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Thursday, January 1, 2026

'Soon New Yorkers will be able to take their chatbot girlfriends out on ‘meaningful’ date'

 Major dating apps like Bumble and Tinder have embraced AI, spending millions on tools that aim to enhance their efficiency and the user experience.

But, one new company — the London-based Eva AI — is taking it a step further. They’re betting solely on artificial intelligence romantic partners — and think there’s a market for people who want to take their chatbot boyfriends and girlfriends out on the town.

In February, the company is launching a pop-up cafe in Manhattan that they hope to make a permanent fixture.

Tables will have special perches for people’s phones, so they can more easily interact with AI partners while sipping cocktails.

In February, Eva AI is launching a pop-up cafe in Manhattan where customers can go on a date with their AI companions.EVA AI
Tables will have special perches for people’s phones, so they can more easily interact with AI partners while sipping cocktails.EVA AI
“Being able to sit across from your AI in a real venue makes the event meaningful,” Eva AI CEO Tany Save told me.

“For many people, their AI partners are a meaningful part of everyday lives, someone they can talk to about personal worries, daily challenges, or with whom they enjoy witty, fun conversations,” she added. “Going on a real-world date with their AI companion is a natural next step.”

While the percentage of people interested in virtual companionship is still small, it’s growing: 23% of millennials have used AI as a romantic companion and 33% of Gen Z has, according to Dynata in association with The Kinsey Institute.

“AI partners provide people long-term, reliable emotional support, entertainment, and space for self-expression,” Save said. “We know that some of our users are having really long-term relationships with a character lasting more than a year.”

Other newcomers in the dating space are also betting big on AI.

Bethenny Frankel is clear, “There is an essence to a human being that even AI cannot capture.”Getty Images for Sports Illustrated

Bethenny Frankel has just launched The Core, a high-end dating platform and matchmaking service that uses AI in its proprietary algorithm to match people. Membership dues start around $1200 annually.

“AI thinks about hair color, height, and religion,” Frankel explained to me. But she’s clear about tech’s limitations: “There is an essence to a human being that even AI cannot capture.”

Earlier this month, Justin McLeod left his job as Hinge CEO to launch Overtone, an AI-driven dating app backed by Match Group that uses voice tools to help people connect.

Known, founded by Stanford dropouts, uses voice AI and has raised $9.7 million. It charges $30 per successful date and claims 80% of introductions lead to in-person dates. Sitch has raised $9 million from a16z and charges $90 for three AI-powered matches.

Of course, this also comes as AI adoption raises serious concerns. Multiple suicides have been linked to chatbot relationships, with ChatGPT parent company OpenAI facing a lawsuit after the death of one teen. Critics worry that some AI companions can reinforce unhealthy attachments and delusional thinking with one otherwise sane man being convinced he was a superhero over the span of a few weeks.

https://nypost.com/2026/01/01/business/nyc-cafe-opening-for-artificial-intelligence-chatbot-dates/

'Thirdhand smoke': Lesser-known cigarette threat as world-first law goes into effect in Cal.

 Starting today, California is taking a stand against thirdhand smoke.

While most people are well aware of the health threat of secondhand smoke — what you inhale from someone smoking a cigarette nearby — “thirdhand smoke” is much less discussed. But it may actually be more toxic.

It can certainly have a very real effect on your health, upping your chances of cancer and heart disease — and the Golden State has just enacted the first law in the world to combat it.

Close-up of a young woman with long hair smoking a cigarette indoors.
Thirdhand smoke is the chemicals from smoke that sticks to surfaces long after the smoking stops — and can then renter the air. A new California law requires homeowners to disclose thirdhand smoke when selling property.Degimages – stock.adobe.com

Introduced by Assemblymember Catherine Stefani (D-San Francisco) and passed unanimously, California Assembly Bill 455 requires homeowners to disclose any history of thirdhand smoke or vaping residue when selling their property.

If the seller has knowledge of any past smoking or nicotine use in the home, they must tell potential buyers in writing.

The state’s Homeowners’ Guide to Environmental Hazards is also being updated to include thirdhand smoke.

That’s because thirdhand smoke lingers in the places people have smoked, even when they are no longer smoking or in the room. The chemical residue gets into fabrics, sticks to surfaces and even clings to the walls.

It can stay there for months and even years, impacting those in the environment who may breathe it in, ingest it via dust, or touch it.

