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Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt warned that artificial intelligence chatbots could increase loneliness among young men who prefer AI-powered “perfect girlfriends.”

Schmidt, who took the helm at Google in 2001 and stepped down in 2011, discussed the dangers of young men interacting with an “AI girlfriend” who is perfect in every way.

“That kind of obsession is possible, especially for people who are not fully formed,” Schmidt told entrepreneur and NYU Stern School of Business professor Scott Galloway during his podcast “The Prof G Show” on Sunday.

“Parents are going to have to be more involved for all the obvious reasons, but at the end of the day, parents can only control what their sons and daughters are doing within reason,” Schmidt added.

While AI-powered chatbots pose a danger to users of all ages, young men are particularly vulnerable, the former Google executive said.

“Theres lots of evidence that theres now a problem with young men,” Schmidt said. “In many cases, the path to success for young men has been, shall we say, been made more difficult because theyre not as educated as the women are now.”

In 2019, women surpassed men to account for more than half of the college-educated workforce in the United States, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of government data.

Women have continued to outpace men in college enrollments — so much so that the gender gap among college graduates is larger in some states than racial and ethnic disparities, according to Forbes.

“Many of the traditional paths [for young men] are no longer as available and so they turn to the online world for enjoyment and sustenance,” Schmidt said, “and because of the social media algorithms they find like-minded people who ultimately radicalize them, either in a horrific way, like terrorism, or in the kind of way youre describing — theyre just maladjusted.”

He called the potential for young men to fall in love and grow obsessed with their AI girlfriends “an unexpected problem of existing technology.”

Some young men have already fallen victim to dangerous new technology.

A Florida mother is suing Character.ai, an AI-powered chatbot, and Google, which struck a deal in August to license the chatbot’s technology, after her 14-year-old son committed suicide in February after a lifelike chatbot girlfriend told him to “come home” after months of obsessive messages, according to the suit.

Schmidt said teenagers are not ready to handle complex, AI-powered technology.

“You put a 12 or 13-year-old in front of these things, and they have access to every evil as well as every good in the world,” he said. “And they’re not ready to take it.”

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During the interview, Schmidt argued that regulatory laws, like the US’ Section 230, which protects tech giants from being held liable for the content on their platforms, should be reformed “to allow for liability in the worst possible cases.”

President-elect Donald Trump’s Federal Communications Commission pick Brendan Carr has argued for restrictions on Section 230, though he has focused on adding anti-discrimination protections that would prohibit companies from censoring posts, excluding illegal posts like child sex abuse.

But Schmidt said he is not expecting much progress on Section 230 over the next four years, since Trump’s administration has bigger fish to fry.

And tech companies today are so valuable that“it’s likely to take some kind of a calamity to cause a change in regulation.”

If you or someone you know is affected by any of the issues raised in this story, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255) or text Crisis Text Line at 741741.

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Why Are Extreme Heat Hotspots Defying Climate Expectations Worldwide?

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Why Are Extreme Heat Hotspots Defying Climate Expectations Worldwide?

A recent study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, has identified regions globally experiencing extreme heatwaves surpassing climate model predictions. These anomalies, spanning every continent except Antarctica, have been linked to thousands of deaths, agricultural failures, and severe wildfires in recent years, according to several reports. The research highlights the challenges in understanding and projecting the physical dynamics driving these unexpected temperature extremes, raising concerns about the adequacy of current climate models in estimating regional risks.

Heatwave Intensification and Global Hotspots

The study, led by Dr Kai Kornhuber, an adjunct scientist at Columbia Climate School and senior research scholar at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, analysed data from the past 65 years. It identified areas where extreme heat is intensifying more rapidly than moderate temperatures, resulting in record-breaking maximum temperatures.

Examples include the June 2021 Pacific Northwest heatwave, where temperatures in Lytton, British Columbia, soared to 121.3 degrees Fahrenheit, causing a wildfire that decimated the town.

Regions most affected include northwestern Europe, parts of Asia such as central China, and regions in Australia, Africa, and South America, accoridng to sources. Northwestern Europe has seen the most consistent signals, with heatwaves contributing to 60,000 deaths in 2022 and 47,000 in 2023.

According to the study, summer peak temperatures in this region are increasing at twice the rate of average summer temperatures, exacerbated by the lack of widespread air conditioning.

Understanding the Underlying Mechanisms

Scientists attribute some of these extremes to disruptions in the northern hemisphere’s jet stream, which is influenced by Arctic warming. This destabilisation has created Rossby waves, trapping hot air over temperate regions.

Dr Samuel Bartusek, a co-author of the study, highlighted the interplay of factors behind the Pacific Northwest heatwave, including vegetation drying and atmospheric heat transport. However, the study acknowledges gaps in understanding, with some events described as “grey swans,” lying between predictability and randomness.

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Tesla Cybercab is in NYC, providing a cool look at an uncertain future [Gallery]

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Tesla Cybercab is in NYC, providing a cool look at an uncertain future [Gallery]

Early last month, Tesla unveiled the Cybercab, a 2 door vehicle with no steering wheel and pedals, fully reliant on the future of autonomy. Since then, they’ve put the vehicle on display at a couple Tesla showrooms, most recently at the Meatpacking District location in New York City. I went to go take a look, and I have a few thoughts.

