Technology
How AI is making IVF more predictable
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In-vitro fertilization (IVF) can take a serious toll on families, not only emotionally but financially, especially when every cycle comes with new bills and no clear sense of what the full journey might cost. Gaia Family aims to change that by removing the guesswork around pricing with a blend of tech and AI-driven forecasting. Instead of worrying about unpredictable costs, couples pay a fixed upfront price or monthly installments that cover their planned IVF treatment, medications, embryo transfers and built-in protections if cycles or transfers aren’t successful. It gives families a clearer path forward and support that lasts through the entire process.
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ROBOTS POWER BREAKTHROUGH IN PREGNANCY RESEARCH, BOOSTING IVF SUCCESS RATES
Artificial intelligence is giving hopeful parents more clarity about their chances over multiple IVF cycles, helping them plan their journey with clearer expectations instead of guesswork. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
How Gaia Family was born
Gaia Family was founded by Nader AlSalim, a former Goldman Sachs executive who knew the IVF struggle firsthand. After spending over $50,000 across five IVF rounds in multiple countries, he and his wife finally had a son. The experience left him frustrated by how little clarity the system offered and how emotionally draining the process could be.
He saw that most fertility systems were built around procedures, not people. His goal with Gaia Family was to build something different, a program that uses data to empower families instead of leaving them to navigate uncertainty and mounting debt. That personal experience became the foundation of Gaia Family’s mission to bring agency, transparency and compassion to fertility care.
TRUMP ROLLS OUT PLAN TO SLASH IVF COSTS FOR AMERICAN FAMILIES THROUGH NEW PHARMA PARTNERSHIP
Gaia Family gives families one fixed IVF price with built-in protection and full support every step of the way. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
How Gaia Family’s plan works
- Choose your clinic: Gaia partners with more than 100 fertility clinics across the U.S.
- Get your personalized quote: Your doctor designs your treatment plan, and Gaia uses it to calculate your fixed cost upfront.
- Start with confidence: Pay monthly or upfront, then begin treatment knowing all your major expenses are covered.
If a cycle doesn’t result in viable embryos, Gaia’s built-in protection covers another attempt, helping families try again without financial shock. Once you have viable embryos, your Gaia Plan allows you unlimited frozen embryo transfers (usually $5,000 each) at no extra cost until you have a baby. And, if none of those transfers result in a live birth, then Gaia will give you money towards another cycle. Plus, you have the option of including all of your PGT-A testing and your medication for a fixed cost, so you have even more protection throughout your journey. AlSalim, tells CyberGuy the company’s mission goes beyond technology.
“At Gaia Family, we’re using AI not to replace the human element of fertility care, but to bring more confidence to it,” AlSalim said. “Fertility treatment can feel like a game of chance — our technology helps turn it into a guided, informed journey. By analyzing millions of data points, we can forecast the most effective and affordable pathway for each individual, so patients can make decisions grounded in data rather than uncertainty. Ultimately, it’s about giving hopeful parents more agency, transparency, and peace of mind in one of the most emotional experiences of their lives.”
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For many couples, this combination of data and compassion is transforming uncertainty into confidence and renewed hope. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Why Gaia Family’s model matters
IVF in the United States can cost as much as $30,000 per cycle, and most couples need several tries. Each failed attempt adds more bills and stress. Gaia Family’s fixed-cost model gives families financial predictability while keeping them emotionally supported. It also encourages clinics to focus on outcomes rather than repeated treatments.
This approach is transforming how people view fertility care. Instead of relying on luck, families can benefit from AI insights to make better decisions. While it may not lower the medical costs yet, it changes how couples experience one of life’s most emotional challenges, turning fear into informed planning and despair into hope. Gaia removes the spiraling costs, making couples’ outcomes so much more cost-efficient.
What this means for you
If you are thinking about IVF or egg freezing, Gaia Family’s model could make your path more manageable. It provides upfront transparency about costs, protection against financial loss and a data-driven forecast of success. It helps you make decisions based on evidence rather than guesswork.
Still, while AI can analyze data patterns, it cannot alter biology. Factors like age, health and genetics continue to shape outcomes. Even so, Gaia Family’s system gives couples a sense of control that traditional fertility care rarely provides by serving everyone, with no eligibility criteria in terms of age or health factors. Knowing that your finances are protected can ease stress and allow you to focus on what matters most: building your family.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
Gaia Family is blending AI and empathy to rewrite how fertility care works. It replaces uncertainty with insight and transforms risk into reassurance. For many, it’s not just about technology, it’s about restoring hope and fairness to one of life’s most personal journeys.