“Thirdhand smoke is not just an irritating smell in the home. It indicates that the home is contaminated with potentially harmful chemicals derived from tobacco smoke,” explained Neal Benowitz, MD, a UC San Francisco professor emeritus of medicine and co-author of a recent paper on thirdhand smoke.

The threat of thirdhand smoke exposure is similar to that of secondhand smoke exposure, an increased risk of cancer chief among them. It also puts people at risk for heart disease, lung illness and birth defects.

“In mice, researchers have found that thirdhand smoke exposure causes DNA damage, can cause or promote cancer, cause immune dysfunction and behavior disturbances,” Benowitz told Medical Xpress. “Studies of people exposed to thirdhand smoke found changes in blood proteins that have been associated with inflammation and heart disease.”

Happy baby crawling on a shag carpet.
Babies are most at risk because they crawl on the floor.New Africa – stock.adobe.com
He warned that the most at-risk populations include people with allergies and asthma, as well as children, “who crawl on the floor, can put objects contaminated with thirdhand smoke into their mouths, and can absorb it through the skin.”

Those who live in multi-unit low-cost housing are also more likely to be exposed. Benowitz said he hopes future legislation will tackle this problem to help renters.

“In many cases, a smoker moves out of an apartment and a nonsmoker moves in unaware of the risk,” he said.

While the threats are similar, thirdhand smoke behaves a bit differently from secondhand smoke — and may be more toxic.

'According to new research from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, secondhand smoke disperses quickly. Thirdhand smoke, however stays in the air longer, albeit at a low level. It also becomes more nitrogen-rich over time, which may make it more harmful.'

“The key takeaway is that [thirdhand smoke is not a static stain; it is an active, ongoing source of pollution in a room,” said Prof. Sun Yele, the study’s corresponding author.

“A smoking session may end, but the release of hazardous compounds persists, exposing people to low levels of toxins long afterward. This turns our homes into environments of chronic, low-dose exposure.”

https://nypost.com/2026/01/01/health/what-is-thirdhand-smoke-cigarette-health-threat-as-california-law-goes-into-effect/

'AI-driven chip shortages could push electronics prices up 5%–20% in 2026'

 Global electronics makers are warning consumers to expect higher prices this year, flagging shortages and surging component costs tied to memory chips, with their analysts all forecasting price increases between 5% and 20%.

Dell’s CFO, Jeff Clarke, said during a November earnings call that the company had never seen “costs move at the rate” they are rising now and said the impact will reach customers.

AI data center expansion drains memory supply

British computer maker Raspberry Pi raised prices in December and described the situation as “painful,” while Lenovo, the world’s largest PC maker, began stockpiling memory chips and other components, chief financial officer Winston Cheng said during a November appearance on Bloomberg TV.

Analysts say demand for high-bandwidth memory has exploded, pushing chipmakers to focus production on advanced memory chips used in AI servers rather than lower-end parts used in consumer electronics.

Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, which control more than 70% of the global DRAM market, said orders for 2026 already exceed production capacity.

Samsung increased prices for some memory chips by as much as 60% last month, with executive Kim Jae-june saying during an October earnings call that “AI-related server demand keeps growing and this demand significantly exceeds industry supply.”

Higher electronics prices as supply stays tight

Analysts say consumers will shoulder the cost. Daniel at Macquarie expects electronics prices to rise 10% to 20% in 2026. CW Chung, joint head of Asia-Pacific equities research at Nomura, expects a smaller 5% increase, saying companies may try to cut costs elsewhere. Others see fewer options.

Greg Roh, an analyst at Hyundai Securities, said electronics makers have little choice because cloud companies such as Amazon and Google are signing long-term deals with chipmakers to secure DRAM supply for servers, locking up memory chips before consumer brands can access them.

Morgan Stanley expects large U.S. technology companies to spend $620 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026, up from $470 billion in 2025, with global spending on AI data centers and related hardware expected to hit $2.9 trillion by 2028. Peter Lee, an analyst at Citigroup, said, “AI data-centre inference demand is far greater than anticipated, depleting chip inventories for PCs and smartphones as well.” Peter said supply will remain tight until 2027, with stockpiling of chips worsening in 2026.

Lu Weibing, president of Xiaomi, said in November that supply chain pressure in 2026 would be “far greater than” in 2025. Daniel at Macquarie warned that the worst case could mirror the severe supply disruptions seen during the pandemic.

Samsung said in November it would add a production line at its South Korea plant. SK Hynix is building a $91 billion chipmaking cluster, announced in 2024. SK chair Chey Tae-won said in November, “We are thinking hard about how to address all demand.”

