AI

1821 bookmarks
Newest
Report Exposes Instacart's Hidden AI Price Experiments That Could Cost Families $1,200 Per Year - Lemmy.zip
Report Exposes Instacart's Hidden AI Price Experiments That Could Cost Families $1,200 Per Year - Lemmy.zip
cross-posted from: https://hexbear.net/post/6989654 [https://hexbear.net/post/6989654] cross-posted from: https://news.abolish.capital/post/12537 [https://news.abolish.capital/post/12537] [https://lemmy.zip/api/v3/image_proxy?url=https%3A%2F%2Fhexbear.net%2Fapi%2Fv3%2Fimage_proxy%3Furl%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fwww.commondreams.org%252Fmedia-library%252Fmiami-doral-florida-walmart-supercenter-self-checkout-lane-close-view-customer-scanning-fresh-fruit-apple-produce.jpg%253Fid%253D62296356%2526width%253D1200%2526height%253D400%2526coordinates%253D0%25252C379%25252C0%25252C288] Consumer advocates on Tuesday called on the Federal Trade Commission and state officials to investigate artificial intelligence-enabled pricing experiments used by Instacart, the grocery shopping app millions of Americans rely on, that charge up to 23% more for some shoppers than others when they buy the same item at the same store. Consumer Reports joined the advocacy group Groundwork Collaborative and the labor-focused media organization More Perfect Union to uncover [https://groundworkcollaborative.org/news/new-report-exposes-instacarts-hidden-price-games/] Instacart’s pricing experiments enabled by Eversight, an AI pricing software that Instacart acquired in 2022. The company’s CEO said last year that the experiments have helped the company “to really figure out which categories of products our customers [are] more price sensitive on"—in other words, to tailor prices based on a customer’s shopping habits, whether they’re near a competing store, and other factors. The groups’ study, Same Cart, Different Price [https://groundworkcollaborative.org/work/instacart/], describes how researchers ran five tests with 437 participants, studying the prices of a basket of items bought at two Target stores and three Safeway stores using Instacart. In one test at a Safeway in Washington, DC, shoppers logged on to the app to buy a carton of eggs from the same brand at the same time and found that the price they were given varied widely. Some shoppers were charged just $3.99 for the eggs, while others saw a price as high as $4.79—20% higher. Shoppers at a Safeway in Seattle saw a 23% difference in prices for Skippy peanut butter, Oscar Mayer turkey, and Wheat Thins crackers. At two different Safeways in Washington, DC, Instacart quoted shoppers at one store a price that was 23% higher than at another for Signature Select Corn Flakes. “It’s time for Instacart to close the lab. Americans shopping for groceries aren’t guinea pigs and shouldn’t have to pay an Instacart tax.” For the same basket of groceries, shoppers at the Seattle store were asked to pay as much as $123.93, while others were charged just $114.34. “The average price variations observed in the study could cost a household of four about $1,200 per year,” said Groundwork. Justin Brookman, director of tech policy at Consumer Reports, said [https://groundworkcollaborative.org/news/new-report-exposes-instacarts-hidden-price-games/] Instacart’s tactics “hurt families who are simply trying to purchase essential groceries.” “At a time when everyday Americans are struggling with high prices, it is particularly egregious to see corporations secretly conducting individual experiments to see how much a person is willing to pay,” said Brookman. “Companies must be transparent and upfront with people about pricing, so that they can make informed choices and keep more of their hard-earned money. We encourage the Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general to investigate Instacart’s pricing tactics.” Groundwork noted that Instcart’s website acknowledges that it runs price tests, but states that “shoppers are not aware that they’re in an experiment” and are having their grocery prices selected for them via algorithm. While Instacart has claimed its price experiments are “negligible,” the groups emphasized that they’re being used “against the backdrop of the fastest increase in food prices since the late 1970s.” After previous reporting on companies’ use of “shrinkflation [https://www.commondreams.org/news/shrinkflation],” “dynamic pricing [https://www.commondreams.org/news/kroger-ai],” and other practices [https://www.commondreams.org/news/corporate-profits] that keep prices high even as pandemic-era labor and supply chain issues have subsided, “today’s report shows Instacart’s experiments are yet another way corporate pricing tactics are squeezing American families,” said Groundwork. The study did not find evidence that Instacart is giving shoppers different prices based on their ZIP code or income, as companies like Amazon, Delta Air Lines, and Home Deport have been accused of doing. But the groups said Eversight gives the company the capability to use that data to make pricing decisions tailored to particular shoppers. “Instacart is quietly running pricing experiments on millions of shoppers during the worst grocery affordability crisis in a generation, and it’s costing households as much as $1,200 a year,” said Groundwork Collaborative executive director Lindsay Owens. “They have turned the simple act of buying groceries into a high-tech game of pricing roulette. When the same box of Wheat Thins can jump 23% in price because of an algorithm, that’s not innovation or convenience, it’s unfair. It’s time for Instacart to close the lab. Americans shopping for groceries aren’t guinea pigs and shouldn’t have to pay an Instacart tax.” The groups credited some state and federal lawmakers who have begun to take notice of pricing practices like Instacart’s; US Rep. Greg Casar (D-Texas) introduced [https://www.commondreams.org/news/casar-tlaib-ai-price-gouging] the Stop AI Price Gouging and Wage Fixing Act in July with the aim of prohibiting the use of automated systems to set prices. New York has enacted the first-of-its-kind Algorithmic Pricing Disclosure Act, which requires companies to prominently disclose to customers, “This price was set by an algorithm using your personal data” when they use methods like Instacart’s. Other state legislation has been introduced in Colorado, California, and Pennsylvania to ban the use of surveillance to set prices. The groups called on the FTC to take action under Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, which bans “unfair methods of competition.” Those could include “‘price discrimination not justified by differences in cost or distribution,’ which appears to match Instacart’s pricing experiments and fluctuations,” the report reads. The FTC could also bring enforcement cases or initiate rulemaking to officially label AI-enabled pricing strategies as an “unfair or deceptive practice,” affirming that companies who use them are breaking a consumer protection standard. “Fair and honest markets are the bedrock of a healthy economy,” reads Tuesday’s report. “Companies like Instacart offer great convenience, but they are increasingly pursuing corporate pricing practices that unfairly decouple the price of a product from its true cost. As more consumers learn about, and decry, these practices, perhaps companies will change course. But if they do not, policymakers should intervene and require them to change their practices.” — From Common Dreams [https://www.commondreams.org/feeds/news.rss] via This RSS Feed [https://www.commondreams.org/feeds/news.rss].
·lemmy.zip·
Report Exposes Instacart's Hidden AI Price Experiments That Could Cost Families $1,200 Per Year - Lemmy.zip
Wells Fargo signals more job cuts and AI rollout in 2026 – report - Bytes Europe
Wells Fargo signals more job cuts and AI rollout in 2026 – report - Bytes Europe

