A paper in JAMA Psychiatry says mental health providers should ask if patients are using artificial intelligence chatbots, ...
The faith-based AI market is expanding, with tools for various religions. For example, there's an AI Jesus that — for $1.99 per minute — will offer words of prayer and encouragement.
Apps and platforms allow novice and veteran coders to generate more code more easily, presenting significant quality and ...
Every conversation you have with an AI — every decision, every debugging session, every architecture debate — disappears when the session ends. Six months of work, gone. You start over every time.
Artificial intelligence chatbots feed into humans’ desire for flattery and approval at an alarming rate and it’s leading the bots to give bad — even harmful — advice and making users self-absorbed, a ...
Americans are increasingly turning to artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT and Claude to help prepare their tax returns, but experts warn the technology can deliver outdated or inaccurate ...
Artificial intelligence chatbots are so prone to flattering and validating their human users that they are giving bad advice that can damage relationships and reinforce harmful behaviors, according to ...
As Apple continues reimagining Siri for today's AI landscape, a Bloomberg report says it may be trying to include every chatbot on one platform. Tyler has worked on, lived with and tested all types of ...
A new ‘Extensions’ feature could allow users to pick which chatbot Siri works with, according to Bloomberg. A new ‘Extensions’ feature could allow users to pick which chatbot Siri works with, ...
Apple plans to allow third-party AI chatbots to integrate with Siri in iOS 27, reports Bloomberg. Apple already has a partnership with OpenAI that lets ‌Siri‌ hand questions off to ChatGPT, but Apple ...
Teachers already struggle to manage divisive classroom conversations. Artificial intelligence tools—notably the chatbots that students use—may make the problem worse. AI chatbots’ tendency to flatter ...
Large language model (LLM) chatbots have a tendency toward flattery. If you ask a model for advice, it is 49 percent more likely than a human, on average, to affirm your existing point of view rather ...