Author archives

Chatbots Make Terrible Doctors, New Study Finds

404 Media – no paywall: “…Chatbots may be able to pass medical exams, but that doesn’t mean they make good doctors, according to a new, large-scale study of how people get medical advice from large language models.  The controlled study of 1,298 UK-based participants, published today in Nature Medicine from the Oxford Internet Institute and …

Subjects: AI, Health Care, Medicine

Trump Mentioned in Epstein Files ‘More than One Million Times’

Axios: “Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) told Axios in an interview Tuesday that when he searched President Trump’s name in the unredacted Epstein files the previous day, it came up “more than a million times.” Why it matters: At least one of the files Raskin found appears to contradict what Trump has publicly claimed about his …

Subjects: E-Records, Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Legal Research

Why AI Detection Fails on the Fakes That Matter Most

“Image Whisperer AI Image Detector – beta v9.94 – Media Verification & Research tool, detects AI, by Henk van EssTotal fakes are easy to spot. Hybrid fakes slip through. Most AI detectors work like calculators — they output a number. They need to work like detectives — really look at the evidence. Developed by Henk van Ess with Claude …

Subjects: AI, Financial System, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Search Engines

New database offers macro look at Trump administration’s immigration crackdown

Fast Company: “As the Trump administration’s crackdown on immigration continues, keeping up with Immigrations and Custom Enforcement can feel like navigating a maze. From stories of agents raiding worksites and taking children in broad daylight to reported plans for new detention centers, the daily onslaught of alarming news makes it difficult to see the full …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Congress, Free Speech, Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Legal Research

A case study in PDF forensics: The Epstein PDFs

PDF Association: “We report on the technical aspects of the PDF files released by the US Department of Justice in connection with the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The recent release of a tranche of files by the US Department of Justice (DoJ) under the “Epstein Files Transparency Act (H.R.4405)” has once again prompted many people …

Subjects: E-Government, E-Records, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Search Engines

London PR firm rewrites Wikipedia for governments and billionaires

The Bureau of Investigative Journalism: “Twenty-five years after it was founded, Wikipedia stands as an unrivalled achievement. Not only is it the single largest collection of information in human history, it has also built a stellar reputation for reliability in a digital world awash with lies and deception. For this reason, new AI tools have …

Subjects: Education, Financial System, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Search Engines

Green’s Dictionary of Slang

“Green’s Dictionary of Slang is the largest historical dictionary of English slang. Written by Jonathon Green over 17 years from 1993, it reached the printed page in 2010 in a three-volume set containing nearly 100,000 entries supported by over 400,000 citations from c. AD 1000 to the present day. The main focus of the dictionary is the …

Subjects: Education, Internet, Knowledge Management

In Praise of One of America’s All-Time Great Book Sections (RIP)

Washingtonian: “Actually, the Washington Post Layoffs Were a Bigger Bloodbath Than You Thought. Nearly half of the paper’s newsroom was eliminated during last week’s cuts—possibly the largest one-day wipeout of journalists in a generation. LitHub – Gerald Howard on the Washington Post Book World and the Further Enshittification of All Things. “Here is what it …

Subjects: Education, Knowledge Management, Libraries

Your browser extensions can see every password you type

MakeUseOf: “Browser extensions enhance the functionality of the browser, and most of us have at least one third-party add-on installed. I always keep a handful of Chrome extensions installed for productivity, and some of them are ones I genuinely can’t browse without. Ad blockers, full-page screenshot tools, price comparison trackers, they all seem harmless enough. …

Subjects: Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, E-Commerce, Internet, Privacy, Search Engines

Trump set off a surge of AI in the federal government. See what happened.

Washington Post: “As the Trump administration seeks to sweep away obstacles to developing artificial intelligence, the president’s team has brought its zeal for the new technology to the federal government itself. Orders came down from the White House budget office in April urging every corner of the government to deploy AI. “The Federal Government will …

Subjects: AI, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, E-Government, E-Records, Economy, Government Documents, Legal Research

American Optimism Slumps to Record Low

Gallup: “The percentage of U.S. adults who anticipate high-quality lives in five years declined to 59.2% in 2025, the lowest level since measurement began nearly two decades ago. Since 2020, future life ratings have fallen a total of 9.1 percentage points, projecting to an estimated 24.5 million fewer people who are optimistic about the future …

Subjects: Economy