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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  May 16, 2023 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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them. >> joe, did you hear anything from them? today saying the thing back? was there any response? >> yeah, when the speaker, the leader, couldn't memorize his speech and kept looking at his notes, and he kept pulling out his speech to read it and then he put it back in and started reading it again, i yelled at him, boring. why can't you remember -- why can't you memorize your speech? and at one point, i'm like, boring. this has gone on too long. and he was like, he should get comfortable. this is going to be awhile. >> joe flood. thank you and thank you for making us giggle about a very serious subject. >> thank you. >> and thank you for us. "cnn tonight" with alisyn camerota starts right now. >> hello and welcome to our viewers joining us here in the united states and all around the world, i'm rosemary church. just ahead on cnn newsroom. closer, but not quite there. it's the u.s. a debt default
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deadline looms. congressional leaders say that they have made some progress. but a deal remains out of reach for now. plus, a win emerges. cnn projects kentucky attorney general daniel cameron will secure the republican nomination for governor. we will look ahead to his face-off with the incumbent democratic governor. and ukrainian officials say they intercepted six russian hypersonic missiles by air defenses over kyiv. but russia insists that that is not the case. more in a live report. thank you for joining us. america's dangerous standoff over the debt ceiling has caused the u.s. president to scrap part of his planned swing through the pacific region. joe biden is leaving later today for the g7 summit in
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hiroshima japan. he was supposed to visit top under guinea and australia afterwards for a separate set of meetings. but now he will be heading back to washington right after the g7. for debt talks with congressional leaders as the u.s. creeps ever closer to default. the latest round of negotiations on tuesday between republicans and the white house resulted in no major breakthroughs. the top house republicans say the two sides are still far apart but that a deal is possible by weeks and. but >> i did think this one was a little more productive. we are a long way apart. but what changed in this meeting was, the president has now selected to people from his administration to directly negotiate with us. >> the bottom line is that we all came to agreement. that we would continue discussions. and hopefully we can come to an agreement. we do not have much time. but the fault is just the worst,
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worst alternative. >> a default could happen as soon as june 1st. cnn's jeremy diamond picks up this story. >> president biden on tuesday emerged from negotiations with congressional leaders saying discussions were productive. and they are making progress towards a deal. could avoid the moving towards default. of course there has been progress in negotiations. held mostly at the staff level in the days leading up to the meeting. talk about a potential spending cap. and other areas of potential agreement between democrats and republicans. but make no mistake, there are still huge gaps between the two sides and some major sticking points. including for example the notion of work requirements for some of these safety net programs. a disagreement between the two sides on that. and amid some of this progress, but also the major sticking points that remain, president biden canceling the second portion of his foreign trip. he is still scheduled to go to
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japan on wednesday. but he is canceling the second portion of that trip to australia. and papua new guinea. here is the president on tuesday. >> i'm cutting my trip short, i am postponing the australia portion of the trip. my stop and pop under guinea. in order to be back for the final negotiations with congressional leaders. >> there was an overwhelming consensus i think in today's meeting. the congressional leaders, that defaulting on the debt is simply not an option. >> the president has appointed to senior level staffers to lead these negotiations with the speaker of the house. they are the presidents counselor steve rush city and director of management and budget. those two senior advisers will join the white house legislative affairs director louisa terrell. who has been leading those negotiations. but it does signal there is a ratcheting up of this. that we are getting to a serious phase of negotiations. president himself saying that he will be in touch with speaker mccarthy over the phone while he is in japan.
