Consumer AI
Texas universities deploy AI tools to review and rewrite how some courses discuss race and gender Records obtained by The Texas Tribune show how universities are using the technology to reshape curriculum under political pressure, raising concerns about academic freedom.
Bereaved users are paying AI “griefbots” to recreate a deceased relative’s voice and personality for real-time conversations. The bots rely on the same large language model technology behind ChatGPT, customized with personal data of the departed. One user told The New York Times he wept with relief when the bot spoke in his father’s comforting voice. Providers bill by subscription or minute, prompting criticism that they monetize emotional vulnerability. University of York philosopher Louise Richardson warns the bots can stall healthy mourning by making loss feel reversible. Human-rights scholar Natasha Fernandez says labeling paid griefbots exploitative would force a broader ethical reckoning for profit-driven death industries.
Google has launched CC, an experimental Gemini-powered assistant that emails users a “Your Day Ahead” summary drawn from Gmail, Drive, and Calendar. Users can also email CC at any time to add to-dos, store notes, or retrieve information. The trial is open only to AI Pro and Ultra subscribers in the U.S. and Canada who are at least 18 and use consumer Google accounts. Workspace accounts and customers in other regions are excluded for now. The assistant enters a field already served by Mindy, Read AI, Fireflies, and Huxe, which send similar briefs. Google’s version pulls directly from multiple first-party services, giving it broader context than those rivals, according to the article.
OpenAI launches GPT Image 1.5, its new flagship image generator built into ChatGPT. The model renders images up to four times faster and is available to all users today. It obeys instructions more precisely, enabling believable photo edits like clothing and hairstyle try-ons while preserving original essence. A new Images sidebar offers preset filters and trending prompts to guide creation. OpenAI frames the release as a shift from gimmicky art to enterprise-ready visual production, aiming to satisfy investor pressure for revenue. The upgrade lands amid intensifying rivalry with other labs following Google’s viral Nano Banana.
The University of Hawai‘i Institute for Astronomy has released an AI system that reconstructs the Sun’s magnetic field in three dimensions with unprecedented accuracy. The Haleakalā Disambiguation Decoder processes data from the NSF Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope to nail down the field’s true direction and height. The algorithm fuses telescope observations with the physics rule that magnetic fields form closed loops, eliminating long-standing measurement gaps. Peer-reviewed tests on calm zones, active regions, and sunspots validate its precision, and the findings appear in the Astrophysical Journal. The sharper 3D maps expose electric currents and other structures that drive solar flares and coronal mass ejections. Researchers say this clarity strengthens space-weather forecasts, buying extra time to shield satellites, power grids, and communications.
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.