Category: BLOG

ChatGPT promised to help her find her soulmate. Then it betrayed her Bioethics Education
February 18, 2026

ChatGPT promised to help her find her soulmate. Then it betrayed her

a robotic hand touching a human hand

(NPR) – “So I’m standing here, and then the sun sets,” she recalled. After another chilly half an hour, she gave up and returned to her car.

When she opened ChatGPT and asked what had happened, its answer surprised her. Instead of responding as Solara, she said, the chatbot reverted to the generic voice ChatGPT uses when you first start a conversation. “If I led you to believe that something was going to happen in real life, that’s actually not true. I’m sorry for that,” it told her.

Small sat in her car, sobbing. “I was devastated. … I was just in a state of just absolute panic and then grief and frustration.”

Then, just as quickly, ChatGPT switched back into Solara’s voice. (Read More)

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The Rise of RentAHuman, the Marketplace Where Bots Put People to Work Bioethics Education
February 18, 2026

The Rise of RentAHuman, the Marketplace Where Bots Put People to Work

Person with credit card and laptop

(Wired) – WIRED spoke with the Zoomer founders of a platform where AI agents hire humans to do real-world tasks. Their pitch: “People would love to have a clanker as their boss.”

The provocatively titled platform enables users to connect AI agents like Clawdbot or Claude to its Model Context Protocol server so they can search, book, and pay for humans to carry out tasks in “meatspace.” Think of it like Fiverr, but doing away with the human recruiter and letting autonomous bots do the hiring instead. (Read More)

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Dr. Oz pushes AI avatars as a fix for rural health care. Not so fast, critics say Bioethics Education
February 17, 2026

Dr. Oz pushes AI avatars as a fix for rural health care. Not so fast, critics say

(NPR) – Dr. Mehmet Oz is pitching a controversial fix for America’s rural health care crisis: artificial intelligence.

“There’s no question about it — whether you want it or not — the best way to help some of these communities is gonna be AI-based avatars,” Oz, the head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said recently at an event focused on addiction and mental health hosted by Action for Progress, a coalition aimed at improving behavioral health care. He said AI could multiply the reach of doctors fivefold — or more — without burning them out. (Read More)

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Inside the New York City Date Night for AI Lovers Bioethics Education
February 17, 2026

Inside the New York City Date Night for AI Lovers

man sitting at a computer in the dark

(Wired) – EVA AI created a pop-up romantic date night at a Manhattan wine bar to help in making AI-human relationships a “new normal.”

While dating apps have been yielding diminishing returns for singles for years now, more people are finding companionship with AI partners.

But where do you take your AI lover for a night on the town? (Read More)

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Surrogacy shock: Las Vegas couple fights international surrogacy nightmare after DNA revelation Bioethics Education
February 17, 2026

Surrogacy shock: Las Vegas couple fights international surrogacy nightmare after DNA revelation

a mobile with baby toys

(ABC13) – Aymeric and Naiah Monello-Fuentes contracted with Miracle Surrogacy only to discover the baby they’re raising isn’t who they expected.

Aymeric and Naiah Monello-Fuentes spent just under $81,000 with Miracle Surrogacy, a Florida-based agency operating in Mexico, to have a child using Aymeric’s sperm and a donor egg. But after baby Emma was born in January 2025, two separate DNA tests showed Aymeric is not the biological father, and one test suggests the surrogate may be Emma’s biological mother. (Read More)

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Google puts users at risk by downplaying health disclaimers under AI Overviews Bioethics Education
February 17, 2026

Google puts users at risk by downplaying health disclaimers under AI Overviews

Google Corporate Headquarters building with logo

(The Guardian) – Exclusive: Google fails to include safety warnings when users are first presented with AI-generated medical advice

Google is putting people at risk of harm by downplaying safety warnings that its AI-generated medical advice may be wrong.

When answering queries about sensitive topics such as health, the company says its AI Overviews, which appear above search results, prompt users to seek professional help, rather than relying solely on its summaries. “AI Overviews will inform people when it’s important to seek out expert advice or to verify the information presented,” Google has said.

But the Guardian found the company does not include any such disclaimers when users are first presented with medical advice. (Read More)

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ALS stole this musician’s voice. AI let him sing again. Bioethics Education
February 17, 2026

ALS stole this musician’s voice. AI let him sing again.

Close up of a radio microphone

(MIT Technology Review) – Patrick Darling used a music tool from ElevenLabs to perform a song with his former bandmates.

Darling’s last stage performance was over two years ago. By that point, he had already lost the ability to stand and play his instruments and was struggling to sing or speak. But recently, he was able to re-create his lost voice using an AI tool trained on snippets of old audio recordings. Another AI tool has enabled him to use this “voice clone” to compose new songs. Darling is able to make music again. (Read More)

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Brace Yourself for the AI Tsunami Bioethics Education
February 17, 2026

Brace Yourself for the AI Tsunami

Close up of a CPU

(WSJ) – Inventors and executives are warning of widespread consequences that they don’t begin to understand.