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and that he will then meet again with the congressional leaders when he returns to the united states. next week. jeremy diamond, cnn, white house. >> joining me now from seattle washington's jeff tucker. senior economist at zillow. appreciate you being with us. >> thank you for having me on. president biden met with congressional leaders tuesday in an effort to prevent this country defaulting on its national debt come june 1st. house speaker kevin mccarthy says the two sides are far apart. but he expects a deal by weeks and. spending cuts in exchange for his party agreeing to lift the debt limit. but with only two weeks left to make a deal and get it through congress, there is a risk that the debt ceiling will not be raised in time. if that happens, what would default mean for the housing industry, house prices and everyone's mortgage payments. >> yes, u.s. treasuries are the bedrock of the financial system. and so, is their value and
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repayment of the treasury debts came into question, we are concerned that could send castigating fear and uncertainty through the credit system. and what that would mean for homeowners and home buyers is much higher borrowing costs. as lenders are worried about their counter parties. they require highest interest rates to make loans. so we are estimating that this could raise mortgage rates by about two points. from about six and a half percent towards eight and a half percent on a 30-year mortgage in the u.s.. that would be a huge blow to affordability for home buyers. who are already struggling with major affordability challenges in the last year or so. and i think that would really impede the volume of home sales at the moment by discouraging so many home buyers. >> that is a terrifying prospect isn't it. what could home buyers do right now to try to protect themselves against any negative impact of a debt default. or is it too late to do that?
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with less than two weeks to go before the june 1st default deadline. >> at the moment, it does not seem too late. we are not yet seeing that kind of mortgage rate uncertainty or rising mortgage rates come into play yet. i think that bond markets are still hoping that policy makers can reach a deal and resolve this without actually going into default. so at the moment, for these last couple of weeks of man. mortgage rates are still hovering in about the same six and a half percent neighborhood. this is really the heart of the spring home shopping season in the united states. so this is the time of year when we see some of the most new listings on any given week. a lot of home buyers are busy out there. so if you see the perfect house right now. this could very well be a good time to go out and lock in that rate and close on a mortgage with a lender. >> good advice. so overall, what is the
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worst-case scenario for how devastating the u.s. debt default could be for home buyers and indeed renters. because there would be that trickle down effect, when? but >> yes, the worst-case scenario that we are considering is especially what would happen if a default sort of ground on for a couple months. we actually saw some of the spending that the u.s. lays out every month. being forced down to exactly months.h we actually saw some of the spending that the u.s. lays out every month. being forced down to exactly
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equal th a quarter in some of the hardest hit months later this summer. if we really enter that kind of worst-case default scenario. >> all right, let us hope that it does not get to that point. jeff tucker, thank you so much for talking with, us appreciate it. >> thank you for having me on. >> in north carolina, the republican-led assembly moved to ban most abortions after 12 weeks. overriding a veto from democratic governor roy cooper. the vote in the state senate on tuesday was 30 to 20. a long party lines. just hours later, the state house also voted 72 to 48 to do the same. governor cooper slammed the vote in a tweet. saying that republicans are unified in their assault on women's reproductive freedoms. he had vetoed the abortion ban saturday. >> tonight we proved that here in kentucky, the american dream
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is alive and well. because here in kentucky, you are judged by the color of your skin, but by the content of your character. >> cnn projects daniel cameron will win the republican governor primary in kentucky. the state attorney general thanked donald trump for his endorsement. saying that the trump culture of winning is alive and well in kentucky. cameron will face popular democratic incumbent andy beshear in november's general election. the race is seen as an important bellwether for next year. especially where democrats are defending senate seats in red states, including montana, ohio and west virginia. >> i would like to bring in cnn senior political analyst and senior editor at the atlantic ron brownstein. he joins me now from los angeles. great to have you with us. >> hi rosemary. >> let us start with the kentucky governor race.
