tv CNN This Morning CNN April 13, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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new year you created a rat czar position to deal with the city's rodent issues. that is, when i ask people what should i ask the mayor? new yorkers, they said rats. so go. what do you what does this mean? are you going to get rid of them or reduce the number of rats? well i don't know if many people may not know it, but, you know, i hate rats and rats are going to hate me going to hate me before it's over. and now he's coming for him. i told you about tim. we're walking from dinner the other night, and they're rats scurried out of the thing and he's just like i was like what he goes. it's right. i'm like a system. rapid little rat husband almost made us move to the suburbs. still trying because of the rats outside of our home in brooklyn. we have to admit this new yorkers. they are e. norman norman norman. first time people visit me in new york when we take the subway, they're like, oh, my god! what is that? and i'm like welcome to new york, new york. hey we are we are glad you're with us. it is the eight
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a.m. our good morning, everyone caitlin's on assignment today and breaking overnight really significant. the washington post has apparently discovered who leaked hundreds of classified u. s documents. a young gun enthusiast. that's how he's described shared secrets with fellow video gamers online and also breaking overnight new restrictions on widely used abortion pill and cnn is on the ground in paris. hundreds of thousands are taking to the streets for 1/12 straight day of protest over plans to raise the retirement age. there's lots to get to first of this breaking news overnight. it looks like the washington post. they have figured out who leaked hundreds of highly classified pentagon documents. yep, it's the lead there. it's a huge story really excellent. reporting by the post post reports the alleged leaker. posted these classified documents in a private group online on discord. it's a platform used by video gamers. the post interviewed one of his online friends, he says the leaker who is known as o g, indicated he brought the documents home from a job on a
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military base claimed he worked inside a secure facility that prohibits cell phones and other electronic devices. it could be used to try to steal secret information. his friend says the leak started months ago. i was first made aware of these documents. i want to say about 6 to 8. months ago, i was in a discord server by the name of doug sticker central, and in this channel, there was classified documents being posted by a user who i refer to as o g. from this point. the documents were often listed as ukraine versus russia. first however, it's slowly spiraled into just intelligence about everything. the post reports. ogi shared hundreds of photos of classified documents, including highly classified satellite images and detailed charts of the battlefield in ukraine. some of the members of this online group or apparently from russia . let's talk about all of this with cnn national security analyst and former director of the national of national intelligence james clapper. director clapper. this is so stunning in so many ways and it
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buried in this reporting the post reviewed about 300 photos of classified documents, most of not been made public yet. which means this isn't over. and there's more to come. what's your reaction? well it's not good. obviously poppy, this is pretty serious thing. and uh, i think when i first heard reporting about this, i wondered how much more is yet to be revealed. and some of which uh, you know, it could be quite serious. so you know for somebody smells whole life and intelligence is pretty disturbing. according to the post claim that he spent at least some of his day inside a secure facility that prohibited cell phones and other electronic devices. so if they prohibited that it also prohibits. you know people who work there from printing. how does this leak happened? then? wouldn't you know? aren't people searched or
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what have you when they're leaving the facility to make sure there aren't carrying these documents? well, don the system that we have is ultimately based on personal trust. that's why there's uh, an attempt made of, you know, we use a fairly rigorous clearance process to ensure that people who are granted access to such classified information or or and trustworthy and are not going to expose it. so that's that's the weak link here and tightening up administrative procedures, which is understandable. it's him feeling you've got to do something, but really, the concern here is people and people if they are bent on exposing classified information. they'll figure out a way to beat the administrative procedures and that that's that's the real issue here. i thought this was striking that his friend who talks the washington post said that o g got upset many times because people weren't paying
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enough attention to these documents, and he was posting, so he changed his tactics rather than spending time copying documents by keyboards. he took photographs of them and drop them into the server. and sort of he had to make his followers pay attention to this. it just sat there for months ignored before. yeah that's probably this one thing is in reading. the article really struck me that this sleeker o. g if that's about who it is, has in common with his predecessors, predecessors james robert hansen and edward snowden, a degree of narcissism here where there's an ego element that of feeling self important by having access and exposing, uh, such material and then in this case being irritated because people weren't paying proper attention after he'd gone to all the effort to purloin these documents so that
