AI: The Good, the Bad, and What We Must Accept According to Anthropic

Published on 2026-07-04 | Translated from Spanish

Anthropic's president, Daniela Amodei, issued a clear warning: artificial intelligence is neither an angel nor a demon, but a reality with two faces. For the average citizen, this means AI can speed up medical diagnoses or automate tedious tasks, but it also threatens to leave drivers or administrative workers jobless. The key is to accept both sides without falling into hysteria or empty promises. Society must prepare for a profound change in daily routine, understanding that progress brings with it risks of privacy and inequality that cannot be ignored.

bifurcated city street scene, left side showing a doctor using a glowing holographic diagnostic interface over a patient bed, right side showing a truck driver staring at an empty dashboard while automated delivery drones fly past, central divider with a scale balancing a medical cross and a padlock, cinematic photorealistic style, dramatic split lighting, warm healing tones on left, cold metallic blues on right, detailed hardware components visible, contrast between human touch and cold automation, ultra-detailed urban background, dystopian yet hopeful atmosphere

How to prepare systems for the double-edged sword of AI ⚖️

From a technical standpoint, AI development requires robust regulatory frameworks and control systems that mitigate biases and data leaks. Tech companies must implement algorithmic audits and transparency in training models, while governments update data protection laws. Workforce training in digital skills is a priority to avoid social gaps. It's not about slowing innovation, but about designing infrastructures that allow detecting failures before they affect millions. Neutrality does not exist: every advance implies an ethical decision.

AI takes your job... but sells you a course to get it back 💸

The irony of the matter is that while AI threatens to leave you on the street, digital gurus are already selling express courses for you to become an expert in prompt engineering. Because of course, if you lose your job as an accountant, you can always retrain as a chatbot trainer. The only sure thing is that while we debate whether AI is good or bad, online training platforms are already cashing in. In the end, the real business is not artificial intelligence, but the anxiety it generates. Prepare for the worst, but don't forget to have your credit card handy.