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Technology
Boston Dynamics CEO Robert Playter is stepping down after six years
Robert Playter, CEO of Boston Dynamics, announced on Tuesday that he is stepping down from his role effective immediately and leaving the company on February 27th, as previously reported by A3. Under Playter’s leadership, Boston Dynamics navigated its way through an acquisition from Softbank that brought it to Hyundai in 2021, and it launched a new all-electric version of its humanoid Atlas robot in 2024. Just a few days ago, the company posted another video of its research Atlas robots attempting tumbling passes and outdoor runs as more enterprise-ready editions start to roll out.
Boston Dynamics announced at CES last month that Atlas robots will begin working in Hyundai’s car plants starting in 2028, as the robotics field has become increasingly crowded by competitors like Tesla and Figure, as well as AI companies with “world model” tech built for robots.
Playter has been at Boston Dynamics for over 30 years and has served as CEO since 2020, replacing the company’s original CEO, Marc Raibert. Boston Dynamics CFO Amanda McMaster will serve as interim CEO while the company’s board of directors searches for Playter’s replacement.
“Boston Dynamics has been the ride of a lifetime. What this place has become has exceeded anything I could have ever imagined all those years ago in our funky lab in the basement of the MIT Media Lab,” Playter said in a letter to employees, which was shared with The Verge. He also highlighted the company’s successes with its Spot, Stretch, and Atlas robots.
“From the earliest days of hopping robots, to the world’s first quadrupeds, to spearheading the entire humanoid industry, Playter made his mark as a pioneer of innovation. He transformed Boston Dynamics from a small research and development lab into a successful business that now proudly calls itself the global leader in mobile robotics,” Nikolas Noel, VP of marketing and communications at Boston Dynamics, said in a statement to The Verge, adding, “He will be sorely missed, but we hope he enjoys some well-deserved time off. Thanks Rob.”
Technology
Microsoft ‘Important Mail’ email is a scam: How to spot it
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Scam emails are getting better at looking official. This one claims to be an urgent warning from Microsoft about your email account. It looks serious. It feels time sensitive. And that is exactly the point. Lily reached out after something about the message did not sit right.
“I need help with an email that I’m unsure is valid. Hoping you can help me determine whether this is a valid or a scam. I have attached two screenshots below. Thank you in advance,” Lily wrote.
Here is the important takeaway up front. This email is not from Microsoft. It is a scam designed to rush you into clicking a dangerous link.
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WHY CLICKING THE WRONG COPILOT LINK COULD PUT YOUR DATA AT RISK
A closer look at the sender shows a red flag scammers hope you will miss, a free email address posing as a trusted brand. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Why this Microsoft ‘Important Mail’ email is a scam
Once you slow down and read it closely, the red flags pile up quickly.
A generic greeting
It opens with “Dear User.” Microsoft uses your name. Scammers avoid it because they do not know who you are.
A hard deadline meant to scare you
The message claims your email access will stop on Feb. 5, 2026. Scammers rely on fear and urgency to short-circuit good judgment.
A completely wrong sender address
The email came from accountsettinghelp20@aol.com. Microsoft does not send security notices from AOL. Ever.
Pushy link language
“PROCEED HERE” is designed to trigger a fast click. Microsoft messages sent to you to are clearly labeled Microsoft.com pages.
Fake legal language
Lines like “© 2026 All rights reserved” are often copied and pasted by scammers to look official.
Attachments that should not be there
Microsoft account alerts do not include image attachments. That alone is a major warning sign.
10 WAYS TO PROTECT SENIORS FROM EMAIL SCAMS
The fake Microsoft email uses urgency and vague language to pressure you into clicking before you have time to think. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
What would have happened if you clicked
If you clicked the link, you would almost certainly land on a fake Microsoft login page. From there, attackers aim to steal:
- Your email address
- Your password
- Access to other accounts tied to that email
Once they have your email, they can reset passwords, dig through old messages and launch more scams using your identity.
HACKERS ABUSE GOOGLE CLOUD TO SEND TRUSTED PHISHING EMAILS
Scam emails often reach people on their phones, where small screens make it easier to miss warning signs and click fast. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
What to do if this email lands in your inbox
If an email like this shows up, slow down and follow these steps in order. Each one helps stop the scam cold.
