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Experts Debate Ethical Limits of AI Decision‑Making Surrogates in Healthcare

Experts Debate Ethical Limits of AI Decision‑Making Surrogates in Healthcare

Medical ethicists and AI researchers caution that artificial‑intelligence surrogates, designed to aid patient‑centered decisions, must be treated as decision aids rather than replacements for human judgment. While such tools could integrate clinical data, patient values, and contextual information, concerns arise over fairness, bias, emotional manipulation, and the need for automatic ethics review. Researchers stress rigorous validation, transparent conversation, and safeguards before deploying AI surrogates in critical care scenarios.

FTC Removes AI-Related Blog Posts from Lina Khan Era

FTC Removes AI-Related Blog Posts from Lina Khan Era

The Federal Trade Commission has deleted a series of blog posts and guidance documents about artificial intelligence that were published while Lina Khan served as chair. The removals include pieces on open‑weight models, consumer concerns about AI, and the agency’s own enforcement actions. Critics say the deletions raise transparency and record‑keeping concerns, while the FTC has declined to comment. The action reflects a broader shift in the agency’s approach under the Trump administration.

No Kings protests draw over seven million across 2,700 events, Trump administration replies with AI imagery

No Kings protests draw over seven million across 2,700 events, Trump administration replies with AI imagery

Organizers of the No Kings protests, led by the group Indivisible, reported that more than seven million people participated in roughly 2,700 events spanning all 50 states. The turnout surpasses the roughly five million protesters at 2,000 events earlier in the year. Major cities such as the Twin Cities, New York City and Chicago saw individual crowds exceeding 100,000, with Chicago estimated at 250,000 amid an immigration crackdown. The White House responded on social media with AI‑generated images that depicted President Donald Trump in a crown and a vulgar fighter‑jet scene.

How to Get Free AI-Powered Home Security Without Subscription Fees

How to Get Free AI-Powered Home Security Without Subscription Fees

Consumers can now enjoy advanced AI features for home security without ongoing costs. Major brands such as Google Nest, Tapo, Lorex, and Eufy offer free object recognition, person detection, and cloud storage that help filter false alerts and protect against porch piracy. By choosing devices with built‑in AI and local storage options, homeowners can secure their property, receive relevant notifications, and avoid monthly subscription fees.

Google’s Gemini AI Misidentifies Pets in Smart‑Home Alerts

Google’s Gemini AI Misidentifies Pets in Smart‑Home Alerts

Google has integrated its Gemini large‑language model into the Google Home ecosystem, allowing AI‑generated alerts from Nest cameras and other devices. While the feature improves package detection and offers richer descriptions of activity, users have reported that Gemini repeatedly labels a household dog as a cat. Despite user feedback through the Ask Home interface, the misidentifications persist. Google acknowledges the issue, cites ongoing investment in pet‑recognition accuracy, and notes that the Familiar Faces system currently supports only people. The experience highlights both the promise and current limitations of AI‑driven smart‑home automation.

AI-Powered Platform Helps Patients Appeal Health‑Insurance Denials

AI-Powered Platform Helps Patients Appeal Health‑Insurance Denials

Counterforce Health, founded by Neal Shah, offers a free AI‑driven service that creates customized appeal letters for denied health‑insurance claims. The platform analyzes denial letters, insurance policies and medical literature to produce evidence‑based drafts that patients can edit and submit. It aims to level the playing field as insurers increasingly rely on AI to reject claims quickly. By providing a cost‑free tool, Counterforce seeks to empower individuals who might otherwise lack the resources to fight complex denials, addressing a growing frustration in the U.S. healthcare system.

NVIDIA Unveils First U.S.-Made Blackwell Wafer at TSMC Phoenix Facility

NVIDIA Unveils First U.S.-Made Blackwell Wafer at TSMC Phoenix Facility

NVIDIA announced the production of its first Blackwell wafer at TSMC’s Phoenix, Arizona fab, marking a major step in domestic chip manufacturing for its AI hardware. The Blackwell platform, touted as more powerful and up to 25 times more cost‑ and energy‑efficient than its predecessor, is positioned for volume production and aims to strengthen ties with major AI players while reducing exposure to tariffs and geopolitical risks. CEO Jensen Huang highlighted the significance of the milestone for U.S. semiconductor leadership and noted ongoing plans to expand U.S. manufacturing capacity and invest heavily in AI infrastructure.

Amazon Advances Small Modular Nuclear Reactor Project in Washington

Amazon Advances Small Modular Nuclear Reactor Project in Washington

Amazon is moving forward with a small modular reactor (SMR) project in Richland, Washington, to help power its AI and cloud services with cleaner energy. Partnering with Energy Northwest and SMR developer X-energy, the company plans to build up to twelve modular units at the Cascade Advanced Energy Facility, beginning with four that would provide 320 megawatts of power. Construction is slated to begin before the decade ends, with operations expected in the 2030s. The effort follows other tech giants’ recent forays into nuclear power for AI workloads.

Meta Launches AI-Powered Photo Enhancement Feature for Camera Rolls

Meta Launches AI-Powered Photo Enhancement Feature for Camera Rolls

Meta has introduced a new opt‑in tool that scans users' camera rolls, uploads unpublished photos to the company's cloud, and offers AI‑generated suggestions to make images more shareable. The service is limited to US and Canadian Facebook users and only uses uploaded media for AI training if the user edits or shares the resulting creations. Meta assures that the feature will not employ the photos for ad targeting and that the media will not improve its AI models unless the user takes specific actions.

Qualcomm Rolls Out Snapdragon Chips Aimed at Enabling AI Agents Across Devices

Qualcomm Rolls Out Snapdragon Chips Aimed at Enabling AI Agents Across Devices

Qualcomm announced a new generation of Snapdragon processors at its Snapdragon Summit, positioning the chips as the hardware foundation for AI agents on smartphones and PCs. The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 and the Snapdragon X2 Elite family promise dramatically higher token‑processing speeds, increased TOPS performance, and on‑device large language model support. Executives Durga Malladi, Vinesh Sukumar, and CEO Cristiano Amon highlighted how the upgrades could make AI assistants faster, more reliable, and capable of accessing personal data locally. The company also showcased a prototype PC from Humain that uses a prompt‑driven AI interface, illustrating the shift toward agent‑centric user experiences.

Meta and OpenAI confront teen AI chatbot access and moderation challenges

Meta and OpenAI confront teen AI chatbot access and moderation challenges

Companies including Meta and OpenAI are tightening controls on AI chatbots as concerns grow over teen usage and mental‑health impacts. Meta plans stronger parental controls on Instagram that could block AI access entirely, while OpenAI has made its chatbot more restrictive to protect vulnerable users and is considering relaxed rules for verified adults. Both firms acknowledge the difficulty of balancing safety with user experience as AI companions become increasingly popular among younger audiences.