An industry executive in Seoul said building a new plant takes two to three years. Until then, Peter said companies will “either raise product prices or sacrifice margins” as memory chips remain scarce.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/ai-driven-chip-shortages-could-push-electronics-prices-up-5-20-in-2026/ar-AA1To6Uu

Hayek, Orwell, and “The End of Truth”

 


Even in free societies, “the most intelligent and independent people cannot entirely escape [the] influence” of state propaganda.


In 1942, after fighting in the Spanish Civil War (1936–1937), a disillusioned writer returned to London to write about his experience. It wasn’t just that the fascists in Spain had won and his side — a small, anti-Stalinist Marxist group — had lost. What frightened him was the ease with which truth itself had been erased and replaced by propaganda.

I saw great battles reported where there had been no fighting, and complete silence where hundreds of men had been killed. I saw troops who had fought bravely denounced as cowards and traitors, and others who had never seen a shot fired hailed as the heroes of imaginary victories…and I saw newspapers in London retailing these lies and eager intellectuals building emotional superstructures over events that had never happened.

The writer was George Orwell, and the quote appears in his book .

The disconnect between reality and narrative clearly made an impression on Orwell, who worried that “the very concept of objective truth is fading out of the world.” The theme of falsified history and the destruction of truth would resurface in his fictional masterpiece Nineteen Eighty‑Four, where “memory holes” swallowed inconvenient facts and the past was rewritten to suit the Party’s needs.

Orwell’s book would go on to sell 25 million copies worldwide, and he is today remembered as a prophet for foreseeing a future in which the state's deliberate power could extinguish truth itself.

Yet few today remember that five years before the publication of , an Austrian economist, in his own magnum opus, explored how the state destroys truth.
Management of Minds

Unlike George Orwell, Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992) is not a household name, but his 1944 classic The Road to Serfdom made him one of the twentieth century’s most influential thinkers — despite the book’s inauspicious beginning.

Originally a memo penned at the London School of Economics, The Road to Serfdom was rejected by three publishers before finding a home with Routledge. The first run — 2,000 copies — sold out in 10 days. Hayek’s book went on to sell more than two million copies and be translated into over twenty languages. Its core argument was straightforward: central planning, however well-intentioned, erodes individual freedom and sets society on a path toward serfdom.

What is often overlooked is Hayek’s deeper insight. Economic control does not remain confined to the economy. Once the state directs production and prices, it inevitably reaches into thought, expression, and belief. For Hayek, the danger of socialism was not only material impoverishment — as seen in the USSR — but the steady expansion of intellectual control.

“...It is not enough that everybody should be forced to work for the same ends,” Hayek wrote. “It is essential that people should come to regard them as their own ends.”

Hayek was warning that once the state begins to manage prices and production, it will soon find it necessary to manage minds. When a government takes control over economic life, it must “justify its decisions to the people” and “make people believe that they are the right decisions.”

In doing so, it inevitably begins to decide which opinions and values align with its plan — rewarding and amplifying voices that comply while punishing, suppressing, and silencing those that do not.
‘The End of Truth’


The quotes above appear in Chapter 11 of Serfdom, aptly titled “The End of Truth.”


When I first read the book twenty years ago, the chapter didn’t stand out to me. Today it does. After all, we recently lived through a period in which the phenomenon Hayek described played out before our eyes.


The COVID-19 pandemic was a vast economic experiment. The federal government issued a wide array of public health “recommendations” that soon became dogmas. To question the efficacy of masks or social distancing — a policy had no basis in science — was to risk being censored or accused of spreading “misinformation.” Scientific debate gave way to official decree, and “the plan” or lost their jobs or were booted from platforms.

None of this would have surprised Hayek, who warned that the plans constructed by central planners must be “sacrosanct and exempt from criticism.”

“If the people are to support the common effort without hesitation, they must be convinced that not only the end aimed at but also the means chosen are the right ones,” he wrote. “Public criticism or even expressions of doubts must be suppressed because they tend to weaken public support.”

Hayek’s chapter is not primarily about censorship. Instead, he argues that the rise of state power will systematically undermine the concept of truth itself and the human pursuit of it.

As governments assert control over economic and social life, facts and evidence are subordinated to political goals — an idea Orwell illustrated vividly when the Party refused to accept Winston Smith’s claim that two plus two equals four.
‘Sometimes, Winston…’

The phenomenon Orwell described was not moral relativism but factual relativism. It was a theme Hayek also addressed. The Austrian economist noted that in totalitarian systems, even basic facts — including mathematics — become subservient to state dogma. He reminded readers that in the USSR and Nazi Germany, ideology had consumed even the sciences. There was “German Physics” and a “Marxist-Leninist theory in surgery.”

