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1000 results for “artificialmind”

  1. Sanders Probes AI Impact on Privacy

    Senator Sanders just had a striking conversation with an AI named Claude about the impact of artificial intelligence on privacy - and his one-line verdict says it all: Claude is actually pretty good on the issues. This brief endorsement carries significant weight, sparking important discussions about the role of AI in shaping our future.

    osintsights.com/sanders-probes

    #ArtificialIntelligence #Privacy #EmergingThreats #AiEthics #SenatorSanders

  2. New data: 20% of full-time U.S. employees report AI has already replaced portions of their work. But 15% say AI also created entirely new tasks they didn't have before.

    Replacement and creation are happening at the same time.

    #ArtificialIntelligence #FutureOfWork #WorkplaceAutomation

  3. New data: 20% of full-time U.S. employees report AI has already replaced portions of their work. But 15% say AI also created entirely new tasks they didn't have before.

    Replacement and creation are happening at the same time.

    #ArtificialIntelligence #FutureOfWork #WorkplaceAutomation

  4. New data: 20% of full-time U.S. employees report AI has already replaced portions of their work. But 15% say AI also created entirely new tasks they didn't have before.

    Replacement and creation are happening at the same time.

    #ArtificialIntelligence #FutureOfWork #WorkplaceAutomation

  5. New data: 20% of full-time U.S. employees report AI has already replaced portions of their work. But 15% say AI also created entirely new tasks they didn't have before.

    Replacement and creation are happening at the same time.

    #ArtificialIntelligence #FutureOfWork #WorkplaceAutomation

  6. #OpenAI Backs Bill That Would Limit #Liability for AI-Enabled Mass #Deaths or Financial Disasters

    The ChatGPT-maker testified in favor of an #Illinois bill that would limit when #AI labs can be held liable—even in cases where their products cause “critical harm.”
    #chatgpt #artificialintelligence

    wired.com/story/openai-backs-b

  7. #OpenAI Backs Bill That Would Limit #Liability for AI-Enabled Mass #Deaths or Financial Disasters

    The ChatGPT-maker testified in favor of an #Illinois bill that would limit when #AI labs can be held liable—even in cases where their products cause “critical harm.”
    #chatgpt #artificialintelligence

    wired.com/story/openai-backs-b

  8. #OpenAI Backs Bill That Would Limit #Liability for AI-Enabled Mass #Deaths or Financial Disasters

    The ChatGPT-maker testified in favor of an #Illinois bill that would limit when #AI labs can be held liable—even in cases where their products cause “critical harm.”
    #chatgpt #artificialintelligence

    wired.com/story/openai-backs-b

  9. Backs Bill That Would Limit for AI-Enabled Mass or Financial Disasters

    The ChatGPT-maker testified in favor of an bill that would limit when labs can be held liable—even in cases where their products cause “critical harm.”

    wired.com/story/openai-backs-b

  10. #OpenAI Backs Bill That Would Limit #Liability for AI-Enabled Mass #Deaths or Financial Disasters

    The ChatGPT-maker testified in favor of an #Illinois bill that would limit when #AI labs can be held liable—even in cases where their products cause “critical harm.”
    #chatgpt #artificialintelligence

    wired.com/story/openai-backs-b

  11. The Ethics of AI in Writing

    There was a discussion recently on an editors’ group about whether to work on AI-generated content or not. Everyone who commented, more than 70 people, said that they would not.
    Some of the editors refused to be the ones who would “put the humanity” into the words since that should be the responsibility of the person who would ultimately benefit from the text. Others commented that the text was often not up to a standard they would accept anyway, AI-generated or not.
    The discussion was pertinent since Hachette cancelled a novel recently that was said to have been written at least partly by AI. The author claims that an editor friend had introduced these AI generated parts of the text.
    writerunboxed.com/2026/04/10/t

