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Latimer AI startup to launch bias detection tool for web browsers

John Pasmore Cofounder and CEO Latimer AI
John Pasmore Cofounder and CEO Latimer AI

Latimer AI

  • Latimer AI plans to launch a bias detection tool as a Chrome browser extension in January.
  • The tool scores text from one to 10, with 10 being extremely biased.
  • Latimer AI hopes the product will attract new users.

Bias is in the eye of the beholder, yet it's increasingly being evaluated by AI. Latimer AI, a startup that's building AI tools on a repository of Black datasets, plans to launch a bias detection tool as a Chrome browser extension in January.

The company anticipates the product could be used by people who run official social media accounts, or anyone who wants to be mindful of their tone online, Latimer CEO John Pasmore told Business Insider.

"When we test Latimer against other applications, we take a query and score the response. So we'll score our response, we'll score ChatGPT or Claude's response, against the same query and see who scores better from a bias perspective," Pasmore said. "It's using our internal algorithm to not just score text, but then correct it."

The tool assigns a score from one through 10 to text, with 10 being extremely biased.

Patterns of where bias is found online, are already emerging from beta testing of the product.

For instance, text from an April post by Elon Musk, in which he apologized for calling Dustin Moskowitz a derogatory name, was compared to an August post from Bluesky CEO Jay Graber.

An Elon Musk post on X is analyzed for bias and scores 6.8 out of 10, or "high bias" according to Latimer AI.
An Elon Musk post on X is analyzed for bias and scores 6.8 out of 10, or "High Bias" according to Latimer AI.

Latimer AI

Musks' post scored 6.8 out of 10, or "High Bias," while Graber's scored 3.6 out of 10, or "Low Bias".

Bluesky CEO Jay Graber's post to the platform is analyzed for bias and scores a 3.6 out of 10, or "Low Bias" according to Latimer AI.
Bluesky CEO Jay Graber's post to the platform is analyzed for bias and scores a 3.6 out of 10, or "Low Bias" according to Latimer AI.

Latimer AI

Latimer's technology proposed a "fix" to the text in Musk's post by changing it to the following: "I apologize to Dustin Moskowitz for my previous inappropriate comment. It was wrong. What I intended to express is that I find his attitude to be overly self-important. I hope we can move past this and potentially become friends in the future."

While what is deemed biased is subjective, Latimer isn't alone in trying to tackle this challenge through technology. The LA Times plans to display a "bias meter" in 2025, for instance.

Latimer hopes its bias tool will draw in more users.

"This will help us identify a different set of users who might not use a large language model, but might use a browser extension," Pasmore said.

The bias detector will launch at $1 a month, and a pro version will let users access multiple bias detection algorithms.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Tariffs and sanctions could disrupt the tech supply chain. Here's how to derisk it.

aon supply chain

Getty Images

  • SolidIntel CEO advises clients on derisking supply chains amid tariff concerns.
  • China's dominance in rare earth minerals poses risks to tech supply chains.
  • Friend-shoring and nearshoring are strategies to enhance national security and tech resilience.

Megan Reiss has been very busy since the election. The CEO and founder of SolidIntel, a D.C.-based supply chain advisory firm, has been fielding calls from current and prospective clients looking to understand what Trump's second term could mean for their manufacturing, supply, raw materials, foundry, and businesses across sectors.

SolidIntel's clients also want to know how to derisk their operations as talk of tariffs sends markets into a volatile turn.

"People concerned about tariffs are very interested in moving their supply chains out of China as quickly as possible because they see it as the potential for everything to get really expensive, really quickly," Reiss told Business Insider.

The rare earth minerals and raw materials underpinning the AI boom and its countless clusters of chips may soon be in the spotlight because of where they're produced. Though President-elect Trump's Monday post named Mexico and Canada, all eyes are on China.

"Our technology is dependent on these rare earth minerals. China has a lot of opportunity to turn off the spigot," Reiss said.

Friend shoring to allies

Friend shoring, or moving supply chain, manufacturing, and operations to non-adversarial countries to have continuity, is one step to derisking tech's supply chain.

The potential for export controls and sanctions are also top of mind for SolidIntel's rare earth mineral clients. These raw materials serve as the building blocks for wafters, and semiconductors that power advanced AI chips. The vast majority of these minerals are commercially mined in China or quarries owned by Chinese companies.

A chart displaying 15 minerals the U.S. imports.
Rare earth minerals used to make AI chips are almost exclusively imported from China.

Department of the Interior

In 2023, the U.S. imported more than 95% of rare earth compounds and minerals from China, Malaysia, Estonia, and Japan, according to the U.S. Department of the Interior.

Nearshoring and friend-shoring manufacturing and vital supply chains away from China are also important for national security and could bolster a sovereign tech sector. The near-term investment is difficult but ultimately more beneficial in the long term.

Since 2023, SolidIntel, which uses generative AI and machine learning to identify supply chain risks, has helped companies track how bad actors end up in supply chains and connects companies with compliant suppliers.

"The more these supply chains are not hung over our head, and we make national security choices that are in the best interest of the U.S., the less afraid we are that an adversary is going to try to kill our commercial sector, that's a good thing," Reiss said.

There are closer to home alternatives that could become more viable depending on the incoming administration's policies, how relations with China play out, and if Trump makes good on his tariffs talk.

"My fear is not that we will not find alternative sources because there are a lot of rare earth minerals, and they're not just in the U.S.; they're in friendly and allied countries. I'm worried about us doing it fast enough. It can take a decade or more to bring a mine online, and it can't take that long in this case," Reiss said.

Create redundancy in manufacturing

To derisk the supply chain, create redundancy. In other words, reducing parts of supply chains that are dependent on one country is a way to cut down on risks and diversify manufacturers' options.

"If I were a manufacturer and I had a couple of chokepoints in my supply, say two of three, difficult-to-source parts that are only produced in a couple of countries, you would ideally want to have production lines in multiple countries," Reiss said.

Though streamlining production to fewer or one country can be cheaper and more efficient, it only works until something goes wrong she said.

Regulation of the supply chain may increase, but tech companies and their suppliers could find solutions in data. "Technology cannot do it unto itself, because you can only rely on the data you can get to understand the whole length of the supply chain. It's about open-sourced intelligence and closed data sets, " Reiss said.

"It's not just 'is this a foreign manufacturer, it's 'what are the foreign ownership control and influence risks in partnering with a company or in having a certain investor," Reiss said. "There's a lot more to it that people are just starting to build out their understanding of."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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