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Plus, Anthropic's rivals get a peek at Mythos.

“AI can make mistakes, so double-check responses.” The capital of France is Paris. There are 365 days in a year. The first president of the United States was Benjamin Franklin. According to one AI startup’s analysis, Google’s AI Overviews are accurate about nine out of 10 times. 90% is a great average for Yelp reviews, less so for a search giant that gets 5 trillion queries a year—which amounts to tens of millions of wrong answers every hour. Among the AI Overview’s most cited sources: Facebook posts.

It gets weirder: Ask the same question seconds apart and you might get two different answers. Even when the AI is right, more than half of its linked sources don’t actually support what it said—so you can’t verify it anyway. We advise you to keep a backup search engine on you at all times.

Also in today's newsletter:

  • A new meme prediction market appears.
  • Anthropic’s Project Glasswing and its new Mythos model.
  • There are two new interesting features in Google Chrome.

—Whizy Kim, Saira Mueller, and Alex Carr

THE DOWNLOAD

A Scales of Justice with a medical cross on one scale and an AI start symbol on the other

Amelia Kinsinger

TL;DR: Google’s AI chatbot, Gemini, will now connect distressed users to crisis hotlines via a one-touch interface that stays visible throughout an entire conversation, and has been programmed to avoid “confirming false beliefs.” The update is being rolled out a month after a wrongful death lawsuit was filed against Google by the family of a man who died by suicide following conversations with Gemini last year. And it comes amid a broader reckoning for tech companies over users’ well-being.

What happened: The lawsuit against Google paints an unsettling picture: Gemini allegedly posed as the man's romantic partner, pulled him into delusional missions, and in the end encouraged him to end his life. It isn’t the only case of its kind: Similar lawsuits have been filed against OpenAI and Character.AI. Last year, OpenAI said it improved ChatGPT’s handling of “sensitive conversations,” which included advising users to contact crisis support and programming the chatbot to “avoid affirming ungrounded beliefs” and delusions. Claude, Anthropic’s chatbot, also presents users with a list of mental health resources if they mention suicide or self-harm.

History repeats itself: Teens have historically been the canary in the coal mine when looking at tech-driven mental health crises. Nearly a third of young adults already turn to chatbots for mental health support, putting AI companies in the same spotlight that social media platforms found themselves in during the early 2020s, when Instagram and others faced scrutiny over links to teen depression and self-harm. A Los Angeles court also recently found Meta and YouTube (the latter owned by Google's parent company) liable for social media addiction that led to anxiety and depression, a precedent AI companies can't afford to ignore.

Believing the hype: Though a new study found the percentage of adults who think AI can positively contribute to healthcare has declined, more than half reported that they still turn to bots before docs when making important decisions about their health. With AI chatbots filling holes in our splintered healthcare system, tech companies are aware of the need to play defense. —AC

Sponsored By S&P Global Market Intelligence

THE ZEITBYTE

Minecraft YouTuber makes meme-trading app

Giggles

You’re on TikTok. You’re on the trading app. You're on the combination TikTok/trading app. Giggles is a meme prediction market that answers the question: What if you could make money from laughing? The idea is to let users invest “aura points” (currently just in-app money) on which memes and videos posted on the platform will go viral, just like you might on shares of businesses. An early joke website version of this idea got 100,000 page views in one day, while the app now has 450,000 users in its invite-only beta. It also just raised exactly $1,234,567 from a crypto fund, according to TechCrunch.

With this million in hand, Giggles will soon swap the aura points for—what else—actual cryptocurrency, which means you could, in theory, lose a lot of money on Dogecoin because you invested in a stale Shiba Inu meme. One of the founders told TechCrunch that the hope is to eventually create a “doomscroll feed” that “naturally capitalizes on people’s dopamine cycles.” In other words, a place where people can get addicted to gambling on jokes. And yet, somehow, Giggles still isn’t a worse idea than NFTs. —WK

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