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trump endorsed daniel cameron. just won the gop primary for kentucky governor and will go up against incumbent democrat andy beshear in the november 7th general election. what do you think the outcome will be of that race. >> well, as people around the world i think we'll understand this reference. american politics is becoming more parliamentary. states are lining up more consistently from top to bottom. the way they vote for the white house, more consistently predicts how they vote for everything else. there are only four of the 25 states that trump won in 2020 that have democratic governors. kentucky is one of them. andy beshear, son of a former governor is very much a survivor. he is a skilled politician. he has one of the highest approval ratings of any governor in the country. daniel cameron, the black attorney general is a rising star for republicans. he has an identity independent of trump. so he is not likely to be as completely defined by trump as
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some of the endorsed candidates in 22. this is a very close race. but i think many people think beshear amazingly is somewhat favored in deep red kentucky because he has established enough of an identity separate from his own party. >> interesting. so donald trump's pick, not rhonda sentences choice. who won the kentucky primary for the gop. just as the florida governor is preparing to officially launch his presidential campaign by the end of this month, the polls are not looking great for desantis. he has lost a lot of ground. and there will be a very crowded field by the time everyone announces their leadership intentions. but desantis seems to be the only rival whom might have even a small chance of toppling trump. how do you expect this will all play out? >> well, desantis is unquestionably a much diminished figure today from what he was on the morning after the election. when as we noted, most of trump's endorsed candidates in
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the swing states lost. desantis won a sweeping victory. including winning hispanic areas. as well as suburban white areas. and he looked formidable. he has struggled in the transition from his very -- life in conservative media bubble. where his little interaction with the mainstream press. as he tries to go into the national stage. it difficulty symbolized but his answer in which she dismissed the interest in ukraine before doubling back so i think he is less formidable today than he was. donald trump has a hold on a big chunk of the party. desantis might be at the low and. it might be a kind of time to buy the stock, not in the sense that he necessarily will challenge trump. beat trump. but there is still an audience in the republican party among donors. and strategists. even a share of the voters for alternative to trump, this belligerent, hectoring behavior at the town hall last week.
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i think reminding many voters not outside, but inside the republican party what they do not like about him. and as you say, in the period where desantis has struggled, none of the other potential 24 candidates have gained or bill much a foundation. so i think that there is a second act for desantis. but it looks much more difficult for him than it did six months ago. >> we will be watching very closely. ron brownstein, always a pleasure to chat with, you thank you so much. >> air raid sirens sounded for another night across several regions and in kyiv. just one night after the ukrainian capital was targeted by a barrage of russian missiles. ukraine says that all 18 russian missiles launched at the country early tuesday were intercepted. including six hypersonic missiles. and that is a claim that the russian defense minister is
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denying. and russia is claiming to have destroyed a u.s. made patriot air defense system. in a missile strike in kyiv. the ukrainian military has declined to comment but u.s. official tells cnn that the patriots system was likely damaged and not destroyed. the u.s. is still assessing the potential damage. cnn's clare sebastian is following developments for us, she's joining us live from london. it is always a challenge of course to get the facts during the fog of war, but what more are you learning about whether russia damaged this patriot battery, and also russia was flat denial that ukraine shot down six missiles? >> yeah rosemary, i think this really is this episode in more is a textbook reminder of how this is also an information war. information is being controlled, manipulated by both sides. the way this unfolded, first ukraine coming out and saying
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it shot down these six missiles, but now we had russia coming out and claiming they actually used one of those to destroy, they, say a u.s. made patriot battery. then, obviously, the defense minister, the defense minister came out and elaborate on that saying that we did not even fire them. ukraine always gets the missiles wrong, speaking to state media. so obviously both of those reports, those claims cannot be true. the u.s. official telling cnn that they believe a patriot battery was damaged, they were not destroyed. this was not officially confirmed by the white house national security spokesperson, john kirby, and they said they're not officially commenting on that. but if it was damaged, that would help her apparent either inside ukraine or out. so a lot of conflicting information, and the level of conflict in this information demonstrate that that was potentially a game changing moment in this war, shifting the calculus for both sides, rosemary. >> clare, the grain deal, that
