Brita filter packaging misleads consumers, class-action lawsuit claims
Los Angeles resident Nicholas Brown asserted that the filter in the Brita doesn’t remove or reduce levels of potentially hazardous substances from drinking water.
Los Angeles resident Nicholas Brown asserted that the filter in the Brita doesn’t remove or reduce levels of potentially hazardous substances from drinking water.
A lawsuit filed against the maker of some of the nation’s most popular water filtration systems has accused the Brita company of falsely advertising that its products remove or reduce hazardous contaminants from tap water.
Tech companies are confronting a challenge: how to balance asking users for more data in order to deliver new AI features without scaring away privacy-conscious businesses and consumers.
The Brita Products Co. was hit with a proposed class action in California state court by a custom
Certain Brita Products Company water pitchers, dispensers, and filters aren’t nearly as effective in removing contaminants as marketing portrays, a class action suit filed Wednesday in Los Angeles says.
When the White House revealed its list of voluntary safety and societal commitments signed by seven AI companies, one thing was noticeably missing: anything related to the data these AI systems collect and use to train this powerful technology.
Since last fall, experts have touted generative artificial intelligence as both a groundbreaking innovation in tech and a potential threat to humanity.
Cigna Healthcare, a major player in the health insurance industry, is now at the center of a federal class action lawsuit over claims that the company has been using AI algorithms to improperly deny customer claims. The lawsuit claims that Cigna’s system denied about 300,000 pre-approved claims, spending an average of 1.2 seconds to deny each claim.
Fox News host Arthel Neville speaks with Ryan J. Clarkson about a lawsuit that alleges consumer data is being stolen to train some Big Tech companies’ AI products on ‘Fox News Live.’
Fox News host Arthel Neville speaks with Ryan J. Clarkson about a lawsuit that alleges consumer data is being stolen to train some Big Tech companies’ AI products on ‘Fox News Live.’