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Woman says ChatGPT saved her life by helping detect cancer, which doctors missed
Fox News senior medical analyst Dr. Marc Siegel joined'Fox & Friends' to discuss the impact of artificial intelligence on medicine and his take on President Trump's decision to withdraw from the World Health Organization. A mother of two credits ChatGPT for saving her life, claiming the artificial intelligence chatbot flagged the condition leading to her cancer when doctors missed it. Lauren Bannon, who divides her time between North Carolina and the U.S. Virgin Islands, first noticed in February 2024 that she was having trouble bending her fingers in the morning and evening, as reported by Kennedy News and Media. After four months, the 40-year-old was told by doctors that she had rheumatoid arthritis, despite testing negative for the condition. WHAT IS ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI)?
Google AI overviews will explain any nonsense phrase you make up
Google's AI Overviews sometimes acts like a lost man who won't ask for directions: It would rather confidently make a mistake than admit it doesn't know something. We know this because folks online have noticed you can ask Google about any faux idiom -- any random, nonsense saying you make up -- and Google AI Overviews will often prescribe its meaning. That's not exactly surprising, as AI has shown a penchant for either hallucinating or inventing stuff in an effort to provide answers with insufficient data. In the case of made-up idioms, it's kind of funny to see how Google's AI responds to idiotic sayings like "You can't lick a badger twice." On X, SEO expert Lily Ray dubbed the phenomenon "AI-splaining."
Google to report earnings amid justice department lawsuits and Trump tariffs
Google's parent company Alphabet will report its first quarter earnings on Thursday, which come as the tech giant is embroiled in antitrust lawsuits brought by the US government and a 17% drop in its stock price since the beginning of the year. It is also the company's first earnings report since Donald Trump levied tariffs on trade partners around the world. Despite the upheaval, analysts appear optimistic on Alphabet's outlook projecting first quarter revenue of 89.2bn, up 11% since the same time last year, and earnings of 2.01 per share, up 7%, according to consensus estimates. Analysts do not expect the global tariffs to create much of an impact for Alphabet, since they were mostly instituted after the end of the quarter. Alphabet is one of the world's most valuable companies, worth nearly 2trn.
OpenAI Wants to Go For-Profit. Experts Say Regulators Should Step In
In the latest development in an ongoing struggle over OpenAI's future direction--and potentially the future of artificial intelligence itself--dozens of prominent figures are urging the Attorneys General of California and Delaware to block OpenAI's controversial plan to convert from its unique nonprofit-controlled structure to a for-profit company. In a letter made public April 23, signatories including "AI Godfather" Geoffrey Hinton, Harvard legal professor Lawrence Lessig, and several former OpenAI researchers argue the move represents a fundamental betrayal of OpenAI's founding mission. "The proposed restructuring would eliminate essential safeguards, effectively handing control of, and profits from, what could be the most powerful technology ever created to a for-profit entity with legal duties to prioritize shareholder returns," the letter's authors write. It lands as OpenAI faces immense pressure from the other side: failing to implement the restructure by the end of the year could cost the company 20 billion and hamstring future fundraising. OpenAI was founded in 2015 as a non-profit, with its stated mission being to ensure that artificial general intelligence (AGI) "benefits all of humanity" rather than advancing "the private gain of any person."
Trump signs AI education order to train K-12 students amidst competition from China
President Donald Trump signed a new executive order on Wednesday aimed at fostering AI education in K-12 schools and preparing students for an increasingly AI-centric workforce. The new directive's overarching goal is to "ensure the United States remains a global leader in this technological revolution," according to the press release. The policy seeks to "promote AI literacy and proficiency of K-12 students" while also training educators so they can integrate AI education into their curriculums. The move could be a response to recent developments in China. In March, the Beijing Municipal Education Commission announced that it would be making AI lessons mandatory for primary and secondary school students.
Eufy's new security NVRs will boast crime-detecting AI agents
Eufy is teeing up a pair of networked security video recorder and camera kits that will--eventually--use AI agents to warn you of possible threats in real time. Both systems offer connections for PoE (Power over Ethernet) cameras, with the ProSecure NVR arriving in various packages that combine 4K bullet Pan/tilt/zoom and turret-style cameras with color night vision, cross-camera tracking (a Eufy feature that stiches together video events from different vantage points), and up to 8X digital zoom. The ProSecure NVR supports a total of 16 connected cameras. The ProSecure NVR arrives in various packages that combine bullet PTZ and turret-style cameras. In addition to PoE cams, the Zigbee-enabled HomeBase Pro can connect to everything from Eufy keypads and smoke detectors to video doorbells and water leak sensors.
Microsoft report: 1 in 3 business leaders are considering replacing workers with AI
Microsoft's annual Work Trend Index report is here and, unsurprisingly, AI is the hot topic in the 2025 edition. The big takeaway: 1 in 3 business leaders say that they are considering layoffs as a result of AI deployment in their companies. According to the report, 33 percent of leaders are already "considering headcount reductions" because of AI. The new report also highlights how "frontier firms" are integrating AI into their workflow. Microsoft describes these frontier firms as companies "structured around on-demand intelligence and powered by'hybrid' teams of humans agents."
I used Motorola's 1,300 Razr Ultra, and it left me with no Samsung Galaxy Z Flip envy
You have my attention, Motorola. The company today is unveiling not one, not two, but three Razr flip phones, including a first-ever'Ultra' model that's feature-packed, fashionably styled, and unsurprisingly expensive at 1,299. I spent an intimate afternoon with all three models ahead of their launch, and, barring the price tag that makes me question the state of the economy, my first impressions were mostly positive. In fact, the Razr Ultra, which I tested the most, left me feeling a little less excited about what's on the docket from Samsung later this summer. The base Motorola Razr model (left) and Razr Ultra (right).
Motorola's Latest Razr Phones Are All In on AI
But at the company's closed-door launch event on Wednesday in New York City, much of the spotlight was on Moto AI, artificial intelligence features powered by in-house and third-party large language models, like Meta's Llama. Google's Gemini is naturally available on the Razr phones, but for the first time, the AI search engine Perplexity AI will be preinstalled on the devices. The CEO of Perplexity, Aravind Srinivas, took the stage to talk about the optimizations made to take advantage of the Razr's unique design. Motorola even says Microsoft's Copilot will also be available in the coming months. The 2025 Razr lineup starts at 700 for the base Razr, 1,000 for the Razr, and 1,300 for the Razr Ultra; the midrange Razr is almost the same device as the Razr from 2024, with a few enhancements to durability.
How much energy does a single chatbot prompt use? This AI tool can show you
AI systems require a lot of energy to function, but no one has exact numbers, especially not for individual chatbot queries. To address this, an engineer at Hugging Face built a tool to try to find out. The language surrounding AI infrastructure, much of which emphasizes "the cloud" and other air-themed metaphors, can obscure the fact that it relies on energy-hungry computers. To run complex computations quickly, AI systems require powerful chips, multiple GPUs, and expansive data centers, all of which consume power when you ask ChatGPT a question. This is part of why free-tier access to many chatbots comes with usage limits: electricity costs make computing expensive for the hosting company.