Policymakers, academic faculty, scientists, business professionals, philanthropy and nonprofit organizations, and many individuals. There are some folks joining us from my home state of minnesota, which is terrific, so weak clearly have a crosssection of the country that are joining us to discuss the very important topic that we are talking about today. Its my special pleasure to welcome you all. Since 1948, pew has worked to make change by creating Common Ground using data to make a difference in making progress through partnerships. And although our world and the challenges that it faces has changed over 75 years, our commitment and values remain the same. We strive for equity to work with you mentally humility and to have impact. We want to be inclusive, nonpartisan and operate with integrity. Those values shape how we approach all of our work, how we collaborate with each other, and how we engage with our staff, with policymakers, with our partners and with the public. That brings
i m laura coates and this is cnn tonight. and what could be the next big thing that could change everything, like your smartphone did 15 years ago. well, there might be an answer. it s the rise of artificial intelligence. you may have heard of chatgpt. you may have thought it was a typo when you actually saw on your screen but it s not it s called chatgpt. but the question is, what exactly is it? well, i wasn t sure how to explain it myself so you know what, i went right to the source. chatgpt, briefly describe yourself for a tv audience here s what they came up with, quote chatgpt it s a sophisticated computer program that uses artificial intelligence to understand and generate human like language it can answer questions, write stories, and even engage in conversation it s been trained on a massive amount of tech data, so it s able to understand and respond to a wide range of topics and questions. it s like having a very knowledgeable and well spoken personal assistant avail
you may have thought it was a typo when you actually saw it on your screen but it s not it s called chatgpt. but the question is, what exactly is it? well, i wasn t sure how to explain it myself so you know what, i went right to the source. chatgpt, briefly describe yourself for a tv audience here s what they came up with, quote, chatgpt it s a sophisticated computer program that uses artificial intelligence to understand and generate human-like language. it can answer questions, write stories, and even engage in conversation. it s been trained on a massive amount of text data, so it s able to understand and respond to a wide range of topics and questions. it s like having a very knowledgeable and well-spoken personal assistant available 24 7 to help with anything you need. did you get all of that? that s according to chatgpt. tonight, we re going to talk all about artificial intelligence, the good, the bad, the pretty cool, and what it could actually mean in your future. plu
ron desantis slimming punished for something that hasn t even happened. yet can desantis take that page straight out of the authoritarian playbook? all of that and more is coming up, so let s get started. good morning to you on this very busy sunday. i am katie fang. senate democrats are on the brink of a spending bill intended to lower health care costs, tackle climate change and bring down the deficit. here s a live, look right now, at the chamber. floor lawmakers going on more than seven hours now, applauding through a pile of amendments in what is known as vote-a-rama. the measure advance on a party line vote of 51 to 50, with vice president kamala harris casting the tie breaking vote, and overcoming unanimous republican opposition. the azar 50, the nays are 50. the senate being equally divided, the vice president votes in the affirmative with the motion to proceed being a great. too. while democrats are trying to push ahead with democrat domestic priorities, for pr