What AI knows about you / Big loser / Bad to verse

What AI knows about you. Tech columnist Kim Komando’s crafted a copy-and-paste inquiry you can feed artificial intelligence engines to get an overview of their intel on you.
Matt Novak at Gizmodo: “ChatGPT gave out my address and phone number. … This raises questions about what’s considered private info in the AI age.”
Futurism: A large study concludes that replacing workers with AI is backfiring badly.

Bill shock. As AI data centers increase electricity demand, ComEd customers’ charges next month stand to jump at least 12%.
Chicago 312’s H Kapp-Klote: Illinois’ 244 data centers are quietly gobbling up the state’s water.
Concerned about AI engines’ climate impact? Orbit Media co-founder Andy Crestodina has tips for minimizing your queries’ cost.

‘They all have something in common.’ Columnist and former Labor Secretary Robert Reich says the CEOs who’ve traveled to China with Trump “couldn’t give a rat’s ass about strengthening America’s geopolitical power.”
Stephen Colbert: “These people can work magic. They’ve already made their taxes disappear!
CNN alumnus Jim Acosta: “For years, Trump hid his tax information from the public. Now he could be paid billions by the Internal Revenue Service.”

Antiwar Republicans. As Democrats repeatedly try—so far, unsuccessfully—to halt Trump’s war with Iran, the number of Republicans siding with them is growing.

Big loser. Politico’s analysis finds judges have ruled against the Trump administration’s immigration detention practices 90% of the time—an astonishing 10,000 times.
FBI insiders tell MS NOW that Kash Patel is “padding the stats” to boost the agency’s arrest record on his watch.

‘We are watching, in real time, the creation of a one-party state in the American South.’ Historian Heather Cox Richardson sums up Republicans’ mid-decade gerrymanders—shutting Democrats out of power.
Law professor Joyce Vance, a self-identified southerner, rounds up “a radical, racist transformation of voting maps” state-by-state.
Heads Up News columnist Dan Froomkin: “If you care about democracy, get fired up to fight white supremacy.”
NOTUS: The son of Sen. Rand Paul “drunkenly hurled antisemitic insults … at a Capitol Hill bar.”
Noting that Senate races can’t be gerrymandered, Contrarian Jen Rubin sees Democrats’ prospects “actually improving.”

Nice cash if you can get it. A Sun-Times analysis finds Illinois politicians spending millions in campaign funding on meals—acknowledging nevertheless that “it’s difficult to police whether a meal or a drink … is appropriate.”
Mayor Johnson’s off to see the pope at the end of the month.

‘No, you may not have public money to pay your private school tuition.’ Former Tribune columnist Eric Zorn rebuts a Trib editorial.
Lisa Needham at Public Notice: “The assault on higher ed goes deeper than you think. The regime is quietly working to create a permanent underclass.”
The University of Chicago says that, beginning in the fall of next year, students from families earning less than $250,000 a year will get in tuition-free.

Bad to verse. Broadcaster Salem Media—parent to Chicago’s reactionary WIND-AM—is selling itself to The Christian Community Foundation, doing business as WaterStone.
MS NOW—the former MSNBC—has settled on a revised lineup heading into the fall elections.

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‘The quiet part out loud’ / ‘Chicago is in a different league’ / Overpaying for internet?

‘The quiet part out loud.’ Poynter’s Tom Jones: Trump’s words to reporters yesterday—“I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation”—hands Democrats a ready-made political ad.
 Former AP D.C. bureau chief Ron Fournier: “Trump immortalized … his narcissistic slouch through life.”
 Columnist Jeff Tiedrich: “Lying liar who lied about bone spurs and lied about hush money and lied about his dead pedo bestie and lied about how tariffs work … just accidentally committed an honesty.”
 The Wall Street Journal’s analysis of thousands of the president’s “late-night Truth Social storms” quantifies his spread of conspiracy theories and attacks on his opposition.
 Historian Heather Cox Richardson: “The biggest story in the country, today and always, is that the president of the United States is mentally unwell.”
 Jordan Klepper on The Daily Show: “Trump and [FBI chief] Kash Patel have split up blinking duties.”

Grilled. Speaking of Patel: He fought back before Congress yesterday against reports that he drinks excessively …
 … and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth faced lawmakers’ questions about the war on Iran …
 … as the White House lists a couple of the president’s one-time fanboys turned skeptics, Tucker Carlson and Nick Fuentes, as possible domestic terrorists.
 Under criticism from anti-abortion groups and vapemakers, Trump’s Food and Drug Administration chief is out.

‘Chicago is in a different league.’ A New York Times analysis (gift link) analyzes the region’s warehouse boom: “Few places in the nation have been transformed so completely, so quickly.”
 Block Club: The Gage Park neighborhood’s getting another Amazon hub.

J*AI*L. WBEZ reports that Cook County Jail is considering spending more than $1 million on AI-powered surveillance tech …
 … even as Illinois lawmakers consider ways to put new restraints on AI tech.

‘Dismantling America’s secular foundation.’ Columnist and former U.S. Rep. Marie Newman—a Catholic but also “a fully locked and loaded supporter of the Constitution, who believes deeply in the separation of church and state”—inventories the ways “the new theocracy … has accelerated its efforts to fundamentally reshape the United States into an explicitly Christian nation.”
 Meanwhile, a Tribune editorial (gift link) calls on Gov. Pritzker to opt into a new federal program to send public tax dollars to private schools.
 Axios: Illinois remains one of the few states with legal protections against school and library book bans.
 Chicago Public Schools are headed toward teacher layoffs and bigger classes.
 A Sun-Times/WBEZ analysis finds many of Illinois’ public colleges and universities haven’t established the required protocols for what to do if immigration agents invade campus.

Overpaying for internet? Tech watchdog Kim Komando says chances are good you’re not getting the service you’re paying for—and offers a three-move, 15-minute plan to fight back and get a better deal.
 Gov. Pritzker’s pressing the Trump administration to deliver long-promised cash to upgrade Illinoisans’ internet access.
 Google’s targeting Apple MacBook fans with a new Googlebook laptop.

‘A climate opportunity.’ The American Prospect: “Thanks to Trump’s war … gas prices are shooting through the roof.”
 CNN: With China’s help, “Cuba is pulling off one of the fastest solar revolutions on the planet.”

Food in the news. The Trib’s revealed (gift link) the winners of its 2026 Readers’ Choice Food Awards.
 The Chicago Fire’s new stadium will be named … McDonald’s Park …
 … and, yeah, it’ll serve McDonald’s food.

Lolla lineup. This year’s Lollapalooza schedule’s out …
 … and four-day tickets are already waitlist-only.

‘Watching Trump’s war on my beloved profession is painful.’ Veteran Chicago journalist and former Better Government Association chief Andy Shaw: “The modern right-wing assault on journalism … is a sustained campaign to convince millions of Americans that … any reporter who asks hard questions is corrupt.”
 Popular Information: “Pulitzer-winning newsrooms are quietly publishing mountains of gambling slop.”

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