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i found that striking and something in common with his predecessor leakers as you were reading the information in the washington post. i'm wondering if it gave you any insight into who this person could be what their role could be at this facility. well actually not don . um this could be anybody. uh i mean, the system is set up so that people who need to have access to such classified information, and there are a lot can have ready access to it. and so it appears that at least in the pentagon, we're gonna clamp down on on the dissemination of such material, which is always the knee jerk reaction after such revelation and over time, those procedures will prove to be onerous and inefficient and there will be relaxed. um so i don't i can't tell because this
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could be very senior person or someone who's role of lee jr. who simply had administrative access. we do know they were driven by conspiracy because the post reports that you know o g was telling his followers the government basically set up the massacre at the buffalo supermarket, you know, to increase funding for. for police , etcetera, so sort of hooked them with a parent conspiracies was called thug shaker central. yeah, thank you, director. always a pleasure. appreciate it. thanks thank you. breaking overnight a significant development in the legal battle over a widely used abortion pill . an appeals court has ruled kristen will remain available for now. but the court also imposed temporary restrictions. women won't be allowed to get the medication delivered in the mail this morning, the white house vowing to continue to fight in the courts to try to reverse the texas federal judge's ruling. that suspended the pills fda approval last week even though it has been on the market and available to women
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for more than 20 years. let's sign this here with the very latest force are like good morning to you partial temporary freeze on the judge's ruling. and really, if you look at this, this is a partial win for the biden administration. they had wanted to see a longer term freeze on this texas judge's ruling, which essentially had put a pause on suspending the fda approval of kristen. until about friday. this order of for this ruling from the fifth circuit court of appeals says that the pill can remain on the market, but ultimately they're trying to put in place some restrictions that includes people being unable to get this pill through the mail. also, um it affects some of the rules and changes that the fda had made about when exactly in a pregnancy this can be used. but this morning so far, the white house simply saying they're going to continue this legal fight. the big question right now is whether the justice department will try to take this to the supreme court to get basically eliminate those
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restrictions. do you think that so when i hear you say that the white house is going to continue the fight. the natural progression would be trying to have the supreme court look at it this week before the deadline tomorrow night. um do you have a sense they will or will they wait and sort of put it through? the normal process of appeals have just look at this and say, okay, you know, they have said that the fda approval of this drug will stay in place for now . they may just decide. okay, well, let this play out in the appeals court. they haven't exactly indicated which way they're going to go. but really the white house and the biden administration is quite limited in what they can do beyond just fighting this in courts. there's not much that the president can do on his own to try to protect the full access to medford press down, you know, we've heard of some of the democratic governors in various states trying to stock up on these pills in the event that the fda does suspend approval in the white house has really pushed back on this suggestion by some that the fda just simply ignore this ruling from that texas judge, so i
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think over the course of the next day, we should have an idea of how the justice part ernments going to act whether they will try to take this to the supreme court immediately or just wait and let the appeals process some more political news here on this, or like california democratic senator democratic senator dianne feinstein. there's also asked to be temporarily replaced on the judiciary committee amid some party pressure to resign from the senate. congressman ro khanna was on with me last hour. he's calling for her to resign. this is what he told me watch this. any single senator, republican senator can object to that. senator schumer has done the right thing, he said. he's going to try to get that done in the senate. but we have to see if that's even possible. and i guess my question is, why not just take the step and resign instead of going through all of these motions? some context, please our lead. what is the committee gone through with feinstein's during her absence. the committee is currently has a very narrow makeup. and so right
