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Youngkin credits Trump administration with bolstering anti-human trafficking efforts

FOX News

Youngkin, joined by Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares and other state attorneys general, compared human trafficking enforcement to addressing transnational gangs. "We must have multi-state and federal support in order to dismantle the networks, not just arrest an individual, we've got to unpack the networks," Youngkin told a crowd of a few hundred. The Trump administration has been a boon to human trafficking enforcement efforts, Youngkin said, noting he met with top Justice Department officials at the White House after the inauguration to discuss the matter and found them receptive. Virginia law enforcement has since been coordinating with the federal government to take down foreign gang operations, which Youngkin said overlaps with the human trafficking space. Youngkin used the example of gang crime inside correctional centers, which he said was the first "thread" his team pulled.


Youngkin unleashes cutting-edge AI technology in effort to slash Virginia's government red tape

FOX News

Gov. Glenn Youngkin, R-Va., joins'America's Newsroom' to discuss the impact of President Donald Trump's'historic' trade deal with Japan and the advancements in artificial intelligence. Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin is embarking on a landmark project to use "agentic" artificial intelligence to hasten his 2022 pledge to cut one-quarter of Virginia's red-tape regulatory structure during his tenure. The term-limited Republican signed an executive order that introduced a pilot program using AI to scan the entirety of Richmond's regulations and official guidance. "We ask each agency to calculate the savings to them associated with any action that is taken. For more information about our methodology, I would point you to the Regulatory Economic Analysis Manual, which can be found online," Youngkin spokesperson Peter Finocchio told Fox News Digital.


Tech guru behind ChatGPT 'a little bit scared' of his creation: 'Going to eliminate a lot of current jobs'

FOX News

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that he was "a little bit scared" of ChatGPT and admitted that his technology would likely destroy "a lot of current jobs." The CEO of the company behind ChatGPT, likely the world's most famous AI chatbot, admitted that he was "a little bit scared" of his company's creation during an interview with ABC News. "We've got to be careful here," OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said during an interview Thursday. That's because the technology itself, he explained, was extremely powerful and could be dangerous. "I think people should be happy that we are a little bit scared of this," the 37-year-old tech guru said.


Virginia Gov. Youngkin says more schools should ban ChatGPT

FOX News

New York attorney and writer Alexander Zubatov weighs in on how A.I. is rapidly changing society and says he's concerned about A.I. being used as a weapon against descent on'The Ingraham Angle.' Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin said Thursday that more school districts should ban the ChatGPT artificial intelligence tool. The Republican said during a CNN evening town hall that the U.S. should be clear about its goal as a nation "which is to make sure that our kids can think and, therefore, if a machine is thinking for them, then we're not accomplishing our goal." "I do think that it's something to be very careful of, and I do think more districts, more school districts should ban it," the governor said. Earlier in the year, public schools in northern Virginia blocked the chatbot from county-issued devices. ARE YOU READY FOR AI VOICE CLONING ON YOUR PHONE?