If you look at other stories by the same author, such as this one https://www.techbrew.com/stories/openai-token-price-wars-ant... - the "TL;DR", "What happened", "Bottom line" format is consistent across their work. It looks to me like a style guide thing, not necessarily something introduced by LLMs.
No technology will make it cheaper for YOU, just improve margins for the chain of fleecing between provider and insurance. Demand for healthcare is inelastic like water or air, so they can charge whatever they want and you pay or die. AI will of course amplify your costs while improving their profits.
Insurance companies spend a lot of time on bill review and disputes over coding. They will develop an adversarial AI process to counteract this (assuming they haven't already). Race to the bottom and we all win
Because it's useful to leverage capitalist greed to invest in expensive and risky medical research, and have surplus medical capacity paid for by people that have extra wealth and are willing to pay for extra care.
The issues arise when there isn't a sufficient public system taking the bulk of the demand, giving people options and a floor to the quality and utility of the private system.
Just wait until we deploy the AI to optimise healthcare so that people die right at retirement age to maximise tax extraction and minimise healthcare usage
14 comments
[ 0.24 ms ] story [ 39.9 ms ] threadThe four emboldened headings that make up the whole article sound like they’re straight outta chatgpt:
* what happened
* the devil is in the billing details
* the big but
* bottom line
I’m not sure that I’ve ever read a Fortune article before so maybe this is just their style. But I doubt it.
If you look at other stories by the same author, such as this one https://www.techbrew.com/stories/openai-token-price-wars-ant... - the "TL;DR", "What happened", "Bottom line" format is consistent across their work. It looks to me like a style guide thing, not necessarily something introduced by LLMs.
(This is not about AI costing too much.)
Clearly the fault is with AI. That's the only possible explanation.
The issues arise when there isn't a sufficient public system taking the bulk of the demand, giving people options and a floor to the quality and utility of the private system.