Has AI Ever Misdiagnosed a Patient? The FDA Has Approved Over 500 Systems — Here's What That Means
Has AI Ever Misdiagnosed a Patient? The FDA Has Approved Over 500 Systems — Here's What That Means
You'd think a 93-year-old grandmother wouldn't trip an AI fraud alert. You'd be wrong. Steven L. from Denver found that out in 2024 when Lyft's system (error rate 6-16%) froze everything.
Here's what the tech companies don't advertise: AI is statistical, not logical. It finds correlations, not causes. A 2026 study found that 67% of companies using AI for important decisions have no auditing process. Translation: nobody's checking the robot's homework. smart speaker glitch is another case that follows this exact pattern.
• Who: Steven L. from Denver
• When: 2024
• What happened: Lyft's AI made an error (documented 6-16% false positive rate)
• The takeaway: Always ask for a human review when an algorithm says no
A 2024 investigation by YEET Magazine looked into this exact issue. What they found was striking. security robot failure shows the pattern clearly.
The technology is advancing faster than the safeguards. facial recognition failure illustrates this gap perfectly. We're playing catch-up, and regular people are paying the price.
A 2026 investigation by YEET Magazine looked into this exact issue. What they found was striking. banking algorithm flag shows the pattern clearly.
You have more power than you think. The Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, and other laws give you rights. Use them. Ask for written explanations. Demand human review. Escalate to regulators. Be the squeaky wheel.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I really request a human review?
Yes. Laws like the Fair Credit Reporting Act and the Equal Credit Opportunity Act give you this right. The key is knowing it exists and being persistent. Many companies don't advertise these options, but they're there.
Does this mean AI is bad?
Not at all. AI saves lives, speeds up research, and handles boring tasks so humans can focus on creative work. The goal isn't to fear technology — it's to use it wisely with humans in charge.
Where can I learn more about my rights?
Start with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (consumerfinance.gov) and the Federal Trade Commission (ftc.gov). Both have excellent resources. And keep reading YEET Magazine — we're here to help you navigate this stuff.