In today’s Quick Serve of AI news:
The Australian Army is trialling TrapRadio, an AI-powered system that generates fake radio communications to mislead adversaries and protect soldiers by diverting enemy attention with synthetic traffic mimicking high-value targets.
Read more at iTnews
Voiceover artist Gayanne Potter alleges her voice was used without consent to create ScotRail’s new AI-generated announcer “Iona,” sparking calls for its removal amid ongoing legal and ethical concerns over AI use in creative industries.
Read more at BBC News
Despite current tech sector gains and limited AI regulation, mounting public and expert concerns about AI’s risks and biases signal an inevitable backlash that will drive future oversight and reform.
Read more at Brookings
The 2025 G7 Leaders’ Summit in Canada presents a pivotal opportunity for the country to influence global AI governance while addressing the benefits and risks of AI domestically and internationally.
Read more at The Conversation
Leading epidemiologist Jay K. Varma warns of the imminent danger posed by AI-generated deepfakes simulating bioterrorism outbreaks, which could destabilize regions, provoke military conflict, and overwhelm public health responses before verification is possible.
Read more at Stat News
Some attorneys continue to rely uncritically on generative AI tools for legal research, leading to the submission of fabricated judicial opinions and resulting in judicial sanctions, prompting calls for careful verification and adherence to professional competence standards.
Read more at AEI
Disclaimer: Quick Serves are created with AI and may contain mistakes.