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expires very soon in the coming hours, in fact. what is the latest on that? >> it expires tomorrow, thursday, rosemary. this is a down to the wire moment, russia has been holding this up because they say, i support memorandum was agreed, alongside the grain deal last -- food and fertilizer on global markets is not being met. that has a list of certain bands that russia has put out, without including lifting some sanctions, restarting a pipeline for russian ammonia. those kinds of things, which of course is fraught with difficulty and not really within the jurisdiction of the u.n., which is brokering these talks. so they have to negotiate with other parties as well, but there is so much at stake, here this grain deal is not just about getting green out of ukraine, to the global markets, particularly the more vulnerable countries in africa, but stabilizing world food
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prices as well. so we are watching to see what unfolds during the next 24 hours. >> we'll certainly do, that close about him joining us live from london. many thanks. and still, become a powerful cyclone has hit myanmar, leaving the country most vulnerable ethnic minority in urgent need of food, water, and shelter as the death toll climbs. up to 8 weeks of relief with cytopoint. that's a lot more fun time, right max? yup. it's life-changing time. ♪ ♪ cytopoint is a long-lasting eatment for allergic dermatitis. just one injection given by your veterinarn can control allergic itch for 4-8 weeks. it's life-changing itch relief that brings back the fun in life, day after day. now's the time to ask your
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dead and rescue groups warn of a large scale loss of life following one of the strongest storms to ever hit myanmar. the country shadow government says that at least 400 people are dead and an unspecified number missing after cyclone mocha roared onto the coast on sunday, unleashing floods and landslides. among the hardest hit areas -- state where human rights watch says a 600,000 members of the -- minority lives under government persecution. cnn's -- joins me live from new delhi with more on this. so, what are you learning about the aftermath of this tropical cyclone? >> well, what is certain rosemary is that the community living in the coastal areas of western myanmar where they have been consigned by the authorities have been hit the hardest. we are talking about hundreds
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of thousands of people living there and they have very poor infrastructure. that has been given to them in the settlements. what we are also being told is that a lot of people have drowned in the floods unleashed by this very powerful cyclone. i want to start with a satellite images that have been released by -- those are images taken after the cyclone hit, which is the capital of rakim and is being compared to those images taken in favor of this year. you can see the widespread damage, the widespread destruction, you can see how homes have been damaged, out roofs have blown of, trees have fallen, and even a bridge subvert. that's the scale we're talking about and we do not even know or the death toll really even stands. you have a figure of a 400, which cnn cannot verify at this point, but that could go up given the devastation that we have seen on the ground. we do know that a lot of the people have been burying their
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loved ones, here's a father who just heard these loved ones, he lost nine of 14 family members who are with him into a flooded morning. . >> translator: nine of my 14 family members were killed, only five survived, they were killed because they could not resist when strong winds wave the boy. >> all of my belongings, and even dishes are gone. now i have no money to rebuild my house. we are starving. i have not ayton for today's. how many days does a person have to go hungry? >> that is what a lot of refugees are now saying. they have not eaten in days, and it is yet to reach them. the true damaged, rosemary, is yet to be ascertained in one of asia's least developed countries. back to. you >> just a horrifying devastation. vedika sud joining us live with the update. we appreciate it. torrential rain has caused
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extensive flooding in some of italy's northeastern region, homes were submerged by muddy water from a flooded river, authorities say that some residents rushed to the roofs of their buildings as the water began to rise. ten people were evacuated from their house after a mudslide hit a nearby area. the rain follows months of drought in the region. just ahead, new york city has a plan to house migrants in local school gyms. many parents are not happy about it. we will explain.
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welcome back everyone. migrant crossings at the u.s. southern border appear to be holding steady without the massive surge of some officials had feared. u.s. congressman -- of texas, counted fewer than 5000 crossings on tuesday. a slight uptick from a couple of days ago. that is only about half the numbers of migrants encountered last wednesday, shortly before
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title 42 expired. he also says that the number of migrants in border patrol custody has dropped by only 10,000 over the past week. while the numbers may be down at the border, there is no letup in sight for new york city, which mayor eric adams says will eventually run out of space to house migrants. now, many parents are protesting the city's proposed plan to house migrants in 20 school gyms. cnn's athena jones has the story. >> i think that the kind of tried to slip this through without giving people a chance to respond. >> i would like other places to be considered. our school is tiny, we can barely fit in as it is. >> parents of children who attend this elementary school in brooklyn, new york, are concerned about mayor eric adams plan to potentially house migrants and 20 school gyms across the city. adams says the migrants would not interact with the students at the schools.
