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Showing posts with the label Digital Ethics | Healthcare | Social Media

YouTube’s New AI Search Feature Is a Content Discovery Game-Changer

YouTube’s New AI Search Carousel Is Changing How We Discover Videos — Here’s What You Need to Know You know that moment when you type something like “best cafés in Paris” into YouTube, and you’re buried under a flood of random vlogs, listicles, and unrelated reviews? Yeah, we’ve all been there. But that chaotic hunt for the right video might soon be a thing of the past. YouTube just rolled out an AI-powered search carousel — and it’s not just another shiny feature. It’s a smart, intuitive, and (honestly) much-needed step forward that could completely change how we search for and interact with video content. Let me break it down — not like a press release, but like someone who geeks out about this stuff and actually uses YouTube every day. --- What Is YouTube’s AI Search Carousel? In simple terms: YouTube now shows an AI-generated video carousel when you search for things like: Travel recommendations Local activities and attractions Shopping inspirati...

"TikTok in Hospitals? Why NHS Staff Are Alarmed by Patients Filming Medical Treatments"

📱 When TikTok Meets the Treatment Room: Why Patients Filming NHS Procedures Raises Real Concerns In the age of social media oversharing, it seems even hospital wards aren’t off-limits. A growing number of NHS patients are reportedly filming their medical procedures — sometimes without consent — and uploading them to platforms like TikTok, Instagram, or YouTube. But what feels like innocent content creation to one person can become a serious ethical and professional concern for healthcare workers — and even a threat to patient privacy and staff well-being. 🎥 The Rise of ‘Patient Influencers’ It’s no secret: healthcare stories attract huge engagement online. From emotional recovery journeys to “day in my life” cancer treatment vlogs, these clips can offer hope, raise awareness, and even break taboos. But not every recording happens ethically or with permission — and that’s where things get blurry. At the annual conference of the Society of Radiographers ...