showed.

It isn’t just extreme circumstances –– abuse, crimes or abandonment –– that lead to no contact. Often, it is the accumulation of difficult dynamics, she added.

“My research and my understanding is it’s very everyday, common events in family life that can lead to periods of tension and distance and strain,” she said.

Not all periods of no contact are the final word on a relationship, she said. Sometimes they are breaks to establish feelings of safety or to step away and reflect before reengaging.

The experience might also be cyclical, with people reestablishing contact and breaking it several times, Blake added.

For some, the reason behind such estrangements might seem clear to both parties. But in many cases, c

New House bill aims to peel back banana regulations in childcare

Kraig Pakulski 0 27 Article rating: No rating

By Camila DeChalus, CNN

(CNN) — A new bipartisan bill passed in the House is aiming to eliminate childcare regulations that critics in the industry say have gone bananas.

Across the country at some daycare centers, workers can open a bag of chips for a toddler but may not be allowed to peel a banana without triggering additional food preparation rules — a regulatory quirk that a bipartisan group of lawmakers is now trying to change.

The legislation, known as the Cutting Red Tape on Child Care Providers Act, passed in the House last week. It aims to create a separate category for foods with a low risk for foodborne illness — like peeled fruits and vegetables — and seeks to prevent childcare providers from being penalized for serving them.

Democratic Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez of Washington state, who sponsored the bill, says this legislation would cut unnecessary red tape that discourages daycare workers from serving fresh fruits and vegetables, though critics argue the issue is more nuanced and question how much impact the bill would have.

“When we have policies that wittingly or unwittingly make Cheetos more accessible to a toddler than fresh fruit, we have a crisis brewing,” Gluesenkamp Perez said, in a video posted on X.

Perez said she confirmed that under regulations in Washington and other states, serving fresh fruit would require a daycare owner to install additional sinks to meet regulations.

Colleen Condon, who owns a daycare facility in Washington, told CNN the bill is necessary because the regulations are overly burdensome.

“What we’re actually experiencing is a system that is burdened with too many regulations,” she said. “If we’re spending all of our time thinking about how we’re going to peel a banana, do all this other stuff like, that’s time. Teachers aren’t engaging with kids, yeah, and doing the actual important work.”

These kitchen upgrades create more barriers for home-based daycare providers, particularly in rural communities, critics argue.

Dana Christiansen, who owns two large Washington daycare facilities and is a board member of the Washington Childcare Centers Association, also told CNN that daycare facilities are overregulated.

“Everybody agrees that health and safety of children is the most important thing. But when you put these things into place that just create hurdles and hurdles and battles and battles, you are just hurting an industry that just runs on really tight margins and can really struggle,” Christiansen said.

Some childcare advocates say standardized food-safety regulations for daycare centers are essential, while also acknowledging that if certain rules can be eliminated without compromising children’s health and well-being, federal regulators should consider doing so.

“The health and safety of children is the most important aspect of running a childcare program, and the providers who do that work take that responsibility very seriously,” Erica Phillips, executive director of the National Association for Family Child Care, told CNN.

She continued, “There are opportunities where we can make sure that the regulations are specific to childcare and not creating an undue burden on them by, requiring them to get a certification, or some other requirement or regulation that doesn’t really fit well with a with a childcare program.”

CNN has reached out to Senate Majority Leader John Thune asking whether his chamber will take up a vote on the House bill.

Christiansen said she is glad Gluesenkamp Perez introduced this bill but urged members of Congress to do more to eliminate costly regulations.

“There’s so much more that I feel like needs to be done. It feels hard that it stopped at

In the Kristin Smart case, key questions remain after 3 decades

Kraig Pakulski 0 20 Article rating: No rating

By Ray Sanchez, CNN

(CNN) — The investigation into the 1996 disappearance of Kristin Smart has been characterized by decades of critical questions, starting with the whereabouts of her remains.

Now, new questions are emerging as authorities have concluded their most recent search at the home of the mother of Paul Flores – the man convicted of Smart’s murder – and say they have not recovered Smart’s remains after new soil testing had returned signs of human remains. Will other locations be searched or searched again with new techniques? Will evidence they say they are still evaluating lead them in new directions?

The quest for answers in the case has captivated the public’s attention ever since the college freshman vanished from California Polytechnic State University’s San Luis Obispo campus over Memorial Day weekend in 1996. A decadeslong investigation led to the trial and conviction in 2022 of Paul Flores for her murder.

Still, key questions have stood in the way of the Smart family’s pursuit of some semblance of closure and their hope to “finally lay her to rest in the presence of those who love her.”

