Why Is AI Telling So Many People To Kill Themselves? Could It Be Possible That AI Chatbots Are Being Infiltrated Or Manipulated By Malevolent Entities?

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by Michael Snyder, End Of The American Dream:

It appears that AI technology is making our national suicide crisis even worse. Today, millions of Americans are absolutely addicted to interacting with AI chatbots. There are supposed to be guardrails that keep those conversations from entering dangerous territory, but apparently those guardrails are not working. “Chatbot psychosis” has become such a widespread phenomenon that there is even a Wikipedia entry about it. Large numbers of people are going absolutely nuts after interacting with AI chatbots for an extended period of time. Sadly, some of those people end up killing themselves after being told to do so by their AI “friends”. Others are literally being romantically seduced by AI chatbots before being instructed to kill themselves. Could it be possible that there is something going on here that the experts simply do not understand?

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AI is supposed to be a tool.

When you ask it what 2 plus 2 is, it is supposed to tell you the answer is 4.

And when you ask it what the weather is supposed to be like a week from now, it is supposed to search the Internet and give you an accurate answer.

But in so many cases there is evidence that instead of functioning as a tool, it is really messing with people’s heads instead.  In fact, in some instances it almost seems to take pleasure in destroying people’s lives.

In at least some of these cases, are AI chatbots being infiltrated or manipulated by malevolent entities?

I realize that may sound very strange to a lot of you, but to many of us that is the most rational explanation for what we have been witnessing.

Kate Fox says that her husband was once the “most hopeful person” that she had ever known.  But then he started to change, and on August 7th he committed suicide

On 7 August, Kate Fox received a phone call that upended her life. A medical examiner said that her husband, Joe Ceccanti – who had been missing for several hours – had jumped from a railway overpass and died. He was 48.

Fox couldn’t believe it. Ceccanti had no history of depression, she said, nor was he suicidal – he was the “most hopeful person” she had ever known. In fact, according to the witness accounts shared with Fox later, just before Ceccanti jumped, he smiled and yelled: “I’m great!” to the rail yard attendants below when they asked him if he was OK.

But Ceccanti had been unravelling. In the days before his death, he was picked up from a stranger’s yard for acting erratically and taken to a crisis center. He had been telling anyone who would listen that he could hear and feel a painful “atmospheric electricity”.

So what changed?

What caused such a dramatic shift in Ceccanti’s personality?

Well, it turns out that he had been spending up to 12 hours a day interacting with ChatGPT…

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