The newsletter highlights a growing concern about therapists using Artificial Intelligence tools during sessions without clients´ knowledge. One client, Declan, discovered his therapist was consulting ChatGPT after a technical glitch led to inadvertent screen sharing. He watched ChatGPT generate analyses in real time while his therapist copied his statements into the model and relayed its answers back. The article says similar reports are increasing, and frames the practice as a breach of client trust and privacy.
Separately, the newsletter assesses Apple AirPods as a potential gateway hearing aid. The US Food and Drug Administration approved hearing-aid software for Apple’s AirPods Pro in September 2024. The author, who reports living with hearing loss and tinnitus, contrasts the arrival of a major tech company in the hearing-aid space with a market dominated by a few firms. The piece notes the author’s everyday hearing aids cost just over Not stated, and that the AirPods Pro 2 are now positioned as an alternative, but the article does not state the exact device price point.
Beyond those two features, the edition curates the day’s must-reads and wider tech coverage. Topics include internal conflict at MAHA, efforts by an organization called DOGE to use Artificial Intelligence in regulatory contexts, and Salesforce replacing around 4,000 support jobs with Artificial Intelligence agents. Other items flagged for further reading include tensions in China’s electric vehicle industry, a newly reported black hole, work on making quantum computers more useful, OnlyFans piracy, humans hired to fix poor Artificial Intelligence outputs, changing gadget trends among children, and a piece on supershoes reshaping distance running. The newsletter also quotes an education leader skeptical of equating Artificial Intelligence to classroom tools like calculators, and points readers to longer features in the publication’s print edition.