Author: nick

I posted this morning about Doe v. OpenAI, the interesting and important lawsuit that alleges that “[d]riven by a ChatGPT-fueled delusional spiral, her ex-boyfriend [Doe’s] stalked and harassed her for months—generating dozens of fake psychological reports about her via ChatGPT and distributing them to her family, friends, and colleagues, which escalated to leaving her voicemails threatening her physical safety.” Regular readers of the blog might ask: What’s with this Jane Doe business here? Why is this case being litigated under a pseudonym, when other tort cases generally aren’t? (Pseudonymity is a rare exception to the general rule that people must…

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Like, Follow, Subscribe: Influencer Kids and the Cost of a Childhood Online, by Fortesa Latifi. Gallery Books, 288 pp. Last Halloween, a clever costume “won the Internet,” as the saying goes. Kate Snyder of Brooklyn posted a picture of herself in a tiny smocked dress, knee-high socks, and a white cardboard heart surrounding her white-painted face. Her caption reads “[I’m] the toddler of a celebrity mom who wants to protect my identity but she also want[s] to post my outfits.” Snyder’s post received thousands of likes on Instagram and even made its way over to a Reddit snark page (more…

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Photograph by Nathaniel St. Clair US president Donald Trump says that his war in Iran – currently in a supposed ceasefire – resulted in “total and complete victory. 100%. No question about it.” The Iranian regime, via a statement from its Supreme National Security Council, also claims “great victory.” If the war is really over (I’m skeptical), who actually won? Well, not you. “You can no more win a war,” said Jeannette Rankin, “than you can win an earthquake.” Rankin, the first woman ever elected to the US House of Representatives, entered Congress in 1916, just in time to vote…

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On a recent episode of “The Pitt,” a jaundiced patient learned her liver problems were likely caused by what she’d assumed was a healthy habit — taking a turmeric supplement five times a day. “With doses that large of turmeric, there have been cases of liver failure,” medical resident Trinity Santos told her. “From eating a spice?” the yellow-skinned patient exclaimed.  Behind this fictional exchange is a factual concern: The cooking spice turmeric has become a popular anti-inflammatory supplement, but in some cases, it can cause liver injury. It’s a risk posed by a number of supplements marketed as being…

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Last week I wrote about the possibilities of genetically engineering humans. The quickie version is this – we are already using genetic engineering (CRISPR) for somatic changes to treat diseases, and other applications are likely to follow. Engineering germline cells, which would get into the human gene pool, are legally and ethically fraught, but it’s hard to predict how this will play out. I have also written often about genetically engineering food. I think this is a great technology with many powerful applications, but it should be, and largely is, highly regulated to make sure that anything that gets into…

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Thorn argues that a recent New York Times op-ed rewrites history through omission, glossing over the collateral damage caused by the previous administration. Former Biden economic advisers Ryan Cummings and Jared Bernstein would have you believe the decline in bitcoin’s price from its 2025 peak somehow vindicates their administration’s approach to cryptocurrency. A masterclass in selective memory, their February 26 New York Times opinion piece omits the most consequential fact about Biden-era crypto policy: it was not a reasoned regulatory framework. The authors credit the Biden administration with “increasingly aggressive regulatory efforts to curb scams and fraud.” This framing is extraordinary, given what…

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