"It is totally our job now but we chose this and we could all walk away any time if we didn't want to be part of it," Jessi says.
In Geneva, Washington and Beijing had agreed to reduce tariffs imposed on each other's imports in a deal where both nations cancelled some tariffs altogether and suspended others for 90 days.Bessent said talks on a further deal had lost momentum, but stressed they were continuing.
"I believe that we will be having more talks with [China] in the next few weeks and I believe we may at some point have a call between the president and [Chinese President Xi Jinping]," Bessent said on Thursday.He added the pair had "a very good relationship" and he was "confident that the Chinese will come to the table when President Trump makes his preferences known"., the US lowered tariffs imposed on goods from China from 145% to 30%.
China's retaliatory tariffs on US goods dropped from 125% to 10%.The US President has argued imposing tariffs on foreign goods would encourage US consumers to buy more American-made goods, bringing back manufacturing jobs while increasing the amount of tax revenue raised.
They have been used by the Trump administration as leverage in negotiations as it seeks to reduce trade deficits with other nations.
A delegation from Japan are continuing trade talks with their US counterparts in Washington on Friday.Psychologist Ian MacRae specialises in emerging technologies, and warns "some people are placing a lot of trust in these [bots] without it being necessarily earned".
"Personally, I would never put any of my personal information, especially health, psychological information, into one of these large language models that's just hoovering up an absolute tonne of data, and you're not entirely sure how it's being used, what you're consenting to.""It's not to say in the future, there couldn't be tools like this that are private, well tested […] but I just don't think we're in the place yet where we have any of that evidence to show that a general purpose chatbot can be a good therapist," Mr MacRae says.
Wysa's managing director, John Tench, says Wysa does not collect any personally identifiable information, and users are not required to register or share personal data to use Wysa."Conversation data may occasionally be reviewed in anonymised form to help improve the quality of Wysa's AI responses, but no information that could identify a user is collected or stored. In addition, Wysa has data processing agreements in place with external AI providers to ensure that no user conversations are used to train third-party large language models."