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now, many of these judicial nominees that they're trying to get through there. it's creating a bit of a backlog. she's been out for about a month and we know that for the president getting these judicial nominees is a top priority had been doing so at a faster clip than the former president. one of the issues that they're going to run into with this request is it's going to require a resolution to be passed, which typically at the start of a congress that goes through unanimously, but this could be an opportunity where republicans maybe try to block it. we don't know how set up minority leader mitch mcconnell is going to act on this. you know, he has a history in the past. if you think towards the end of the obama administration, he really had stalled and blocked some of his nominees, which then created vacancies for former president trump to fill so republicans could use this as a moment to try to slow things down a bit special. at a time when people are seeing the power of the judicial system, especially with this abortion, ruling power of one federal judge, right. thank you very much alive. it's good to have you here. good to see
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you. so we're going to take you out of paris is a live look right now. hundreds of thousands of people nationwide are expected to protest against the controversial pension reform bill that pushes the retirement age to 64 a day before the country's supreme court is expected to rule on that police are on high alert. as a past demonstrations have erupted into violent clashes. wanna get straight now to cnn's frederik pleitgen live with more in paris for us, frederick hello to you. what measures are police taking to prevent violence? hi john. well, they're putting thousands of cops on the street that i can show you that right now. here, we're going to pan around a little bit. you can see the riot cops here are already at the ready. and the other thing that you were saying as well done as absolutely correct. there are literally tens of thousands of people coming in here right now, as you said across france is probably again going to be hundreds of thousands are going to protest against that. proposed pension reform bill and, you know, we say that and of course, the key to that pension reform bills that they want to raise the pension age
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from 62 to 64 of french people are coming out coming out here today because they're angry at the weight of the french president, emmanuel macron is pushing this law through essentially used executive powers for that by passing a vote in the parliament, and it's quite interesting because you can see here that a lot of folks who are coming out on the street. a lot of them are older folks. votes of trade. but a lot of them are also younger people who are just extremely angry at the way the french president is doing. this is becoming a big problem for many people are already referring to him as a lame duck president in the first year of his second term, he still got a lot of time ahead of him. but he has lost a lot of popular support because of the way that he is trying to push through this pension reform, and, of course that's led to a lot of these protests also led to some of the violence among the protesters. in fact, earlier today, there was a group of protesters that actually stormed the headquarters of the largest luxury goods maker here in this country, for instance, that makes louisville thanh handbag stormed the headquarters and
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actually occupy that building for awhile by and large so far, and we're just beginning stages right now, things here are store. well very peaceful, but you can tell that the french riot police not taking any chances with us at all. all right, frederik pleitgen in paris watching it all for us. thank you, frederick. let's take you to dublin from paris. that's a live look right now. president biden in dublin, continuing his historic visit to the region, we'll take it live there, and former president trump is back in new york for a deposition as he faces yet another legal battle. the question is, will he cooperate? the city custom cash card automatically adjust to her new more cash back in your top eligible, spend categoryry high. you don't have to keep tabs on rotating categories. this is the only rotating i care about or activate anything to earn your cash back. automatically adjust for you. can i get a cucumber water 5% cash back that
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michael higgins. let's listen to me, mr president, can i have a selfie? unselfish selfie? mr president very quickly just over here. questions from reporters hours. someone wanted to listen in a little bit. oh, is that right? was taking questions about the classified he did a whole investigation going on. we should just let that play out, said they're getting close, meaning the intelligence community trying to figure out who may have leaked this. want to listen in. all right, let's bring in our colleague phil mattingly. he joins us live. this is sort of fun chat now with the president, but he didn't answer. you know, some serious questions about the intel league. yeah and probably what's interesting is it's the first time he really has up to this point hasn't taken many. if any questions on this trip, the white house has been very cognizant. very cognizant of the
