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Half of UK adults worry that AI will take or alter their job, poll finds

The Guardian

Half of adults in the UK are concerned about the impact of artificial intelligence on their job, according to a poll, as union leaders call for a "step change" in the country's approach to new technologies. Job losses or changes to terms and conditions were the biggest worries for the 51% of 2,600 adults surveyed for the Trades Union Congress who said they were concerned about the technology. AI is a particular concern for workers aged between 25 and 34, with nearly two-thirds (62%) of those surveyed reporting such worries. The TUC poll was released as a string of large employers – including BT, Amazon, and Microsoft – have said in recent months that advances in AI could lead them to cut jobs. Britain's job market is slowing amid a cooling economy, with the UK's official jobless rate at a four-year high of 4.7%, although most economists do not believe this is linked to an acceleration in investment in AI.


Majority of Americans don't trust AI-generated election information, poll finds

FOX News

Tech expert Kurt Knutsson reveals how scientists developed a method for robots to sense touch using AI and sensors. Most Americans do not believe artificial intelligence (AI) is trustworthy for election information. A poll released Thursday by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and USAFacts found that just under two-thirds of Americans do not trust generative predictions produced by AI. Approximately 64% of respondents responded to the survey saying that they are not confident that election information generated by AI chatbots is reliably factual. Text from the ChatGPT page of the OpenAI website is shown in this photo.


Biden approval rating plummets to 15-year low, poll finds

FOX News

Talk radio host Stacy Washington joined'Fox & Friends First' to discuss why Biden's approval has plummeted to all-time lows as Americans battle the impacts of an open border and soaring consumer prices. President Biden's approval rating plummeted to the lowest on record for a U.S. president in the last 15 years, according to a new poll by ABC News. Biden's approval rating sits at just 31%, according to a national survey produced for ABC by Langer Research Associates, with fieldwork by Ipsos Public Affairs via its online, probability-based KnowledgePanel. The poll found 58% of respondents disapprove of the job Biden is doing as president. That makes his approval rating worse than even former President Trump's lowest in office, which was 36%, according to ABC News.