Site icon Scientific Inquirer

DAILY DOSE: AI Chatbots Fuel Misinformation Around LA Protests; NIH Director Sidesteps Accountability Amid Funding Cuts and Political Pressure.

U.S. Northern Command

AI Chatbots Fuel Misinformation Around LA Protests

Users seeking clarity about ICE-related protests in Los Angeles are turning to AI chatbots like Grok and ChatGPT—but often receiving mistaken answers. Social platforms are flooded with recycled footage, conspiracy claims (e.g. paid actors), and misleading narratives. With reduced moderation across major networks, many rely on AI tools for fact-checking—tools that have misidentified protest imagery (like National Guard photos) and failed to correct previous errors. This amplifies confusion, involving figures like Gov. Newsom and Sen. Cruz, and undermines trust in both social media and AI verification methods. (Wired)


NIH Director Sidesteps Accountability Amid Funding Cuts and Political Pressure

In Senate testimony, NIH Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya deflected responsibility for sweeping research funding cuts tied to the Trump administration’s budget strategy and ideological agenda. Amid efforts by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency and political conflicts with universities, the NIH has frozen or delayed over 2,300 grants, prompting criticism from both parties. Bhattacharya denied initiating key decisions—like halting payments to Northwestern—and cited collaboration with Congress and the administration. He avoided specifics on controversial moves, including overhead funding cuts and restrictions on diversity-related research. Senators, including Democrats Tammy Baldwin and Dick Durbin, expressed frustration at the lack of transparency. A staff letter accused NIH leadership of censoring science based on ideology. Bhattacharya promised a new appeals process but gave few assurances. (New York Times)

Reform Movement Should Have Anticipated “Gold‑Standard Science” Push

A Science opinion piece argues that the Trump-era “gold-standard science” push—centering reproducibility and transparency—was a veiled political strategy. Critics contend it empowers political appointees to dismiss inconvenient research and suppress dissenting science, echoing past abuses like Lysenkoism. The reform language legitimized centralization and gave officials tools to label research as misconduct. Open science advocates warn this undermines independent inquiry and national research leadership. The article calls for genuine reforms that preserve scientific autonomy rather than enabling political controls. (Science)



RFK Jr. Purges CDC Vaccine Panel, Sparks Integrity Concerns

On June 10, 2025, Health Secretary RFK Jr. dismissed all 17 members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, citing conflicts of interest. The panel, crucial for vaccine recommendations, is being reconfigured—a move critics say politicizes public health, erodes trust, and risks disrupting immunization schedules. Prominent voices like Dr. Tom Frieden and Dr. Robert Steinbrook describe it as an attack on scientific integrity. Kennedy’s previous anti-vaccine positions, including moves on COVID‑19 guidelines for children and pregnant women, intensify concern. The ACIP will meet as scheduled, but its future guidance could reflect the new composition. (The Guardian)


Ivermectin Myths Persist Despite Evidence

Despite robust evidence disproving its benefits against cancer or COVID‑19, public demand for ivermectin remains high. The drug, whose deworming properties are well-known, continues to circulate via false health claims. Some U.S. states are even pushing for over‑the‑counter availability. Experts emphasize this trend perpetuates medical misinformation and distracts from proven treatments. (Ars Technica)


🌟 Unveil the cosmos in style! Our “Science is a Way of Thinking” T-shirt, inspired by the legendary Carl Sagan, is a must-have for dreamers & science lovers. Premium cotton, sleek design, and a tribute to curiosity. Wear the universe’s wonder. ✨

FDA Evaluates First New Oral Gonorrhea Antibiotic in Decades

The FDA is reviewing an application for zoliflodacin, an investigational oral antibiotic targeting uncomplicated gonorrhea. If approved, it would be the first novel treatment in decades, crucial as resistance to current treatments like ceftriaxone increases. Approximately 82 million gonorrhea cases occur annually worldwide, and zoliflodacin offers hope against growing antimicrobial resistance. Developed by Innoviva with support from GARDP, earlier trials showed comparable efficacy to ceftriaxone. (CIDRAP)


Robot With AI Mastery Serves Up Badminton

Engineers led by Yuntao Ma have developed a quadruped robot capable of playing badminton autonomously. Named ANYmal, it perceives and strikes shuttlecocks using integrated visual and movement AI. Though it requires lower-latency optics for competitive play, early tests show the robot can track and hit shots reliably—melding perception and physical agility in real time. This marks a step forward in dynamic, AI-powered robotics. (Ars Technica)


Nvidia CEO: Quantum Computing Approaches Inflection Point

In a CNBC interview on June 11, 2025, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said quantum computing is reaching an “inflection point,” shifting from theoretical promise to real-world problem solving. The comment boosted related stocks like IonQ and Rigetti. This suggests Nvidia recognizes quantum’s imminent role in future AI and computing ecosystems. (CNBC)


Spanish Scientist Has 11 Papers Retracted Over Fraud

Eleven studies by Spanish chemist Rafael Luque have been officially retracted after fraud accusations. Expelled from Córdoba University in 2022, he allegedly used co-authors without involvement and manipulated data across 96 risky publications. His prolific output—about one publication every two days—linked him with a network of fraudulent collaborators (e.g., Ashok Pandey). Investigations spurred retracting ~2,000 researchers’ works and led to the deployment of tools like Argos to monitor academic misconduct. (El Pais)

Thanks for reading. Let’s be careful out there.

WORDS: The Biology Guy.

IMAGE CREDIT: U.S. Northern Command


Early life on Earth relied on a surprisingly scarce metal
A study from UW–Madison reveals that ancient life, 3.4 billion years ago, …
The “I” in Egalitarianism: New Research Complicates the Noble Hunter-Gatherer
A study of the Hadza hunter-gatherers reveals that their sharing practices, often …

Exit mobile version