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fact that they don't want to weigh in or take the spotlight off of this trip as it relates to the leaks and what i've been told behind the scenes from white house officials, the president has been regularly briefed on what they have found on the ongoing investigation and probably most importantly, on the conversations that top u. s officials are having with their counterparts in an effort to try and tamp down what i think has been a real scramble over the course of the last couple of days. the president making very clear he wasn't going to weigh in on specifics, noting that the full investigation is underway did note. i think somewhat interesting. only that there was that they believe they're getting close. so we'll see kind of what develops here. but this is his first time weighing in on this guys. yeah you concerned about the lead time to go to move not concerned about the later years. i'm concerned, and that happens. but there's nothing contemporaneous that i'm aware of. are you concerned about relationships? so there you heard. that was just from
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just a few moments ago, the president's real first time weighing in on this again, saying, don't believe there's anything contemporaneous there but is concerned and told behind the scenes and i think we've reported this in real time back in the states while we've been over here just how acute the scramble has been both in trying to identify the leaks, the scale of the leaks who's behind the leaks. the justice department investigation that the defense department investigation that are both underway at this moment , but also in trying to deal with allies who are subject to some of the leaks that have come out here. the president again not weighing in on specifics, beyond saying that the investigation is underway, seemed to hint that there may be some conclusion to that investigation in the near term, but not saying that he believed there are any dramatic issues here. but i can tell you behind the scenes right as officials, administration officials very cognizant of the very real problems, both with allies and just generally about classified documents here, guys i was going to say yeah. ask our allies phil mattingly. thank you very much. this morning. former president donald trump is back in new york
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for a deposition in a civil lawsuit filed by attorney general leticia james, alleging that he was involved in a decade song scheme to defraud lenders with false financial statements . his children and the trump organization are also listed as defendants. former president invoked the fifth amendment more than 400 times in a previous deposition in that case last august. cnn's kara scannell joins us now live this morning in new york city outside of the new york state, a g s office. good morning, kara trump expected to attend the proceedings today. what can you tell us? good morning, john. so we are expecting the former president to arrive probably a little bit later this hour for his second deposition with the new york attorney general's office, as you said at the first deposition last august, he asserted his fifth amendment right against answering any questions and self incrimination more than 400 times that that was before the attorney general's office filed that lawsuit. that lawsuit was filed in september, and now they're doing all of this pre trial
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work. and as a part of that the new york attorney general's offices asked trump to come in for a second deposition. now the question here is will he answer any questions? this time? there are a couple of different factors that play and there could be some strategic decisions being made here, the former president as a defendant in this case and having asserted his fifth amendment the last time that's something that a jury could hold against him. it's called an adverse inference . so if you know by the jury could look at him, not answering questions and say, okay, that you know is that goes against him. if he does answer questions this time, you know, they already know the 400 plus questions that he was asked the last time. they also already know what he's been charged with having done wrong so they can prepare in a different way for this. if they choose to answer questions, and they can answer some, they can answer none. they could answer a combination. it's really up to him when he's in there shortly this afternoon when we're in a few hours from he will be behind the doors behind us. and sitting there across the table from likely the
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new york attorney general leticia james, herself. she was there. the last time she introduced herself, the greeted each other, and then she turned it over to her top investigators working on this case, you know, of course, that there is a gamble, the manhattan district attorney's office, which just brought the indictment against trump, they are still investigating the accuracy these financial statements, so anything, he says today, if he doesn't answer questions is something that they could look at for their investigation. don alright, carol will be following and we will be watching. thank you, carol. also tonight on cnn, primetime, our colleague caitlin's going to sit down for one on one with michael cohen. you can catch that interview. nine p.m. eastern. we are also following just stunning flooding in south florida. the airport in fort lauderdale is completely shut down certain areas seeing up to 20 inches of rain. just how record breaking is it or whether team is on the ground plus urban farming and sustainable way. we're talking to jamil and norman, the host of the tv show homegrown. about food and wellness and how to transform your outdoor space.
