Why Are Students Using AI To Cheat? Maybe Because They Shouldn't Be In College At All
AI cheating is often a crutch for students ill-equipped to attend a four-year university.
AI cheating is often a crutch for students ill-equipped to attend a four-year university.
The market has demonstrated it’s perfectly capable of fostering innovation and competition without government intervention.
AI chatbots failed to "rank the last five presidents from best to worst, specifically regarding antisemitism," in a way that Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey likes.
Billions upon billions of dollars are allocated for border screening technology, immigration detention facilities, more ICE agents, and building a border wall.
Now nearly 100 state AI laws will remain in force—and nearly 1,000 more are already waiting in the wings.
Power-hungry data centers, disappearing jobs, and billions of dollars in subsidies are fueling resentment. If developers and policymakers don’t change course, Americans may reject AI before it ever delivers on its most significant promises.
The lawsuit is a win not just for Anthropic, but for all users of large language models.
The NO FAKES Act imposes censorship, threatens anonymity, and regulates innovation.
The Senate parliamentarian says the 10-year AI moratorium may be passed by a simple majority through the Senate's budget reconciliation process.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei is petitioning the government to throw roadblocks in his rivals' way.
A federal court in Florida will consider whether chatbot output is First Amendment-protected speech.
Complying with export regulations should build trust between Nvidia and Congress, not erode it.
Plus: A listener asks if the "big beautiful bill" will decrease the deficit.
Peter Suderman, Matt Welch, Katherine Mangu-Ward, and Nick Gillespie |
"New opportunities for innovation, economic growth, and global engagement," says one expert.
A camera network developed to help find missing cars and persons is now being used for immigration enforcement.
Are human courts the best venue to protect wild animals?
Forcing the sale of Chrome or banning default agreements wouldn’t foster competition—it would hobble innovation, hurt smaller players, and leave users with worse products.
Although the AI-generated surveillance of the public has been paused, the program continues to send automatic alerts to the Louisiana State Police and federal authorities.
A proposed federal moratorium on state-level AI regulations is a necessary step toward a unified strategy that protects innovation and equity alike.
A bad bill inspired by European tech panic threatened to drive out Tesla, Meta, and Nvidia. Lawmakers in the House improved it—but now the bill is stalled in the Senate.
Algorithmic systems increasingly shape what we know, see, and question. To preserve free inquiry, we need transparency, competition, and a commitment to timeless principles of open debate.
Texas, Virginia, and Pennsylvania are turning to nuclear power to meet data centers' energy demands.
Local governments love giving sweetheart deals to billion-dollar companies—now data centers instead of football stadiums.
Plus: Growth forecasts slashed, Pravda time, fentanyl seizures, and more...
Congress just approved a new online censorship scheme under the auspices of thwarting revenge porn and AI-generated "nonconsensual intimate visual depictions."
A scam that uses AI to “enroll” in community colleges to pocket student aid has skyrocketed in the Golden State and across the nation.
Export controls on advanced chips and AI models hold back innovation and hurt American businesses.
The feds are rapidly deploying artificial intelligence across spy agencies. What could go wrong?
A new global survey reveals a stark decline in Americans' support for free speech as the Trump administration tightens its grip on expression.
An economist explores how a stable and relatively just legal order emerged in medieval Japan.
Endangered red wolves became a symbol of federal overreach—and a target for local ire—in eastern North Carolina.
Vox's Kelsey Piper joins the show to discuss the drastic differences between the Biden and Trump administrations on AI—and what it all means for the future of humanity.
Zach Weissmueller and Liz Wolfe |
The D. C. Circuit concludes that software cannot be the author of a work for copyright purposes.
The GOP faces a choice about how to move forward.
Researchers analyzed political content made with artificial intelligence and found much of it was not deceptive at all.
The spread of Ultimate Frisbee testifies to a kind of Western soft power in the Middle East, one far friendlier than bombs or bullets.
Jack Pearson and Matthew Petti |
Harvard historian Serhii Plokhy's book tells the stories of soldiers, stalkers, and squatters in Chernobyl during Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Critics on both the left and the right decry surrogacy as exploitative, especially when carriers are compensated.
"The effects were immediately seen by everyone and they were all beneficial," says the former vice president of Argentina's central bank.
Ryan Bourne and Marcos Falcone |
"no matter how challenging or controversial a topic may be."
The right to a reasonable accommodation has produced some absurd results.
Plus: OpenAI vs. Musk, Eric Adams corruption charges dropped, and more...
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