AI Takeover Tracker
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Your Doctor's AI May Be Making Things Up
Good morning, double check your next prescription if your doctor is using an AI scribe. We reviewed 665 articles for this edition. These are the stories you should know.

Headlines & Launches
Your Doctor’s AI Notetaker May be Making Things Up, Ontario Audit Finds(1 min read)
Ars Technica
An Ontario audit revealed that clinical AI scribes are hallucinating critical medical data, including incorrect prescriptions and fake therapy referrals. This forces healthcare workers to spend more time verifying AI outputs than they save on typing.
The Great Mismatch: How a Shrinking Workforce, AI, and Labor Reallocation Will Define the Next 15 Years(6 min read)
Indeed Hiring Lab
Indeed's latest research warns that the primary threat to the labor market isn't job scarcity, but a severe lack of transition pathways for workers displaced by automation to move into newly created roles.
AI Agents Now Help UWM Underwriters Process 16 Mortgage Loans Per Day(6 min read)
HousingWire
The mortgage lender's proprietary AI tools are actively assisting underwriters to hit high daily quotas and managing customer service calls. This highlights how specialized, in-house AI is directly augmenting specific roles in the finance sector.
AI Job Displacement is Accelerating, But Unevenly(1 min read)
Semafor Tech
Most of the concern about AI is coming from tech companies that write code. That's because AI is really good at writing code. Many other things, not so much
Employers Adopt AI Tools Faster than They can Train Workers to Use Them(2 min read)
HR Dive
A widening skills gap is emerging as companies rush to implement new technologies without providing adequate staff training. This disconnect creates a paradox where expensive software sits underutilized by overwhelmed employees.
Quick Links
Tech job Losses Rise as Big Firms Report 100% AI Adoption Rates(1 min read) — Big tech sees rising job losses alongside 100% internal AI adoption rates.
AI can give efficiency when used properly. But hallucinations are still a real problem.
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