More than 1,000 images of child sexual abuse have been found in a prominent database used to train artificial intelligence tools, Stanford researchers said Wednesday, highlighting the grim possibility that the material has helped teach AI image generators to create new and realistic fake images of child exploitation. (Verma & Harwell, The Washington Post)
Read MoreThe rise of ChatGPT had a profound effect on science this year. Its creator, OpenAI in San Francisco, California, is expected to release GPT-5, the next generation of the artificial intelligence (AI) model that underpins the chatbot, late next year. (Naddaf, Nature)
Read MoreA new study estimates that about 30% of Americans are open to the ideas associated with Christian nationalism, but the study’s authors say those who adhere to or sympathize with the ideology are a more complex group than media portrayals and even other studies have found. (Jenkins, Religion News Service)
Read MoreAn explosion of products containing THC and similar chemicals—some of them in kid-enticing forms such as candy or gummy bears—is sending children to emergency rooms across the country and has federal and state regulators grappling with how to contain it. Many of these products face little to no restrictions, because their creators obtain their intoxicating compounds not from marijuana but from hemp, which Congress legalized in 2018. (Whyte, The Wall Street Journal)
Read MoreRegardless of how AI develops, young people will feel the most impact. This GPT generation is being bombarded with declarations about how AI will shape their lives from education to entertainment, but their voices are often missing from the conversation. The Washington Post spoke to some people in this generation to ask how they see AI shaping their future. (DeVynck, Tiku & Verma, The Washington Post)
Read MoreArgentina has seen previous cases of charismatic priests attracting large crowds in search of healing, including here in Rosario, Argentina’s third largest city. But Bergonzi looks nothing like them. A lay person, she doesn’t wear robes or veils. She favors skinny jeans and high-top sneakers. (Feliba & Schmidt, The Washington Post)
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