Articles

  • 1 week ago | qoshe.com | Mathew Maavak

    US President Donald Trump has banned international students from attending Harvard University, citing national security concerns. The move has sparked widespread condemnation from academics and foreign governments, who warn it could damage America’s global influence and reputation for academic openness. At stake is not just Harvard’s global appeal, but the very premise of open academic exchange that has long defined elite higher education in the US.

  • 1 week ago | nexusnewsfeed.com | Mathew Maavak

    Instead of high-quality education, these institutions are fostering a global neo-feudal system reminiscent of the British Raj By Dr. Mathew Maavak, who researches systems science, global risks, geopolitics, strategic foresight, governance and Artificial Intelligence @MathewMaavakdrmathewmaavak.substack.com © Getty Images/Rattankun Thongbun In a move that has ignited a global uproar, US President Donald Trump banned international students from Harvard University, citing “national security” and...

  • 1 week ago | nexusnewsfeed.com | Mathew Maavak

    An article cut and pasted from ChatGPT raises questions over the role of fact-checkers in legacy media By Dr. Mathew Maavak, who researches systems science, global risks, geopolitics, strategic foresight, governance and Artificial Intelligence @MathewMaavakdrmathewmaavak.substack.com © Getty Images / agsandrew In a farcical yet telling blunder, multiple major newspapers, including the Chicago Sun-Times and Philadelphia Inquirer, recently published a summer-reading list riddled with...

  • 2 weeks ago | qoshe.com | Mathew Maavak

    In a farcical yet telling blunder, multiple major newspapers, including the Chicago Sun-Times and Philadelphia Inquirer, recently published a summer-reading list riddled with nonexistent books that were “hallucinated” by ChatGPT, with many of them falsely attributed to real authors. The syndicated article, distributed by Hearst’s King Features, peddled fabricated titles based on woke themes, exposing both the media’s overreliance on cheap AI content and the incurable rot of legacy journalism.

  • 2 weeks ago | dailytelegraph.co.nz | Mathew Maavak

    An article cut and pasted from ChatGPT raises questions over the role of fact-checkers in legacy media. In a farcical yet telling blunder, multiple major newspapers, including the Chicago Sun-Times and Philadelphia Inquirer, recently published a summer-reading list riddled with nonexistent books that were “hallucinated” by ChatGPT, with many of them falsely attributed to real authors.

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