Showroom restrictions

First things first, there’s a couple unfortunate limitations at the showroom. You can’t touch the vehicle, sit inside it, nor take a look at the trunk.

The first two are sort of understandable since they’re early vehicles, though even then it’s a little weird since these are the same vehicles they gave test drives in on unveil night. I don’t exactly understand why they won’t open the trunk, as it would’ve been nice to get a look at how much room it offered.

Cybercab impressions

Limitations aside, it was still really nice to get to take a look at the Cybercab. Despite sharing the same “cyber” branding as the Cybertruck, this is still a very sleek looking vehicle, and honestly one of my favorite designs from Tesla.

It’s definitely a smaller vehicle in person than you’d expect – you really need to see it in person to comprehend its size. A couple things stood out to me: legroom, display, and the color.

Though I wasn’t allowed to sit inside, the cabin seemed fairly spacious, despite the vehicles smaller size. Obviously, with it being a two seater without being a compact car, there’s a fair bit of space for additional legroom.

The display is also quite large, taking up a great portion of the dashboard. It’s not necessarily surprising, since in a theoretical world with autonomous driving, there’d be more of an opportunity to watch shows and movies while being driven to your destination.

The color is also gorgeous. It honestly suits this vehicle perfectly, and I’m not sure if it’d work as well on something like the Cybertruck or even the Model 3. It works perfectly here though, and it’s cool to see a unique color that most vehicles don’t offer.

Cool prototype, uncertain future

While it’s really cool to take a look at the Cybercab prototype, it’s still just that – a prototype. As it stands today, the Cybercab has no steering wheel or pedals, and Tesla seemingly has no plans of selling a version of the Cybercab that you can actually drive yourself.

Tesla does plan on selling this vehicle to consumers for potentially $30,000 – as soon as 2026, or rather, “before 2027.” That whole concept hinges on Full Self-Driving getting to a safe enough point where cars could be deployed en mass, without any easy way for riders to take over. Regulators would also have to be on board with it.

I do believe in Tesla’s ability to develop Full Self-Driving, but there’s also the simple fact that interventions would need to be near zero for a no-steering wheel vehicle to be safe. I just don’t think we’ll get there so soon. Even if we do, regulation is a big hurdle for Tesla to jump over – so I just can’t see Cybercab in its current form being on our streets before 2027.

On the optimistic side, Trump’s transition team has stated that they plan to make a framework for autonomous vehicles a priority in the upcoming administration. Maybe that’ll speed things up a little bit, if it comes to fruition. While on the same subject, the aforementioned $30,000 price tag for Cybercab might actually be after incentives, something that the Trump administration plans to swiftly kill off.

With all that being said, here are the photos I took at Tesla Meatpacking District. I’d highly recommend going to see it yourself if you’re in the New York City area. We don’t know how long the Cybercab will be on display, so I’d go sooner rather than later if you can.


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Leaked email signals BYD’s plan to heat up EV price war

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Leaked email signals BYD’s plan to heat up EV price war

According to a leaked letter circulating on social media yesterday, BYD has asked its suppliers to accept price cuts in the coming year – a major signal that the Chinese EV maker is gearing up to intensify the price war in China even further, all while pushing harder into Europe and other markets.

A screenshot of an email from BYD circulated on Weibo yesterday, according to Reuters, demanding “10% price cuts from an unnamed supplier from January.”

BYD’s PR and branding director Li Yunfei responded to the leak in a Weibo post: “Annual bargaining with suppliers is a common practice in the automotive industry,” according to Bloomberg. “We put forward price reduction targets to suppliers. They’re not mandatory requirements. We can negotiate.”

For the past two years or so, BYD has been leading the charge in an intense price war in China, pushing smaller companies to the edge while forcing consolidation.  

In response, Volkswagen and Stellantis have teamed up with Chinese brands Xpeng and Zhejiang Leapmotor to build EVs, while EV maker HiPhi and Shanghai-based WM Motor have filed for bankruptcy, Bloomberg reports.

Leaked email from BYD signals its plan to intensify price war

Meanwhile, BYD is looking large and in charge. It’s currently ramping up production by close to 200,000 units to meet demand, and the company has hired nearly 200,000 new employees over the past three months. Earlier this year, the company led a fresh round of industry-wide price cuts, aggressively slashing prices on its best-selling models, and in turn, gained market share and pushed weaker rivals even further to the brink.

BYD is China’s best-selling car brand, having sold some 3.2 million plug-in hybrids and BEVs this year, including a record-breaking 500K million vehicles in October. Its cars account for more than one-third of the total sales of EVs and plug-in hybrids in China this year.

By the end of this year, it looks to be on track to selling an incredible 4 million units.

In the July-September quarter, BYD’s net profit rose to 11.6 billion yuan ($1.63 billion). Also, third-quarter revenue was up 24% on year $28.24 billion, which outpaced major rival Tesla’s for the first time. Tesla’s revenue for the July-September quarter reached $25.2 billion.

BYD still sells more than 90% of its vehicles in China, but it is pushing hard into Europe and other markets, despite higher tariffs. The automaker is looking to double exports to 450,000 vehicles this year.

Photo credit: BYD


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