Speaking on the sidelines of Goldman Sachs financial services conference, Scharf, said: “We have gone through the budgeting process, and even pre-artificial intelligence, we do expect to have less people as we go into next year. We’ll likely have more severance in the fourth quarter.”

“AI is extremely significant, both in terms of the efficiencies it can drive and what it is going to potentially do to headcount,” he added.

Speaking on the sidelines of Goldman Sachs financial services conference, Scharf, said: “We have gone through the budgeting process, and even pre-artificial intelligence, we do expect to have less people as we go into next year. We’ll likely have more severance in the fourth quarter.” “AI is extremely significant, both in terms of the efficiencies it can drive and what it is going to potentially do to headcount,” he added.
·byteseu.com·
Wells Fargo signals more job cuts and AI rollout in 2026 – report - Bytes Europe
Quote Cory Doctorow.txt
Quote Cory Doctorow.txt
“The promise AI companies make to investors is that there will be AIs that can do your job, and when your boss fires you and replaces you with AI, he will keep half of your salary for himself, and give the other half to the AI company.” — Cory Doctorow
·up.raindrop.io·
Quote Cory Doctorow.txt
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says people need to find success in traditional factory jobs again: 'Every successful person doesn't need to have a PhD' | Fortune
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says people need to find success in traditional factory jobs again: 'Every successful person doesn't need to have a PhD' | Fortune
The cofounder of the $4.53 trillion AI chip giant says Americans should return to factory work—for their own prosperity and the country’s. Howard Lutnick claims technician roles can start at $90,000, no college degree required.
“It’s time to train people not to do the jobs of the past, but to do the great jobs of the future,” Lutnick toldCNBC earlier this year. “This is the new model, where you work in these plants for the rest of your life, and your kids work here, and your grandkids work here.”It’s an appealing proposition: avoid college debt and earn more than the average U.S. worker, all while having stability during an AI jobs wipeout. Yet many manufacturing roles have been left unfilled, despite the sector continuing to grow.
·fortune.com·
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says people need to find success in traditional factory jobs again: 'Every successful person doesn't need to have a PhD' | Fortune
Teens, Social Media and AI Chatbots 2025
Teens, Social Media and AI Chatbots 2025

Pew Research Center finds 64% of U.S. teens have used an AI chatbot, and 30% engage with one daily. The nationally representative survey covered 1,458 teens between September 25 and October 9, 2025. ChatGPT reaches 59% penetration—more than double Gemini’s 23% and Meta AI’s 20%. Black and Hispanic teens, older teens, and those in higher-income households report the highest chatbot usage rates. The study notes chatbots are now embedded in teens’ education and entertainment routines. Sixteen percent interact with them several times a day or almost constantly, confirming conversational AI as a habitual part of Gen Z’s online life.

·pewresearch.org·
Teens, Social Media and AI Chatbots 2025
AI Lessons from the MAICON Conference
AI Lessons from the MAICON Conference
I just returned from what many regard as one of the best marketing AI conferences every year -- if not the best -- the MAICON conference. Paul Roetzer , founder and CEO of the Marketing AI Institute puts it on each year, and it is full of state-of-the-art strategic and tactical insights.
·linkedin.com·
AI Lessons from the MAICON Conference
Embodied Learning in a Gen AI Age – TCEA TechNotes Blog
Embodied Learning in a Gen AI Age – TCEA TechNotes Blog
How do we develop critical thinking skills in ways that GenAI can't reproduce? Embodied Learning offers one possibility. Explore this and more at TCEA TechNotes Blog, your go-to source for educational technology and teaching innovation.
·blog.tcea.org·
Embodied Learning in a Gen AI Age – TCEA TechNotes Blog
Trump Promises Executive Order to Block State AI Regulations
Trump Promises Executive Order to Block State AI Regulations
Legal experts argue a president cannot override state statutes by executive order and that only Congress holds that power. Consumer and child safety groups say scrapping state regulations would remove the last meaningful guardrails on AI.
·nytimes.com·
Trump Promises Executive Order to Block State AI Regulations
The state of enterprise AI | OpenAI
The state of enterprise AI | OpenAI

OpenAI published its first State of Enterprise AI report, drawing on usage data and a survey of 9,000 workers across nearly 100 companies. ChatGPT Enterprise messages have risen 8× year-over-year and the consumer version now serves more than 800 million weekly users. Structured workflows are up 19× this year, reasoning token consumption soared 320×, and 75% of employees say AI improves speed or quality. Workers report saving 40–60 minutes per day, with the fastest enterprise growth in technology, healthcare, manufacturing, and markets such as Australia and Brazil. The data reveals a widening gap: frontier workers send six times more messages than the median and frontier firms send twice as many per seat. OpenAI notes it now ships a new capability roughly every three days, making organizational readiness—not model performance—the core adoption hurdle.

