From blaming the victim to replying "I have no interest in your life" to suicidal thoughts, AI chatbots can respond unethically when used for therapy.
A lot of us are guilty of not doing this one thing while having our food. Well, that is chewing food properly. Read on to ...
Stockhead on MSN
Top cyber scientist warns of quantum computing security threats
Quantum computers capable of breaking bank and hospital security in minutes are now accessible to criminals through cloud ...
Chatbots weren't designed for mental health, but they are increasingly used for therapy. What are the risks an benefits?
The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) is forming a new Robotics Advisory Group (RAG) to offer ...
The UK will never match the AI budgets of the US or China. The good news is that it does not have to. It should strategically ...
PsyPost on MSN
Smarter AI models show more selfish behavior
A new study reveals that as artificial intelligence systems become more capable of complex reasoning, they also tend to act ...
Prof Erin McCarthy from the University of Galway talks about her ERC-funded project STEMMA and the value of curiosity-driven frontier research.
Across Grossmont and Cuyamaca colleges, military-affiliated students, who include veterans, dependents, and those actively ...
3D printing’s accessibility has enabled low-cost, decentralised manufacturing—but it also allows the unregulated production ...
Researchers from the University of Liverpool, in collaboration with The Health Foundation, have analyzed anonymized health ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
AI and you: A match made in binary code
For how much time we spend staring at our phones and computers, it was inevitable that we would become… close. And the ...
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