I don’t feel fear or FOMO—I feel concern. And from that concern comes the realization that many people will suffer from the rise of AI. In societies like Argentina, where schooling rates are alarming, children don’t know how to read, and reading comprehension in schools is almost nonexistent, the impact can be even harsher.
Add to that a people worn down by politics, a landscape where I’m not interested in taking sides, not out of fear but because real solutions come from facing the problem and verbalizing it so we can see what’s within our reach. Quality education is slipping away, leaving self-learning and home teaching as the only paths. But here, owning a computer is not normal: I only got my first one two years ago, as an adult woman.
So I wonder: where will those safe spaces for education exist? The hard truth is—they won’t. In other countries, the rise of AI may be gradual, but in ours it could suddenly strip people of the social positions they’ve worked hard to achieve. How do I live with that knowledge? By sharing what I know in the most accessible way possible, so knowledge doesn’t stay in the hands of a few, but reaches anyone with the curiosity and desire to grow.
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Leonor