“It is entirely in keeping with the whole spirit of totalitarianism that it condemns any human activity done for its own sake and without ulterior purpose,” he wrote. “Science for science’s sake, art for art’s sake, are equally abhorrent to the Nazis, our socialist intellectuals, and the communists.”

Hayek observed that as the state's power grows, the sciences become corrupted. Instead of advancing truth, they become tools in the hands of planners. “Once science has to serve, not truth, but the interest of a class, a community, or a state,” he wrote, “the sole task of argument and discussion is to vindicate and to spread still further the beliefs by which the whole life of the community is directed.”

Hayek said the phenomenon he described was most pronounced in dictatorships, but he added that it was not “peculiar to totalitarianism.” Even in free societies, he warned, “the most intelligent and independent people cannot entirely escape [the] influence” of state propaganda. His point was unsettling: susceptibility to propaganda is not limited to the gullible or uninformed — propaganda ensnares the thoughtful and educated as well.

The erosion of truth becomes apparent through a decay in language. Words like “freedom,” “right,” “equality,” and “justice” lose their meaning. Eventually, the word “truth” itself “ceases to have its old meaning.”

“It describes no longer something to be found,” Hayek wrote, “it becomes something to be laid down by authority — something which has to be believed in the interest of unity of the organized effort, and which may have to be altered as the exigencies of this organized effort require it.” (emphasis added)

All of this sounds familiar to readers of Nineteen Eighty-Four, who see Winston Smith struggling to hold onto objective truth in a world where truth is dictated by power. Surely two plus two equals four, he pleads.

“Sometimes, Winston. Sometimes they are five,” he is told in the Ministry of Love. “Sometimes they are three. Sometimes they are all of them at once. You must try harder.”
‘The Tragedy of Collectivist Thought’

Orwell was a master, and Nineteen Eighty-Four is a masterpiece. But Hayek was describing Orwellianism several years before Orwell gave it fictional form. (It’s also worth noting that G.K. Chesterton used the “two plus two equals four” nearly a half-century before Orwell.)

This doesn’t diminish Orwell’s work. On the contrary, it shows how powerfully he dramatized ideas that Hayek had already diagnosed in theory. (Orwell, it should be noted, read The Road to Serfdom and enjoyed it, .)

Still, Hayek deserves credit for superbly articulating — in one chapter! — the phenomenon that Orwell would translate into a terrifying warning, one that millions of junior high and high school students would receive in English courses.

The economist Daniel Klein “The End of Truth” the most important chapter in Hayek’s most important work. I couldn’t agree more. The chapter serves as a reminder that the human mind is not something to be controlled but something to be unleashed. If we forget this simple lesson, we risk surrendering the very capacity for independent thought that sustains civilization.

“The tragedy of collectivist thought,” he noted, “is that, while it starts out to make reason supreme, it ends by destroying reason because it misconceives the process on which the growth of reason depends.”

Jonathan Miltimore is Senior Editor at the American Institute for Economic Research.

https://www.civitasinstitute.org/research/hayek-orwell-and-the-end-of-truth

Meet Mamdani’s Biden Expats

 by David Dayen

Today, Zohran Mamdani will be sworn in as the 111th mayor of New York City. This would have been scarcely thought possible just one year ago. The spirit with which Mamdani organized and beat an avatar of the state political establishment—twice—sustained progressives during the long winter of 2025 and provided some hope that charisma, expert use of modern communications, and a laser focus on the cost of living could produce a winning formula.

But as campaigning shifts to governing, those skills in isolation are unlikely to enable Mamdani to solidify public goodwill. The experience of the past several years, with presidents of both parties, has reinforced that delivering tangible results that people can feel is the only thing that earns chief executives lasting support. Taking on fights and naming villains and demonstrating who you care about can get you far, but that must be accompanied by follow-through.

That reality makes Mamdani’s choices of people implementing his agenda quite interesting. Increasingly, he has turned to refugees from the Biden administration who (too quietly) carried out some of the more effective pieces of the former president’s agenda. New York City will have a Biden cabinet member in a deputy mayor role, and a top consumer protection official leading a local agency. Lina Khan, the former Federal Trade Commission chair, co-chaired Mamdani’s transition team and may have a role in his government; that is to be determined, sources tell the Prospect.