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one parent, who decided to monitor the school overnight, over concerns that that is when migrants would arrive, said he feared the atmosphere migrants could create as -- >> we are not against them, they are all welcome, just not to our school. next to children who will be exposed. we do not know exactly they want to do. >> in another part of brooklyn, the coney island community members also complained that the city failed to notify them of a plan to use it detached to school gym there for migrants. the facility has the capacity to house 100 people, and when cnn visited, without our camera, it was filled wall-to-wall with cots and appeared to be housing single adult migrants. >> anything is possible. we don't know anything about these people, or where they came from. we want to protect us. my message for the mayor and the governor, is that you should be ashamed of yourself did not recognize the protection and culpability for our babies in these public schools. >> with hundreds of asylum seekers arriving in new york
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city every day, more than 4200 in the last week alone, officials say that the city is out of space. more than 65,000 asylum seekers have arrived to since last spring, including the highly publicized buses full of migrants from republican border states. new york city has opened more than 130 emergency sites, announced the opening of its ninth large scale humanitarian relief center, which will double as the city's first asylum seeker ally rival center. for months, mayor adams has urged the federal government to provide more support to the city, as a deals with what is usually a federal responsibility. immigration. >> we've had several different conversations with the president, and meeting with his team, communicating with team, sending out how urgent this is for the last few months. but, we are not getting the support that we deserve here in new york city. >> we're working very closely with cities and communities along the border, and in the interior of the united states. we need the system. fixed >> while border
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encounters may be falling, the humanitarian crisis shows no sign of abating. in new york, and other cities far from the border. athena jones, cnn, brooklyn, new york. dozens of migrants have arrived in denver, colorado in recent days. many came from venezuela and say they are trying to buy bus tickets to go to other u.s. cities like chicago or new york. denver's mayor told cnn that he is cautiously optimistic that the number of migrants would remain low. but, is calling for more federal resources just in case. still to come, ecuador's national assembly is holding an impeachment hearing against president -- we will have details. back with that and more, in just a moment. when your cat's huhungry, you definitely know.
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welcome back everyone. the fate of ecuador's a
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president hangs in the balance as the national assembly gets ready to resume impeachment hearing in the coming hours of the embattled president's ink used of embezzlement related to the export of crude oil products. cnn's stefano -- has more on the day one of the proceedings. >> guillermo lasso is a man fighting for his political survival. the first president to face impeachment in ecuador's recent history, on tuesday, he defended his record of government in front of lawmakers with passion. >> translator: -- those who are pushed with such a great in this baseless proceeding. >> the opposition accuses guillermo lasso of embezzlement of, way to the negotiation of the shipping of crude oil products. he denies the charges and says that they are politically motivated. >> the same reproach you have towards me is the biggest proof of my innocence. >> guillermo lasso removal
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could bring an end to tumultuous two years in power. a took office on may 2021 when ecuador was still struggling with and covid-19 pandemic and his presidency had also to deal with a bloody series of massacres inside the penitentiary system that dented his popularity. in a poll in march, more than 60% of ecuadorians say it was time for him to go. but, on the surge of -- fewer confident about what the future will bring with or without lasso. to fruit sellers in a street market in the south of the city, they say they have known each other for 40 years. but, this, week they stand on two opposite sides. -- he thinks that lasso should still complete his mandate, -- believes the country's situation requires a new leader. they both agree, however, that crime and not politics is what keeps them up at night.