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florida, dumping up to 20 inches of rain in just 24 hours. fort lauderdale's airport is now shut down until least noon today, car stalled traveler stranded as historic floodwaters leaves some roads impassable. derek van damme live in atlanta was crazy. i know. i mean. come on, truly. yeah, right. exactly 20 to 25 inches of rain is rare and historic for southern florida. and this is the type of rain that southern florida would experience in a high end hurricane, for instance, now the national weather service using that one in 1000 year event terminology, and basically, this means that the probability of this happening in any given year is very, very low. it's like winning the lottery. could it happen? yes but it's extremely rare. would it happen tomorrow? very unlikely. look at how the storms kind of formed and trained over the same location right over this heavily populated fort lauderdale region , and by the way we have the potential that we broke a 24
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hour state rainfall record, which was set back in 1980 in key west, climatologists will be on site to analyze the data and assess the information, but we still have flood watches and flood warnings for fort lauderdale, miami dade as well as broward's all thanks to the storm system as a warm front lift northward as great a trigger more thunderstorms today that could be severe. and we could see some localized flash flooding as well. another 1 to 2 inches of rainfall possible, just incredible video coming out of this area. look at this aerial video of downtown fort lauderdale of stalled out vehicles. now the national weather service has a slogan. turn around. don't drown. this is what they mean. six inches of water on a roadway can install a vehicle 12 inches of water on the roadway can actually float an entire car but 24 inches of flash. flooding water that can actually go away an entire suv. poppy don. yeah scary. what was the phrase you said, turn around around? don't drown. turn around . don't drown, derek. thank you . thanks, derrick. okay so let's
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talk about farmer j. miller norman, but better known as former j. she is on a mission to teach others about food, sustainability and wellness through farming. she's in atlanta based urban farmer who is passionate about creating a healthier, greener earth on her television show homegrown she helps families transform their outdoor spaces into beautiful and functional backyard farms. take a look. the vision is the most cost effective way to multiply your garden and it's also really healthy for the plants. absolutely. the mother plant gets too big. you want to revive that plant and one way to do that is to kind of dig it up. separated give it a little bit more space. and then that new plant that you've divided off you can plant somewhere else are you going to give it away? okay. so which one? are we gonna dig up first? very nice to show is now in its third season, by the way, and you can catch it on the
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magnolia network, a part or streaming on hbo, max or max now , so we'll just talk about all things food, farming and sustainability is jamila norman . you like to be called farmer farmer j. j. how are you? it's so great that i love what you're doing there you are. the driving force for you is sustainability , so give us some to some choices, big and small that we can do to make our wives more sustainable, absolutely to food , everything to food. i mean, you know, um, i just try to pick natural materials food, you know , trying to just buy organic as much as possible, and you know the least processed food as possible in terms of what you're eating when you're consuming, which you're feeding your families, so ah, you know, that's that's what we're going for keeping it simple. one thing i love about your story is sort of your family and what you
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learned from your parents and their storytelling that informed what you do every day. you have a caribbean family from jamaica and trinidad. just talk about that legacy. and have that informs what you've shown us on the show. yeah definitely. i mean, my parents, both mom and dad both grew up in the caribbeans and very small, essentially rural communities in their respective countries. moved here to new york. you know, like all people coming to new york following dreams, and i was born and raised in new york, but my mom is always talked about growing up in jamaica, and you know how they lived off the land and all of that, and i had an opportunity to live in trinidad for a couple of years. so just like food was everywhere, and everything was so fresh. and so that kind of stayed with me. as i lived. my life raised my family and when i moved to atlanta it just presented an opportunity to farm and i just wanted to do it. not a lot of green space here. you mentioned new york, right? not a lot of green space here. people have tiny balconies. if you do have an outdoor space at all. then what can you do? where do
