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by OutOfHere
482 days ago
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"Close friends" is not a good metric anyone. A better metric is the count of token output of personal life. This includes all online chats, including with AI, on apps, and all social sites. I am pretty sure this metric has been trending very high. |
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>In 2018, a Pew Research Poll found that teenagers who were connected with their friends online were more likely to also hang out in person. By 2022, in-person outings for teens had collapsed.
>Can their online friends fill the role that real-life ones once did? Maybe — if those “friends” even exist.
>Last year one study found a full 25% of young adults “believe that AI has the potential to replace real-life romantic relationships.”
Those are factors, but it's pretty clear the pandemic accelerated such things as such that these cause isolation rather than a conduit to meet up.
And AI romance is on the rise. Is this healthy? I wouldn't think so; and I'm mostly saying that because I hate the idea of a corporate server having such a dangerously intimate connection with a human. Sounds like a Black Mirror episode.
I'll begrudgingly stay open to the more general theory of a personal AI you fall in love with otherwise. Very fearful, but I'd feel like a hypocrite as a game dev who has technically done tiny contributions to this if I suddenly say "you can't care about fictional characters".