What prompted the latest search?

The new search at the home of Susan Flores underscored a renewed commitment to finding answers in the Smart case.

“Until we have Kristin, everything is still wide-open,” San Luis Obispo County Sheriff Ian Parkinson told reporters Friday.

Susan Flores’ Arroyo Grande home has been searched multiple times during the 30-year investigation. But Parkinson said there have since been advances in the soil science and the ground-penetrating radar investigators used to scour the property.

CNN reached out to attorneys who previously represented the Flores family and to Susan Flores but did not hear back.

Last week, investigators descended on Flores’ mother’s home, combing through the packed garage and examining the deck.

“Kristin has been moved, and we don’t know how many times she’s been moved and to where she’s moved, and so just because somebody’s house was searched doesn’t mean that we’re not going back there, because she could have been moved back there thinking that it’s a safe place,” the sheriff told reporters before later announcing Saturday the search had concluded without recovering Smart.

Authorities had a search warrant permitting them to return to the home based on “investigative leads and evidence,” the sheriff previously said, as well as “information that was derived from what we have to deem as a witness.”

Parkinson would not disclose what new information enabled investigators to get the latest warrant.

A Sheriff’s Office spokesperson told CNN the warrant permitting authorities to enter and search the property remains sealed, meaning the underlying evidence presented to the judge is not yet public.

What did investigators find?

Smart’s remains were not recovered in the latest search in Arroyo Grande, the sheriff’s office said Saturday while announcing the search had been concluded.

The agency did not elaborate on the search at the home, only saying any evidence recovered would be sent for evaluation to “aid in the investigation.”

“The Sheriff’s Office remains fully committed to finding Kristin and bringing her home to her family,” the sheriff’s office said Saturday.

The sheriff had previously said evidence indicated human remains “were there at one time or still there,” but could not

Iran’s two-tier internet access fuels anger and exposes cracks in the regime

Kraig Pakulski 0 39 Article rating: No rating

By Tim Lister, Aida Karimi, CNN

(CNN) — The internet blackout in Iran is more than two months old, the longest on record. For millions who rely on being online to make a living, the void has been devastating.

But some have privileged access through what’s called “Internet Pro” – and that’s causing widespread public criticism. The program, launched earlier this year, appears to be another weapon enabling hardliners and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to exert control in Iran.

Iran’s state media boasts of the unity of the government and the people in the face of what it calls an “imposed war” by the United States and Israel, but arguments over who gets what internet access have spilled into the media and embroiled the highest levels of government.

Iranians speak of mounting frustration about being cut off or spending what little money they have in occasionally getting a glimpse of the outside world.

“Imagine dealing with unemployment and crazy inflation, and somehow managing to scrape together 500,000 or a million tomans (about $13), only to spend it on a couple of gigabytes of VPN just so you can get on X or other platforms, check the news, and have a voice,” said Faraz, a 38-year old resident of Tehran. The average monthly wage in Iran is between 20 million and 35 million tomans ($240 to $420).

“And then, in the middle of all this stress and frustration, when you finally manage to open X or Telegram, you see people with unrestricted access acting like everything is normal, it honestly feels like a punch to the gut,” Faraz told CNN.

A VPN (Virtual Private Network) service is a tool that hides a user’s location online, and many people in Iran use it via the black market to get around internet blocks.

The sale of Internet Pro began in February through the Mobile Communications Company of Iran (MCI), after businesses complained that they had been hurt by heavily restricted access during nationwide protests in January. MCI is owned by a consortium with close ties to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).

Internet Pro emphasizes connection stability and less restricted access to international sites. Essentially it provides the same level of access to a fortunate few that was once available to everyone. Users must pass a verification process and have a business, academic or scientific role.

But many Iranians complain it widens the already huge gap between rich and poor.

It has “divided Iranian society into two distinct classes: a digital elite who enjoy fast, unfiltered channels for business, education, and communication, and digital subjects who are confined within heavy filtering, restricted speeds, and the high costs of the black-market VPN economy,” according to the independent publication Khabar Online.

“The main issue is no longer just filtering or shutdowns; rather, it is the redefinition of the right to access the internet,” Mohammad-Hamid Shahrivar, a lawyer, said in an interview with the Shargh news outlet.

The price of black-market VPN apps has skyrocketed, and losing internet access has cost Iranians about $1.8 billion over the past two months, according to Human Rights Activists in Iran (HRA), which is based outside the country. That tallies with an estimate from Iran’s Chamber of Commerce.

“The internet shutdown, which by itself was the source of livelihood for a very large number of virtual businesses – ha

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