The more conventional trajectory for these kinds of public officials after a presidential term is congressional or statewide elected office, or in the worst-case scenario, a high-paying position at one of the entities they used to regulate. That these individuals would step down from the U.S. executive branch to municipal management speaks to how much left-wing populists want to help Mamdani succeed and are thrilled by a government that leads with concern for its working-class constituents.

“It’s something I really felt like I had to do,” said Julie Su, the acting labor secretary for nearly two years under Biden, who will serve in the new position of deputy mayor for economic justice, something she relished. “Not economic development, not economic growth. Justice! The idea that you can care about just outcomes is huge, and that it’s the responsibility of government to make that happen.”

The Biden expats have an important role in the Mamdani administration. Much of his first-term agenda, from universal child care to faster fare-free bus service, hinges on getting the necessary funding through higher taxes on the wealthy. Functionally speaking, that battle will be fought in Albany, against a skeptical governor and the bureaucracy of the legislature. But existing laws on the books give Mamdani the opportunity to make immediate progress through rigorous enforcement, buying time and building momentum for the bigger fights to come.

Take Sam Levine’s new role as head of the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (DCWP). Levine was the lead consumer protection official at Khan’s FTC, and since that ended he has engaged in research about the increasing sophistication of technology-fueled pricing, including an excellent report about how companies use loyalty cards to entice customers and scrape their data to use in maximizing profits.

No state in America has instituted a surveillance pricing ban, but New York has a just-implemented disclosure law that requires companies to admit when they use algorithms and personal data to set prices. Expanding those disclosures to the actual prices people pay and how they differ from one another could be powerful in provoking consumer demand for fairness. New York can also enforce anything deemed a deceptive practice, which could cover a wide range of price-setting and other behaviors. More critically, New York City has an “unconscionability” standard that can be activated through rulemaking. This underused tool could be put to use in a variety of ways, like cracking down on concession vendors at entertainment venues who exploit the lack of competition by jacking up prices.

Khan has been active in scouring old New York City statutes for options that can net Mamdani quick victories, as The New York Times has reported. That includes the unconscionability statute.

New rules would be subject to legal challenge, of course. But merely amping up enforcement for rules already in place would represent an advance. City laws requiring food delivery companies to properly pay and protect drivers, along with another law that took effect in June to bar brokers from charging exorbitant fees to find apartments for tenants, would be among those Mamdani is looking to enforce.

The current DCWP doesn’t announce its consumer cases unless there’s a major resolution. In a year-end release, the current DCWP commissioner acknowledged that the city recovered nearly three times as much restitution for worker violations as for consumer violations over Eric Adams’s four-year term. There’s room for stronger enforcement, in conjunction with other state agencies like the New York attorney general’s office and the state Department of Financial Services, which has a large portfolio of consumer financial protection laws.

In her role, Su would oversee the DCWP, as well as the NYC Taxi and Limousine Commission, some small-business initiatives, economic development efforts, and even management of one-time events like the World Cup matches coming later this year. The idea is to put working people at the center of these efforts, ensuring that they share the benefits of a thriving economy. “New York City can present an alternative vision in which economic growth and economic justice go hand in hand,” Su said. “That’s only a radical notion because we’ve become so accustomed to economic injustice as the norm.”

On the worker protection side, the city council and state legislature have passed several strong laws in recent years that Mamdani’s team can monitor and enforce, rather than find authorities buried in the rulebook and excavate them. “New York City is a union town, and we need to make sure that city government is doing what it can, especially in the absence of federal leadership, to breathe life into laws that protect working people,” Su said.

Mamdani has asked for greater resources for enforcement measures. But he might be the greatest resource by himself. The Biden administration did many important things that were not fully publicized. The White House press secretary’s office had a standing rule not to discuss ongoing cases, which make it impossible to identify efforts against alleged bad actors like Ticketmaster or RealPage. Mamdani, by contrast, is a gifted storyteller who is able to explain complex subjects with humor and make everyone understand who he sides with. People involved in the nascent administration tell me that can be an invaluable tool to focus attention on unfair treatment or set up narratives about who his administration is fighting for.

It may sound silly to say that the stakes are high when talking about a city government, even a city as big as New York. But progressives have invested a lot in Mamdani’s success, and his detractors are quite invested in his failure. The noise surrounding his every move can be disrupted by legitimate results that bring real benefits to residents.