    #ArtificialIntelligence #Editing #Fictiontherapy #ChatGPT #CRAFT

  12. Als een AI-tutor rekening houdt met de zone van naaste ontwikkeling
    Het gebruik van AI-tutors leidt er lang niet altijd toe dat lerenden ook daadwerkelijk goed leren omdat ze lerenden antwoorden aanreiken in plaats van hen te begeleiden bij het denken. Onderzoek van de University of Pennsylvania laat zien dat de volgorde van de oefeningen die een AI-tutor weleens van belang kan zijn. #artificialintelligence #generatieveai #onderzoek #begeleiding #onderwijs #edutoot
    te-learning.nl/als-een-ai-tuto

  13. Als een AI-tutor rekening houdt met de zone van naaste ontwikkeling
    Het gebruik van AI-tutors leidt er lang niet altijd toe dat lerenden ook daadwerkelijk goed leren omdat ze lerenden antwoorden aanreiken in plaats van hen te begeleiden bij het denken. Onderzoek van de University of Pennsylvania laat zien dat de volgorde van de oefeningen die een AI-tutor weleens van belang kan zijn. #artificialintelligence #generatieveai #onderzoek #begeleiding #onderwijs #edutoot
    te-learning.nl/als-een-ai-tuto

  14. Als een AI-tutor rekening houdt met de zone van naaste ontwikkeling
    Het gebruik van AI-tutors leidt er lang niet altijd toe dat lerenden ook daadwerkelijk goed leren omdat ze lerenden antwoorden aanreiken in plaats van hen te begeleiden bij het denken. Onderzoek van de University of Pennsylvania laat zien dat de volgorde van de oefeningen die een AI-tutor weleens van belang kan zijn. #artificialintelligence #generatieveai #onderzoek #begeleiding #onderwijs #edutoot
    te-learning.nl/als-een-ai-tuto

  15. Als een AI-tutor rekening houdt met de zone van naaste ontwikkeling
    Het gebruik van AI-tutors leidt er lang niet altijd toe dat lerenden ook daadwerkelijk goed leren omdat ze lerenden antwoorden aanreiken in plaats van hen te begeleiden bij het denken. Onderzoek van de University of Pennsylvania laat zien dat de volgorde van de oefeningen die een AI-tutor weleens van belang kan zijn. #artificialintelligence #generatieveai #onderzoek #begeleiding #onderwijs #edutoot
    te-learning.nl/als-een-ai-tuto

  16. Florida AG Launches Investigation into OpenAI Over Safety and Security Concerns

    📰 Original title: Florida AG to probe OpenAI, alleging possible connection to FSU shooting

    🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
    👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️

    View full AI summary: killbait.com/en/florida-ag-lau

    #artificialintelligence #openai #chatgpt #fsushooting

  17. Florida AG Launches Investigation into OpenAI Over Safety and Security Concerns

    📰 Original title: Florida AG to probe OpenAI, alleging possible connection to FSU shooting

    🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
    👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️

    View full AI summary: killbait.com/en/florida-ag-lau

    #artificialintelligence #openai #chatgpt #fsushooting

  18. Florida AG Launches Investigation into OpenAI Over Safety and Security Concerns

    📰 Original title: Florida AG to probe OpenAI, alleging possible connection to FSU shooting

    🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
    👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️

    View full AI summary: killbait.com/en/florida-ag-lau

    #artificialintelligence #openai #chatgpt #fsushooting

  19. Most professionals are using AI wrong. They find one "favorite" tool and try to force it into every task.

    That’s like using a hammer to perform surgery.

    I’ve broken down the 2026 AI landscape into three distinct pillars:

    ChatGPT: Your high-velocity drafting and coding engine.

    Claude: Your analytical strategist for prose and interactive prototypes.

    Gemini: Your execution specialist for deep Google Workspace integration.

    Stop treating AI like a relationship and start treating it like a portfolio.

