As more Americans adopt AI tools, fewer say they can trust the results
Despite increasing AI adoption in the U.S., public trust remains low due to widespread concerns about transparency, regulation, and broader societal impact. Financial advisors considering AI tools should be aware of this prevailing sentiment, as it underscores the importance of addressing client trust, data privacy, and ethical considerations when integrating AI into their practices.
Read full article at techcrunch-aiWant the full daily Briefing?
30 stories like this every day, with Action Required call-outs and direct lines to ask Aria — finsay's AI compliance assistant.
Try free for 14 daysRelated stories
- Stalking victim sues OpenAI, claims ChatGPT fueled her abuser’s delusions and ignored her warnings
This lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging its ChatGPT tool was misused for stalking despite ignored warnings, underscores significant ethical an…
- This Startup Wants You to Pay Up to Talk With AI Versions of Human Experts
Onix is launching a platform where AI versions of human experts, like health and wellness influencers, provide advice and potentially hawk p…
- Meta’s New AI Asked for My Raw Health Data—and Gave Me Terrible Advice
This article highlights the privacy risks and limitations of AI models like Meta's Muse Spark, which offered to analyze sensitive health dat…