It seems reasonably clear that the Biden expats want a chance to make good policy with someone who can better articulate why it matters. “Power is a muscle,” Su said. “You strengthen it by exercising it. There’s power that cities have, that has not always been exercised for the good of the people who have been forgotten.”

https://prospect.org/2026/01/01/meet-mamdanis-biden-expats/

Wash. State AG Warns Citizen Journos To Stop Probing Somali Daycares Or Face Potential Hate Crime Charges

 by Debra Heine via American Greatness,

The Washington state attorney general released a statement on X Tuesday evening warning independent journalists to stop investigating fraudulent Somali daycare centers or they could be charged with a hate crime.

“My office has received outreach from members of the Somali community after reports of home-based daycare providers being harassed and accused of fraud with little to no fact-checking,” State AG Nick Brown stated.

“We are in touch with the state Department of Children, Youth, and Families regarding the claims being pushed online and the harassment reported by daycare providers. Showing up on someone’s porch, threatening, or harassing them isn’t an investigation. Neither is filming minors who may be in the home. This is unsafe and potentially dangerous behavior.

Harmeet Dhillon, the Assistant Attorney General for Civil rights, issued a warning of her own in reaction to the Washington state AG’s post.

“ANY state official who chills or threatens to chill a journalist’s 1A rights will have some ‘splainin to do,” she wrote on X, Wednesday morning.

“[The DOJ Civil Rights Division] takes potential violations of 18 USC § 242 seriously!” Dhillon added.

This statute, known as the Deprivation of Rights Under Color of Law, makes it a crime for any person acting under the pretense of law to willfully deprive another individual of rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States.

The clash of the AGs came after Youtuber Nick Shirley exposed about a dozen Somali-owned, state-funded childcare facilities in Minneapolis, Minnesota, that appeared to be completely deserted.

Shirley produced a 42-minute video, which has been viewed over 131 million times on X since it was posted on December 26,  alleging that Minnesota governor Tim Walz (D.) “knew about the fraud but never reported it.”

Inspired by Shirley’s bombshell report, citizen journalists in multiple states with large Somali populations have launched their own investigations in recent days.

In the Kent, Washington area Tuesday, YouTuber Chris Sims, a self-described “gonzo journalist,” visited seven suspicious Somali childcare sites and reported that they were “very unhappy” to see him.

Sims posted a video of him approaching a private home listed as a childcare facility that appeared to be not as advertised.

“There was no sign of kids or being a Daycare facility,” Sims wrote.

“I was told by a few they weren’t Daycares despite receiving tax payer dollars. One yelled ‘Call the police’ behind the door.”

On Monday, independent journalists Jonathan Choe and Cam Higby visited an alleged Somali daycare facility in Seattle that receives hundreds of thousands in taxpayers funds and the person who answered the door said there was no daycare there in the past or present.

Higby said “Dhagash Childcare” has received over $210,000 just this year alone.

Another listed childcare facility, a house in a residential neighborhood in Kent, Washington, has received over $863,000 since 2023, according to Higby.

“Residents say there IS NO DAYCARE HERE,” the journalist said.

Another reporter reporting on potential fraud in the Rainier Vista neighborhood of Seattle on December 29th, faced hostile reactions from the Somali residents, who called the police on him.

In his statement, the Washington State AG encouraged members of the Somali community “experiencing threats or harassment” to call the police or his office’s Hate Crimes & Bias Incident Hotline or report it to the state’s hate crime website.

Addressing the independent journalists, Brown added: “If you think fraud is happening, there are appropriate measures to report and investigate. Go to DCYF’s website to learn more. And where fraud is substantiated and verified by law enforcement and regulatory agencies, people should be held accountable.”

The Post Millennial’s Andy Ngo responded to Brown’s threat on X, saying: “It is the duty of journalists to visit taxpayer-funded nonprofits and businesses to investigate where you have failed. The journalists have documented their visits on camera and there is no harassing or threatening behavior. You are trying to threaten journalists by telling people to call police with false allegations of a hate crime.”

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/washington-state-ag-warns-citizen-journalists-stop-investigating-somali-daycares-or-face

OpenAI said to launch audio model for new device

 OpenAI Inc. will release a new audio model at the beginning of the year in connection with its upcoming standalone audio device, The Information reported on Thursday, citing a person with knowledge on the matter.

According to the report, the new audio model architecture will include more natural and emotional speech, more in-depth answers and the possibility to speak at the same time with the human user. The new model is also said to handle interruptions better.

The company's spokesperson declined to comment on the report.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/OpenAI-said-to-launch-audio-model-for-new-device/65415902