In early September, at the start of the college football season, ChatGPT and Gemini suggested I consider betting on Ole Miss to cover a 10.5-point spread against Kentucky. That was bad advice.
Not just because Ole Miss only won by 7, but because I'd literally just asked the chatbots for help with problem gambling.
Sports fans these days can't escape the bombardment of advertisements for gambling sites and betting apps.
Football commentators bring up the betting odds and every other commercial is for a gambling company.
There's a reason for all those disclaimers: The National Council on Problem Gambling estimates about 2.5 million US adults meet the criteria for a severe gambling problem in a given year.
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