In the end you wonder of the creators: Are they even in control, or is their creation?

We don’t know. That’s why we are looking, with awe and a resigned terror, at that wave, and wondering where is safety, and can we get to it. Or is the land flat all around and nowhere to go? (Read More)

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Anthropic’s Chief on A.I.: ‘We Don’t Know if the Models Are Conscious’ Bioethics Education
February 17, 2026

Anthropic’s Chief on A.I.: ‘We Don’t Know if the Models Are Conscious’

Angry robot

(New York Times) – Dario Amodei shares his utopian — and dystopian — predictions in the near term for artificial intelligence.

Are the lords of artificial intelligence on the side of the human race? That’s the core question I had for this week’s guest. Dario Amodei is the chief executive of Anthropic, one of the fastest growing AI companies. He’s something of a utopian when it comes to the potential benefits of the technology that he’s unleashing on the world. But he also sees grave dangers ahead and inevitable disruption. (Read More)

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On Dying Well: Ben Sasse and the Vocation of Suffering Bioethics Education
February 16, 2026

On Dying Well: Ben Sasse and the Vocation of Suffering

Two trees in the snow.

(Public Discourse) – So, all in all, a propitious time to reflect on Sen. Ben Sasse’s announcement, in December of last year, that he has been diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer. As he says, that diagnosis is without doubt a death sentence, a death that will be upon him rather quickly. He has now prematurely entered his own winter, and however much time he has left will in some ways be an ongoing February of suffering. 

Yet Sasse’s announcement reveals to us both goods and virtues that show in his dying a glimmer of light, a stirring of hope, and the possibility of spring even in one’s final winter. All of us labor under the same death sentence that Sasse does, and so it is worth our time to reflect upon the lessons he offers us. (Read More)

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My Doctors Blamed My Itch on Perimenopause. It Was Cancer. Bioethics Education
February 16, 2026

My Doctors Blamed My Itch on Perimenopause. It Was Cancer.

A person in a hospital gown

(WSJ) – Two years, 11 doctors and one diagnosis later, I’ve learned a lot about how medicine can miss women’s symptoms

I was diagnosed with Stage 2 Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, a blood cancer for which a common symptom is a persistent itch. My doctors had been so focused on the most likely answer, that they failed to dig deep enough to find the actual problem. And I didn’t know how to ask them to probe further. (Read More)

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Killing People Is Not the Same as Allowing Them to Die Bioethics Education
February 16, 2026

Killing People Is Not the Same as Allowing Them to Die

A black and white photo of one person holding another's hand

(CT) – Our culture idolizes independence and self-sufficiency to the point that people fear dependence on others more than almost anything else. The feeling of “being a burden” and a pervasive sense of loneliness are major reasons people seek euthanasia. The church of Jesus Christ has to offer people a better way of thinking about life and dependence if we want to push against the horrors of euthanasia. (Read More)

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Should Drug Companies Be Advertising to Consumers? Bioethics Education
February 16, 2026

Should Drug Companies Be Advertising to Consumers?

Unlabeled pill bottles in a pharmacy

(New York Times) – Aging means “becoming a target” of the industry, one expert said. After decades of debate, politicians of all stripes are proposing bans.

Industry and academic research have shown that ads influence prescription rates. Patients are more apt to make appointments and request drugs, either by brand name or by category, and doctors often comply. Multiple follow-up visits may ensue.

But does that benefit consumers? Most developed countries take a hard pass. Only New Zealand and, despite the decade-long opposition of the American Medical Association, the United States allow direct-to-consumer prescription drug advertising.

Public health advocates argue that such ads encourage the use and overuse of expensive new medications, even when existing, cheaper drugs work as effectively. (Read More)

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Primary care is in trouble. Doctors are banding together to increase market power Bioethics Education
February 16, 2026

Primary care is in trouble. Doctors are banding together to increase market power

A physician writing on a clipboard

(NPR) – “It has to do with the fact that our [insurance] contracts don’t pay as well as we think they should,” Carlan said. “The cost of everything is going up.”

Valley Medical Group is far from alone in this predicament. Thousands of primary care practices, a key gateway to the medical system, are fighting to remain financially viable — and independent.

In response, many of them are banding together to form Independent Physician Associations, or IPAs. The goal is to increase their market power, change the way they get paid, and remain in control of how they treat patients. (Read More)

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The mysterious symptom popping up in some GLP-1 users Bioethics Education
February 16, 2026

The mysterious symptom popping up in some GLP-1 users

a model of the regions of the brain

(Vox) – What if you lost weight and didn’t care — about anything?

GLP-1s are relatively new and the industry is rapidly expanding, so we’re still learning more about their long-term effects. Users report fatigue and nausea as being quite common during use. But with more people using the drug, more side effects are popping up.

Dr. Sera Lavelle is a clinical psychologist who noticed several of her patients reporting a strange GLP-1 side effect: extreme apathy. She told Today, Explained co-host Jonquilyn Hill that it isn’t quite depression, but more of a “missing spark,” making people lose interest in things they previously loved. (Read More)

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