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The Godmother of AI says young talent is ‘overfocusing’ on every detail of their career

Fei Fei Li
Fei Fei Li said that young people should ask themselves three questions when considering a job.

  • Fei-Fei Li urged young AI talent to focus on passion and mission over minute details.
  • Li is a Stanford computer science professor and the CEO of AI company World Labs.
  • Industry leaders highlight creativity, adaptability, and soft skills in AI career success.

Young AI talent is overthinking too many aspects of their careers, says the Godmother of AI.

“I do find many of the young people today think about every single aspect of an equation when they decide on jobs at some point,” Fei-Fei Li said on an episode of “Lenny’s Podcast” released on Sunday.

Li is a longtime Stanford computer science professor famous for inventing ImageNet. Last year, she cofounded World Labs, a company building AI models to perceive, generate, and interact with 3D environments.

On the podcast, she said it’s a “privilege” to receive applications from young AI engineers and researchers who want to work at World Labs.

“But sometimes I do want to encourage young people to focus on what’s important because I find myself constantly in mentoring mode when I talk to job candidates,” she said. “Not necessarily recruiting, but just in mentoring mode.”

She added that she sees young talent “overfocusing on every minute decision” instead of asking themselves the most important questions like: “Where’s your passion? Do you align with the mission? Do you believe and have faith in this team?”

“Just focus on the impact you can make and the kind of work and team you can you can work with,” she said.

Li joins other tech and AI leaders who have been touting the value of soft skills such as creativity and passion over technical details.

Liang Wenfeng, the founder of the Chinese AI lab DeepSeek, has said he favors creativity over experience.

“If you are pursuing short-term goals, it is right to find people with ready experience,” he said in a 2023 interview with 36KR, a Chinese tech publication. “But if you look at the long-term, experience is not that important. Basic skills, creativity, and passion are much more important. From this perspective, there are many suitable candidates in China.”

Last month, Ryan Roslansky, the CEO of LinkedIn, said that initiative and adaptability will be more valuable in the future as companies incorporate AI in the workplace.

“My guess is that the future of work belongs not anymore to the people that have the fanciest degrees or went to the best colleges, but to the people who are adaptable, forward thinking, ready to learn, and ready to embrace these tools,” Roslansky said at a fireside chat at the company’s office.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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Trump Tells Republicans They Can Vote to Release Epstein Files Because He Has ‘Nothing to Hide’

In a major reversal, President Donald Trump has signalled to House Republicans that they can vote for the release of the so-called “Epstein files,” as an upcoming vote that threatened to force GOP lawmakers to choose between their leader and their base seems all but certain to pass anyway.

After urging Republicans last week to prevent a House vote to release all of the Epstein files, Trump posted on Truth Social on Sunday night that “House Republicans should vote to release the Epstein files, because we have nothing to hide.”

[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

Still, Trump maintained that the focus on Jeffrey Epstein, the late well-connected financier and convicted sex offender who died by suicide in federal prison in 2019 during an investigation into alleged sex trafficking, is a distraction ginned up by Trump’s rivals, despite many of his allies having for years fomented conspiracies that Epstein’s death and the lack of public information about his associates were part of a cover-up by prominent Democratic associates.

“It’s time to move on from this Democrat Hoax perpetrated by Radical Left Lunatics in order to deflect from the Great Success of the Republican Party,” Trump added in his post. “The House Oversight Committee can have whatever they are legally entitled to, I DON’T CARE! All I do care about is that Republicans get BACK ON POINT, which is the Economy, “Affordability” (where we are winning BIG!)”

Lawmakers are preparing to vote on a bill that would force the Justice Department to fully release all documents and communications related to Epstein’s sex trafficking investigation and death. The bill has overwhelming support from Democrats, and Rep. Thomas Massie (R, Ky.), who introduced a discharge petition in July alongside Rep. Ro Khanna (D, Calif.) to force the vote despite Republican leadership’s opposition, said he expected a “deluge of Republicans” to also break with their party and vote for the files’ release.

The discharge petition was stalled during the government shutdown when Rep. Adelita Grijalva (D, Ariz.)’s swearing-in was delayed by Speaker Mike Johnson (R, La.), a move Democrats claimed was to block the petition effort. Grijalva became the 218th member to sign the petition, meeting the threshold to force a vote, immediately after taking the oath of office last week when Johnson called the House back to session to pass the funding bill to end the government shutdown.

The Epstein files disclosure vote is expected on Tuesday and comes after the House Oversight Committee last week made public more than 20,000 files, including several email exchanges that mention Trump. In one email from 2019, Epstein wrote that Trump “knew about the girls.” Trump’s friendship with Epstein was already known, and he appears to have been mentioned in records released by the DOJ earlier this year.

The White House, which maintains that Trump has never been accused of wrongdoing in connection with Epstein, said Democrats “selectively leaked emails” to “smear President Donald Trump.”

The names of victims were redacted from the files released last week, although the White House said that one of them was the late Virginia Giuffre, who accused Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, who was recently stripped of his British royal title of prince over his connection to Epstein, of sexually abusing her. Giuffre, who previously worked at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago and was among the most prominent of Epstein’s victims, died by suicide in April. She previously told authorities that Trump was a “good friend” of Epstein’s but that to her knowledge he had never partaken in “any sex with any” of Epstein’s victims.

Speaker Johnson also said on Sunday that Republicans and Trump have “nothing to hide.”

“We’ll just get this done and move it on,” he said on Fox News.

Whether Trump’s supporters in the House take the President’s latest message as permission, however, is yet to be seen. Trump also warned in his post about Epstein that “Some ‘members’ of the Republican Party are being ‘used,’ and we can’t let that happen.”

The release of the Epstein files has been a divisive issue among Republicans and Trump’s MAGA base. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R, Ga.) was one of three Republicans besides Massie to sign the discharge petition amid Trump’s calls for Republicans to block the mainly Democratic effort to release the files.

The President withdrew his “support and endorsement” of Greene on Friday, calling her a “traitor.” The public fallout between Trump and Greene, a longtime ally of the President, has led to threats on Greene’s life, she said.

Last week, Trump made several posts that appeared aimed at keeping Republicans in line and accused Democrats of pushing an “Epstein Hoax.” 

“Some Weak Republicans have fallen into their clutches because they are soft and foolish,” he wrote on Friday. “Only a very bad, or stupid, Republican would fall into that trap,” he wrote in another post. “This is another Russia, Russia, Russia Scam, with all arrows pointing to the Democrats,” he posted on Friday.

The President also said he had instructed Attorney General Pam Bondi to investigate Epstein’s association with several prominent Democrats, despite the Justice Department announcing in July that the case was effectively closed and no further uncharged third parties would be investigated.

“Let’s,” Trump added in his Sunday night post, “not fall into the Epstein ‘TRAP,’ which is actually a curse on the Democrats, not us.”

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