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you begin? if you live in a place like new york city or urban sprawl, as they call it in a place like new york city? i mean, you know, you can definitely like if you have a balcony or something like that. you can grow on your balcony. also you know, there are like small community gardens, you know, in new york, so i would i would encourage you to kinda like find those, um, enjoying those gardens. but in atlanta. there's just lots of green space right? and that's what presented the opportunity to have farms are over 30 urban farms in the city of atlanta proper so and they range in size from like house ladder up to, like seven acres. so we're we got. we got down there don't have outdoor space, but we have a little community garden down the block from us in brooklyn. so i think you found my saturday morning activity. no farmer j. thank you appreciate good to see you can't wait to watch absolutely. you can see it on hbo on mad on max. thank you so, and that's a written by a high school student
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flagged by ai as being plagiarized. only problem. it wasn't we're going to explain, plus out just moments ago. another key inflation report following yesterday's pretty much better inflation report. what it all means for this economy ahead. can you just grow a little garden to on your kitchen like and it gets a little sunlight thing? so many migrgrants complaining a about w this wasas nothing like the easy route they were promised.d. onef the world's most dangerous journeys, people clumping together, perhaps fearing for their own safety, women, children risking their lives for a better life. reminder of the violence faces migrants here every day. the whole story with anderson cooper premieres sunday at eight every sunday one whole story one whole hour on cnn, mutualustomizes your car insurance. so you only pay for what youeed. with the money we saved. we tried electric unicycles. got it, okay. doggy
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crystals enough for up to 40 windows. just pay a separate fee call or go online now. this is cnn. the world's news network. to know where you're going. you must know where you've been every mile marks a moment in history. for 75 years. sherm his lead hr to drive change. we fight for women at work. shape policy and protections for all we advocate for an inclusive workforce. and endure it together during unprecedented times because the beauty of the road is there's always something ahead, join sharm on our journey to drive change. money this morning brought to you by sheriff empowering people to create better workplaces and a better world. all right. welcome back, everyone. this is just in to cnn this morning. another key reporter inflation. the producer
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price index following yesterday's consumer price index showing inflation falling to the lowest level in nearly two years. that's great. cnn's business correspondent christine romans, crunching the numbers. i'm so relieved. this is a dramatic cool down in inflation . this is producer prices. this is the factory level. so this is what you know at the factory floor of the prices they're paying. eventually that goes on to consumers. 2.7. uh that's a dramatic cool down. we were expecting more like 3% it was 4.6% last month. so that is a big one month drop in prices that they are paying inflation and month to month. the decline of 0.5% prices actually falling very good news there. this is the slowest inflation for producers in more than two years , almost back to where we were before this inflation crisis began. this is important progress, and it comes after yesterday when we also saw important progress. consumer prices still 5% still above what the fed would like to see. but
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cooling down dramatically. and yesterday we learned the grocery prices fell. i'm going to say this again. grocery prices fell for the first time since 2020 since the beginning of this inflation crisis, so all of that heavy machinery that the fed was using and the price problem seems to be working, so hopeful that this means that consumers will finally start to feel a little bit of relief still work to do. no question about that the fed could still decide to raise interest rates another little tiny bit just make sure that they got proof here, but this is i think this is definitive evidence that a peak is in an inflation. we will not see what we saw in the 19 seventies and the fed all that work is getting this under control a men i hope i'm right. yes i think you are. everybody watching is open any day. i would bet on you to be right, christine. thank you. welcome thanks, guys. picture this k. you write an essay completely on your own right for school. only someone later says no, that wasn't you. that was a i
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artificial intelligence. that is what happened to a high school senior in california. her story is featured in the washington post columnist who wrote the story says that he was testing a s software that helps teachers spot plagiarism and their students work. the software, he says, incorrectly flagged the student's essay as having been aided by chat gpt, so joining us now are go to person. when it comes to this ai stuff that she needs oval. she's a futurist tech entrepreneur and the founder of weekly advice for young entrepreneurs. thank you very much. i saw this in the washington post and immediately i thought about you. i was having a conversation. with someone in my family this weekend, who is a principal at an elementary school and i said, how do you decide? how do you how do teachers know if it's chat? gpt et if it's a i, or if it's an actual student is writing it. there is this tool out there, but that tool can be
