Trump’s AI Is Coming For Your Healthcare
Trump’s AI pilot program is aimed at “efficiency.” But it’s already killing people in the private sector.
Trump’s AI pilot program is aimed at “efficiency.” But it’s already killing people in the private sector.
John interviews Ryan Clarkson, founder and managing partner of Clarkson Law Firm who is overseeing the firm’s innovative AI litigation practice. Experts at Clarkson Law Firm have been representing numerous patients and their families in legal fights against insurers like UnitedHealthcare, Cigna, and Humana, exposing how, due to AI’s denial of claims, elderly patients have been unable to access and afford the very same care their doctors have ordered, leading to some even passing away due to being denied medical care.
If every expression is logged, every connection mapped, and every data point cross-referenced by an unelected algorithm, dissent becomes dangerous, privacy becomes impossible, and freedom becomes imaginary.
Today, Clarkson Law Firm, the prominent California-based public interest firm, filed a class action lawsuit against Surge AI in the Superior Court of California for the County of San Francisco.
Three more universities were hit with lawsuits this week by students who say they were targets of a former University of Michigan and Baltimore Ravens coach accused of hacking accounts to steal intimate photos, as the number of suits stemming from the scandal continues to grow.
U.S. health insurance companies are coming under increased scrutiny for their unregulated use of artificial intelligence, which patients say is being used to wrongfully deny medical coverage and services.
Clarkson Law Firm secured a positive development on behalf of victims impacted by negligent fertility practices.
Clarkson Law Firm filed a class action lawsuit on behalf of a University of Michigan female student-athlete against former University of Michigan assistant football coach, Matthew Weiss.
The company behind more than a dozen dating apps, Match Group, has known for years about the abusive users on its platforms, but chooses to leave millions of people in the dark.
Match Group has known since 2016 about abusive users on its dozen dating apps, but leaves millions of people in the dark