DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

I used ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity to research a gnarly NYC rent situation. Here’s what I learned.

February 6, 2026
in News
I used ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity to research a gnarly NYC rent situation. Here’s what I learned.
Nolita is an upscale neighborhood in NYC brimming with boutiques and restaurants.
Nolita is an upscale neighborhood in NYC brimming with boutiques and restaurants. Alexander Spatari/Getty Images
  • A version of this story originally appeared in the BI Tech Memo newsletter.
  • Sign up for the weekly BI Tech Memo newsletter here.

In New York City, three things are certain: death, taxes, and sky-high rent.

There may not be much AI can do for death. Taxes, I’m not sure. But it turns out this technology can be surprisingly helpful if you have a unique rent situation.

I live in a former superintendent-occupied apartment in a prewar co-op in Manhattan. Although I signed a market-rate lease when I moved in, I later learned — with the help of AI tools — that my apartment might qualify as a “rent-stabilized” unit.

New York is one of a handful of cities where rent increases can be limited by law, depending on the circumstances. This is known as rent stabilization. It’s a milder form of rent regulation that lets landlords charge more, but not too much more.

My apartment’s rent history showed the unit had been registered as rent-stabilized in the 1980s and contained no obvious record of a deregulation event. Did that mean the apartment might still be regulated? Could I gain protection from potentially large rent increases in the future?

I couldn’t find clear answers on Reddit or Google, so I uploaded a photo of the apartment’s rent-registration history and asked ChatGPT to help me interpret it.

ChatGPT walked me through the document and said this type of situation is routinely evaluated by the New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal, which oversees rent-stabilization and related rules in NYC.

I told ChatGPT to show me its sources. It cited relevant provisions of the rent-stabilization code and several court decisions. AI can sometimes hallucinate, so I asked Perplexity and Google Gemini the same questions, as an initial way to double-check the facts. These AI tools reached similar high-level conclusions but differed in their reasoning and the way they cited authoritative sources. Gemini and Perplexity were better at showing their work than ChatGPT, and Gemini tended to be the most conservative in its framing, which made me trust it more.

I still caught all three bots making mistakes. In one instance, Gemini cited a legal case that didn’t exist. When I called it out, it quickly corrected itself. I repeated this process multiple times, reading the underlying legal provisions and pushing back on AI-powered conclusions I thought were wrong. I even role-played as a landlord, presenting arguments rental property owners might make about why my apartment is not rent-stabilized.

Eventually, I hit a wall. No matter how much I challenged the bots, they were confident that my situation raised legitimate questions that New York’s DHCR might resolve. That’s when I called a housing attorney — which cost $35 through the New York Bar Association’s referral service — to sanity-check everything. After reviewing the documents, he agreed that filing a rent-overcharge complaint was reasonable. So I went ahead. The proceeding is ongoing, and no determination has been made yet.

My case is pretty unusual. But there are broader takeaways:

  • AI chatbots can help you understand complex documents
  • This meaningfully lowers the barrier for people trying to understand their rights
  • You must still be diligent and check AI outputs. That includes checking that cases and other sources being cited are real.
  • Don’t make important final decisions based only on AI answers
  • These tools can help you identify the right questions to ask, and decide when it’s time to consult a human expert.

Sign up for BI’s Tech Memo newsletter here. Reach out to me via email at [email protected].

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post I used ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity to research a gnarly NYC rent situation. Here’s what I learned. appeared first on Business Insider.

Doctor issues scathing ultimatum to MAGA-fied CBS over Epstein-linked health guru
News

Doctor issues scathing ultimatum to MAGA-fied CBS over Epstein-linked health guru

by Raw Story
February 7, 2026

A former ABC News medical correspondent has vowed never to set foot on CBS as long as the network keeps ...

Read more
News

U.S. births dropped last year, offsetting 2024’s increase and dashing hopes for an upward trend

February 7, 2026
News

Colorado Funeral Home Director Is Sentenced to 40 Years in Corpse Abuse Case

February 7, 2026
News

John Phelan, Trump’s Navy secretary, listed in Epstein flight logs

February 7, 2026
News

Trump wanted to drop JFK from Kennedy Center, advisers stopped him

February 7, 2026
Saab is looking to arm its Gripen fighter jets with a proven drone-killing rocket after studying the Ukraine war

Saab is looking to arm its Gripen fighter jets with a proven drone-killing rocket after studying the Ukraine war

February 7, 2026
Trump Opens Marine National Monument in Atlantic to Commercial Fishing

Trump Opens Marine National Monument in Atlantic to Commercial Fishing

February 7, 2026
Crypto startup inspired by ‘Lord of the Rings’  becomes first bank approved in Trump’s 2nd term

Crypto startup inspired by ‘Lord of the Rings’ becomes first bank approved in Trump’s 2nd term

February 7, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026