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wrong as well. right so those the ai detection tools they're actually quite often more wrong than not, of course, the tool that was used in this case alternate in a i detector tool this company says it has about 98% accuracy and flagging. i generated content, but that number hasn't been evaluated by external researchers. so i think in an era when a i is going to become a part of our common discourse as part of our world, trying to play this cat and mouse game of the happening. i generated content. it's just going to become more and more challenging over time. these tools are going to get better. since most of these ai tech detection tools have come to market. we've already seen a massive updates in the ai system. that's powering systems like chat gpt, so i think it's kind of a losing battle for teachers to try to consistently flag ai generated content variability and doubt there. i think there's also a question about this sort of the role of the government and all this and
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regulation. we've been so behind the ball in terms of regulating social media. i sat down yesterday in washington, d c with the president's top economists like al brainard and asked her, you know, just because we can do all this with a i does that mean we should here's what she said. i do think that there are some important risks here. and yes, absolutely . we need to make sure that they're important safeguards that we all agree and put those in place so that some of those risks that are really quite sobering are addressed at the outset. that's a hope. but what should the government do in your opinion? when it comes to education in particular, i think banning these systems are trying to catch students using these types of systems isn't the right step forward. the purpose of education is to prepare students for the economy in the world of tomorrow that world is going to include a i so if we want students to be able to
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participate in that world to be able to use these tools safely, they need to be working with them now and then, when it comes to a government level, what role does government have here? we've seen a lot of leading voices and call for an office of strategic foresight, so we don't always feel like we're caught off guard slamming the panic button to try to keep up with the latest iterations in artificial intelligence, and instead a year or two ago when research into these systems with starting to become a lot more prevalent, we could start to measure the potential destruction. the guardrails that should be applied give institutions like academia, which tends to move a little bit slower, the chance to catch up and reformulate curriculums. and then, of course for things like safety. our watermarks on i generated content a possibility. what a i detection tools could be helpful . do we have those in newsrooms ? so those are all of the different standards and pathways we can take, but it starts with having a lot more foresight and not kind of always being caught off guard with the latest iteration in technology. yeah. yeah you were talking about
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donna was talking about watermarks watermarks? yeah, because i mean, you have to be able to identify who is what is real and what is not actually the who is another. our a. i would just, you know, chat gpt right off right there in front of everyone that bosses who are watching as well, thank you very much with that at all. anybody any good to see you? we'll see you soon. rules have baseball games. see you soon. new rules have baseball games, ending quicker and unintended consequence. hmm. was last time for beer. oh my gosh, sort of games impacting beer sales, alcohol sales at the park. i don't know if that's good or bad. harry antin is here with this morning's number. what is shame? because it's one safe sites. you're out of the strike . overly competitive, brother check like really, dude, that'ss a foul. you're ready to s settla score. the right home insurance
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season starting winning streak to 12. 12 is the biggest winning streak the team has ever had at any point in their history. they are now just one win shy of tying the major league record to start a season, which was set by the brewers and the braves in the 19 eighties with the new pitch clock. the time of last night's game, two hours 44 minutes. that's quick. shorter games means a little less time to chug that beer. so what's that doing to alcohol sales at the ballpark? senior data reporter harry antin is here with that. okay my own not fun. take but is wasn't this in place so people didn't drink as long, so less drunk driving. that's exits. basically it was that they would not leave the ballpark with as much booze in their system. so why would you change that? what we're going to get to that perhaps a little bit like this, so this morning's number is i just want to use one ballpark as an example. right? so the major league baseball
