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This new hotel scam will have you seeing five stars and it’s all legal.

Hotels across the country have been caught slapping customers with often-outrageous charges for checking in early or checking out late a perk until only recently offered as a courtesy when available, reports the Wall Street Journal.

The latest travel travesty comes as the hospitality industry explores new ways to boost the bottom line while quietly doing away with basic amenities like daily housekeeping.

In recent years, hotels have been found guilty of sticking up their guests with a growing number of “junk fees,” from bewildering resort charges to steep parking tabs a trend the White House recently pledged to fight against.

President Biden announced he’s asking the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to squash the rising tide of secret add-ons that “cost Americans tens of billions of dollars.”

Meanwhile, visitors to NYC’s TWA Hotel, located at Kennedy Airport, will find themselves paying anywhere up to $150 for a late check-out.

In Beantown, the Hyatt Place Boston Seaport tacks on $50 for guests who stay past 1 p.m., with the price increasing $25 every hour through 3 p.m., according to the Journal.

Once you start paying…it creates a precedent. Its going to be harder to not pay it in the future,” frequent traveler anda precious-metals dealer Wei Chang told a reporter. I always encourage people not to pay it.

Ask those in the industry, like the vice president of San Francisco’s Hotel Nikko which charges $50 to get into a room before 1 p.m. and they will say you’re justly covering the price of convenience.

Because we had to pay a housekeeper to get in early and get the rooms ready. Were basically passing the cost on to the consumer,” the hotel’s VP and general manager Anna Marie Presutti said, claiming that they don’t profit off the early fees.

And apparently, loyalty doesn’t get you very much in the new rumble for a room.

Amy Franks is a Florida travel agent with has diamond status inHiltons loyalty program yet she was still got the “nickel and dime” treatment at an Orlando Doubletree, which charged her $35 to check in early.

They just gave me a cookie-cutter answer that its their policy,” Franks said.

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IRS wants court to toss crypto exec’s appeal over bank record summons

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IRS wants court to toss crypto exec’s appeal over bank record summons

The US tax agency claims it complied with financial privacy laws when it summoned banks for crypto founder Rowland Marcus Andrade’s financial records.

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Technology

Chinese tech giant Baidu to release next-generation AI model this year as DeepSeek shakes up market

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Chinese tech giant Baidu to release next-generation AI model this year as DeepSeek shakes up market

Men interact with a Baidu AI robot near the company logo at its headquarters in Beijing, China April 23, 2021.

Florence Lo | Reuters

BEIJING — China’s Baidu plans to release the next generation of its artificial intelligence model in the second half of this year, according to a source familiar with the matter, as newer players such as DeepSeek disrupt the segment.

Ernie 5.0, called a “foundation model,” is set to have “big enhancements in multimodal capabilities,” the source said, without specifying its functions. “Multimodal” AI can process texts, videos, images and audio to combine them as well as convert them across categories — text to video and vice-versa, for instance.

Foundation models can understand language and perform a wide array of tasks including generating text and images, and communicating in natural language.

Baidu’s planned update comes as Chinese companies race to develop innovative AI models to compete with OpenAI and other U.S.-based companies. In late January, Hangzhou-based startup DeepSeek prompted a global tech stock sell-off with the release of its open-source AI model that impressed users with its reasoning capabilities and claims of undercutting OpenAI’s ChatGPT drastically on cost.

“We are living in an exciting time … The inference cost [of foundation models] basically can be reduced by more than 90% over 12 months,” Baidu CEO Robin Li said at the World Governments Summit in Dubai this week. That’s according to a press release of his fireside chat with Omar Sultan Al Olama, UAE’s minister of state for artificial intelligence, digital economy, and remote work applications.

“If you can reduce the cost by a certain percentage, then that means your productivity increases by that kind of percentage. I think that’s pretty much the nature of innovation,” Li noted.

Baidu was the first major Chinese tech company to roll out a ChatGPT-like chatbot called Ernie in March 2023. But despite initial momentum, the product has since been eclipsed by other Chinese AI chatbots from startups as well as large-tech companies such as Alibaba and ByteDance.

While Alibaba shares have soared 33% for the year so far, Baidu shares are up 6%. Tencent has notched gains of about 4% for the year so far. ByteDance is not listed.

Goldman Sachs: China stands to gain as AI focus shifts toward applications layer

Baidu’s Ernie model already supports the integration of generative AI across a range of the company’s consumer and business-facing products, including cloud storage and content creation.

Last month, Baidu said its Wenku platform for creating presentations and other documents had reached 40 million paying users as of the end of 2024, up 60% from the end of 2023. Updated features, such as using AI to generate a presentation based on a company’s financial filing, started being rolled out to users in January.

The current version of the Ernie model is Generation 4, released in Oct. 2023. An upgraded “turbo” version Ernie 4.0 was released in August 2024. Baidu has not officially announced plans to release the next generation update.

The latest version of OpenAI’s ChatGPT, GPT-4o, was released in May 2024. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said in a Reddit “ask me anything” session earlier this month that there wasn’t a public timeline for GPT-5’s release.

Baidu did not respond to a request for comment.

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US and UK decline to sign international agreement for ethical AI

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US and UK decline to sign international agreement for ethical AI

The US and UK snubbed signing an international AI agreement, with US Vice President JD Vance claiming that “excessive regulation of the AI sector could kill a transformative industry.”

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