A paper in JAMA Psychiatry says mental health providers should ask if patients are using artificial intelligence chatbots, just as they would ask patients about sleep habits and substance use.
FacebookLikeShareTweetEmail From viral videos to algorithmic suppression, the fight over Palestine is increasingly unfolding online. At a recent high-level webinar, the Global Alliance for Palestine ...
William Liu is grateful that he finished high school when he did. If the latest AI tools had been around then, he told me, he might have been tempted to use them to do his homework. Liu, now a ...
A Louisville startup is landing clients across the country — without making a single sales call. Stephen P. Schmidt has the ...
The Hangzhou start-up’s latest chatbot update sparks speculation over whether the expert mode is linked to the long-delayed ...
Lofty valuation prices in profitable Starlink satellite network, but also unproven ventures such as Starship, xAI and ...
Once the advertising seal is broken, the lucrative revenue spigot will be hard for other AI companies to resist ...
Find out why Googlebot is no longer the only dominant crawler as OpenAI's ChatGPT-User takes the lead in web requests.
As religious AI tools become increasingly common, many people are reckoning with how these technologies shape their ...
Phishing surge, LinkedIn tracking claims, spyware use, and rising stealers expose growing abuse of trusted systems.
AI chatbots make it possible for people who can’t code to build apps, sites and tools. But it’s decidedly problematic.