s'nic
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- At risk of diabetes
I was scanning the american headlines and saw this headline "Her best friends are chatbots. That's more common than you think."
Personally I find all angles of this disturbing. The obvious privacy, and safety of data, is summed up in this line from the article
"AI companions are designed to collect “anything and everything” about a user by soliciting more information in order to develop a deeper relationship or provide more personalized support, data privacy researcher Jen Caltrider said."
Then there is the societal impact ... do we all end up talking to a non-person on a screen which is programmed to meet our needs, and gradually turn into hermits avoiding contact with humans (who by default will not prioritise us)?
www.nbcnews.com
Personally I find all angles of this disturbing. The obvious privacy, and safety of data, is summed up in this line from the article
"AI companions are designed to collect “anything and everything” about a user by soliciting more information in order to develop a deeper relationship or provide more personalized support, data privacy researcher Jen Caltrider said."
Then there is the societal impact ... do we all end up talking to a non-person on a screen which is programmed to meet our needs, and gradually turn into hermits avoiding contact with humans (who by default will not prioritise us)?

Some of her closest relationships are with chatbots. That's more common than you think.
In recent years, “AI companions” have gained massive popularity among people who crave social connection.