    Full technical breakdown on how to "glitch-proof" your workflow:
    digiglitch.net/5j1v

    #ArtificialIntelligence #Productivity #TechStrategy #DigitalTransformation #Workflows

  20. Trump-appointed judges refuse to block #Trump #blacklisting of #Anthropic #AI tech

    A federal appeals court refused to halt the Trump administration's efforts to #blacklist Anthropic yesterday, denying the company's emergency motion for a stay. But the court granted the US-based AI firm's request to expedite the case and will hold oral arguments on May 19.
    #artificialintelligence

    arstechnica.com/tech-policy/20

  21. New Statesman | The silent coup by Will Dunn

    On 20 April 2025, an official in the British government emailed their colleagues a story from that day’s Financial Times. The headline read: “UAE set to use AI to write laws in world first”. The officials, all of whom are involved in implementing AI in the running of the British state, read the article with amusement. “We were tempted to say: ‘We got there first,’” one of them told me. But they felt that the UK was “not fighting for the crown of the first AI-written line of legislation”, so they decided not to make public a fact very few people know: text composed by a large language model has made its way into an act of parliament. British laws are already being written by AI.

    This is a matter of sovereignty. The software products we refer to as “AI” are all built on advanced “foundational models” from the US and China. This is a technology we do not control, but which plays an increasingly active role at every level of the British power structure. It is part of every conversation, drafting emails between officials, summarising ministers’ briefings and composing speeches delivered in the House of Commons. The Bank of England is using machine learning to inform its decisions on interest rates. The BBC uses AI to redraft articles. Every student at Oxford – where 31 of our previous prime ministers were educated – is now being educated with the help of OpenAI. There is little public understanding of how quickly this technology is moving through the institutions of power, or how enthusiastically it’s being pursued by a government that believes AI software could solve all its problems.

    In dozens of interviews with current and former government officials and advisers, technologists and MPs – most of whom asked not to be named, in order to speak freely – I have been told about a quiet handing over of control in the frameworks of advice, intelligence and decision-making that underlie every government decision. This is not just a simple software upgrade. Large language models (LLMs), the software behind AI program such as ChatGPT, are built to produce answers that will be accepted by users – not to calculate, but to convince. This highly persuasive software, built primarily overseas, is being handed an unknown amount of political power.

    Read more: newstatesman.com/technology/20

    #artificialintelligence(ai) #politics #technology #ukgovernment

  22. New Statesman | The silent coup by Will Dunn

    On 20 April 2025, an official in the British government emailed their colleagues a story from that day’s Financial Times. The headline read: “UAE set to use AI to write laws in world first”. The officials, all of whom are involved in implementing AI in the running of the British state, read the article with amusement. “We were tempted to say: ‘We got there first,’” one of them told me. But they felt that the UK was “not fighting for the crown of the first AI-written line of legislation”, so they decided not to make public a fact very few people know: text composed by a large language model has made its way into an act of parliament. British laws are already being written by AI.

    This is a matter of sovereignty. The software products we refer to as “AI” are all built on advanced “foundational models” from the US and China. This is a technology we do not control, but which plays an increasingly active role at every level of the British power structure. It is part of every conversation, drafting emails between officials, summarising ministers’ briefings and composing speeches delivered in the House of Commons. The Bank of England is using machine learning to inform its decisions on interest rates. The BBC uses AI to redraft articles. Every student at Oxford – where 31 of our previous prime ministers were educated – is now being educated with the help of OpenAI. There is little public understanding of how quickly this technology is moving through the institutions of power, or how enthusiastically it’s being pursued by a government that believes AI software could solve all its problems.

    In dozens of interviews with current and former government officials and advisers, technologists and MPs – most of whom asked not to be named, in order to speak freely – I have been told about a quiet handing over of control in the frameworks of advice, intelligence and decision-making that underlie every government decision. This is not just a simple software upgrade. Large language models (LLMs), the software behind AI program such as ChatGPT, are built to produce answers that will be accepted by users – not to calculate, but to convince. This highly persuasive software, built primarily overseas, is being handed an unknown amount of political power.

    Read more: newstatesman.com/technology/20

    #artificialintelligence(ai) #politics #technology #ukgovernment

  23. New Statesman | The silent coup by Will Dunn

    On 20 April 2025, an official in the British government emailed their colleagues a story from that day’s Financial Times. The headline read: “UAE set to use AI to write laws in world first”. The officials, all of whom are involved in implementing AI in the running of the British state, read the article with amusement. “We were tempted to say: ‘We got there first,’” one of them told me. But they felt that the UK was “not fighting for the crown of the first AI-written line of legislation”, so they decided not to make public a fact very few people know: text composed by a large language model has made its way into an act of parliament. British laws are already being written by AI.

