Tech companies are marketing AI-based note-taking software to therapists as a new time-saving tool. But by signing up, providers may be unknowingly offering patients’ sensitive health information as data fodder to the multibillion-dollar AI therapy industry.

Technology firms behind artificial intelligence–based note-taking software — marketed to therapists as a time-saving administrative tool — have quietly included provisions in their terms and conditions that allow patients’ therapy records to be sold and manipulated to train other AI applications.

Providers outsourcing standard progress notes to automated software, which summarize session recordings and transcripts, may be unknowingly offering patients’ sensitive health information as data fodder to the multibillion-dollar AI therapy

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