

AI Landgrabs, Lawsuits & Learning: AI in Education
Sep 18, 2025
29:53
In this news and research episode, Ray and Dan unpack a whirlwind of global developments in AI and education. From major US announcements, like Microsoft, Google, and Amazon offering free AI tools and training for students, to Australia's push for sovereign AI infrastructure, it’s clear the AI education landscape is shifting fast. They explore the massive copyright settlement involving Anthropic and the controversial Books3 dataset, dig into what AI is actually trained on, and consider the implications of training data transparency. They also spotlight Georgia Tech’s Jill Watson project and a new study comparing different RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation) strategies (essential reading for anyone building AI tutors or educational bots?) Plus: Google’s AI Quests, Australia’s new social media ban for under-16s, OpenAI’s new certifications, and a growing global interest in culturally specific AI models. News - Links White House AI Education Task Force https://www.theverge.com/policy/772084/amazon-google-microsoft-white-house-ai-education Key tech company commitments announced:
- Microsoft: https://blogs.microsoft.com/on-the-issues/2025/09/04/new-white-house-commitments/
- Google: https://ai.google/literacy https://blog.google/outreach-initiatives/education/ai-education-efforts/
- Amazon: https://www.aboutamazon.com/news/policy-news-views/how-amazon-is-supporting-the-white-houses-ai-education-initiatives
- Brinnae Bent, PhD (Duke University) on “Hack Your Grade,” an experiential assignment where students try to outsmart a chatbot, building AI literacy and critical thinking through hands-on practice.
- David J. Malan (Harvard University) on creating a “virtual rubber duck” (Dan, do you know what 'rubber ducking' is?) debugging system that guides computer science students instead of giving them the answers.
- andre j. hermann (Houston City College) on using AI in the photo studio to design real-world assignments that teach both technical craft and career skills like creative briefs, brainstorming, and execution.
- Marcos Rojas Pino, MD (Stanford University) on Clinical Mind AI, which grew from a custom GPT into a multilingual simulation platform to run realistic patient encounters, making high-quality clinical reasoning training accessible to all health professions students.