    This is a matter of sovereignty. The software products we refer to as “AI” are all built on advanced “foundational models” from the US and China. This is a technology we do not control, but which plays an increasingly active role at every level of the British power structure. It is part of every conversation, drafting emails between officials, summarising ministers’ briefings and composing speeches delivered in the House of Commons. The Bank of England is using machine learning to inform its decisions on interest rates. The BBC uses AI to redraft articles. Every student at Oxford – where 31 of our previous prime ministers were educated – is now being educated with the help of OpenAI. There is little public understanding of how quickly this technology is moving through the institutions of power, or how enthusiastically it’s being pursued by a government that believes AI software could solve all its problems.

    In dozens of interviews with current and former government officials and advisers, technologists and MPs – most of whom asked not to be named, in order to speak freely – I have been told about a quiet handing over of control in the frameworks of advice, intelligence and decision-making that underlie every government decision. This is not just a simple software upgrade. Large language models (LLMs), the software behind AI program such as ChatGPT, are built to produce answers that will be accepted by users – not to calculate, but to convince. This highly persuasive software, built primarily overseas, is being handed an unknown amount of political power.

    Read more: newstatesman.com/technology/20

    #artificialintelligence(ai) #politics #technology #ukgovernment

  24. New Statesman | The silent coup by Will Dunn

    On 20 April 2025, an official in the British government emailed their colleagues a story from that day’s Financial Times. The headline read: “UAE set to use AI to write laws in world first”. The officials, all of whom are involved in implementing AI in the running of the British state, read the article with amusement. “We were tempted to say: ‘We got there first,’” one of them told me. But they felt that the UK was “not fighting for the crown of the first AI-written line of legislation”, so they decided not to make public a fact very few people know: text composed by a large language model has made its way into an act of parliament. British laws are already being written by AI.

    This is a matter of sovereignty. The software products we refer to as “AI” are all built on advanced “foundational models” from the US and China. This is a technology we do not control, but which plays an increasingly active role at every level of the British power structure. It is part of every conversation, drafting emails between officials, summarising ministers’ briefings and composing speeches delivered in the House of Commons. The Bank of England is using machine learning to inform its decisions on interest rates. The BBC uses AI to redraft articles. Every student at Oxford – where 31 of our previous prime ministers were educated – is now being educated with the help of OpenAI. There is little public understanding of how quickly this technology is moving through the institutions of power, or how enthusiastically it’s being pursued by a government that believes AI software could solve all its problems.

    In dozens of interviews with current and former government officials and advisers, technologists and MPs – most of whom asked not to be named, in order to speak freely – I have been told about a quiet handing over of control in the frameworks of advice, intelligence and decision-making that underlie every government decision. This is not just a simple software upgrade. Large language models (LLMs), the software behind AI program such as ChatGPT, are built to produce answers that will be accepted by users – not to calculate, but to convince. This highly persuasive software, built primarily overseas, is being handed an unknown amount of political power.

    Read more: newstatesman.com/technology/20

    #artificialintelligence(ai) #politics #technology #ukgovernment

  25. Poke Launches AI Agent Accessible Through Text Messaging for Everyday Tasks

    📰 Original title: Poke makes using AI agents as easy as sending a text

    🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
    👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅

    View full AI summary: killbait.com/en/poke-launches-

    #artificialintelligence #aiagents #automation #consumerai

  26. The transformation of business operations is already underway.

    Organizations using AI are:
    • Automating communication
    • Scaling workflows
    • Responding instantly

    The real differentiator is no longer technology—but how quickly it is adopted.

    Visit: aisa-x.ai/free-ai-chatbot-indi

    #ArtificialIntelligence #Automation #DigitalTransformation #AisaXAI #BusinessGrowth #FutureOfWork