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>> translator: i have to close down at five or 60, am because if you leave later, you get robbed, he complains. he says only a few years ago he keep his shop open until nighttime. >> the recent spike in criminal activity was all too evident over the weekend. when a failed assassination attempt against the mayor killed one and injured five. facing his own political -- lasso condemned the attack and vows to keep fighting. against organized crime on monday, the following day, his political foes. stefano pozzebon, cnn. >> in the next hour, a paris court is expected to rule on former french president nicholas -- appealed to overturn the 2021 conviction. it two years ago, a low court found sarkozy guilty of bribery and influence peddling. he has denied any wrongdoing. sarkozy served one term as the
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french leader from 2007 until 2012. but, has faced several legal battles since then. thank you so much for joining, us i'm rosemary church. for international viewers world sport is next. for viewers here in the united states and in canada, i will be back with more cnn newsroom in just a moment. having diabetes can raise a lot of questions. like my morning ride. will it help lower my glucose? with the freestyle libre 2 system you can know where your glucoseevel is and where it's headed. without fingersticks. manage your diabetes with more coidence and lower your a1c.
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church. the growth of artificial intelligence seems limitless, but it might be possible to minimize its dangers with regulations. that was the key take away from tuesday's u.s. senate hearing on a.i. with a tech industry leaders. lawmakers peppered experts with questions about the fast moving technology and how best to regulated to prevent disaster. cnn's nick walsh reports. >> my worst fears are that we cause a significant harm to the world. >> today senate hearing is a crucial step and humanities effort to prevent that harm and to rain and the handful of players controlling it is tech. >> i think you need to be incredible scrutiny on us and our competitors. >> his company created chatgpt, it could write a term paper or a song, capture imagination and headlines. >> but artificial intelligence soon put us all out of work? >> a. i. has potentially world-renowned zhang benefits that could have good education
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helps eradicate disease transportation, and i can be life in haunting or maybe an existential threat to humanity. we know some of the risks like rapid misinformation. >> the new seasons are going to be destabilizing. they can and will create persuasive lies and at a scale humanity has never seen before. democracy itself is threatened. >> as is our jobs. >> gpt-4 will i think entirely automate away some jobs. it will create new ones that we believe will be much better. >> there are risks like automated weapons we can imagine. >> today i create a situation where our drown kinesiology target itself? >> i think we shouldn't allow that. >> what can be done? >> sure. >> there are risks we can't darnella barely even comprehend. >> as a system to become more capable, and i'm not sure how far away that is, but maybe not super far, i think it is important that we have spent time talking about how we are going to confront those challenges.
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>> so what do we do? >> stop complaining it and tell me what if any rules we ought to implement? >> number one, a safety review like we use with the fda prior to widespread deployment. >> citizens that aid to a licensed developers and or the most powerful a. i. systems. >> i think a model that can persuade manipulate and influenza personal behavior or a person's belief, that would be a good threshold. i think a model that could help create novel biological agents would be a great threshold. >> there was support in this room for a brand-new government agency to oversee a. i., but-- >> for every success story in government regulation, you can take a five failures. >> and this technology is moving up very, very fast. google, microsoft, and others pouring in a billions of dollars. government can be glacial. >> when you look at the record of congress and dealing with innovation technology and rapid change, we are not designed for that. >> i've come to the conclusion that it's impossible for
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congress to keep up with this speed of technology. >> there is of course an election and the u.s. just about 18 months away and an avalanche of misinformation no doubt on its way. there's not much time to deal with at least some of the issues at play here. another big question, should the u.s. does create its own agency and then hope that the rest of the world will follow? or should people be concentrating on creating a global initiative, a global body to oversee a. i.? now listen, three minutes on capitol hill or three minutes on television is not nearly enough to deal with this massive topic, that committee of the senate will be meeting many more times, many brains around the world working on this problem. experts tell me that we, you, me, all of us, we need to also educate ourselves about a. i. so we know what is coming down the pike and how it might impact us. nick watt, cnn, los angeles.
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>> the u.s. justice department is cracking down on stolen technology used to help authoritarian governments who abused human rights. prosecutors from the disruptive technology strikeforce announced five criminal cases on tuesday. in one case, a chinese nationalist was accused in the scheme to produce weapons of mass destruction for iran. others involved in providing aircraft parts and sensitive technology to russia. your iphone will soon be able to talk for you using your own voice. all it needs is about 15 minutes of training. apple announced the feature in a group of new accessibility updates coming later this year. the tool is meant to help those who have a voice impairments or disability. apple says the tool can do a lot of good, but it comes at a time, of course, when artificial intelligence is under intense scrutiny.