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houston astros home park a minute maid park, the alcohol sales for last year were $28.4 million. now that was across about 95 major events in 2022, but the vast majority of those were in fact baseball games. there are few concerts in there as well. but 28.4 million gives you an idea that whose is a big big sale point for baseball teams, right, so the traditional rules was that you only sell through the end of the seventh inning, but the mlb's new pitch clock has made seven innings and about 24 minutes shorter, quicker, on average, right. so what are some teams doing well? they're now going to sell alcohol until the eighth inning that gets back about 75% of the time of lost sales right because of the faster games and but by my estimate that might make teams at most about a few extra million dollars, but you know, obviously, that perhaps could lead to more people out on the roads, right, papi? yeah i mean , you know how my position on this. i think it's not a safe. so um this could also have ill
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advised effects, right? exactly right. so, okay, so here's an estimate of the time between out the alcohol cut off and the end of a nine inning mlb game. so last year with the seventh inning come off, cut off and the 2022 game time. it was about 42 minutes. now with the 2023 game timing and the eighth inning cut off. look at that. it's only about 18 minutes. so now 24 minutes less time elapses from people getting alcohol in their system and then going on the road. you don't have to be a genius to figure out that might lead to some more people who perhaps shouldn't be driving, driving and more than that. there's actually a study on this . okay there was a study. that should be a one here. there we go. study of 2006 to 2015 home philly games more time between the end of the game and the end of alcohol sales lead to less violent crime around the stadium . so we know for a fact that one in fact, you squeeze in the time and you're leaving less time for
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people to get the alcohol through their systems. we know that it doesn't back lead to more crime, at least in philadelphia phillies games hopefully, that doesn't happen this year, but we'll see. i told you my old city areas to philadelphia, not fella. philadelphia you got the accent down. i'm gonna leave it to you. i do. the new york accent water , water, water, water, water water. hmm water, according to harriet's beer, thank you, harry happening in just minutes. jury selection will begin today in the dominion voting systems defamation trial against fox news as a judge, sanctions and network for withholding key evidence, details ahead. with every generation subaru forester has been a leader in crash safety. working to undo the impact crash can have on your life. which has led the forester
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indiana, records show. local leaders knew that building was riddled with fire hazards for years in 2019, the owner admitted the plant didn't have sprinklers and ignored an order to repair the property. but it's unclear what steps the city took to enforce that order. meantime officials are conducting around the clock care quality monitoring there. nervous the debris may contain asbestos from burning plastics. however no toxic compounds have yet been detected in the air. more than 2000. people still can't go home 2000 people and those living downwind of the fire are under a shelter in place. order the cause of the fire still unknown this morning, and it will likely be several days before it stops so investigations can begin. cnn has reached out to the company. for a response. and we have not heard back. also this this morning just minutes from now. jury selection begins in dominion voting systems $1.6 billion defamation case against fox. roughly 300 potential jurors will be whittled down to 12 jurors and 12 alternate there will be asked about their news
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habits, including whether they watch fox, but they will not be asked if they believe the 2020 election was legitimate or if they had any connection to the capital insurrection. if a jury isn't seated today, the process will continue tomorrow. opening statements set to begin monday. the trial is expected to last about six weeks. in a pre trial hearing yesterday, dominion also played previously unaired audio of fox host maria bartiromo's conversations with former trump lawyer rudy giuliani. the judges sanctioning fox for withholding evidence like this and only turning over the recordings to dominion last week. we ask you is much evidence if you can tell us about these lawsuits, whatever you can tell us in terms of evidence would be really helpful. okay, great. exactly what we have and, um. software this software. that's that's a little harder,
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troubling to tell you right? it's being being analyzed right now. i mean, there are a couple of races that have been reversed. because the democrat was triple counted two already in michigan. now whether that applies for the whole state or not, i can't tell you yet. just bring him suffer. pelosi have an interest in it. yeah i've read that. i can't prove that, okay? fascinating jury selection today . fascinating i know to be you don't have to be a fly on the wall just to be in the courtroom witnesses and the reporters getting to cover it. we thank you for watching us. everyone was so glad that you did. and you have yourself a great day. but in the meantime, make sure you tune in to cnn's new central, which starts right. now.
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