The Alligator News Roundup
Number 4. The Guardian. AI agent makes bold confession after irreplaceable data destroyed. [https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/apr/29/claude-ai-deletes-firm-database] A friend of mine in banking told me he has used an artificial intelligence agent for ten years. “I can’t do this volume of coding without it,” he reports. He, like most who follow the ANR, is clever and intelligent. He knows how to drive his AI agent, and he knows where the ditches are. Would you hand a scalpel to a plumber? Sure, under the right circumstances. (No offense to plumbers—I have found they are a huge contributor to my quality of life.) In the case of Pocket OS, a software outfit that serves multiple rental car agencies, the scalpel they wielded came with its own ideas about where to cut. It decided the entire company database needed to be exorcised—including all backups. The operation took 9 seconds, and… poof! it was gone. Claude, the Anthropic AI offering, employed a tool called Cursor, running on an API called Railway. Clear so far? During a routine update, Cursor (which now seems to be an appropriate name) encountered a problem and, per its instructions, sought to remove it. The removal process was executed by Railway, which, per its instructions, completely solved the problem and returned results to Cursor. Which discovered that not only had the problem been removed, but so had everything else in the database. Everything. Customer records, billing statements, future reservations, payment history, yada yada. For multiple rental car clients, which meant many thousands of rental customers. When challenged in the “who shot John” follow-up, Cursor admitted it had passed the command to Railway without first reading Railway’s documentation file. Basically: “Sorry about that, Chief.” [https://getsmart.fandom.com/wiki/Maxwell_Smart] While writing a middle grade action-adventure story (my latest time sink obsession) I have used ChatGPT extensively for line editing and timeline consistency: How to have this character say this better? is this timeframe reasonable for that activity? etc. Occasionally Chat will forget what chapter we are in and who the other characters are. I have had to stop and prompt: Please read the entire file I just uploaded, then answer my question again. Invariably, the response is a very pleasant and honest, “Oh, you are absolutely right to question this. Now that have I read the file, here is the correct answer…” Meanwhile, if Chat and I ever get this project into print, I’ll let you know. So, use the scalpel with your own intelligence, not someone else’s. Number 3. AP News. Another Ebola treatment center is set ablaze, spreading virus further. [https://apnews.com/article/congo-ebola-outbreak-who-spread-response-18537353976a958687e55f95434c918c] With yet another outbreak of the deadly and highly contagious Ebola virus in the Congo this month, local burial practices have once again conflicted with careful medical treatment. The body of a local man was held in a clinic after his death. His friends, “local youths” according to the article, demanded his body for proper burial. They were denied for reasons of protocol safety in handling infected remains. Logically, the local youths were angered. They showed it by setting fire to the clinic, then fleeing the scene. Presumably, the act of vandalism, causing uncertain spreading of the virus as well as certain difficulty in treating other cases, will appease whatever cosmic forces had demanded proper burial services. Perhaps those unnamed cosmic forces need to get up with the times. They could probably just tap into the AP News feed and modify burial service methods as necessary. This reminds me of a statement made on talk radio during the 1992 Rodney King riots [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1992_Los_Angeles_riots] in LA. A week of violent unrest resulted in 63 dead, 2,000+ injured and $1 billion in property damage. Walter E. Williams, a quick-witted and eloquent black economist guest hosting for Rush Limbaugh, said something like: “And now I’ve got a word for my own folks out there. The next time the white man does something you don’t like, don’t burn down your own neighborhood.” Number 2. NBC News. Fast food worker refunds mac ‘n’ cheese purchases to his own credit card. Does not end well for him. [https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/texas-man-nabbed-mac-cheese-caper-chick-fil-a-rcna342938] A young Chick-fil-A employee in Texas was just trying to get a little of his own back. Exploring the wonders of a state-of-the-art cash register, to which for some reason he had been given full access, he discovered how to accept a customer-prompted return. A credit could be issued to the customer for an unwanted or unsatisfactory purchase. Chasing the technology curve, young Mr. Jones further recognized that the refund could be applied to a credit card electronically. No more swiping Andrew Jacksons from the cash drawer. Probably he understood that someone would notice missing cash at the end of the day. Cleverly, he opened a brand new credit card account and went to town. “They’ll NEVER find me NOW!” Unfortunately, he had not chased the tech curve far enough to realize that his employer’s refunds were immediately noted as flowing to the new credit card account in his own name. Nor did he understand that the surveillance cameras in the restaurant watched more than customers stealing soft drinks. Poor Mr. Jones. It’s tough to get ahead when the cards are stacked against you. In about 1975, I worked at a university cafeteria. The pots-n-pans guy and the custodian were antagonists toward one another, which was awkward in that they shared a common locker room with adjacent lockers. One day, the custodian’s checkbook turned up missing. By complete coincidence, the next week a check with an unreadable signature made a payment on the dishwasher’s trailer house. Quite the mystery. The wheels of justice ground forward. I marvel. Only by the grace of God has our world survived thus far. A cynic might speculate that is what the judge and prophet Samuel implied with his proclamation of “Ebenezer!” in 1 Samuel 7:12. (“So far, the LORD has helped us.”) Number 1. People online. Well-intentioned woman stocks help-the-poor fridge, finds it wiped out in the first hour. [https://people.com/usd1-800-community-fridge-donation-gone-within-an-hour-11982317] It was a noble way to address a problem that had no solution. A Brashawnee Johnson felt called to fill up the local community refrigerator, so that her less fortunate neighbors could have something for dinner. While the “something” involved peanut butter and vienna sausages, at least it was a kind gesture. Ms. Johnson spent $1,800 on carefully selected items, lovingly placing them in the unsecured Louisiana fridge. Less than an hour later, it was all gone. She suspects there were people who were more greedy than hungry, but she can’t be sure. Security cameras have now been placed to help police track inappropriate appropriations of the foodstuffs. Which leads to a challenge for investigators: What, exactly, will you ask the suspects once they are identified? “Were you really hungry?” Ms. Johnson is undeterred. She plans to continue contributions, in the hopes that some truly in need are helped. That is admirable. The onliest tinge of concern might be that the $1,800 gift was funded by Brashawnee Johnson’s non-profit, The Village Foundation. [https://volunteer.com/] I found zero reference to The Village Foundation other than many articles and social media posts bemoaning the sudden loss, and most spilling some angst over other hungries who could have used the vienna sausages. There is absolutely nothing to suggest anything wrong or fraudulent here. However, channeling Reagan, “Trust, but verify.” I would like to see a touch more research into the non-profit. Specifically, besides personal tax write-offs for donations, what other government tax dollars might support the charity? But that’s just me, letting my jaded blogger persona show. Have a good weekend! Get full access to The Alligator Blog at alligatorpublishing.substack.com/subscribe [https://alligatorpublishing.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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