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OpenAI and Apple's $0 deal gone wrong
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Plus, Google is limiting the storage on some Gmail accounts.

AI finally broke the Princeton University honor code. In 1893, Princeton students petitioned to remove proctors from exams—pledging on their honor to self-police—and it worked for 133 years. That changed Monday when faculty voted nearly unanimously to bring back proctors starting July 1, citing AI tools that have made cheating easy and invisible. "If the exam is on a laptop, someone can just flip to another window," the Honor Committee chair told the Wall Street Journal.

In a survey of Princeton seniors last year, 30% reported cheating on an assignment or exam. Nearly half knew of a violation, but less than 1% made a report. The pledge survived two world wars. It did not survive ChatGPT.

Also in today's newsletter:

  • How to use AI for your finances.
  • Developers have beef with AI coding tools.
  • Why you should maybe not use the peace sign in photos (it’s not what you think).

—Jordyn Grzelewski, Annie Saunders, and Saira Mueller

         
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