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DoorDash introduced a standalone Tasks app that pays its delivery couriers to submit videos and audio recordings for AI training. Workers can earn money filming household chores, speaking in foreign languages, or capturing everyday tasks—all to help AI and robotics systems understand the physical world.
A George Mason University study found that 55% of surveyed U.S. teens have used AI to create fake nude images, with more than a third reporting non-consensual image creation. The research reveals AI nudification has become normalized among adolescents, raising urgent questions about consent and privacy in the age of AI-powered tools.
About 2,400 Kaiser Permanente mental health professionals and 23,000 nurses walked off the job in Northern California, protesting concerns that AI is replacing human therapists and degrading patient care. Workers cite new screening systems using unlicensed staff and AI tools like Abridge, while Kaiser maintains AI won't replace clinical judgment.
Val Kilmer died in April 2025 at age 65, but will star in As Deep as the Grave through AI technology. The actor was cast five years ago but throat cancer complications prevented filming. His daughter Mercedes Kilmer approved the digital resurrection, calling it aligned with her father's optimism about emerging technologies in storytelling.
The Washington Post has begun using an AI-driven algorithm to dynamically set subscription prices based on readers' personal data, marking a controversial shift from traditional fixed-price models. The move has drawn criticism from Democratic lawmakers who are pushing legislation to ban surveillance pricing practices, while raising concerns about invasive data collection and the future of journalism in the AI era.
A Delaware judge ordered South Korean gaming company Krafton to reinstate Unknown Worlds Entertainment leadership after CEO Changhan Kim relied on ChatGPT to engineer their removal and avoid a $250 million earnout payment. The court ruling highlights critical concerns about AI in corporate decision-making and the need for human judgment in good faith business dealings.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is battling widespread social media conspiracy theories claiming he's been replaced by an AI-generated clone. Despite posting proof of life videos, skeptics continue analyzing footage for visual inconsistencies, highlighting how artificial intelligence has created a crisis of trust where even authentic content faces scrutiny. The incident reveals the growing challenge of proving reality in an age of sophisticated deepfakes.
Dozens of recruitment channels on Telegram are seeking AI face models to conduct pig-butchering scams via deepfake video calls. Workers from Turkey, Russia, Ukraine, and Asia apply for roles requiring up to 100 video calls daily, using face-swapping technology to manipulate victims into cryptocurrency and romance scams across Southeast Asia.
Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses are under fire as reports reveal third-party contractors view sensitive user footage for AI training purposes. The controversy has attracted U.S. Senate attention, sparked a class-action lawsuit, and raised fears of mass surveillance as the company reportedly plans to add facial recognition technology.
Angela Lipps spent nearly six months behind bars after facial recognition software wrongly identified her in a North Dakota bank fraud case. She was arrested at gunpoint while babysitting, held without bail, and later cleared when bank records proved she was 1,200 miles away. This marks at least the ninth documented case of wrongful arrest driven by AI-driven misidentification, revealing a troubling pattern where law enforcement skips basic verification steps despite explicit warnings from AI vendors.
An estimated 85% of K-12 teachers and nearly 80% of university students now use AI tools like ChatGPT for schoolwork and lesson planning. But researchers warn this rapid AI integration in classrooms is creating an 'illusion of competence' that weakens critical thinking skills and undermines long-term student learning, even as policies and training lag far behind adoption rates.
Google demonstrated prototype smart glasses at MWC 2025 that can take a photo and immediately alter it using AI. The glasses use Gemini and Nano Banana to create photorealistic fake photos on the fly, transporting subjects to different locations like Barcelona's La Sagrada Família. This marks a shift in smart glasses capabilities, raising questions about photo authenticity as the technology prepares for launch later this year.
At the Game Developers Conference, major tech players like Nvidia and Google showcased AI tools across the expo floor, but a new survey reveals 52% of developers believe generative AI is harmful to the games industry. The conference highlighted a growing rift between venture capital enthusiasm and creative workers' concerns about job displacement, ethical issues, and output quality.
Embark Studios has re-recorded AI-generated voice lines in Arc Raiders with professional human actors following player criticism. CEO Patrick Söderlund acknowledged a clear quality difference, stating that real actors deliver superior performance. Despite the game's success with nearly 500,000 peak players on Steam, the studio is responding to concerns about immersion while maintaining AI as a production tool for testing.
A University of Bristol study conducted with Meaning Machine found that 95% of 68 players enjoyed generative AI-powered NPCs in Dead Meat, a murder mystery game. However, the small sample size, 20-minute playtime, and the studio's vested interest in the technology raise questions about whether AI characters in video games can truly replace human-written content.
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