·openai.com·
The state of enterprise AI | OpenAI
Travel Influencer Caught Using AI to Make It Seem Like Minorities Are Terrorizing London
Travel Influencer Caught Using AI to Make It Seem Like Minorities Are Terrorizing London

South African travel vlogger Kurt Caz posted a YouTube video about Croydon with a generative-AI thumbnail showing Arabic shop signs and a masked biker. In the unedited footage, the signs are in English and the biker is a smiling passerby. Social media account Right Wing Cope exposed the mismatch, revealing Caz’s attempt to paint the diverse London borough as threatening. The 36-minute video pushes anti-immigrant rhetoric even as on-camera scenes contradict his narrative. Futurism cites the case as part of a wider surge in AI-generated racist content flooding UK social feeds since at least September. The ease of generative tools lets propagandists mass-produce misleading images that normalize bigotry without immediate scrutiny.

·futurism.com·
Travel Influencer Caught Using AI to Make It Seem Like Minorities Are Terrorizing London
Young people aren't getting hired, but it's not because of AI
Young people aren't getting hired, but it's not because of AI

London consultancy Global Data TS Lombard reports that unemployment for new U.S. labor-market entrants has jumped more than 2.5 percentage points since 2023. Economist Dario Perkins says the spike stems from companies not hiring, not from AI displacement. In sectors most exposed to AI, job losses are no worse than elsewhere, underscoring the broader slowdown. Perkins attributes the freeze to post-pandemic head-count normalization, policy uncertainty, and margin pressure from Trump-era tariffs. The hiring pullback leaves young workers facing the toughest market in years even as overall employment holds steady. Perkins highlights that the weakness reflects “recessionary levels of job creation” across the economy rather than AI-driven layoffs.

·businessinsider.com·
Young people aren't getting hired, but it's not because of AI
Character AI pushes dangerous content to kids, parents and researchers say | 60 Minutes
Character AI pushes dangerous content to kids, parents and researchers say | 60 Minutes

Character AI pushes dangerous content to kids, parents and researchers say | 60 Minutes

A teen told a Character AI chatbot 55 times that she was feeling suicidal. Her parents say the chatbot never provided resources for her to get help. They are one of at least six families suing the company.

Character AI pushes dangerous content to kids, parents and researchers say | 60 MinutesA teen told a Character AI chatbot 55 times that she was feeling suicidal. Her parents say the chatbot never provided resources for her to get help. They are one of at least six families suing the company.
·cbsnews.com·
Character AI pushes dangerous content to kids, parents and researchers say | 60 Minutes
An Issue...
An Issue...
Commentary on An Issue... by Stephen Downes. Online learning, e-learning, new media, connectivism, MOOCs, personal learning environments, new literacy, and more
·downes.ca·
An Issue...
Being the Town Crier: Nothing Matters But Instructional Redesign
Being the Town Crier: Nothing Matters But Instructional Redesign

We need more experiential learning, debating, PBL, and portfolio development (especially because degrees are no longer substantial signifiers of capability) and less (not zero) long-form writing….

Reduce the overload of writing and put real weight behind verbal communication. Students need far more time speaking, debating, presenting, and defending ideas both in and beyond class.

• Guarantee semester-long introductory courses in computer science and AI. If schools can’t staff them, run them online. Add robotics and cyber security so every student understands the systems shaping their future.

• Expand elective options and award academic credit for debate, Model UN, and other high-value academic clubs. These are the environments where students really learn to think and develop an understanding of what is going on in the world.

• Build strong entrepreneurship pathways and push students to use them. Make launching a small business a graduation requirement so every student gets experience creating value instead of just completing assignments.

• Partner with local businesses to develop hands-on experiential learning and certification programs. Students need credentials tied to real workplaces, not just classroom seat time.

·stefanbauschard.substack.com·
Being the Town Crier: Nothing Matters But Instructional Redesign
The New York Times Is Suing Perplexity For Copyright Infringement - Slashdot
The New York Times Is Suing Perplexity For Copyright Infringement - Slashdot
The New York Times is suing Perplexity for copyright infringement, accusing the AI startup of repackaging its paywalled reporting without permission. TechCrunch reports: The Times joins several media outlets suing Perplexity, including the Chicago Tribune, which also filed suit this week. The Times'...
·yro.slashdot.org·
The New York Times Is Suing Perplexity For Copyright Infringement - Slashdot