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one of u.s. president joe biden 's top advisers came face to face with a trespasser in's own home in the middle of the night. sullivan was unharmed, but the secret service is taking the matter seriously. cnn's evan perez has details on the security breach. >> the u.s. secret service is investigating how uninsured or entered the home of u.s. national security adviser jake sullivan last night without being detected by sir secret service detail guarding his home. sullivan has a 24/7 secret service protection, he was unarmed in the incident which occurred in late april. the secret service stepped in a statement that it is taking the failure seriously. modifications to the protective posture have also been made to ensure additional security layers are in place as we conduct this comprehensive review. sources tell us that sullivan encountered the person inside his home in the early morning hours and he told investigators that he thought the person was
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intoxicated. there was no threat made and the sources said that the person left sullivan's home without the secret service detail noticing. evan perez, cnn, washington. the san francisco district attorney's office will not press charges against the security guard who shot and killed -- brown who is accused of shoplifting at walgreens store. authorities released surveillance video monday showing the altercation between the security guard and brown, leading up to the shooting. a warning though, the images are disturbing. the attorney for brown's family says that of the security guards actions were, quote, way beyond what was reasonable and necessary. the district attorney explained why no charges will be filed. >> we had to decide whether or not we have the sufficient evidence to prove this case to 12 jurors beyond a reasonable doubt. it was our conclusion that we
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did not have such evidence and that is why we have arrived at this decision, at this time. >> brown's family plans to file a lawsuit against the security officer, the security company, and walgreens. a chef in nigeria is hoping to set a world record after she cooked nonstop for four days, beating the current record of more than 87 hours she created dozens of nigerian dishes and cooking marathon captivated the country. stephanie azari has more. >> nigerian chefs -- has become a national sensation of are cooking nonstop for 100 hours possibly setting a new record. the chef started cooking on thursday and cooked 135 recipes, and over 100 meals, to showcase the best of nigerian cuisine. they she remained in high
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spirits by the lack of sleep, and her fans went to great lengths to support. are >> -- we all come out and show support. >> one man even traveled for hundreds of kilometers through the night to get to the venue in lagos. >> i dove hours just to be. here >> the chefs cook us -- as celebrities and politicians, including the governor of lagos visitor. musicians also created a party and concert atmosphere. >> the crowd is going absolutely crazy. it -- has just passed 96 hours in her four-day cooking marathon. she passed the world record hours ago, but she decided to keep on going to go the extra mile. >> i'm very tired, but at the same time i feel very blessed. the first day was the most difficult. i was ready to give up six
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hours on, but i feel like a miracle happened. >> the record to beat was a set in 2019 by indian sheriff -- who posted a message of support to hilda during her attempt. the guinness world committee still has to confirm that all their criteria have been met, but for nigerians, there is a new record breaker in town and her name is held it basse. stephanie busari, cnn, lagos. the 76 the can film festival kicked off on tuesday with the premiere of johnny depp's new movie. is the third census highly publicized defamation trial with ex-wife amber heard. depp plays the french king louis the 15th in the period drama, -- he walked the red carpet at the premiere, stopping along the way to speak with fans and posed for photos.
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this year, can will pay tribute to michael douglas, awarding the actor with an honorary palme d'or. the prestigious festival comes amid protests in france and an intern attainment rioters a strike, with many movies and tv shows shutting down production. thank you so much for your company, i am rosemary church. goalie back with more cnn newsroom after a short break. do stick around. to trereat my sleep apnea, i'm sleeping much better. in fact, it's mamaking me think of doioing other things i've been putting off. like removing thatat tattoo of your first wife's name. but your mom's name is vicky too! that's even worse. ( ♪ ) inspire. sleep apnea innovation. learn more and view important safety information at inspiresleep.com.
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