Tech
Google Removes Some AI Health Summaries After Accuracy Concerns
Google has reportedly removed certain AI-generated summaries for health-related searches after an investigation found that some of the information provided could be misleading.
The summaries, known as AI Overviews, appear at the top of search results and are designed to provide concise answers to user questions. A report by the Guardian newspaper found that several AI Overviews contained inaccurate health information, raising concerns about potential harm to users.
The investigation highlighted cases where the AI supplied numbers with little context in response to queries such as “what is the normal range for liver blood tests?” and “what is the normal range for liver function tests?” The results did not account for differences based on age, sex, ethnicity, or nationality. In some cases, Google’s AI extracted data from Max Healthcare, an Indian hospital chain in New Delhi, rather than providing verified global medical guidance.
Featured snippets, which also appear at the top of Google search results, differ from AI Overviews because they extract existing text from relevant websites rather than generating new content. However, the Guardian noted that even variations of liver test queries, such as “[liver function test] lft reference range,” continued to produce AI-generated summaries. Liver function tests measure proteins and enzymes in the blood to evaluate how well the liver is performing.
In one example, Google’s AI reportedly advised pancreatic cancer patients to avoid high-fat foods. Experts told the Guardian that such guidance could be dangerous, potentially increasing the risk of mortality among patients.
The Guardian’s findings come amid broader concerns about AI chatbots “hallucinating,” a term used to describe when AI systems generate false or misleading information due to incomplete or inaccurate data. Experts have warned that reliance on AI for medical information could pose serious risks if users interpret these responses as authoritative.
Euronews Next contacted Google to confirm whether AI Overviews had been removed from certain health queries but did not receive an immediate response. Google announced over the weekend that it would expand AI Overviews to Gmail, allowing users to ask questions about their emails and receive automated answers without searching through messages manually.
The development underscores ongoing tensions between AI innovation and accuracy, particularly in sensitive areas such as healthcare. As AI tools become more integrated into search engines and email platforms, experts emphasize the importance of verifying information with trusted medical sources and cautioning users against relying solely on machine-generated summaries.
Tech
Study Says EU Regulations Are Slowing Rollout of Advanced AI Models
A new study by Governance.AI has found that European Union regulations are delaying the rollout of advanced artificial intelligence models, with technology companies increasingly pointing to the bloc’s regulatory framework as a key obstacle to launching new AI products in Europe.
The report examined 375 large language models (LLMs) released between June 2018 and May 2026, comparing their availability across the United States, the European Union and the United Kingdom. According to the findings, at least 11 percent of advanced AI model releases were either delayed or never launched in the EU compared with the United States. In the UK, the figure stood at 7 percent.
Researchers said they identified 68 cases in which AI models experienced delays or were withheld from specific markets. Regulatory factors were cited as the primary reason in 56 of those cases, making them the most common cause of restricted availability.
The study reviewed releases from major AI developers, including Meta, Google, OpenAI and Anthropic. Meta recorded the highest proportion of delayed or unavailable releases, with 26 percent of its AI models delayed or withheld in the EU and 15 percent in the UK. Anthropic’s Claude 3 Opus was highlighted as one example, with its web application arriving in the EU 71 days later than in the United States.
According to the report, data protection rules have emerged as the biggest regulatory hurdle, particularly for AI systems capable of processing images, audio and real-time video rather than text alone.
The researchers argued that uncertainty surrounding the application of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) to AI model training and deployment has created additional challenges for developers. They also said enforcement of data protection rules has generally been stricter within the EU than in the UK, despite both jurisdictions sharing similar legal foundations following the adoption of the GDPR before Britain’s exit from the bloc.
The report noted that the full impact of newer legislation, including the Digital Markets Act, which began taking effect in 2023, and the Artificial Intelligence Act, adopted in 2024, has yet to be fully reflected in the data.
At the same time, the European Union is reviewing proposals aimed at making data rules more practical for AI development through its Digital Omnibus initiative. Lawmakers are also considering changes to copyright legislation and the AI Act’s copyright provisions to strengthen protections for creators, measures that researchers say could affect future AI model availability if implemented too strictly.
John Lidiard, a UK AI policy researcher and one of the report’s authors, said policymakers should consider the impact that regulatory barriers can have on businesses and consumers seeking access to the latest AI technologies. He said balancing innovation with effective oversight would remain a key challenge as governments continue to develop AI regulations.
Tech
French Startups Face Political Uncertainty as AI Reshapes Innovation Landscape
Tech
AI Security Test Reveals Vulnerabilities in US Government Systems Within Hours
-
Entertainment2 years agoMeta Acquires Tilda Swinton VR Doc ‘Impulse: Playing With Reality’
-
Sports2 years agoChina’s Historic Olympic Victory Sparks National Pride Amid Controversy
-
Business2 years agoSaudi Arabia’s Model for Sustainable Aviation Practices
-
Business2 years agoRecent Developments in Small Business Taxes
-
Home Improvement2 years agoEffective Drain Cleaning: A Key to a Healthy Plumbing System
-
Politics2 years agoWho was Ebrahim Raisi and his status in Iranian Politics?
-
Sports2 years agoKeely Hodgkinson Wins Britain’s First Athletics Gold at Paris Olympics in 800m
-
Business2 years agoCarrectly: Revolutionizing Car Care in Chicago
