welcome to a special edition of fox news live. problems piling up for president biden at home and overseas. peace looking as el useive as ever in the middle east while the crisis at the southern border spirals further out of control. despite all that merry christmas, everyone. i m rich edson. i m claudia cowen. the president is facing growing pressure to respond to houthi attacks in the red sea. the white house confirming iran has been providing weapons and intelligence on ship locations fueling a crisis in global shipping and raising tensions in the middle east. exiled iranian leader says when it comes to proxy wars, iran wrote the book. this regime has mastered proxy wars particularly emboldened and encouraged when apiecement becomes an element more reason to push the envelope. we shouldn t be surprised to see these are the kind of acts that the regime will take advantage of to try to get as much credit as possible but at the same time not bearing the consequences and
deadline looms. congressional leaders say that they have made some progress. but a deal remains out of reach for now. plus, a win emerges. cnn projects kentucky attorney general daniel cameron will secure the republican nomination for governor. we will look ahead to his face-off with the incumbent democratic governor. and ukrainian officials say they intercepted six russian hypersonic missiles by air defenses over kyiv. but russia insists that that is not the case. more in a live report. thank you for joining us. america s dangerous standoff over the debt ceiling has caused the u.s. president to scrap part of his planned swing through the pacific region. joe biden is leaving later today for the g7 summit in hiroshima japan. he was supposed to visit top under guinea and australia afterwards for a separate set of meetings. but now he will be heading back to washington right after the g7. for debt talks with congressional leaders as the u.s. creeps ever closer to default. the la
professor was accused by chat bot of sexual harassment, and tree. appointed to a washington post article appointed to a washington post article that didn t exist. the more that happens, the more anybody can deny anything, as one prominent lawyer deny anything, as one prominent lawyer on deny anything, as one prominent lawyer on friday, defendants are starting lawyer on friday, defendants are starting to claim complaints and making starting to claim complaints and making up legitimate evidence. it can contribute to the undermining of democracy can contribute to the undermining of democracy. medical device could have serious democracy. medical device could have serious consequences, and open source serious consequences, and open source large language model seems to have played a role in a person s decision have played a role in a person s decision to have played a role in a person s decision to take their own life. it asked decision to take their own life. it
hello. welcome to bbc news, if you rejustjoining us, good timing, because we re about to head to washington to hear from the man leading the change to the way we all live. this is sam altman, the ceo and co founder of openai, the people who ve brought us the artificial intelligence tool chatgpt in the last few months, that has the potential, to revolutionise how people work, shop and interact. he s about to be questioned by lawmakers in the us, both about the huge benefits the technology could bring and the threat artificial intelligence could pose for humanity, plus the safeguards that will be needed. in march, elon musk and other tech leaders published an open letter calling for the development of ai systems to be paused. this the scene, all set for the start of that session. it s going to be fascinating. fascinating too is altman himself. those who know him describe him as a brilliant thinker, he s even been called a start up yoda. one of his first employers said, within m
industry. artificial intelligence or ai. the ceo of openai testified before the senate judiciary committee today. the company is behind chatgpt. that s just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to ai. there are multiple apps and programs you can use to create art, pictures, phone calls, even to impersonate people s voices. the list of potential misuses of ai is getting longer every day and leads to numerous questions about how and what and whether to regulate. nick watt takes a closer look at some of the possibly life changing benefits and also terrifying risks posed by ai brought up in today s hearing. my worst fears are that we cause significant, we, the field, the technology, the industry, cause significant harm to the world. today s is that the hearing is a crucial step in humanity s effort to prevent that harm and to reign in the handful of players controlling this tech. i think there needs to be incredible scrutiny on us and our competitors. his company created