January 17, 2024

Meanwhile. . .

AI tools like ChatGPT can draft letters, tell jokes and even give legal advice – but only in the form of computerized text.  Now, scientists have created an AI that can imitate human handwriting, which could herald fresh issues regarding fraud and fake documents.  Amazingly, the results are almost indistinguishable from the real thing drafted by human hands.

 Audience Declines in Traditional U.S. Latino and Black Media Continue

 The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear a case today that could weaken government agencies' power to regulate…everything. The plaintiffs in the case are a small group of New Jersey fishermen who don't want to pay for monitors on their boats to ensure they follow federal regulations. Former solicitor general Paul Clement is asking the high court to overrule a 40-year-old case that asks judges to defer to federal agency interpretations of regulations if they're reasonable, NPR's Carrie Kahn says. Clement argues the precedent gives federal agencies way too much power. David Doniger of the environmental advocacy group Natural Resources Defense Council says the real goal of this case is to "enfeeble the federal government so that we don't have the capacity to deal with modern problems."

  

China's population drops for a second straight year in 2023

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