Insurgency and the shifting politics of antarctica. He was based in caracas venezuela for the New York Times as bureau chief where he covered colombian warhe and politics in bolivia. Give a warm welcome to simon romero. [applause] mr. Romero thanks for the kind introduction. I will introduce this wonderful panel i have the pleasure of moderating. Is a journalist and cultural anthropologist and writer at texas monthly. Thework focuses on u. S. Mexico border in the history and culture of south texas. Her writing has appeared in harpers magazine and the New York Times. [applause] angela is a multimedia journalist who has covered the u. S. Mexico border in mexicos interior for television, newspapers and radio and was muska and was mexico border chief for a major broadcasting group. She is a reporter for the albuquerque journal, and a special contributor on public radio and television. [applause] alfredo is the mexico border correspondent for the dallas morning news, where he has covered u.
Rain forest, paraguays guerrilla insurgency and the shifting politics of antarctica. He was also the New York Times bureau chief until then, covering issues including president hugo chavezs political movement, columbias long internal war and indigenous politics. Please give a warm welcome to mister simon romero. [applause] thank you for the very kind introduction. I will move on and introduce this wonderful panel i have the privilege of moderating. We have cecilia balli, cultural and apologist and writer at large on texas monthly. Her work focuses on the usmexico border and the history and culture of south texas. Her writing has appeared in harpers magazine and the New York Times. [applause] Angela Kocherga is a multimedia journalist to cover the usmexico border and mexicos interior for television, newspapers, and radio and mexicos border chief for a major broadcasting group. C is the Southern New Mexico border reporter for a special contributor for public radio and television. [applau
U. S. Mexico border. It is my great pleasure to introduce our moderator. Simone romero as a correspondent the New York Times. He covered brazil and other parts of south america and is written on a broad range of issues including river pirates in the amazon, paraguays insurgency and the shifting politics of antarctica. He was based in caracas venezuela for the New York Times as bureau chief where he covered colombian warhe and politics in bolivia. Give a warm welcome to simon romero. [applause] mr. Romero thanks for the kind introduction. I will introduce this wonderful panel i have the pleasure of moderating. Is a journalist and cultural anthropologist and writer at texas monthly. Thework focuses on u. S. Mexico border in the history and culture of south texas. Her writing has appeared in harpers magazine and the New York Times. [applause] angela is a multimedia journalist who has covered the u. S. Mexico border in mexicos interior for television, newspapers and radio and was muska and
Who are very active in looking at technology and product 50 and the implications for the labor force. It will depend over time on workers having the skills and aptitudes to benefit from technology. Hashistory for 250 years been that Technology Enables higher productivity and those who have the skills and aptitude to operate and benefit from that technology, their wages go up. Their stated of living goes up. Youre at a place where there may be a period and there have been periods where there could be several decades that is not the case. Where the evolution of ofhnology leads to periods bad distributional effects. Over time, it has always led to lifting all boats. This particular period is one of concern. Ought to beress, we thinking about the potential impact at whether there are any policy moves we ought to make to anticipate or to try to accommodate Artificial Intelligence and other technologies. Chair powell i think it is hard to imagine you can stop the march of technology. It will
Test. Test. Test. Test. Test. Test. Test. Test. Test. Test. Test. Captioning performed by vitac you see how blatant their efforts were to get involved in the 2016 election. I think weve seen influence operations coming out of china, iran. I know camille will talk about this in greater detail. And we need to be honest. Its us. Were doing a lot to promote the disinformation ourselves. Sometimes were doing it at the behest or with the encouragement of foreign actors. Sometimes were doing it on our own because of various extreme views which foreign actors amplify. But its not just the adversary thats doing it. It involves our own citizens, some of whom take extreme positions and exploit these techniques and these kinds of technologies in order to propagate them. There are two things that are on the horizon that we need to think about that can even take this to the next level. One is the use of socalled Artificial Intelligence. Again, the amount of data that is out there about what people a