1) Do not click or interact at all
Do not click links, buttons or images. Do not reply. Even opening attachments can trigger tracking or malware. Strong antivirus software can block phishing pages, scan attachments and warn you about dangerous links before damage happens. Make sure yours is active and up to date. The best way to safeguard yourself from malicious links that install malware, potentially accessing your private information, is to have strong antivirus software installed on all your devices. This protection can also alert you to phishing emails and ransomware scams, keeping your personal information and digital assets safe.
Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices at Cyberguy.com.
2) Delete the message immediately
Once it is reported, delete it. There is no reason to keep it in your inbox or trash.
3) Check your account the safe way
If you want peace of mind, open a new browser window and go directly to the official Microsoft account website. Sign in normally. If there is a real issue, it will appear there.
4) Change your password if you clicked
If you clicked anything or entered information, change your Microsoft password right away. Use a strong, unique password you do not use anywhere else. A password manager can generate and store it securely for you. Then review recent sign-in activity for anything suspicious.
Next, see if your email has been exposed in past breaches. Our No. 1 password manager pick includes a built-in breach scanner that checks whether your email address or passwords have appeared in known leaks. If you discover a match, immediately change any reused passwords and secure those accounts with new, unique credentials.
Check out the best expert-reviewed password managers of 2026 at Cyberguy.com.
5) Enable two-factor authentication
Turn on two-factor authentication (2FA) for your Microsoft account. This adds a second check, which can stop attackers even if they get your password.
6) Use a data removal service for long-term protection
Scammers often find targets through data broker sites. A data removal service helps reduce how much personal information is publicly available, which lowers your exposure to phishing in the first place.
While no service can guarantee the complete removal of your data from the internet, a data removal service is really a smart choice. They aren’t cheap, and neither is your privacy. These services do all the work for you by actively monitoring and systematically erasing your personal information from hundreds of websites. It’s what gives me peace of mind and has proven to be the most effective way to erase your personal data from the internet. By limiting the information available, you reduce the risk of scammers cross-referencing data from breaches with information they might find on the dark web, making it harder for them to target you.
Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting Cyberguy.com.
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7) Report it as spam or phishing
Use your email app’s built-in reporting tool. This helps train filters and protects other users from seeing the same scam.
Extra protection tips for real Microsoft notices
When Microsoft actually needs your attention, the signs look very different.
- Alerts appear inside your Microsoft account dashboard
- Messages do not demand immediate action through random email links
- Notices never come from free email services like AOL, Gmail or Yahoo
That contrast makes scams easier to spot once you know what to look for.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
Scammers are counting on you being busy, distracted or worried about losing access to your email. That is why messages like this lean so hard on urgency. Your email sits at the center of your digital life, so attackers know a shutdown threat gets attention fast. The good news is that slowing down for even a few seconds changes everything. Lily did exactly the right thing by stopping and asking first. That single habit can prevent identity theft, account takeovers and a long, frustrating cleanup. Remember this rule. Emails that threaten shutdowns and demand immediate action are almost never legitimate. When something feels urgent, that is your cue to pause, verify on your own and never let an email rush you into a mistake.
Have you seen a fake Microsoft warning like this recently, or did it pretend to come from another brand you trust? Let us know your thoughts by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
Technology
ChatGPT’s cheapest options now show you ads
ChatGPT users may soon start seeing ads in their chats, as OpenAI announced on Monday that it’s officially beginning to test ads on its AI platform. They’ll appear as labeled “sponsored” links at the bottom of ChatGPT answers, but OpenAI says the ads “do not influence the answers ChatGPT gives you.”
Currently, ads will only show up for users on the free version of ChatGPT or the lowest-cost $8 per month Go plan. Users in the Plus, Pro, Business, Enterprise, and Education plans won’t see any ads, so anyone who wants to avoid them has to pay at least $20 per month for the Plus subscription. There is one loophole — OpenAI notes that users can “opt out of ads in the Free tier in exchange for fewer daily free messages.”
Users on the Go tier can’t opt out of seeing ads, but users on both the Free and Go plans can dismiss ads, share feedback on ads, turn off ad personalization, turn off the option for ads to be based on past chats, and delete their ad data. According to OpenAI, advertisers will only get data on “aggregated ad views and clicks,” not personalized data or content from users’ ChatGPT conversations.
Additionally, not all users and chats will be eligible for ads, including users under 18 and conversations on certain sensitive topics “like health, mental health or politics.” Even adult users on the chatbot’s Free and Go plans might not immediately start seeing ads, since the feature is still in testing.
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