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Close-up of a person sitting down and writing a message on white paper resting on a wrapped Christmas present with a golden ribbon.
Dear Grandma, ChatGPT says you’re wonderful – and I totally agree.

07 December 2025 - AI News Quiz for Adults

Welcome to our AI News Quiz for Adults, where this week’s headlines get turned into ten quick-fire questions. From serious breakthroughs to slightly bonkers stories, you’ll explore how artificial intelligence is creeping into everyday life, work and even Christmas traditions.

This is a fun quiz, not an exam, so if you don’t know an answer, just guess! After every question you’ll be told straight away whether you were right, along with a short explanation to fill in the gaps. See how many AI stories you’ve really been paying attention to.

1 .
According to new Royal Mail research, what Christmas shortcut are millions of Brits planning to take – without their relatives even realising?
Letting AI write the heartfelt message in their cards
Asking the postman to choose a random message for each card
Sending only blank cards and telling people “AI did the rest”
Using a QR code that links to a half-hour AI Christmas speech
Royal Mail research suggests nearly eight million Brits will pop AI-written Christmas cards in the post this year, with one in ten people already planning to use AI to help write them. Most over-55s say they probably wouldn’t spot the difference, so Grandma may never know her message came from a chatbot.
2 .
Which new NHS trial is using AI more like a gentle health coach than a robot doctor?
An app that spots brand-new diseases before doctors do
An app that sends personalised “just-in-time” coaching nudges to patients
An app that writes all the GP’s clinic notes every evening
An app that decides who gets fast-track appointments and who must wait
A Loughborough University team, working with Holly Health and Modality Partnership, tested an AI-powered “just-in-time adaptive intervention” app with NHS patients who have multiple long-term conditions. By using reinforcement learning to time personalised nudges, it boosted healthy habits and self-management.
3 .
According to new UK polling on AI, what do most people say they want from those in charge of powerful AI systems?
For tech companies to mostly police themselves, as long as nothing goes badly wrong
For AI rules to focus mainly on keeping the UK ahead in the global tech race
For AI to be regulated independently, with strong powers to step in if things go wrong
For politicians to stay out of AI completely and let the market decide
Ada Lovelace Institute’s “Great (public) expectations” report shows strong support for tougher AI rules. A nationally representative UK poll found 89% of people think AI should be regulated independently, and similar numbers want government and regulators able to halt harmful systems.
4 .
What “fast-track” trick is a new NHS AI tool using to give stroke patients a better second chance?
By automatically performing all the brain surgery while doctors do the paperwork
By replacing CT scans with a quick live video chat that diagnoses strokes from your face
By sending daily coaching messages about diet and exercise after people leave hospital
By flagging dangerous clots on stroke scans in minutes so treatment can start faster
On 2 December 2025, NHS England revealed that an AI imaging tool, including Brainomix 360 Stroke, is helping doctors spot serious clots on CT scans in minutes. A Lancet Digital Health study suggests about 15,000 patients have already benefited, often getting thrombectomy treatment over an hour earlier than before.
5 .
UNESCO has just published a chunky new rulebook for AI. What part of public life is it mainly trying to tidy up?
Setting ground rules for how courts and tribunals use AI systems
Choosing which AI tools teachers can use in classrooms worldwide
Deciding how much AI-generated music streaming services must pay artists
Writing a global dress code for robots working in hospitals and care homes
UNESCO has released the first global guidelines on using AI in courts and tribunals, with 15 principles covering transparency, fairness and human oversight. The aim is to help judges use AI tools without turning them into “robot oracles”, and to keep humans firmly in charge of justice decisions.
6 .
Guardian reporters say AI research has a “slop problem”. What are worried academics actually complaining about?
That AI has started marking human essays more harshly than before
That robots are demanding first authorship on every scientific paper
That low-quality, mass-produced AI papers are flooding top conferences
That peer reviewers are being replaced by an AI that auto-accepts everything
A Guardian investigation reports academics warning that AI research is being swamped by low-quality, mass-produced “slop” papers, overwhelming conferences like NeurIPS and straining peer review. One author alone claimed over 100 AI papers in a year, prompting serious integrity concerns.
7 .
In its new AI growth plan, what unusual helping hand has the UK government promised to give promising home-grown AI hardware start-ups?
Handing every AI start-up a free supercomputer plus decades of ultra-cheap cloud credits
Promising to turn Downing Street into a public AI co-working space at weekends
Letting AI firms skip corporation tax if they only build officially “good robots”
Acting as the “first customer”, buying early products from UK AI hardware start-ups
The UK government’s latest AI growth plan says it will act as a “first customer” for promising UK AI hardware start-ups, especially chip builders, using public procurement to give them crucial early orders. The strategy also includes a Sovereign AI Unit and a new AI Growth Zone in South Wales.
8 .
Why are EU competition officials suddenly paying very close attention to WhatsApp’s new AI helper?
Because Meta’s built-in AI assistant on WhatsApp may be shutting out rival chatbots from the platform
Because WhatsApp secretly replaced every emoji with AI-generated poetry about your feelings
Because EU rules say every group chat must include at least one human moderator wearing a suit
Because WhatsApp’s AI keeps auto-adding your boss to every meme-filled group you create
EU regulators have opened an antitrust investigation into Meta’s new WhatsApp AI policy. The concern is that embedding Meta’s own assistant while restricting rival AI chatbots could abuse its dominant position and limit competition in conversational AI tools across Europe.
9 .
A big new study says nearly three in ten UK GPs are already using AI at work. What are they mainly doing with tools like ChatGPT during patient consultations?
Letting the AI decide which patients should be seen and which should be turned away
Using it to draft notes and summaries while they talk to patients
Asking it to choose treatments for patients without properly double-checking the advice
Using it to break bad news so they don’t have to say it themselves
A Nuffield Trust and Royal College of GPs study found that about 28–30% of UK GPs now use AI tools such as ChatGPT, mainly to draft clinical notes, appointment summaries and other paperwork during consultations. The tech saves time, but doctors warn of a “wild west” of unregulated tools and unclear liability.
10 .
Google’s latest AI leak mentions something called “Nano Banana 2 Flash”. What is it supposed to be?
A heavyweight “Titan” model that only runs in Google’s biggest data centres
A brain-scanning research system designed just for hospitals and universities
A small, fast image model called Nano Banana 2 Flash for low-cost use
A super-expensive enterprise AI that only runs on custom Google mainframes
On 7 December 2025, reports from TestingCatalog and others said Google is preparing Nano Banana 2 Flash, a cut-down Gemini image model aimed at fast, cheap generation and editing. It’s meant to offer “Pro-like” results while using less compute, making AI visuals more affordable for everyday users.
Author:  Tara Kemp

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