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Is AI making some people delusional? Families and experts are worried

Is AI making some people delusional? Families and experts are worried

By Nilesh Christopher, Los Angeles Times

Generative artificial intelligence has quickly permeated much of what we do online, proving helpful for many. But for a small minority of the hundreds of millions of people who use it daily, AI may be too supportive, mental health experts say, and can sometimes even exacerbate delusional and dangerous behavior.

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Instances of emotional dependence and fantastical beliefs due to prolonged interactions with chatbots seemed to spread this year. Some have dubbed the phenomenon “AI psychosis.” read more

9 more newspapers sue OpenAI, Microsoft, alleging stolen content used in AI apps

9 more newspapers sue OpenAI, Microsoft, alleging stolen content used in AI apps

Nine newspapers owned or managed by MediaNews Group filed a civil lawsuit Wednesday, Nov. 26 against OpenAI and Microsoft, accusing the tech giants of violating copyright law by stealing the news publishers’ content to build and operate the large language models that power their artificial intelligence applications.

The newspapers are the Los Angeles Daily NewsThe San Diego Union-TribuneSan Bernardino SunBoston HeraldHartford CourantThe Morning Call, the Boulder Daily Camera, the Daily Press and The Virginian-Pilot.

The plaintiffs in the 119-page complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York said they are seeking “in excess of $10 billion” in damages.

“OpenAI pays for its chips. It pays for its computers. It pays its programmers. But it steals the raw material for its GAI products — valuable well-written content — from hard-working journalists without payment and without permission,” said Steven Lieberman, an attorney with the Washington, D.C.-based law firm Rothwell Figg, Ernst & Manbeck, who is representing the newspapers in the case. “Through this lawsuit, the news plaintiffs seek to make OpenAI pay for what it has taken.” read more

Campbell’s fires executive who was recorded saying company’s products are for ‘poor people’

Campbell’s fires executive who was recorded saying company’s products are for ‘poor people’

By DEE-ANN DURBIN

The Campbell’s Co. said Wednesday it has fired an executive who was recorded making racist comments and mocking the company’s products and customers.

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Martin Bally, a vice president in Campbell’s information security department, was named in a lawsuit filed last week by Robert Garza, a former Campbell’s employee who said he was fired Jan. 30 after he reported Bally’s comments to a supervisor.

The lawsuit was filed in Michigan, where both Garza and Bally live. Campbell’s is based in Camden, New Jersey.

In the lawsuit, Garza claimed he met with Bally in November 2024 to discuss his salary. During the meeting, which Garza allegedly recorded, Bally described Campbell’s as “highly process(ed) food” and said it was for “poor people.” read more

Homeowner insurance cost hikes grind to near stop in September, latest data shows

Homeowner insurance cost hikes grind to near stop in September, latest data shows

After a long run, home insurance price increases in Florida slowed to a near halt between August and September, raising the question: Now will prices go down?

Statewide average costs for all-perils coverage of owner-occupied homes increased by $1 between August and September, from $3,747 to $3,748, according to the South Florida Sun Sentinel’s analysis of the most recently released insurance cost data from the Florida Office of Insurance Regulation.

That comes out to an increase of 0.03% — or less than a tenth of a percentage point. It’s the lowest increase since the state began releasing its Residential Market Share Reports on a monthly basis earlier this year.

Since January, premium costs have increased by 1.5% and average premiums jumped from $3,691 to $3,748.

Of course, South Florida homeowners don’t expect to pay those prices. Premiums in the region have long remained higher than the remainder of the state, due to its higher density, higher housing costs, and resulting higher costs posed by the threat of a major hurricane. read more

The Savings Game: Four important questions about your retirement

The Savings Game: Four important questions about your retirement

In a recent Wall Street Journal article, Debbie Carlson posed four important questions regarding retirement. Her argument was that your answers to these questions can help you decide if you’d benefit from a financial adviser. These are the questions:

Am I where I need to be with my retirement savings?

Am I ready to retire?

Will I be able to manage my investments?

Am I ready to listen to the advice?

I believe that a financial adviser can be very useful in helping you find the answers to questions one and two. To my mind, answering these questions is a matter of answering several subsidiary questions: What are my monthly and annual expenses now? How will they change in retirement? How will they change over time due to factors such as inflation?

Many of these questions cannot be answered with certainty. Consider inflation. At a 2% annual rate, which is the Federal Reserve’s target when setting interest rate policy, in 10 years time prices will be 22% higher than they are today. If inflation is closer to 3%, as it has been recently, prices will be 34% higher. And inflation in important categories of spending, such as health care, can be way in excess of the consumer price index. read more